A newly discovered cyber attack campaign has been observed delivering a previously undocumented malware family called SharkLoader that acts as a loader for deploying Cobalt Strike Beacon on compromised hosts.
Kaspersky, which is tracking the activity under the moniker StrikeShark, said the campaign has targeted a diplomatic organization in Indonesia, government organizations in Taiwan, software development companies across multiple countries, and entities associated with other sectors located in Hong Kong, Lebanon, Syria, Colombia, North Macedonia, Nepal, and Serbia.
“The observed victimology suggests a campaign with broad geographic reach and a diverse target set rather than a narrow focus on a specific industry or region,” the Russian cybersecurity vendor said.
The campaign does not exhibit direct links to any known threat actor or group, although the operators have utilized several open-source post-compromise tools like FScan and Pillager, commonly put to use by Chinese-speaking developers. It’s believed that the campaign is the handiwork of a Chinese-speaking threat actor.
Attack chains involve the two initial access pathways: the exploitation of known Exchange Server flaws, such as CVE-2021-26855 (aka ProxyLogon), to strike the Indonesian diplomatic entity, or through a path traversal vulnerability impacting Openfire (CVE-2023-32315) in the case of Taiwanese software development organizations, or a critical remote code execution bug in GeoServer (CVE-2024-36401) to target a Colombian organization.



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