Friday, April 11, 2025
HomeCVE/vulnerabilityBlackByte Hackers Exploiting VMware ESXi Auth Bypass Vulnerability

BlackByte Hackers Exploiting VMware ESXi Auth Bypass Vulnerability

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

BlackByte, a Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) group that surfaced about mid-2021 appears to have traces of Conti’s evolution.

It uses productive sophistication such as bypassing security measures through the use of kernel-level exploited drivers, inducing self-replicating ransomware with worm features, and leveraging living-off-the-lead binaries.

This shows its advances shifting from one programming language or code over to the other Go, .NET, and C++.

- Advertisement - Google News

Cyber security analysts at Cisco Talos discovered that BlackByte hackers have been exploiting VMware ESXi Auth bypass vulnerability.

Technical Analysis

More recent attacks employ VPN credentials for initial access through brute forcing and gain elevated privileges through CVE-2024-37085 in VMWare ESXI.

BlackByte exploits NTLM for internal movement in the network using pass-the-hash methods, hides ransomware (ExByte) as harmless files like “atieclxx.exe”, and launches a ransomware attack (“host.exe”) by passing some command line switches (-s [8-digit string] svc).

The ransomware is deployed as a service and, in this case, spreads via SMB, many of its actions are executed from C:\SystemData, and new files such as ‘MsExchangeLog1.log’ log execution progress.

MsExchangeLog1.log contents mid-execution (Source – Cisco Talos)

BlackByte is also reported to manage Active Directory, add administrative groups called ‘ESX Admins,’ and modify security applications using registry keys.

The group’s data exfiltration methods might exploit their customized tool ExByte, however, these details remain classified due to their off-network staging as well as the collateral damages caused by encryption.

Taking into account only those victims that are publicly available, there is no reason for concern about this group as it seems to have limited activity.

However, recently Cisco Talos’ telemetry which is collected globally has shown some BlackByte activity is not as limited as it appears.

The BlackByte ransomware has upgraded its extension to .blackbytent_h and utilizes the technique of Bring Your Own Vulnerable Driver (BYOVD) on the following four vulnerable drivers:-

  • RtCore64.sys
  • DBUtil_2_3.sys
  • zamguard64.sys
  • gdrv.sys

Current scenario shows that the ransomware self-encrypts and sends a self-destruction command(/c ping 1.1.1[.]1 -n 10 > Nul & fsutil file setZeroData offset=0 length=503808 c:\windows\host.exe & Del c:\windows\host.exe /F /Q), exploits compromise of the network using dumped credentials and the NetShareEnumAll function with ‘SRVSVC’ named pipe, bypassed Windows Defender scanning by altering registry settings (HKLM\SOFTWARE\MICROSOFT\WINDOWS DEFENDER).

The malware deletes system binaries (taskmgr.exe, perfmon.exe, shutdown.exe, resmon.exe), and communicates with msdl.microsoft[.]com (204.79.197[.]219) for debugging symbols, and targets various industries, with manufacturing most affected (32% of victims).

The transition of BlackByte from C# to Go and now C/C++ is a major step forward in order to utilize anti-analysis methods.

The ransomware’s self-propagating nature, BYOVD usage, and custom per-victim compilation pose significant challenges which lead to the introduction of more advanced methods of defense and in some cases even enterprise-wide password changes for the whole organization if better control is required.

Recommendations

Here below we have mentioned all the recommendations:-

  • Implement MFA for remote and cloud access.
  • Audit VPN configurations.
  • Set alerts for privileged group changes.
  • Limit or disable NTLM.
  • Disable SMBv1 and enforce SMB signing.
  • Deploy EDR across all systems.
  • Disable vendor accounts and remote access.
  • Detect unauthorized configuration changes.
  • Document enterprise password reset procedures.
  • Harden and patch ESX hosts.

Download FreeIncident Response Plan Templatefor Your Security Team – Free Download

Balaji
Balaji
BALAJI is an Ex-Security Researcher (Threat Research Labs) at Comodo Cybersecurity. Editor-in-Chief & Co-Founder - Cyber Security News & GBHackers On Security.

Latest articles

Researchers Exploit Windows Defender with XOR and System Calls

A recent cybersecurity revelation has demonstrated how researchers successfully bypassed Windows Defender antivirus mechanisms...

Ivanti 0-Day RCE Flaw Exploitation Details Revealed

A critical unauthenticated Remote Code Execution (RCE) vulnerability, CVE-2025-22457, has been disclosed by Ivanti, sparking concerns across...

Jenkins Docker Vulnerability Allows Hackers to Hijack Network Traffic

A newly disclosed vulnerability affecting Jenkins Docker images has raised serious concerns about network...

Microsoft Issues Urgent Patch to Fix Office Update Crash

Microsoft has released an urgent patch for Office 2016 to address a critical issue...

Resilience at Scale

Why Application Security is Non-Negotiable

The resilience of your digital infrastructure directly impacts your ability to scale. And yet, application security remains a critical weak link for most organizations.

Application Security is no longer just a defensive play—it’s the cornerstone of cyber resilience and sustainable growth. In this webinar, Karthik Krishnamoorthy (CTO of Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing – Indusface), will share how AI-powered application security can help organizations build resilience by

Discussion points


Protecting at internet scale using AI and behavioral-based DDoS & bot mitigation.
Autonomously discovering external assets and remediating vulnerabilities within 72 hours, enabling secure, confident scaling.
Ensuring 100% application availability through platforms architected for failure resilience.
Eliminating silos with real-time correlation between attack surface and active threats for rapid, accurate mitigation

More like this

Ivanti 0-Day RCE Flaw Exploitation Details Revealed

A critical unauthenticated Remote Code Execution (RCE) vulnerability, CVE-2025-22457, has been disclosed by Ivanti, sparking concerns across...

Jenkins Docker Vulnerability Allows Hackers to Hijack Network Traffic

A newly disclosed vulnerability affecting Jenkins Docker images has raised serious concerns about network...

Rogue Account‑Creation Flaw Leaves 100 K WordPress Sites Exposed

A severe vulnerability has been uncovered in the SureTriggers WordPress plugin, which could leave...