The threat actor known as APT-C-60 has been linked to a cyber attack targeting an unnamed organization in Japan that used a job application-themed lure to deliver the SpyGlace backdoor.
That’s according to findings from JPCERT/CC, which said the intrusion leveraged legitimate services like Google Drive, Bitbucket, and StatCounter. The attack was carried out around August 2024.
“In this attack, an email purporting to be from a prospective employee was sent to the organization’s recruiting contact, infecting the contact with malware,” the agency said.
APT-C-60 is the moniker assigned to a South Korea-aligned cyber espionage group that’s known to target East Asian countries. In August 2024, it was observed exploiting a remote code execution vulnerability in WPS Office for Windows (CVE-2024-7262) to drop a custom backdoor called SpyGlace.
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The attack chain discovered by JPCERT/CC involves the use of a phishing email that contains a link to a file hosted on Google Drive, a virtual hard disk drive (VHDX) file, which, when downloaded and mounted, includes a decoy document and a Windows shortcut (“Self-Introduction.lnk”).
The LNK file is responsible for triggering the subsequent steps in the infection chain, while also displaying the lure document as a distraction.
This entails launching a downloader/dropper payload named “SecureBootUEFI.dat” which, in turn, uses StatCounter, a legitimate web analytics tool, to transmit a string that can uniquely identify a victim device using the HTTP referer field. The string value is derived from the computer name, home directory, and the user name and encoded.
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The downloader then accesses Bitbucket using the encoded unique string in order to retrieve the next stage, a file known as “Service.dat,” which downloads two more artifacts from a different Bitbucket repository – “cbmp.txt” and “icon.txt” – which are saved as “cn.dat” and “sp.dat,” respectively.
“Service.dat” also persists “cn.dat” on the compromised host using a technique called COM hijacking, after which the latter executes the SpyGlace backdoor (“sp.dat”).
The backdoor, for its part, establishes contact with a command-and-control server (“103.187.26[.]176”) and awaits further instructions that allow it to steal files, load additional plugins, and execute commands.
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It’s worth noting that cybersecurity firms Chuangyu 404 Lab and Positive Technologies have independently reported on identical campaigns delivering the SpyGlace malware, alongside highlighting evidence pointing to APT-C-60 and APT-Q-12 (aka Pseudo Hunter) being sub-groups within the DarkHotel cluster.
“Groups from the Asia region continue to use non-standard techniques to deliver their malware to victims’ devices,” Positive Technologies said. “One of these techniques is the use of virtual disks in VHD/VHDX format to bypass the operating system’s protective mechanisms.”