Search This Blog

Powered by Blogger.

Blog Archive

Labels

New China-Based Campaign Targets Windows MS-SQL and Phpmyadmin Servers Worldwide

Chinese Hackers Infect Over 50,000 Windows MS-SQL and PHPMyAdmin Servers Worldwide with 20 Different Payloads.

A china based attack campaign has primarily targeted on servers having a place with the healthcare, telecommunications, media, and IT segments. The campaign named as Nansh0u is known to target Windows MS-SQL and PHPMyAdmin servers around the world.

Despite the fact that the campaign was detected towards the start of April, however the attacks were observed to go back to February 26. All through the campaign the threat actors used 20 unique payloads, and continued making at least one payload a week and utilized them right away.


More than 50,000 servers were reported to be breached in this campaign, when the targeted servers compromised they were infected with a rather pernicious payload, which thusly drops a crypto-miner that mines TurtleCoin and sophisticated kernel-mode rootkit.

The hackers behind this campaign utilize propelled systems pursued by APTS groups, like the 'fake certificates and privilege escalation exploits' so to state the Nansh0u campaign isn't only a crypto-miner attack.

The attack begins with a serious of login endeavors targeting MS-SQL servers in order to gain administrator privileges. Attacker’s infrastructure consolidates the following modules to dispatch an attack on MS-SQL servers.
  • Port scanner
  • MS-SQL brute-force tool
  • Remote Code Executor


And by analysing the 20 payload samples from the attacker’s servers and Guardicore Global Sensor Network, each payload is a wrapper and has several functionalities.

The reasons being why the researchers are quite confident in accessing that Chinese attackers have operated this campaign are:
  •  The attacker choosing to write their tools with EPL, a Chinese-based programming language.
  • Some of the file servers deployed for this campaign are HFSs in Chinese.
  • Many log files and binaries on the servers included Chinese strings, such as (“duplicates removed”) in logs containing breached machines, or (“start”) in the name of the script initiating port scans.

Share it:

China

cryptomining

Windows