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Vulnerabilities/Malwares

Microsoft warns that Russian hackers have exploited a sneaky Outlook vulnerability.

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Microsoft has patched a zero-day Outlook vulnerability (CVE-2023-23397) that was used by a hacking group affiliated with Russia’s GRU to target organizations in Europe.

Between mid-April and December 2022, the security flaw was used in attacks to target and breach the networks of fewer than 15 organizations in the fields of transportation, energy, the military, and government.

The hacking bunch (followed as APT28, STRONTIUM, Sednit, Sofacy, and Extravagant Bear) sent vindictive Standpoint notes and errands to take NTLM hashes by means of NTLM exchange demands by constraining the objectives’ gadgets to confirm to aggressor controlled SMB shares.

The stolen credentials were used to change Outlook mailbox folder permissions and lateral movement within the victims’ networks, enabling email exfiltration for specific accounts.

This information was made available to customers who subscribe to Microsoft 365 Defender, Microsoft Defender for Business, or Microsoft Defender for Endpoint Plan 2 in a private threat analytics report that BleepingComputer was able to access.

The Computer Emergency Response Team for Ukraine (CERT-UA) reported the critical Outlook elevation of privilege security flaw (CVE-2023-23397), which can be exploited in low-complexity attacks without the involvement of the user.

By sending messages with extended MAPI properties that contain UNC paths to an SMB share (TCP 445) under their control, threat actors can take advantage of this vulnerability.

“By sending a specially crafted email that triggers automatically when it is retrieved and processed by the Outlook client, the attacker could take advantage of this vulnerability. “In a security advisory that was released today, Microsoft states that this could result in exploitation BEFORE the email is viewed in the Preview Pane.”

Redmond elaborates in a separate blog post, “The connection to the remote SMB server sends the user’s NTLM negotiation message, which the attacker can then relay for authentication against other systems that support NTLM authentication.”

All supported versions of Microsoft Outlook for Windows are affected by CVE-2023-23397; however, versions of Outlook for Android, iOS, or macOS are unaffected.

Additionally, because they do not support NTLM authentication, online services like Outlook on the web and Microsoft 365 are immune to attacks that take advantage of this NTLM relay vulnerability.

Microsoft suggests patching CVE-2023-23397 right away to mitigate this vulnerability and prevent future attacks.

If patching is not immediately possible, the company also suggests adding users to the Protected Users group in Active Directory and blocking outbound SMB (TCP port 445) to lessen the impact of CVE-2023-23397.

Microsoft recommends that customers immediately patch their systems against CVE-2023-23397, add users to the Protected Users group in Active Directory, and block outbound SMB (TCP port 445) as a temporary mitigation to lessen the impact of the attacks. Mitigation and targeting detection script are available.

Additionally, Redmond released a PowerShell script to assist administrators in determining whether any Exchange environment users have been exploited by means of this Outlook vulnerability.

According to Microsoft, it “checks Exchange messaging items (mail, calendar, and tasks) to see if a property is populated with a UNC path.”

“Admins can use this script to clean the property or even permanently delete malicious items if necessary.”

When run in Cleanup mode, this script also lets you change or delete potentially harmful messages that are on the audited Exchange Server.

Vulnerabilities/Malwares

In recent attacks, MetaStealer malware targets Apple macOS.

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A new information stealer malware called MetaStealer has set its sights on Apple macOS, making the latest in a growing list of stealer families focused on the operating system after Stealer, Pureland, Atomic Stealer, and Realst.

“Threat actors are proactively targeting macOS businesses by posing as fake clients in order to socially engineer victims into launching malicious payloads,” SentinelOne security researcher Phil Stokes said in a Monday analysis.

In these attacks, MetaStealer is distributed in the form of rogue application bundles in the disk image format (DMG), with targets approached through threat actors posing as prospective design clients in order to share a password-protected ZIP archive containing the DMG file.
Other instances have involved the malware masquerading as Adobe files or installers for Adobe Photoshop. Evidence gathered so far shows that MetaStealer artifacts began appearing in the wild in March 2023. The most recent sample was uploaded to VirusTotal on August 27, 2023.

“This specific targeting of business users is somewhat unusual for macOS malware, which is more commonly found being distributed via torrent sites or suspicious third-party software distributors as cracked versions of business, productivity or other popular software,” Stokes said.

The main component of the payload is an obfuscated Go-based executable that comes with features to harvest data from iCloud Keychain, saved passwords, and files from the compromised host.

Select versions of the malware have been observed containing functions that likely target Telegram and Meta services.

SentinelOne said it observed some MetaStealer variants impersonating TradingView, the same tactic that has been adopted by Atomic Stealer in recent weeks.
This raises two possibilities: Either the same malware authors could be behind both the stealer families and have been adopted by different threat actors due to differences in the delivery mechanism, or they are the handiwork of disparate sets of actors.

“The appearance of yet another macOS infostealer this year shows the trend towards targeting Mac users for their data continues to rise in popularity among threat actors,” Stokes said.

“What makes MetaStealer notable among this crop of recent malware is the clear targeting of business users and the objective of exfiltrating valuable keychain and other information from these targets. Such high-value data can be used to pursue further cybercriminal activity or gain a foothold in a larger business network.”

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Vulnerabilities/Malwares

The Apple zero-click iMessage Exploit that spread spyware to iPhones

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According to Citizen Lab, a zero-click exploit chain known as BLASTPASS was used to actively exploit two zero-days that Apple fixed today in emergency security updates to install commercial spyware from NSO Group on fully patched iPhones.

The two bugs, followed as CVE-2023-41064 and CVE-2023-41061, permitted the assailants to taint a completely fixed iPhone running iOS 16.6 and having a place with a Washington DC-based common society association by means of PassKit connections containing malignant pictures.

“The exploit chain is referred to as BLASTPASS by us. Citizen Lab stated, “The exploit chain was capable of compromising iPhones running the most recent version of iOS (16.6) without the victim’s interaction.”

“The adventure included PassKit connections containing malevolent pictures sent from an assailant iMessage record to the person in question.”

Resident Lab likewise asked Apple clients to refresh their gadgets right away and empowered those in danger of designated assaults because of their character or calling to actuate Lockdown Mode.

The two zero-days were discovered in the Image I/O and Wallet frameworks by security researchers from Citizen Lab and Apple. CVE-2023-41064 is a buffer overflow that occurs when maliciously crafted images are processed, and CVE-2023-41061 is a validation issue that can be exploited by malicious attachments.

Both enable unauthorized code execution on unpatched iPhone and iPad devices by threat actors.

With improved logic and memory handling, Apple fixed flaws in macOS Ventura 13.5.2, iOS 16.6.1, iPadOS 16.6.1, and watchOS 9.6.2.

The following devices are on the affected list:

Apple has fixed a total of 13 zero-days exploited to target devices running iOS, macOS, iPadOS, and watchOS since the beginning of the year, including: iPhone 8 and later iPad Pro (all models), iPad Air 3rd generation and later, iPad 5th generation and later, and iPad mini 5th generation and later

two zero-days in July (CVE-2023-37450 and CVE-2023-38606),

three zero-days in June (CVE-2023-32434, CVE-2023-32435, and CVE-2023-32439),

four zero-days in May (CVE-2023-32409, CVE-2023-28204, and CVE-2023-32373),

and another WebKit zero-day in February (CVE-2023-23529).

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Vulnerabilities/Malwares

Google fixes one more Chrome zero-day vulnerability exploited by Hackers

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To address the fourth Chrome zero-day vulnerability exploited in attacks since the beginning of the year, Google issued emergency security updates.

In a security advisory that was released on Monday, Google disclosed that the company was aware of the existence of an exploit for CVE-2023-4863.

Users in the Stable and Extended stable channels are currently receiving the new version, and it is anticipated that the entire user base will receive it in the coming days or weeks.
Chrome users are urged to upgrade their browsers as soon as possible to version 116.0.5845.187 (Mac and Linux) or 116.0.5845.187/.188 (Windows), which addresses the CVE-2023-4863 flaw in Windows, Mac, and Linux systems.

This update was quickly accessible when BleepingComputer checked for new updates through the Chrome menu > Help > About Google Chrome.

After a restart, the web browser will also check for new updates and install them without user intervention.
Assault subtleties not yet accessible
The basic zero-day weakness (CVE-2023-4863) is brought about by a WebP pile cushion flood shortcoming whose effect goes from collides with inconsistent code execution.

The bug was accounted for by Apple Security Designing and Engineering (Burn) and The Resident Lab at The College of Toronto’s Munk School last Wednesday, September 6.

Resident Lab security scientists have frequently found and revealed zero-day bugs manhandled in profoundly designated spyware assaults by government-supported danger entertainers focusing on high-risk people like resistance lawmakers, writers, and protesters around the world.

On Thursday, Apple fixed two zero-days labeled by Resident Lab as being taken advantage of in assaults as a feature of an endeavor fasten known as BLASTPASS to taint completely fixed iPhones with NSO Gathering’s Pegasus hired soldier spyware.
Although Google stated that the CVE-2023-4863 zero-day vulnerability has been exploited in the wild, the company has yet to provide any additional information regarding these attacks.

“Admittance to mess with subtleties and connections might be kept limited until a larger part of clients are refreshed with a fix,” Google said. ” If the bug is in a third-party library that other projects similarly rely on but have not yet fixed, we will also maintain restrictions.

This means Chrome users can update their browsers to stop attacks before more technical details are released. This could make it easier for more threat actors to make their own exploits and use them in the real world.

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