While investigating a yet unknown advanced persistence threat (APT), Kaspersky researchers came across new malware that contained several important attributes that potentially connect it to DarkHalo – the threat actor behind the Sunburst attack. It is considered one of the most impactful supply chain security incidents of recent years.
The Sunburst security incident hit the headlines in December 2020: The DarkHalo threat actor compromised a widely used enterprise software provider and for a long time used its infrastructure to distribute spyware under the guise of legitimate software updates. After the media hype and an extensive hunt by the security community, the actor seemed to go under the radar. After Sunburst, there were no major discoveries of incidents attributable to this actor – it appeared that the DarkHalo APT went offline. However, the results of recent research conducted by the Kaspersky Global Research and Analysis Team shows that this may not be the case.
In June 2021, more than six months after DarkHalo went dark, Kaspersky researchers found traces of a successful DNS hijacking attack against several government organisations in the same country. DNS hijacking is a type of malicious attack in which a domain name (used to connect the URL address of a website with the IP address of the server where the website is hosted) is modified in a way that reroutes network traffic to an attacker-controlled server. In the case that Kaspersky discovered, the targets of the attack were trying to access the web-interface of a corporate email service but were redirected to a fake copy of that web-interface and then tricked into downloading a malicious software update. Following the attackers’ path, Kaspersky researchers retrieved the “update” and discovered it deployed a previously unknown backdoor: Tomiris.
Further analysis showed that the main purpose of the backdoor was to establish a foothold in the attacked system and to download other malicious components. The latter, unfortunately, were not identified during the investigation; however, one other important observation was made: the Tomiris backdoor turned out to be suspiciously similar to Sunshuttle – malware deployed as a consequence of the infamous Sunburst attack.
The list of similarities consists of, but is not limited to, the following:
· Just like Sunshuttle, Tomiris was developed in Go programming language
· Each backdoor uses a single encryption/obfuscation scheme to encode both configurations and network traffic
· Both rely on scheduled tasks for persistence, use randomness and sleep delays to hide their activities
· The general workflow of the two programs, in particular the way features are distributed into functions, look similar enough that Kaspersky analysts suggest they could be indicative of shared development practices
· Finally, the Tomiris backdoor was discovered in networks where other machines were infected with Kazuar – the backdoor which is known for its code overlaps with the Sunburst backdoor
“None of these items, taken individually, is enough to link Tomiris and Sunshuttle with sufficient confidence. We freely admit that a number of these data points could be accidental, but still feel that taken together they at least suggest the possibility of common authorship or shared development practices,” says Pierre Delcher, security researcher at Kaspersky.
“If our guess that Tomiris and Sunshuttle are connected is correct, it would shed new light on the way threat actors rebuild capacities after being caught. We would like to encourage the threat intelligence community to reproduce this research and provide second opinions about the similarities we discovered between Sunshuttle and Tomiris,” adds Ivan Kwiatkowski, security researcher at Kaspersky.
Read more about the connection between Tomiris and the Sunburst attack in the blog post at Securelist.com.