June 26, 2024
Hackers Exploit Legitimate Websites to Deliver BadSpace Windows Backdoor
Legitimate-but-compromised websites are being used as a conduit to deliver a Windows backdoor dubbed BadSpace under the guise of fake browser updates. "The threat actor employs a multi-stage attack chain involving an infected website, a command-and-control (C2) server, in some cases a fake browser update, and a JScript downloader to deploy a backdoor into the victim's system," German

Jun 17, 2024NewsroomWeb Security / Malware

Legitimate-but-compromised websites are being used as a conduit to deliver a Windows backdoor dubbed BadSpace under the guise of fake browser updates.

“The threat actor employs a multi-stage attack chain involving an infected website, a command-and-control (C2) server, in some cases a fake browser update, and a JScript downloader to deploy a backdoor into the victim’s system,” German cybersecurity company G DATA said in a report.

Details of the malware were first shared by researchers kevross33 and Gi7w0rm last month.

It all starts with a compromised website, including those built on WordPress, to inject code that incorporates logic to determine if a user has visited the site before.

Should it be the user’s first visit, the code collects information about the device, IP address, user-agent, and location, and transmits it to a hard-coded domain via an HTTP GET request.

The response from the server subsequently overlays the contents of the web page with a phony Google Chrome update pop-up window to either directly drop the malware or a JavaScript downloader that, in turn, downloads and executes BadSpace.

An analysis of the C2 servers used in the campaign has uncovered connections to a known malware called SocGholish (aka FakeUpdates), a JavaScript-based downloader malware that’s propagated via the same mechanism.

BadSpace, in addition to employing anti-sandbox checks and setting up persistence using scheduled tasks, is capable of harvesting system information and processing commands that allow it to take screenshots, execute instructions using cmd.exe, read and write files, and delete the scheduled task.

The disclosure comes as both eSentire and Sucuri have warned different campaigns leveraging bogus browser update lures in compromised sites to distribute information stealers and remote access trojans.

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