Monday, April 7, 2025
HomeMalwareTrula Hacker Group Uses Custom Malware & Legacy Tools to Attack Government...

Trula Hacker Group Uses Custom Malware & Legacy Tools to Attack Government Organizations

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

Trula, a sophisticated hacking group also known as Krypton, VenomousBear, Waterbug, Uroburos, or Snakegroup targets government entities, military, energy, and nuclear research organizations.

The group knows for conducting various spear-phishing techniques and watering-hole attacks to infect targeted victims. The group knows to be active since at least 2014.

Accenture threat researchers identified the group typical targeting European government organizations using their custom tools, albeit with some updates.

- Advertisement - Google News

Trula Group Attack

In the attack against European government organization, Trula used a combination of remote procedure call (RPC)-based backdoors, such as HyperStack, and remote administration trojans (RATs), such as Kazuar and Carbon.

The RPC backdoors are developed by Trula based on the relying RPC protocol, by using these backdoors they can perform lateral movement and take control of other machines in the local network without relying on the C&C server.

Accenture Cyber Threat Intelligence researchers identified that one of the RPC backdoors used HyperStack functionality.

“HyperStack uses named pipes to execute remote procedure calls (RPC) from the controller to the device hosting the HyperStack client. To move laterally, the implant tries to connect to another remote device’s IPC$ share, either using a null session or default credentials.”

Also, another version of HyperStack observed in this campaign that allows Trula operators to run a command via a named pipe from the controller without implementing IPC$ enumeration activity.

For C&C communication as like other cyber-espionage groups, Trula uses legitimate web services. In the case of the Carbon modular backdoor framework Pastebin used for C&C.

Kazuar uses to connect with the target C2 network that resides outside of the victim network, the C2 network is probably a compromised legitimate website.

Earlier in May Turla Group Updated ComRAT Malware to Use Gmail web Interface for Command and Control.

You can follow us on LinkedinTwitterFacebook for daily Cybersecurity and hacking news updates.

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

Threat Actors Exploit Fake CAPTCHAs and Cloudflare Turnstile to Distribute LegionLoader

In a sophisticated attack targeting individuals searching for PDF documents online, cybercriminals are using...

HellCat, Rey, and Grep Groups Dispute Claims in Orange and HighWire Press Cases

SuspectFile.com has uncovered a complex web of overlapping claims and accusations within the cybercrime...

AI Surpasses Elite Red Teams in Crafting Effective Spear Phishing Attacks

In a groundbreaking development in the field of cybersecurity, AI has reached a pivotal...

Threat Actors Use Windows Screensaver Files as Malware Delivery Method

Cybersecurity experts at Symantec have uncovered a sophisticated phishing campaign targeting various sectors across...

Supply Chain Attack Prevention

Free Webinar - Supply Chain Attack Prevention

Recent attacks like Polyfill[.]io show how compromised third-party components become backdoors for hackers. PCI DSS 4.0’s Requirement 6.4.3 mandates stricter browser script controls, while Requirement 12.8 focuses on securing third-party providers.

Join Vivekanand Gopalan (VP of Products – Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing – Indusface) as they break down these compliance requirements and share strategies to protect your applications from supply chain attacks.

Discussion points

Meeting PCI DSS 4.0 mandates.
Blocking malicious components and unauthorized JavaScript execution.
PIdentifying attack surfaces from third-party dependencies.
Preventing man-in-the-browser attacks with proactive monitoring.

More like this

Threat Actors Exploit Fake CAPTCHAs and Cloudflare Turnstile to Distribute LegionLoader

In a sophisticated attack targeting individuals searching for PDF documents online, cybercriminals are using...

Threat Actors Use Windows Screensaver Files as Malware Delivery Method

Cybersecurity experts at Symantec have uncovered a sophisticated phishing campaign targeting various sectors across...

NEPTUNE RAT Targets Windows Users, Steals Passwords from 270+ Applications

A recent cyber threat named Neptune RAT has emerged as a rising concern for...