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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2024-03-27 15:31:22.107

Source: https://thehackernews.com/2024/03/hackers-target-indian-defense-and.html

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Hackers Hit Indian Defense, Energy Sectors with Malware Posing as Air Force Invite. Indian government entities and energy companies have been targeted by unknown threat actors with an aim to deliver a modified version of an open-source information stealer malware called HackBrowserData and exfiltrate sensitive information in some cases by using Slack as command-and-control (C2). "The information stealer was delivered via a phishing email, masquerading as an invitation letter from the Indian Air Force," EclecticIQ researcher Arda Büyükkaya said in a report published today. "The attacker utilized Slack channels as exfiltration points to upload confidential internal documents, private email messages, and cached web browser data after the malware's execution." The campaign, observed by the Dutch cybersecurity firm beginning March 7, 2024, has been codenamed Operation FlightNight in reference to the Slack channels operated by the adversary. Targets of the malicious activity span multiple government entities in India, counting those related to electronic communications, IT governance, and national defense. The threat actor is said to have successfully compromised private energy companies, harvesting financial documents, personal details of employees, details about drilling activities in oil and gas. In all, about 8.81 GB of data has been exfiltrated over the course of the campaign. The attack chain starts with a phishing message containing an ISO file ("invite.iso"), which, in turn, contains a Windows shortcut (LNK) that triggers the execution of a hidden binary ("scholar.exe") present within the mounted optical disk image. Simultaneously, a lure PDF file that purports to be an invitation letter from the Indian Air Force is displayed to the victim while the malware clandestinely harvests documents and cached web browser data and transmits them to an actor-controlled Slack channel named FlightNight. The malware is an altered version of HackBrowserData that goes beyond its browser data theft features to incorporate capabilities to siphon documents (Microsoft Office, PDFs, and SQL database files), communicate over Slack, and better evade detection using obfuscation techniques. It's suspected that the threat actor stole the decoy PDF during a previous intrusion, with behavioral similarities traced back to a phishing campaign targeting the Indian Air Force with a Go-based stealer called GoStealer. Details of the activity were disclosed by an Indian security researcher who goes by the alias xelemental (@ElementalX2) in mid-January 2024. The GoStealer infection sequence is virtually identical to that FlightNight, employing procurement-themed lures ("SU-30 Aircraft Procurement.iso") to display a decoy file while the stealer payload is deployed to exfiltrate information of interest over Slack. By adapting freely available offensive tools and repurposing legitimate infrastructure such as Slack that's prevalent in enterprise environments, it allows threat actors to reduce time and development costs, as well as easily fly under the radar. The efficiency benefits also mean that it's that much easier to launch a targeted attack, even allowing less-skilled and aspiring cybercriminals to spring into action and inflict significant damage to organizations. "Operation FlightNight and the GoStealer campaign highlight a simple yet effective approach by threat actors to use open-source tools for cyber espionage," Büyükkaya said. "This underscores the evolving landscape of cyber threats, wherein actors abuse widely used open-source offensive tools and platforms to achieve their objectives with minimal risk of detection and investment." The Strategic Guide to Cloud Security Unlock practical steps to securing everything you build and run in the cloud. Goodbye, Atlassian Server. Goodbye… Backups? Protect your data on Atlassian Cloud from disaster with Rewind's daily backups and on-demand restores. Take Action Fast with Censys Search for Security Teams Stay ahead of advanced threat actors with best-in-class Internet intelligence from Censys Search.

Daily Brief Summary

MALWARE // Sophisticated Malware Campaign Targets India's Defense and Energy

Hackers have targeted Indian government and energy firms, using malware disguised as an Air Force invite to steal sensitive data via phishing emails.

The Dutch cybersecurity firm, EclecticIQ, has observed the campaign since March 7, 2024, and named it Operation FlightNight, noting the use of Slack channels for data exfiltration.

Affected entities include those in electronic communications, IT governance, national defense, and private energy companies, with approximately 8.81 GB of data reported as stolen.

The malware, HackBrowserData, has been modified to steal a wide array of documents, use Slack for communication, and leverage obfuscation techniques for evasion.

A decoy PDF file is used as a lure, while the malware simultaneously harvests documents and browser data, relaying it to the adversary's Slack channel.

The methods employed by the attackers resemble previous attacks by using open-source tools and repurposing legitimate services, such as Slack, to minimize detection and costs.

This incident highlights an evolving cyber threat landscape where threat actors utilize open-source tools and mainstream platforms to conduct espionage with minimal risk of detection.