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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2025-09-04 18:01:28.027

Source: https://thehackernews.com/2025/09/ghostredirector-hacks-65-windows.html

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GhostRedirector Hacks 65 Windows Servers Using Rungan Backdoor and Gamshen IIS Module. Cybersecurity researchers have lifted the lid on a previously undocumented threat cluster dubbed GhostRedirector that has managed to compromise at least 65 Windows servers primarily located in Brazil, Thailand, and Vietnam. The attacks, per Slovak cybersecurity company ESET, led to the deployment of a passive C++ backdoor called Rungan and a native Internet Information Services (IIS) module codenamed Gamshen. The threat actor is believed to be active since at least August 2024. "While Rungan has the capability of executing commands on a compromised server, the purpose of Gamshen is to provide SEO fraud as-a-service, i.e., to manipulate search engine results, boosting the page ranking of a configured target website," ESET researcher Fernando Tavella said in a report shared with The Hacker News. "Even though Gamshen only modifies the response when the request comes from Googlebot – i.e., it does not serve malicious content or otherwise affect regular visitors of the websites – participation in the SEO fraud scheme can hurt the compromised host website's reputation by associating it with shady SEO techniques and the boosted websites." Some of the other targets of the hacking group include Peru, the U.S., Canada, Finland, India, the Netherlands, the Philippines, and Singapore. The activity is also said to be indiscriminate, with entities in the education, healthcare, insurance, transportation, technology, and retail sectors singled out. Initial access to target networks is accomplished by exploiting a vulnerability, likely an SQL injection flaw, after which PowerShell is used to deliver additional tools hosted on a staging server ("868id[.]com"). "This conjecture is supported by our observation that most unauthorized PowerShell executions originated from the binary sqlserver.exe, which holds a stored procedure xp_cmdshell that can be used to execute commands on a machine," ESET said. Rungan is designed to await incoming requests from a URL matching a predefined pattern (i.e., "https://+:80/v1.0/8888/sys.html"), and then proceeds to parse and execute the commands embedded in them. It supports four different commands - Written in C/C++, Gamshen is an example of an IIS malware family called "Group 13," which can act both as a backdoor and conduct SEO fraud. It functions similar to IISerpent, another IIS-specific malware that was documented by ESET back in August 2021. IISerpent, configured as a malicious extension for Microsoft's web server software, allows it to intercept all HTTP requests made to the websites hosted by the compromised server, specifically those originating from search engine crawlers, and change the server's HTTP responses with the goal of redirecting the search engines to a scam website of the attacker's choosing. "GhostRedirector attempts to manipulate the Google search ranking of a specific, third-party website by using manipulative, shady SEO techniques such as creating artificial backlinks from the legitimate, compromised website to the target website," Tavella said. It's currently not known where these backlinks redirect unsuspecting users to, but it's believed that the SEO fraud scheme is being used to promote various gambling websites. Also dropped alongside Rungan and Gamshen are various other tools - It's assessed with medium confidence that GhostRedirector is a China-aligned threat actor based on the presence of hard-coded Chinese strings in the source code, a code-signing certificate issued to a Chinese company, Shenzhen Diyuan Technology Co., Ltd., to sign the privilege escalation artifacts, and the use of the password "huang" for one of the GhostRedirector-created users on the compromised server. That said, GhostRedirector is not the first China-linked threat actor to use malicious IIS modules for SEO fraud. Over the past year, both Cisco Talos and Trend Micro have detailed a Chinese-speaking group known as DragonRank that has engaged in SEO manipulation via BadIIS malware. "Gamshen abuses the credibility of the websites hosted on the compromised server to promote a third-party, gambling website – potentially a paying client participating in an SEO fraud as-a-service scheme," the company said. "GhostRedirector also demonstrates persistence and operational resilience by deploying multiple remote access tools on the compromised server, on top of creating rogue user accounts, all to maintain long-term access to the compromised infrastructure."

Daily Brief Summary

MALWARE // GhostRedirector Compromises 65 Servers with Rungan Backdoor and Gamshen Module

GhostRedirector, an emerging threat cluster, has compromised 65 Windows servers across Brazil, Thailand, and Vietnam, deploying the Rungan backdoor and Gamshen IIS module.

ESET researchers identified the malware, which manipulates search engine results to boost target website rankings, potentially damaging the reputation of compromised hosts.

The attacks exploit vulnerabilities, likely SQL injection flaws, using PowerShell for deploying additional tools from a staging server.

Rungan backdoor awaits specific URL requests to execute embedded commands, while Gamshen conducts SEO fraud by modifying server responses to Googlebot requests.

GhostRedirector is suspected to be China-aligned, evidenced by hard-coded Chinese strings and a code-signing certificate linked to Shenzhen Diyuan Technology Co., Ltd.

The group demonstrates persistence by deploying multiple remote access tools and creating rogue user accounts to maintain long-term server access.

Industries affected include education, healthcare, insurance, transportation, technology, and retail, with targets spanning Peru, the U.S., Canada, Finland, India, the Netherlands, the Philippines, and Singapore.