Citrine Sleet APT Exploits Chrome Zero-Day Vulnerability for Rootkit Infiltration

 

It is believed that North Korean hackers have been able to use unpatched zero-day in Google Chrome (CVE-2024-7971) to install a rootkit called FudModule after gaining admin privileges by exploiting a kernel vulnerability in Microsoft Windows.

An investigation by Microsoft has revealed that a North Korean threat actor exploited a zero-day vulnerability in the Chromium browser that has been tracked as CVE-2024-7971 to conduct a sophisticated cyber operation.  

According to the report, Citrine Sleet, the notorious group behind the attack that targets cryptography sectors in particular, is responsible for the attack.

It has been reported that CVE-2024-7971 is a type of confusion vulnerability in the V8 JavaScript and WebAssembly engine that had been impacted in versions of Chrome before 128.0.6613.84. By exploiting this vulnerability, threat actors could gain remote code execution (RCE) access to the sandboxed Chromium renderer process and conduct a remote attack. 

There was a vulnerability that was fixed by Google on August 21, 2024, and users should ensure that they are running the most recent version of Chrome.

It is clear from this development that the nation-state adversary is trying to increase its penetration of Windows zero-day exploits in recent months, indicating that they are persistent in their efforts to acquire and introduce oodles of zero-day exploits. 

This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents

Read the original article: