Saturday, November 23, 2024

VMware bug with 9.8 severity rating exploited to install witch’s brew of malware

Hackers have been exploiting a now-patched vulnerability in VMware Workspace ONE Access in campaigns to install various ransomware and cryptocurrency miners, a researcher at security firm Fortinet said on Thursday.

CVE-2022-22954 is a remote code-execution vulnerability in VMware Workspace ONE Access that carries a severity rating of 9.8 out of a possible 10. VMware disclosed and patched the vulnerability on April 6. Within 48 hours, hackers reverse-engineered the update and developed a working exploit that they then used to compromise servers that had yet to install the fix. VMware Workspace ONE access ​​helps administrators configure a suite of apps employees need in their work environments.

In August, researchers at Fortiguard Labs saw a sudden spike in exploit attempts and a major shift in tactics. Whereas before the hackers installed payloads that harvested passwords and collected other data, the new surge brought something else—specifically, ransomware known as RAR1ransom, a cryptocurrency miner known as GuardMiner, and Mirai, software that corrals Linux devices into a massive botnet for use in distributed denial-of-service attacks.

“Although the critical vulnerability CVE-2022-22954 is already patched in April, there are still multiple malware campaigns trying to exploit it,” Fortiguard Labs researcher Cara Lin wrote. Attackers, she added, were using it to inject a payload and achieve remote code execution on servers running the product.

The Mirai sample Lin saw getting installed was downloaded from http[:]//107[.]189[.]8[.]21/pedalcheta/cutie[.]x86_64 and relied on a command-and-control server at “cnc[.]goodpackets[.]cc. Besides delivering junk traffic used in DDoSes, the sample also attempted to infect other devices by guessing the administrative password they used. After decoding strings in the code, Lin found the following list of credentials the malware used:

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hikvision1234win1dowsS2fGqNFs
roottsgoingonnewsheen12345
defaultsolokeyneworange88888888guest
binuserneworangsystem
059AnkJtelnetadmintlJwpbo6iwkb
1413881234562015060200000000
adaptec20080826vstarcam2015v2mprt
Administrator1001chinvhd1206support
NULLxc3511QwestM0dem7ujMko0admin
bbsd-clientvizxvfidel123dvr2580222
par0thg2x0samsungt0talc0ntr0l4!
cablecomhunt5759epicrouterzlxx
pointofsalenflectionadmin@mimifixmhdipc
icatch99passworddaemonnetopia
3comDOCSIS_APPhagpolm1klv123
OxhlwSG8

In what appears to be a separate campaign, attackers also exploited CVE-2022-22954 to download a payload from 67[.]205[.]145[.]142. The payload included seven files:

  • phpupdate.exe: Xmrig Monero mining software
  • config.json: Configuration file for mining pools
  • networkmanager.exe: Executable used to scan and spread infection
  • phpguard.exe: Executable used for guardian Xmrig miner to keep running
  • init.ps1: Script file itself to sustain persistence via creating scheduled task
  • clean.bat: Script file to remove other cryptominers on the compromised host
  • encrypt.exe: RAR1 ransomware

In the event RAR1ransom has never been installed before, the payload would first run the encrypt.exe executable file. The file drops the legitimate WinRAR data compression executable in a temporary Windows folder. The ransomware then uses WinRAR to compress user data into password-protected files.

The payload would then start the GuardMiner attack. GuardMiner is a cross-platform mining Trojan for the Monero currency. It has been active since 2020.

The attacks underscore the importance of installing security updates in a timely manner. Anyone who has yet to install VMware’s April 6 patch should do so at once.

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