Cyentia Cybersecurity Research Library
  • Sources
  • Tags
  • About
  • Sponsors
  • More from Cyentia

SecureList

Below you will find reports with the source of “SecureList”

image from A gut feeling of old acquaintances, new tools, and a common battleground

A gut feeling of old acquaintances, new tools, and a common battleground

This blog post discusses how WannaCry is a pet project of the Lazarus group.

Added: November 15, 2018
image from Introducing WhiteBear

Introducing WhiteBear

“As a part of our Kaspersky APT Intelligence Reporting subscription, customers received an update in mid-February 2017 on some interesting APT activity that we called WhiteBear. Much of the contents of that report are reproduced here. WhiteBear is a parallel project or second stage of the Skipper Turla cluster of activity documented in another private intelligence report “Skipper Turla – the White Atlas framework” from mid-2016. Like previous Turla activity, WhiteBear leverages compromised websites and hijacked satellite connections for command and control (C2) infrastructure. As a matter of fact, WhiteBear infrastructure has overlap with other Turla campaigns, like those deploying Kopiluwak, as documented in “KopiLuwak – A New JavaScript Payload from Turla” in December 2016. WhiteBear infected systems maintained a dropper (which was typically signed) as well as a complex malicious platform which was always preceded by WhiteAtlas module deployment attempts. However, despite the similarities to previous Turla campaigns, we believe that WhiteBear is a distinct project with a separate focus. We note that this observation of delineated target focus, tooling, and project context is an interesting one that also can be repeated across broadly labeled Turla and Sofacy activity.”

(more available)
Added: November 15, 2018
image from Breaking The Weekest Link Of The Strongest Chain

Breaking The Weekest Link Of The Strongest Chain

This post regards the following event - “Around July last year, more than a 100 Israeli servicemen were hit by a cunning threat actor. The attack compromised their devices and exfiltrated data to the attackers’ command and control server. In addition, the compromised devices were pushed Trojan updates, which allowed the attackers to extend their capabilities. The operation remains active at the time of writing this post, with attacks reported as recently as February 2017.”

(more available)
Added: November 15, 2018
© Cyentia Institute 2025
Library updated: June 30, 2025 20:08 UTC (build b1d7be4)