Cybersecurity Advisory

Karakurt Data Extortion Group

Last Revised
Alert Code
AA22-152A

Actions to take today to mitigate cyber threats from Karakurt ransomware:

  1. Prioritize patching known exploited vulnerabilities.
  2. Train users to recognize and report phishing attempts.
  3. Enforce multifactor authentication.

SUMMARY

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the Department of the Treasury (Treasury), and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) are releasing this joint Cybersecurity Advisory (CSA) to provide information on the Karakurt data extortion group, also known as the Karakurt Team and Karakurt Lair. Karakurt actors have employed a variety of tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs), creating significant challenges for defense and mitigation. Karakurt victims have not reported encryption of compromised machines or files; rather, Karakurt actors have claimed to steal data and threatened to auction it off or release it to the public unless they receive payment of the demanded ransom. Known ransom demands have ranged from $25,000 to $13,000,000 in Bitcoin, with payment deadlines typically set to expire within a week of first contact with the victim.

Karakurt actors have typically provided screenshots or copies of stolen file directories as proof of stolen data. Karakurt actors have contacted victims’ employees, business partners, and clients [T1591.002] with harassing emails and phone calls to pressure the victims to cooperate. The emails have contained examples of stolen data, such as social security numbers, payment accounts, private company emails, and sensitive business data belonging to employees or clients. Upon payment of ransoms, Karakurt actors have provided some form of proof of deletion of files and, occasionally, a brief statement explaining how the initial intrusion occurred.

Prior to January 5, 2022, Karakurt operated a leaks and auction website found at https://karakurt[.]group. The domain and IP address originally hosting the website went offline in the spring 2022. The website is no longer accessible on the open internet, but has been reported to be located elsewhere in the deep web and on the dark web. As of May 2022, the website contained several terabytes of data purported to belong to victims across North America and Europe, along with several “press releases” naming victims who had not paid or cooperated, and instructions for participating in victim data “auctions.”

Download the PDF version of this report:

Click here for STIX. 

TECHNICAL DETAILS

Initial Intrusion

Karakurt does not appear to target any specific sectors, industries, or types of victims. During reconnaissance [TA0043], Karakurt actors appear to obtain access to victim devices primarily:

  • By purchasing stolen login credentials [T1589.001],[T1589.002];
  • Via cooperating partners in the cybercrime community, who provide Karakurt access to already compromised victims; or
  • Through buying access to already compromised victims via third-party intrusion broker networks [T1589.001].
    • Note: Intrusion brokers, or intrusion broker networks, are malicious individual cyber actors or groups of actors who use a variety of tools and skills to obtain initial access to—and often create marketable persistence within—protected computer systems. Intrusion brokers then sell access to these compromised computer systems to other cybercriminal actors, such as those engaged in ransomware, business email compromise, corporate and government espionage, etc.

Some Karakurt victims have reported that initial intrusion may have occurred via compromised Cisco AnyConnect VPN user accounts. Many of these victims reported multi-factor authentication was not enforced for their Cisco AnyConnect VPN platforms.

Common intrusion vulnerabilities exploited for initial access [TA001] in Karakurt events include the following:

  • Outdated SonicWall SSL VPN appliances [T1133] are vulnerable to multiple recent CVEs,
  • Log4j “Log4Shell” Apache Logging Services vulnerability (CVE-2021-44228) [T1190],
  • Phishing and spearphishing [T1566],
  • Malicious macros within email attachments [T1566.001],
  • Stolen virtual private network (VPN) or Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) credentials [T1078],
  • Outdated Fortinet FortiGate SSL VPN appliances [T1133]/firewall appliances [T1190] are vulnerable to multiple recent CVEs,
  • Outdated and/or unserviceable Microsoft Windows Server instances,
  • Outdated and/or unpatched Cisco AnyConnect software and hardware appliances.

Network Reconnaissance, Enumeration, Persistence, and Exfiltration

Upon developing or obtaining access to a compromised system, Karakurt actors deploy Cobalt Strike beacons to enumerate a network [T1083], install Mimikatz to pull plain-text credentials [T1078], use AnyDesk to obtain persistent remote control [T1219], and utilize additional situation-dependent tools to elevate privileges and move laterally within a network.

Karakurt actors then compress (typically with 7zip) and exfiltrate large sums of data—and, in many cases, entire network-connected shared drives in volumes exceeding 1 terabyte (TB)—using open source applications and File Transfer Protocol (FTP) services [T1048] such as Filezilla and cloud storage services including rclone and Mega.nz [T1567.002].

Extortion

Following the exfiltration of data, Karakurt actors present the victim with ransom notes by way of “readme.txt” files, via emails sent to victim employees over the compromised email networks, and emails sent to victim employees from external email accounts. The ransom notes reveal the victim has been hacked by the “Karakurt Team” and threaten public release or auction of the stolen data. The instructions include a link to a TOR URL with an access code. Visiting the URL and inputting the access code open a chat application over which victims can negotiate with Karakurt actors to have their data deleted.

Karakurt victims have reported extensive harassment campaigns by Karakurt actors in which employees, business partners, and clients receive numerous emails and phone calls warning the recipients to encourage the victims to negotiate with the actors to prevent the dissemination of victim data. These communications often included samples of stolen data—primarily personally identifiable information (PII), such as employment records, health records, and financial business records.

Victims who negotiate with Karakurt actors receive “proof of life,” such as screenshots showing file trees of allegedly stolen data or, in some cases, actual copies of stolen files. Upon reaching an agreement on the price of the stolen data with the victims, Karakurt actors provided a Bitcoin address—usually a new, previously unused address—to which ransom payments could be made.

Upon receiving the ransom, Karakurt actors provide some form of alleged proof of deletion of the stolen files, such as a screen recording of the files being deleted, a deletion log, or credentials for a victim to log into a storage server and delete the files themselves.

Although Karakurt’s primary extortion leverage is a promise to delete stolen data and keep the incident confidential, some victims reported Karakurt actors did not maintain the confidentiality of victim information after a ransom was paid. Note: The U.S. government strongly discourage the payment of any ransom to Karakurt threat actors, or any cyber criminals promising to delete stolen files in exchange for payments.

In some cases, Karakurt actors have conducted extortion against victims previously attacked by other ransomware variants. In such cases, Karakurt actors likely purchased or otherwise obtained previously stolen data. Karakurt actors have also targeted victims at the same time these victims were under attack by other ransomware actors. In such cases, victims received ransom notes from multiple ransomware variants simultaneously, suggesting Karakurt actors purchased access to a compromised system that was also sold to another ransomware actor.

Karakurt actors have also exaggerated the degree to which a victim had been compromised and the value of data stolen. For example, in some instances, Karakurt actors claimed to steal volumes of data far beyond the storage capacity of compromised systems or claimed to steal data that did not belong to the victim.

Indicators of Compromise

Email

mark.hubert1986@gmail.com; karakurtlair@gmail.com; personal.information.reveal@gmail.com; ripidelfun1986@protonmail.com; gapreappballye1979@protonmail.com; confedicial.datas.download@protonmail.com; armada.mitchell94@protonmail.com

Protonmail email accounts in the following formats: victimname_treasure@protonmail.com, victimname_jewels@protonmail.com, victimname_files@protonmail.com

Tools

 

Onion site

https://omx5iqrdbsoitf3q4xexrqw5r5tfw7vp3vl3li3lfo7saabxazshnead.onion

Tools

Rclone.exe;; AnyDesk.exe; Mimikatz

Ngrok

SSH tunnel application SHA256 - 3e625e20d7f00b6d5121bb0a71cfa61f92d658bcd61af2cf5397e0ae28f4ba56

DLLs

masquerading as legitimate Microsoft binaries to System32

Mscxxx.dll: SHA1 - c33129a680e907e5f49bcbab4227c0b02e191770 Msuxxx.dll: SHA1 - 030394b7a2642fe962a7705dcc832d2c08d006f5

Msxsl.exe

Legitimate Microsoft Command Line XSL Transformation Utility SHA1 - 8B516E7BE14172E49085C4234C9A53C6EB490A45

dllhosts.exe

Rclone SHA1 - fdb92fac37232790839163a3cae5f37372db7235

rclone.conf

Rclone configuration file

filter.txt

Rclone file extension filter file

c.bat

UNKNOWN

3.bat

UNKNOWN

Potential malicious document

SHA1 - 0E50B289C99A35F4AD884B6A3FFB76DE4B6EBC14

Tools

 

Potential malicious document

SHA1 - 7E654C02E75EC78E8307DBDF95E15529AAAB5DFF

Malicious text

file

SHA1 - 4D7F4BB3A23EAB33A3A28473292D44C5965DDC95

Malicious text

file

SHA1 - 10326C2B20D278080AA0CA563FC3E454A85BB32F 

Cobalt Strike Hashes

SHA256 - 563BC09180FD4BB601380659E922C3F7198306E0CAEBE99CD1D88CD2C3FD5C1B

SHA256 - 5E2B2EBF3D57EE58CADA875B8FBCE536EDCBBF59ACC439081635C88789C67ACA

SHA256 - 712733C12EA3B6B7A1BCC032CC02FD7EC9160F5129D9034BF9248B27EC057BD2

SHA256 - 563BC09180FD4BB601380659E922C3F7198306E0CAEBE99CD1D88CD2C3FD5C1B

SHA256 - 5E2B2EBF3D57EE58CADA875B8FBCE536EDCBBF59ACC439081635C88789C67ACA

SHA256 - 712733C12EA3B6B7A1BCC032CC02FD7EC9160F5129D9034BF9248B27EC057BD2

SHA1 - 86366bb7646dcd1a02700ed4be4272cbff5887af

Ransom note text sample:

 

1.

Here's the deal

We breached your internal network and took control over all of your systems.

2.

We analyzed and located each piece of more-or-less important files while spending weeks inside.

3.

We exfiltrated anything we wanted (xxx GB (including Private & Confidential information, Intellectual Property, Customer Information and most important Your TRADE SECRETS)

Ransom note text sample:

 

FAQ:

Who the hell are you?

The Karakurt Team. Pretty skilled hackers I guess.

Payment Wallets:

bc1qfp3ym02dx7m94td4rdaxy08cwyhdamefwqk9hp

bc1qw77uss7stz7y7kkzz7qz9gt7xk7tfet8k30xax

bc1q8ff3lrudpdkuvm3ehq6e27nczm393q9f4ydlgt

bc1qenjstexazw07gugftfz76gh9r4zkhhvc9eeh47

bc1qxfqe0l04cy4qgjx55j4qkkm937yh8sutwhlp4c

bc1qw77uss7stz7y7kkzz7qz9gt7xk7tfet8k30xax

bc1qrtq27tn34pvxaxje4j33g3qzgte0hkwshtq7sq

bc1q25km8usscsra6w2falmtt7wxyga8tnwd5s870g

bc1qta70dm5clfcxp4deqycxjf8l3h4uymzg7g6hn5

bc1qrkcjtdjccpy8t4hcna0v9asyktwyg2fgdmc9al

bc1q3xgr4z53cdaeyn03luhen24xu556y5spvyspt8

bc1q6s0k4l8q9wf3p9wrywf92czrxaf9uvscyqp0fu

bc1qj7aksdmgrnvf4hwjcm5336wg8pcmpegvhzfmhw

bc1qq427hlxpl7agmvffteflrnasxpu7wznjsu02nc

bc1qz9a0nyrqstqdlr64qu8jat03jx5smxfultwpm0

bc1qq9ryhutrprmehapvksmefcr97z2sk3kdycpqtr

bc1qa5v6amyey48dely2zq0g5c6se2keffvnjqm8ms

bc1qx9eu6k3yhtve9n6jtnagza8l2509y7uudwe9f6

bc1qtm6gs5p4nr0y5vugc93wr0vqf2a0q3sjyxw03w

bc1qta70dm5clfcxp4deqycxjf8l3h4uymzg7g6hn5

bc1qx9eu6k3yhtve9n6jtnagza8l2509y7uudwe9f6

bc1qqp73up3xff6jz267n7vm22kd4p952y0mhcd9c8

bc1q3xgr4z53cdaeyn03luhen24xu556y5spvyspt8

MITRE ATT&CK TACTICS AND TECHNIQUES

See table 1 for all referenced threat actor tactics and techniques in this advisory, as well as corresponding detection and/or mitigation recommendations. For additional mitigations, see the Mitigations section.

Table 1: Karakurt Actors ATT&CK Techniques for Enterprise

Reconnaissance

   

Technique Title

ID

Use

Gather Victim Identify Information: Credentials

T1589.001

Karakurt actors have purchased stolen login credentials.

Gather Victim Identity Information: Email Addresses

T1589.002

Karakurt actors have purchased stolen login credentials including email addresses.

Gather Victim Org Information: Business Relationships

T1591.002

Karakurt actors have leveraged victims' relationships with business partners.

Initial Access

   

Technique Title

ID

Use

Exploit Public-Facing Applications

T1190

Karakurt actors have exploited the Log4j "Log4Shell" Apache Logging Service vulnerability and vulnerabilities in outdated firewall appliances for gaining access to victims' networks.

External Remote Services

T1133

Karakurt actors have exploited vulnerabilities in outdated VPN appliances for gaining access to victims' networks.

Phishing

T1566

Karakurt actors have used phishing and spearphishing to obtain access to victims' networks.

Phishing – Spearphishing Attachment

T1566.001

Karakurt actors have sent malicious macros as email attachments to gain initial access.

Valid Accounts

T1078

Karakurt actors have purchased stolen credentials, including VPN and RDP credentials, to gain access to victims' networks.

Privilege Escalation

   

Technique Title

ID

Use

Valid Accounts

T1078

Karakurt actors have installed Mimikatz to pull plain-text credentials.

Discovery

   

Technique Title

ID

Use

File and Directory Discovery

T1083

Karakurt actors have deployed Cobalt Strike beacons to enumerate a network.

Command and Control

   

Technique Title

ID

Use

Remote Access Software

T1219

Karakurt actors have used AnyDesk to obtain persistent remote control of victims' systems.

Exfiltration

   

Technique Title

ID

Use

Exfiltration Over Alternative Protocol

T1048

Karakurt actors have used FTP services, including Filezilla, to exfiltrate data from victims' networks.

Exfiltration Over Web Service: Exfiltration to Cloud Storage

T1567.002

Karakurt actors have used rclone and Mega.nz to exfiltrate data stolen from victims' networks.

MITIGATIONS

  • Implement a recovery plan to maintain and retain multiple copies of sensitive or proprietary data and servers in a physically separate, segmented, and secure location (i.e., hard drive, storage device, the cloud).
  • Implement network segmentation and maintain offline backups of data to ensure limited interruption to the organization.
  • Regularly back up data and password protect backup copies offline. Ensure copies of critical data are not accessible for modification or deletion from the system where the data resides.
  • Install and regularly update antivirus software on all hosts and enable real time detection.
  • Install updates/patch operating systems, software, and firmware as soon as updates/patches are released.
  • Review domain controllers, servers, workstations, and active directories for new or unrecognized accounts.
  • Audit user accounts with administrative privileges and configure access controls with least privilege in mind. Do not give all users administrative privileges.
  • Disable unused ports.
  • Consider adding an email banner to emails received from outside your organization.
  • Disable hyperlinks in received emails.
  • Enforce multi-factor authentication.
  • Use the National Institute for Standards and Technology’s (NIST’s) standards for developing and managing password policies.
    • Use longer passwords consisting of at least 8 characters and no more than 64 characters in length;
      • Store passwords in hashed format using industry-recognized password managers;
      • Add password user “salts” to shared login credentials;
      • Avoid reusing passwords;
      • Implement multiple failed login attempt account lockouts;
      • Disable password “hints”;
      • Refrain from requiring password changes more frequently than once per year.

        Note: NIST guidance suggests favoring longer passwords instead of requiring regular and frequent password resets. Frequent password resets are more likely to result in users developing password “patterns” cyber criminals can easily decipher.
      • Require administrator credentials to install software.
  • Only use secure networks and avoid using public Wi-Fi networks. Consider installing and using a VPN.
  • Focus on cyber security awareness and training. Regularly provide users with training on information security principles and techniques as well as overall emerging cybersecurity risks and vulnerabilities (i.e., ransomware and phishing scams).

RESOURCES

VERSION HISTORY

June 01, 2022: Initial version.

June 02, 2022: Added STIX file.

December 12, 2023: Added language about Cisco VPNs being a possible initial access vector.

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