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Category: Lateral Movements

Category: Lateral Movements

LeoUncia and OrcaRat

The PWC-named malware OrcaRat is presented as a new piece of malware but looking at the URI used for C&C communication, it could be an updated version of a well-known and kind of old piece of malware: LeoUncia. Status Let’s face it: px~NFEHrGXF9QA=2/5mGabiSKSCIqbiJwAKjf+Z81pOurL1xeCaw=1/xXiPyUqR/hBL9DW2nbQQEDwNXIYD3l5EkpfyrdVpVC8kp/4WeCaArZAnd+QEYVSY9QMw=2 URI taken from an OrcaRat sample.It looks a lot like: qFUtb6Sw/TytLfLsy/HnqI8QCX/ZRfFP9KL/_2yA9GIK/iufEXR2r/e6ZFBfoN/fcgL04f7/ZBzUuV5T/Balrp2Wm URI taken from

APT Kill chain – Part 5 : Access Strenghtening and lateral movements

Being successful at compromising one or several workstations and/or servers from a targeted company is an important step for APT attackers. Just after the initial compromise step, there are 2 possible situations: The attacker managed to gain high privileges on the system. The attacker only managed to compromise machines with regular user privileges. More often

The OXID Resolver [Part 2] – Accessing a Remote Object inside DCOM

In the previous OXID Resolver Part 1 article [1], a way to remotely enumerate the network interfaces on a recent Windows OS machine has been described. This method does not require the knowledge of user credentials and relies on the ServerAlive2() RPC method. The latter is held by the IOXIDResolver interface. This article is dedicated

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