Another Darkleech Campaign

Read the original article: Another Darkleech Campaign


Last week got us up close and personal with Darkleech and Blackhole
with our external careers web site.

The fun didn’t end there, this week we saw a tidal wave of Darkleech
activity linked to a large-scale malvertising
campaign identified by the following URL:

hXXp://delivery[.]globalcdnnode[.]com/7f01baa99716452bda5bba0572c58be9/afr-zone.php

Again Darkleech was up to its tricks, injecting URLs and sending
victims to a landing page belonging to the Blackhole Exploit Kit, one
of the most popular and effective exploit kits available today.
Blackhole wreaks havoc on computers by exploiting vulnerabilities in
client applications like IE, Java and Adobe, computers that are
vulnerable to exploits launched by Blackhole are likely to become
infected with one of several flavors of malware including ransomware,
Zeus/Zbot variants and clickfraud trojans
like ZeroAccess.

We started logging hits at 21:31:00 UTC on Sunday 09/22/2013, the
campaign has been ongoing, peaking Monday and tapered down through out
the week.

During most of the campaign’s run,
delivery[.]globalcdnnode[.]com appeared to have gone dark, no
longer serving the exploit kit’s landing page as expected and then
stopped resolving altogether, yet tons of requests kept flowing.

This left some scratching their heads as to whether the noise was a
real threat.

Indeed, it was a real threat, as Blackhole showed up to the
party a couple of days later; this was confirmed by actually
witnessing a system get attacked on a subsequent visit to the URL.

 

globalcdn_BHEK

Figure 1. – Session demonstrating exploit via IE browser and Java.

 

The server returned the (obfuscated) Blackhole Landing page; no 404
this time.

Darkleech_LANDING

Figure 2 – request and response to to delivery[.]globalcdnnode[.]com.

 

The next stage was to load a new URL for the malicious jar file. At
this point, the unpatched Windows XP system running vulnerable Java
quickly succumbed to CVE-2013-0422.

Darkleech_JAVA

Figure 3 – Packet capture showing JAR file being downloaded.

Darkleech_Java_Classes

Figure 4. – Some of the Java class files visible in the downloaded Jar.

 

Even though our system was exploited and the browser was left in a
hung state, it did not receive the payload. Given the sporadic
availability during the week of both the host and exploit kit’s
landing page, it’s possible the system is or was undergoing further
setup and this is the prelude to yet another large-scale campaign.

We can’t say for sure but we know this is not the last time we will
see it or the crimeware actor behind it.

Registrant:

Name: Alexey Prokopenko
Organization: home
Address:
Lenina 4, kv 1
City: Ubileine
Province/state: LUGANSKA
OBL
Country: UA
Postal Code: 519000
Email: alex1978a @bigmir.net

By the way, this actor has
a long history
of malicious activity online too.

The campaign also appears to be abusing Amazon Web Services.

globalcdnnode.com
Server:           ns-293.awsdns-36.com
Address:    205.251.193.37#53

globalcdnnode.com
origin = ns-293.awsdns-36.com
mail
addr = awsdns-hostmaster.amazon.com

At time of this writing, the domain delivery[.]globalcdnnode[.]com
was still resolving, using fast-flux DNS techniques
to resolve to a different IP address every couple minutes, thwarting
attempts at shutting down the domain by constantly being on the move.

GlobalCDN_PLESK

Figure 5. – The familiar Plesk control panel, residing on the server.

This was a widespread campaign, indirectly affecting many web sites
via malvertising techniques. The referring hosts run the gamut from
local radio stations to high profile news, sports, and shopping sites.
Given the large amounts of web traffic these types of sites see, its
not surprising there was a tidal wave of requests to
delivery[.]globalcdnnode[.]com. Every time a page with the
malvertisement was loaded, a request was made to
hXXp://delivery.globalcdnnode.com/7f01baa99716452bda5bba0572c58be9/afr-zone.php,
in the background.

To give an example of what this activity looked like from DTI, you
can see the numbers in the chart below.

 

Darkleech_splunk

Figure 6. – DTI graph showing number of Darkleech detections logged
each day.

By using malvertising and or posing as a legitimate advertiser or
content delivery network, the bad guys infiltrate the web
advertisement ecosystem. This results in their malicious content
getting loaded in your browser, often times in the background,
while you browse sites that have nothing to do with the attack (as was
the case in our careers site).

Imagine a scenario where a good portion of enterprise users have a
home page set to a popular news website. More than likely, the
main web page has advertisements, and some of those ads could be
served from 3rd party advertiser networks and or CDNs. If
just one of those advertisements on the page is malicious,
visitors to that page are at risk of redirection and or
infection, even though the news website’s server is itself clean.

So, when everybody shows up to work on Monday and opens their
browsers, there could be a wave of clients making requests to exploit
kit landing pages, if Darkleech is lurking in those advertisement
waters, you could end up with a leech or 2 attached to your network.


Read the original article: Another Darkleech Campaign