Ad End 1 August 2025
Ad Ends 13 July 2025
ad End 25 October 2025
Ad Ends 20 April 2025
Ad expire at 5 August 2024
banner Expire 9 June 2025
banner Expire 25 October 2025
banner Expire 10 May 2025
What's new
Wizard's shop 2.0
Money Club cc shop
banner Expire 15 January 2025
banner Expire 20 October 2024
UniCvv
Yale Lodge
Kfc CLub
adv exp at 30 July 2025
Carding.pw carding forum
BidenCash Shop

Chinese APT Group Linked to Ransomware Attacks

File_closed07

TRUSTED VERIFIED SELLER
Staff member
Joined
Jun 13, 2020
Messages
7,904
Reaction score
942
Points
212
Awards
2
  • trusted user
  • Rich User
A well-known Chinese state-backed APT group is believed to have been responsible for multiple ransomware attacks against firms last year, according to new research.

A report from Security Joes and Pro reveals how the vendors uncovered the links after investigating an incident in which ransomware encrypted “several core servers” at an unidentified victim organization.

They found samples of malware linked to the DRBControl campaign which targeted major gaming companies and is associated with two well-known Chinese-backed groups, APT27 (aka Emissary Panda) and Winnti.

Specifically, they claimed to have detected an older version of the Clambling backdoor used in that campaign, an ASPXSpy webshell previously used by APT27, and the PlugX RAT which is often used in Chinese attacks.

Although Winnti is known for financially motivated attacks, APT27 is generally more focused on data theft. However, the latter has previously been linked to one ransomware attack, featuring the Polar variant.

“There are extremely strong links to APT27 in terms of code similarities and TTPs,” the report noted. “This incident occurred at a time when where COVID-19 was rampant across China with lockdowns being put into place, and therefore a switch to a financial focus would not be surprising.”

The attack itself does not seem to have been particularly sophisticated.

The initial vector was a third-party service provider that itself had been infected by a third party, and the attackers used Windows own BitLocker encryption tool to lock down targeted servers.

ASPXSpy was deployed for lateral movement and PlugX and Clambling were loaded into memory using a Google Updater executable vulnerable to DLL side-loading. Popular open source tool Mimikatz was also used in the attack and a publicly available exploit for CVE-2017-0213 was used to escalate privileges.

Gaming firms are an increasingly popular target among financially motivated attackers, according to new research released yesterday by Kela. The threat intelligence firm claimed to have discovered one million compromised internal accounts from gaming companies on the dark web, and 500,000 breached credentials belonging to employees.
 
Ad End 1 February 2024
Top