Alexsey’s TTPs
(.. Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures)Mike Arpaia and I flew out of JFK on the morning of January 22nd, 2012. We were gainfully employed by ████████ and responding to a breach that a client had suffered. Mike and I spent a week pouring over forensic artifacts and soon identified the perp as a Russian-speaking hacker called “M4g”.
M4g would later be revealed by the FBI as Alexsey Belan, indicted four times (including the
Yahoo hack), and sanctioned by the Obama administration.
Photos of Alexsey Belan published by the FBI
Belan targeted tech firms on the west coast. Many of the large breaches publicized during 2012 and 2013 are attributed to him, and news of others didn’t make it into the public domain.
This post details the victim estates and provides insight into the modus operandi of a prolific adversary. Please use this material to consider your environment and ensure these weak links do not exist within it.
TL;DR
Belan’s observed offensive traits were as follows:
He identified peripheral web servers via Google and Linkedin searches
Used known WordPress flaws and custom bugs to compromise PHP sites
Linux authentication mechanisms were altered to capture credentials
Nmap was used to identify exposed network services internally
Corporate Wikis revealed administrative workflows and VPN details
Ticketing, bug tracking, and version control systems provided secrets (e.g. cryptographic keys, seeds, hashes, credentials, and source code)
Cookies from weak non-production instances (e.g. staging) were valid in production as cryptographic materials were the same — bypassing 2FA
Client certificates (exposed by email, ticketing, or lifted from filesystems) were combined with known credentials to access corporate VPNs
Engineering credentials were used to commit backdoors to version control which were self-approved and later deployed into production
Email addresses and password hashes were amassed with each compromise. Cracked credentials were used to target further victims via exposed mail services (e.g. Outlook on the Web or G Suite), and the exploratory process was repeated to gain privileged network access via VPN or similar means.
Defensive controls checklist:
Segregate risky Internet-exposed servers (e.g. third-party PHP sites)
Do not leave secrets in your Wiki, ticketing, or bug tracking systems, or send sensitive material over email (e.g. credentials, certificates, or keys)
Don’t re-use cryptographic seeds, keys, or credentials across production and non-production environments (e.g. development or staging)
Compromised servers made odd DNS requests (e.g. resolving m4g.ru). Use a monitoring tool such as DNS Analytics for Splunk to flag anomalies
Software certificates are an insufficient second factor. Use a real 2FA solution such as Duo and consider hardware tokens to protect private keys via FIPS 201–1 and other standards, as supported by the YubiKey 4
Proper segmentation, enforcement of a sensible policy around the safe transmission of secrets, and close monitoring of production systems nullify this threat.
Technical Details
The marketing department of Belan’s first known victim ran a vulnerable WordPress server from a branch office. The server sat on the corporate WAN and could access internal systems: it wasn’t segregated or placed in a DMZ.
Belan found the server through a Google search and exploited it via CVE-2011–4106. Next, he downloaded tools via wget from m4g.ru and elevated privileges via CVE-2010–3856.
The following steps were undertaken over a five day period:
He replaced the PHP authentication mechanism (l10n.php) to capture credentials of corporate users interacting with the WordPress site
Ran Nmap and discovered the internal Wiki
Captured a handful of valid credentials via WordPress
Authenticated with the Wiki using captured user credentials
Came to understand the administrative procedures via the Wiki
Failed to authenticate with the administrative portal (2FA was required)
Identified a staging instance of the administrative portal that didn’t require 2FA. Authenticated, and subsequently identified directory traversal and arbitrary file upload flaws through manual testing
Found that cookies generated in staging were valid in production, and modified a staging cookie to access the production instance of the administrative portal (bypassing 2FA)
Gained privileged access to the administrative portal server via the known web application flaws, and a obtained a MySQL credential that provided access to customer data within the production environment
Ran mysqldump against the production database, creating 1.txt
Compressed and attempted to SCP 1.tgz to a masterhost.ru shell server using directory structures containing mnogo.mobi and m4g.ru domains
The SCP process failed, and so 1.tgz was split into chunks and exfiltrated by placing them onto an NFS share used to serve static content in the production web environment
Use of Linkedin to Target Peripheral Systems
Belan’s second known victim was notified by the FBI of a breach. We identified an engineering account that had accessed the corporate VPN from Russian IP space, and subsequently discovered a compromised web server running on the engineer’s iMac in the kitchen of his home in Santa Clara.
The web server was a Linux VM running within the iMac via Parallels. Belan had found the server via the engineer’s own public Linkedin profile, e.g.
Personal websites listed in a user’s Linkedin profile
The Linux VM hosted a handful of PHP sites. Belan worked to remotely compromise the Linux VM, host system, and finally his target, as follows:
Tested each PHP site by hand to identify potential weaknesses
Successfully identified and exploited a custom arbitrary file upload flaw
Elevated privileges to root via CVE-2010–3856 (as before)
Altered Linux and PHP authentication mechanisms to capture credentials
Obtained and cracked local user password hashes from /etc/shadow
Authenticated with the Linux VM via SSH using a valid credential
Launched a brute-force SSH password grinding attack from the guest Linux VM against the host operating system (running MacOS X)
Used tools to clear utmp and wtmp log entries within the Linux VM
Successfully authenticated with the host operating system via SSH using a permutation of a known user credential
Obtained corporate VPN configuration details from the host operating system, including the gateway details, client certificate, and private key
Combined the VPN settings with known credentials to authenticate with, and access the corporate VPN as the engineer himself
Application, database, and infrastructure logs within the victim environment were rolling (overwriting entries after 10–14 days). As such, our ability to investigate this compromise was limited. The facts however are as follows:
Belan maintained corporate VPN access for four months
The customer database was obtained from the production environment
Lack of 2FA + The Cloud =
By mid-2013, Belan had amassed 200 million credentials (including email addresses, passwords, but also answers to security questions). Organizations embracing cloud services but not 2FA were soft targets.
A third victim was breached through the following steps:
Use of a valid credential (user/pass) to authenticate with Google Mail
Access to an Internet-based JIRA instance granted via OpenID
Issues in JIRA revealed a legacy Internet-based Subversion (SVN) server
Already known and valid credentials were used to access the SVN server
Local privileges were elevated and engineering password hashes were obtained from /etc/shadow and other files within version control
Internet-exposed Git production instance accessed via cracked credentials
JSP shell committed into Git, self-approved, and queued for deployment
An unwitting engineer later deployed the code into production
Belan read the production database environment variables from an application server via the JSP shell he had implanted
Ran mysqldump against the production database, creating 1.txt
Compressed, split, and exfiltrated 1.tgz via the application server
Fallout and Closing Remarks
1.2 billion usernames, password hashes, and security questions have been compromised from a handful of known victims (including
Yahoo, Evernote, Scribd, and Zappos, according to the New York Times), and likely millions of further records from unknown victims.
Consider the number of organizations that provide services to their users and employees over the public Internet, including:
Web portals for sales and marketing purposes
Mail access via Microsoft Outlook on the Web and Google Mail
Collaboration via Slack, HipChat, SharePoint, and Confluence
DevOps and support via GitHub, JIRA, and CI/CD utilities
Next, consider how many enforce 2FA across their entire attack surface. Large enterprises often expose domain-joined systems to the Internet that can be leveraged to provide privileged network access (via Microsoft IIS, SharePoint, and other services supporting NTLM authentication).
The number of weak networks is high enough for Belan and the FSB to pose a serious threat to organizations around the globe with their Rolodex of secrets. The personal mail and messaging accounts of politicians, lawyers, activists, and journalists can also be easily targeted.
Finally, consider the number of corporate VPNs using unsafe 2FA (requiring only a username, password, and software-based certificate). First-hand experience leads me to believe this number is high. VPN certificates and keys are often found within and lifted from email, ticketing, and chat services.
https://medium.com/@chrismcnab/alexseys ... .gnp4c7jq7