ESET researchers uncover a new campaign of the Winnti Group targeting universities and using ShadowPad and Winnti malware

In November 2019, we discovered a new campaign run by the Winnti Group against two Hong Kong universities. We found a new variant of the ShadowPad backdoor, the group’s flagship backdoor, deployed using a new launcher and embedding numerous modules. The Winnti malware was also found at these universities a few weeks prior to ShadowPad.

The Winnti Group, active since at least 2012, is responsible for for high-profile supply-chain attacks against the video game and software industries leading to the distribution of trojanized software (such as CCleaner, ASUS LiveUpdate and multiple video games) that is then used to compromise more victims. It is also known for having compromised various targets in the healthcare and education sectors.

ESET researchers recently published a white paper updating our understanding of the arsenal of the Winnti Group, following a blog post documenting a supply-chain attack targeting the videogame industry in Asia. Additionally, we published a blog post on a new backdoor named skip-2.0 that targets Microsoft SQL Server.

This article focuses on the technical details of this new ShadowPad variant.

ShadowPad found at several Hong Kong universities

In November 2019, ESET’s machine-learning engine, Augur, detected a malicious and unique sample present on multiple computers belonging to two Hong Kong universities where the Winnti malware had already been found at the end of October. The suspicious sample detected by Augur is actually a new 32-bit ShadowPad launcher. Samples from both ShadowPad and Winnti found at these universities contain campaign identifiers and C&C URLs with the names of the universities, which indicates a targeted attack.

In addition to the two compromised universities, thanks to the C&C URL format used by the attackers we have reasons to think that at least three additional Hong Kong universities may have been compromised using these same ShadowPad and Winnti variants.

This campaign of the Winnti Group against Hong Kong universities was taking place in the context of Hong Kong facing civic protests that started in June 2019 triggered by an extradition bill. Even though the bill was withdrawn in October 2019, protests continued, demanding full democracy and investigation of the Hong Kong police. These protests gathered hundreds of thousands of people in the streets with large support from students of Hong Kong universities, leading to multiple university campus occupations by the protesters.

We have contacted the compromised universities and provided the necessary information and assistance to remediate the compromise.

Updated launcher

Unlike previous ShadowPad variants documented in our white paper on the arsenal of the Winnti Group, this launcher is not obfuscated using VMProtect. Furthermore, the encrypted payload is neither embedded in the overlay nor located in a COM1:NULL.dat alternate data stream. And the usual RC5 encryption with a key derived from the volume ID of the system drive of the victim machine (as seen in the PortReuse backdoor, skip-2.0 and some ShadowPad variants) is not present either. In this case, the launcher is much simpler.

DLL side-loading

The launcher is a 32-bit DLL named hpqhvsei.dll, which is the name of a legitimate DLL loaded by hpqhvind.exe. This executable is from HP and is usually installed with their printing and scanning software called “HP Digital Imaging”. In this case the legitimate hpqhvind.exe was dropped by the attackers, along with their malicious hpqhvsei.dll, in C:\Windows\Temp.

Although we do not have the component that dropped and executed this launcher, the presence of these files leads us to think that the initial execution of this launcher is done through DLL side-loading.

When the malicious DLL is loaded at hpqhvind.exe startup, its DLLMain function is called that will check its parent process for the following sequence of bytes at offset 0x10BA:

85 C0 ; test eax, eax

0F 84 ; jz

In the case where the parent process is hpqhvind.exe, this sequence of bytes is present at this exact location and the malicious DLL will proceed to patch the parent process in memory. It replaces the original instructions at 0x10BA with an unconditional jump (jmp – 0xE9) to the address of the function from hpqhvsei.dll that decrypts and executes the encrypted payload embedded in the launcher.

The decompiled function responsible for patching the parent process is shown in Figure 1. In case hpqhvsei.dll is loaded by a different process than hpqhvind.exe, the malicious code will not be decrypted and executed.

The difference between the original and patched hpqhvind.exe is shown in Figure 2.

The part of the code that is patched is located at the very beginning of the main function of hpqhvind.exe. As we can see in Figure 2, the patched code is located right after the load of hpqhvsei.dll. This means that the function responsible for decrypting and executing the payload is executed directly after the load of the malicious DLL.

Payload decryption

The encrypted payload is located in the .rdata section of hpqhvsei.dll and the decryption algorithm is an XOR loop where the XOR key is updated at each iteration, as shown in Figure 3.

The decrypted payload is the usual shellcode responsible for ShadowPad initialization (obfuscated using fake conditional jumps to hinder disassembly).

Persistence

After having been decrypted, ShadowPad’s shellcode is executed. It will first achieve persistence on the system by writing the in-memory patched parent process to disk to a path specified in the configuration string pool. In the case we examined, the path was C:\ProgramData\DRM\CLR\CLR.exe. It then creates a service named clr_optimization_v4.0.30229_32, which is responsible for executing CLR.exe. To avoid suspicion, this service name, as well as the executable name, were chosen to look similar to the name of a Microsoft .NET optimization Service.

The full staging process is summarized in Figure 4. The numbering on each arrow corresponds to the chronological sequence of events.

Modules

ShadowPad is a multimodular backdoor where the modules are referenced from the Root module with a circular list from which one can extract the module address, a UNIX timestamp (probably embedded automatically during the module’s compilation process) and a module identifier. From the module itself we can also extract the name the developer gave to the module. This version embeds the 17 modules listed in the following table:

Table 1. Modules used with this ShadowPad version

ID Name Timestamp Description 100 Root Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:08:27 PM UTC Initial shellcode 101 Plugins Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:07:02 PM UTC Provides API for the other modules; loads modules 102 Config Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:07:09 PM UTC Handles encrypted configuration string pool 103 Install Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:07:46 PM UTC Achieves persistence 104 Online Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:07:17 PM UTC Overall communications with the C&C server 106 ImpUser Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:07:24 PM UTC User impersonation via token duplication 200 TCP Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:01:01 PM UTC TCP communications 202 HTTPS Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:01:15 PM UTC HTTPS communications 207 Pipe Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:01:35 PM UTC Handles named pipes 300 Disk Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:02:29 PM UTC File system operations 301 Process Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:02:36 PM UTC Process handling 302 Servcie Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:02:45 PM UTC Service handling 303 Register Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:02:52 PM UTC Registry operations 304 Shell Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:03:00 PM UTC Command line operations 306 Keylogger Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:03:16 PM UTC Keylogging to file system 307 Screen Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:03:25 PM UTC Screenshot capture 317 RecentFiles Thu 24 Oct 2019 12:04:44 PM UTC Lists recently accessed files

These modules, except for RecentFiles, have already been mentioned by Kaspersky and Avast. Notice the “Servcie” typo.

As usual, all the module timestamps are spread over a short time range, which could suggest the use of a build framework to compile these modules. This also suggests that these modules were built a few hours before the launcher itself, whose compilation timestamp is Thu Oct 24 14:10:32 2019. Since this compilation timestamp dates back two weeks before this campaign, it’s likely that it hasn’t been tampered with by the attackers.

One might also note that the number of modules embedded in this variant is much higher (17) than the number of modules embedded in the variants previously documented in our white paper (8 to 10 modules).

By default, every keystroke is recorded using the Keylogger module (306, previously documented by Avast) and saved to disk in the file %APPDATA%\PAGM\OEY\XWWEYG\WAOUE.

The log file is encrypted using the same algorithm as the one used to encrypt static strings from the module. Using this module by default indicates that the attackers are interested in stealing information from the victims’ machines. In contrast, the variants we described in our white paper didn’t even have that module embedded.

Configuration

As with previous ShadowPad variants, the Config module (102) contains an encrypted string pool that can be accessed from any other module. The string pool is never stored entirely decrypted in memory; the field of interest is decrypted when needed and then immediately freed (thus quickly unavailable). The configuration size is 2180 bytes and the encrypted strings are located at offset 0x84. The algorithm used to decrypt the strings is the same as the one used to decrypt the static strings of the module. The decrypted content of the string pool is the following:

0x84: 2019/11/7 16:28:36

0x99: CAMPAIGN_ID_REDACTED

0xa1: %ALLUSERSPROFILE%\DRM\CLR\CLR.exe

0xc5: clr_optimization_v4.0.30229_32

oxe6: clr_optimization_v4.0.30229_32

0x107: clr_optimization_v4.0.30229_32

0x128: SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run

0x158: CLR

0x15e: %ProgramFiles%\Windows Media Player\wmplayer.exe

0x197: %windir%\system32\svchost.exe

0x1b7: TCP://b[redacted].dnslookup.services:443

0x1db: UDP://b[redacted].dnslookup.services:443

0x202: SOCKS4

0x21e: SOCKS5

The campaign ID is located at offset 0x99 and is the name of the targeted university. Having a campaign ID related to the target is quite common in the case of ShadowPad and Winnti.

Interestingly, the timestamp present in this config at offset 0x84 is later than the modules’ timestamps and the loader compilation timestamp. This suggests that this config is added manually to the sample after having been built. Even though it’s probably coincidental, the date within the config corresponds to the date of the first detection of this sample at the corresponding university.

Network Communications

Once installed on the system, ShadowPad starts a hidden and suspended Microsoft Windows Media Player wmplayer.exe process and injects itself into that process. The path to wmplayer.exe is provided by the Config module.

Once ShadowPad is injected into wmplayer.exe, the Online module will contact the C&C server using the URL specified in the configuration. It will then start listening for connections on port 13567 after having updated firewall rules accordingly:

Registry key:

HKLM\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\services\SharedAccess\Parameters\FirewallPolicy\FirewallRules\{816381AB-1400-45E5-B560-B8E11C5988CF}

Value:

v2.10|Action=Allow|Active=TRUE|Dir=In|Protocol=6|Profile=Public|LPort=13567|Name=Network Discovery (TCP)|

The communication is then handled by the TCP module (200), which was previously documented by Kaspersky.

Winnti malware was there as well

In addition to ShadowPad, the Winnti malware was found on some machines at these two universities at the end of October (i.e. two weeks before ShadowPad) in the file C:\Windows\System32\oci.dll and is detected by ESET products as Win64/Winnti.CA.

The Winnti malware usually contains a configuration specifying a campaign ID and a C&C URL. On all machines the campaign ID matches the name of the targeted university and the C&C URLs are:

w [redacted] .livehost.live:443

.livehost.live:443 w[redacted].dnslookup.services:443

where the redacted part corresponds to the name of the targeted university.

C&C URL format

One can observe that the C&C URL used by both Winnti and ShadowPad complies to the scheme [backdoor_type][target_name].domain.tld:443 where [backdoor_type] is a single letter which is either “w” in the case of the Winnti malware or “b” in the case of ShadowPad.

From this format, we were able to find several C&C URLs, including three additional Hong Kong universities’ names. The campaign identifiers found in the samples we’ve analyzed match the subdomain part of the C&C server, showing that these samples were really targeted against these universities.

Conclusion

The Winnti Group is still actively using one of its flagship backdoors, ShadowPad, this time against Hong Kong universities. In this campaign, the VMProtected launcher used with ShadowPad, as well as with the PortReuse backdoor and skip-2.0, was replaced by a simpler one. That these samples, in addition to having been found at these universities, contain campaign IDs matching the universities’ names and use C&C URLs containing the universities’ names are good indications that this campaign is highly targeted.

We will continue to monitor new activities of the Winnti Group and will publish relevant information on our blog. For any inquiries, contact us at threatintel@eset.com. The IoCs are also available in our GitHub repository.

Indicators of Compromise (IoCs)

ESET detection names

Win32/Shadowpad.C trojan

Win64/Winnti.CA trojan

File names

%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\DRM\CLR\hpqhvsei.dll

%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\DRM\CLR\CLR.exe

C:\windows\temp\hpqhvsei.dll

C:\windows\temp\hpqhvind.exe

%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\DRM\CLR\hpqhvsei.dll

%SYSTEM32%\oci.dll

%APPDATA%\PAGM\OEY\XWWEYG\WAOUE

Service display name

clr_optimization_v4.0.30229_32

C&C servers

b[org_name].dnslookup[.]services:443

w[org_name].livehost[.]live:443

w[org_name].dnslookup[.]services:443

ShadowPad launcher

Similar sample to avoid disclosing targeted universities.

693f0bd265e7a68b5b98f411ecf1cd3fed3c84af

MITRE ATT&CK techniques