Malware News Chinese hackers target Linux with new WolfsBane malware

Captain Awesome

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A new Linux backdoor called 'WolfsBane' has been discovered, believed to be a port of Windows malware used by the Chinese 'Gelsemium' hacking group.
 

Gandalf_The_Grey

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Unveiling WolfsBane: Gelsemium’s Linux counterpart to Gelsevirine
ESET researchers have identified multiple samples of Linux backdoor, which we have named WolfsBane, that we attribute with high confidence to the Gelsemium advanced persistent threat (APT) group. This China-aligned threat actor has a known history dating back to 2014 and until now, there have been no public reports of Gelsemium using Linux malware. Additionally, we discovered another Linux backdoor, which we named FireWood. However, we cannot definitively link FireWood to other Gelsemium tools, and its presence in the analyzed archives might be coincidental. Thus, we attribute FireWood to Gelsemium with low confidence, considering it could be a tool shared among multiple China-aligned APT groups.

The most notable samples we found in archives uploaded to VirusTotal are two backdoors resembling known Windows malware used by Gelsemium. WolfsBane is the Linux counterpart of Gelsevirine, while FireWood is connected to Project Wood. We also discovered other tools potentially related to Gelsemium’s activities. The goal of the backdoors and tools discovered is cyberespionage targeting sensitive data such as system information, user credentials, and specific files and directories. These tools are designed to maintain persistent access and execute commands stealthily, enabling prolonged intelligence gathering while evading detection.

The trend of APT groups focusing on Linux malware is becoming more noticeable. We believe this shift is due to improvements in Windows email and endpoint security, such as the widespread use of endpoint detection and response (EDR) tools and Microsoft’s decision to disable Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) macros by default. Consequently, threat actors are exploring new attack avenues, with a growing focus on exploiting vulnerabilities in internet-facing systems, most of which run on Linux.
Initial access

Although we lack concrete evidence regarding the initial access vector, the presence of multiple webshells (as shown in Table 1 and described in the Webshells section) and the tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) used by the Gelsemium APT group in recent years, we conclude with medium confidence that the attackers exploited an unknown web application vulnerability to gain server access.
 
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