Wednesday, December 4, 2024
HomeCyber Security NewsHackers Use Bumblebee Malware to Gain Access to Corporate Networks

Hackers Use Bumblebee Malware to Gain Access to Corporate Networks

Published on

SIEM as a Service

A sophisticated malware loader known as Bumblebee has resurfaced, posing a significant threat to corporate networks worldwide.

Cybersecurity researchers at Netskope Threat Labs have uncovered a new infection chain linked to Bumblebee. This marks its first appearance since Operation Endgame, a major Europol-led crackdown on malware botnets in May 2024.

Bumblebee, first identified by Google’s Threat Analysis Group in March 2022, is a highly advanced downloader malware used by cybercriminals to infiltrate corporate networks and deploy additional payloads such as Cobalt Strike beacons and ransomware.

- Advertisement - SIEM as a Service

The malware’s resurgence signals a potential shift in the cyber threat landscape. After a four-month absence, netspoke researchers recently detected a new Bumblebee campaign targeting U.S. organizations.

Join ANY.RUN's FREE webinar on How to Improve Threat Investigations on Oct 23 - Register Here 

A Powershell command to download an MSI file from a remote server (source: Netspoke)

The infection typically begins with a phishing email containing a ZIP file.

Once extracted, the file reveals an LNK file that, when executed, initiates a chain of events to download and execute the Bumblebee payload in memory, avoiding detection by not writing the DLL to disk.

In a departure from previous campaigns, the new Bumblebee variant utilizes MSI files disguised as legitimate software installers, such as Nvidia and Midjourney.

This approach allows the malware to load and execute the final payload entirely in memory, enhancing its stealth capabilities. 

The malware employs sophisticated techniques to evade detection, including using the SelfReg table to force the execution of the DllRegisterServer export function. This method avoids creating new processes that might trigger security alerts.

The entry in the SelfReg table works as a key to indicate what file to execute in the File table (Source: Netspoke)

Bumblebee’s return coincides with the reappearance of several notorious threat actors at the start of 2024, following a temporary “winter lull” in cybercriminal activities.

The malware has been linked to multiple threat groups and high-profile ransomware operations, including associations with Quantum, Conti, and MountLocker.

Security experts warn that Bumblebee should not be underestimated, given its usage by skilled threat actors with a history of ransomware activity.

The malware’s sophisticated evasion techniques and its potential role in initial access brokering for ransomware groups make it a severe threat to corporate cybersecurity.

How to Choose an ultimate Managed SIEM solution for Your Security Team -> Download Free Guide (PDF)

Divya
Divya
Divya is a Senior Journalist at GBhackers covering Cyber Attacks, Threats, Breaches, Vulnerabilities and other happenings in the cyber world.

Latest articles

Progress WhatsUp Gold RCE Vulnerability – PoC Exploit Released

A registry overwrite remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability has been identified in NmAPI.exe, part...

MobSF XSS Vulnerability Let Attackers Inject Malicious Scripts

A critical vulnerability has been identified in the Mobile Security Framework (MobSF) that allows...

CISA Releases Advisory to Monitor Networks to Detect Malicious Cyber Actors

The National Security Agency (NSA) has partnered with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency...

PEFT-As-An-Attack, Jailbreaking Language Models For Malicious Prompts

Federated Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning (FedPEFT) is a technique that combines parameter-efficient fine-tuning (PEFT) with federated...

API Security Webinar

72 Hours to Audit-Ready API Security

APIs present a unique challenge in this landscape, as risk assessment and mitigation are often hindered by incomplete API inventories and insufficient documentation.

Join Vivek Gopalan, VP of Products at Indusface, in this insightful webinar as he unveils a practical framework for discovering, assessing, and addressing open API vulnerabilities within just 72 hours.

Discussion points

API Discovery: Techniques to identify and map your public APIs comprehensively.
Vulnerability Scanning: Best practices for API vulnerability analysis and penetration testing.
Clean Reporting: Steps to generate a clean, audit-ready vulnerability report within 72 hours.

More like this

Progress WhatsUp Gold RCE Vulnerability – PoC Exploit Released

A registry overwrite remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability has been identified in NmAPI.exe, part...

MobSF XSS Vulnerability Let Attackers Inject Malicious Scripts

A critical vulnerability has been identified in the Mobile Security Framework (MobSF) that allows...

CISA Releases Advisory to Monitor Networks to Detect Malicious Cyber Actors

The National Security Agency (NSA) has partnered with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency...