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Hackers Linked to Palestine Use the New NimbleMamba Malware

 


A Palestinian-aligned hacking organization has used a novel malware implant to target Middle Eastern governments, international policy think tanks, and a state-affiliated airline as part of "highly focused intelligence collecting activities." The discoveries by Proofpoint researchers detail the recent actions of MoleRATs in relation to a renowned and well-documented Arabic-speaking cyber organization, and the ongoing installation of a new intelligence-gathering trojan known as "NimbleMamba." 

To verify all infected individuals are within TA402's target zone, NimbleMamba employs guardrails. The Dropbox API is used by NimbleMamba both to control and also data leakage. The malware also has a number of features that make automated and human analysis more difficult. It is constantly in creation, well-maintained, and is geared to be employed in highly focused intelligence collection programs. 

MoleRATs, also known as TA402, operators are "changing the methodologies while developing these very neatly done, specialized and well-targeted campaigns," according to Sherrod DeGrippo, Proofpoint's vice president of threat analysis and detection. 

Reportedly, TA402 sends spear-phishing emails with links to malware distribution sites. Victims should be inside the scope of the attack, otherwise, the user will be rerouted to credible sources. A version of NimbleMamba is dumped on the target's machine inside a RAR file if its IP address fulfills the selected targeted region. Three separate attack chains were discovered, each with minor differences in the phishing lure motif, redirection URL, and malware-hosting sites. 

In the most recent attacks, the perpetrators pretended to be the Quora website in November 2021. The customer would be rerouted to a domain that served the NimbleMamba virus if the target system's IP address fell under one of around two dozen geofenced country codes. The user would be sent to a respectable news source if this was not the case. 

Another effort, launched in December 2021, employed target-specific baits including medical data or sensitive geopolitical information, and delivered malware via Dropbox URLs.

In yet another campaign, which ran from December to January, the hackers employed different baits for each victim but delivered malware via a hacker-controlled WordPress URL. The hacker-controlled URL only enabled attacks on targets in specific nations. 

NimbleMamba contains "various capabilities intended to confuse both automatic and manual analysis," reiterating that the malware "currently being produced, is well-maintained, and tailored for use in highly focused intelligence collection programs," the researchers told. 

Latest Campaign by Molerats Hackers Target Middle Eastern Governments

 

After two months of break, a Middle Eastern advanced persistent-threat (APT) organization has resurfaced and is targeting government institutions in the Middle East -- global government bodies affiliated with geopolitics as a part of its recent malicious activities. 

Proofpoint, a company headquartered in Sunnyvale, ascribed this action to a politically motivated threat actor tracked as TA402, colloquially known as Molerats or GazaHackerTeam. 

TA402 is supposed to work for objectives that are consistent with military or Palestinian state goals. The threat actor has been operating for a decade with a history of compromising associations mainly in Israel and Palestine. The attacks covered verticals such as technology, telecoms, finance, the academy, the army, the media, and governments. 

The two months' break in the operation is not apparent, but the Proofpoint researchers have suggested that it could have played a part either in the holy month of Ramadan or in the recent incidents in the region as well as in the violence which followed in May. 

The current wave of attacks started with spear-phishing Arabic-listed emails carrying PDF files embedded in a geofenced malicious URL that can only selectively route victims to the password-protected file if the source IP address of these files is in the targeted Middle East nations. 

The beneficiaries outside of the target Group are relocated to benign websites like Al Akhbar (www.al-akhbar.com) and Al Jazeera (www.aljazeera.net), generally Arabic language news websites. 

The last step on the infection chain entailed an extraction of the archive to drop a customized implant named LastConn, which is a new version or upgrade of a backdoor called SharpStages that was revealed in December 2020 by Cybereason researcher, as Molerats espionage campaign targeting the Middle East. 

The LastConn is executed with a Decoy document, the malware relies largely on Dropbox API for downloading and executing cloud-hosted files in addition to arbitrary instructions and screenshots that are then returned to Dropbox. 

The continually expanding toolkit of TA402 emphasizes that the Group continues to develop and adapt tailored malware implants to sneak up past defenses and detect thwarts. 

"TA402 is a highly effective and capable threat actor that remains a serious threat, especially to entities operating in and working with government or other geopolitical entities in the Middle East," the researchers concluded. "It is likely TA402 continues its targeting largely focused on the Middle East region."