Monday, December 23, 2024
HomeCyber AttackPanamorfi TCP flood DDoS Attack Targeting Jupyter Notebooks

Panamorfi TCP flood DDoS Attack Targeting Jupyter Notebooks

Published on

SIEM as a Service

An attacker, identified as Yawixooo, leveraged a publicly accessible Jupyter Notebook honeypot as an initial access vector.

The honeypot’s exposure to the internet-enabled Yawixooo to exploit it without requiring complex techniques. 

Once gaining a foothold on the system, the attacker downloaded a new zip file (MD5: 42989a405c8d7c9cb68c323ae9a9a318) from filebin.net, which was only flagged as malicious by ESET on VirusTotal and contained two JAR files.

- Advertisement - SIEM as a Service

Are you from SOC and DFIR Teams? – Analyse Malware Incidents & get live Access with ANY.RUN -> Free Access

These JAR files were also new and only detected by ESET, indicating that they were likely obfuscated or otherwise evasive of traditional antivirus scanning.

The zip file with a single detection

The connector JAR file serves as a malicious payload, leveraging Discord as a command-and-control channel.

Upon execution, it downloads and executes the mineping JAR, a known DDoS tool, which initiates a TCP flood attack, overwhelming the target server with connection requests. 

Attack progress and results are communicated back to the threat actor via the Discord channel, facilitating remote control and monitoring of the DDoS operation. 

The function that updates the Discord channel

Threat actor ‘yawixooo’ is associated with the Panamorfi DDoS campaign.

The attack utilizes a Java-based tool named mineping.jar, which contains 12 files designed for HTTP socket loading, proxy usage, victim flooding, and random connection generation. 

This malicious package, likely repurposed from a Minecraft server tool, enables the launch of a distributed denial-of-service attack against targeted systems.  

The Panamorfi DDoS logo

The threat actor behind the incident has been identified as ‘yawixooo’, a GitHub user with an active public repository, which currently hosts a Minecraft server configuration and an under-construction HTML page. 

Investigators are actively examining the repository for potential indicators of compromise or additional malicious activity associated with the threat actor. 

The website of the threat actor is under construction

Aqua’s CNAPP addresses the security risks associated with data practitioners using Jupyter notebooks by employing runtime protection to detect and block anomalous behavior, which complements traditional vulnerability management and misconfiguration remediation by providing a real-time defense against zero-day threats and unauthorized actions. 

Enforcing granular runtime policies prevents the execution of malicious payloads outside the Jupyter notebook scope, mitigating potential data breaches and maintaining system integrity. 

Aqua Nautilus researchers identified a novel DDoS campaign, “Panamorfi,” leveraging the Java-based Minecraft DDoS tool “mineping.” Threat actors deploy this attack exclusively through misconfigured Jupyter notebooks. 

The campaign targets systems with a DDoS, exploiting vulnerabilities in exposed notebooks. Organizations must prioritize securing Jupyter notebooks and implementing robust DDoS protection measures to mitigate this threat. 

How to Build a Security Framework With Limited Resources IT Security Team (PDF) - Free Guide

Raga Varshini
Raga Varshini
Varshini is a Cyber Security expert in Threat Analysis, Vulnerability Assessment, and Research. Passionate about staying ahead of emerging Threats and Technologies.

Latest articles

Malicious Apps On Amazon Appstore Records Screen And Interecpt OTP Verifications

A seemingly benign health app, "BMI CalculationVsn," was found on the Amazon App Store,...

Lazarus Hackers Using New VNC Based Malware To Attack Organizations Worldwide

The Lazarus Group has recently employed a sophisticated attack, dubbed "Operation DreamJob," to target...

New Python NodeStealer Attacking Facebook Business To Steal Login Credentials

NodeStealer, initially a JavaScript-based malware, has evolved into a more sophisticated Python-based threat that...

DigiEver IoT Devices Exploited To Deliver Mirai-based Malware

A new Mirai-based botnet, "Hail Cock Botnet," has been exploiting vulnerable IoT devices, including...

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

Lazarus Hackers Using New VNC Based Malware To Attack Organizations Worldwide

The Lazarus Group has recently employed a sophisticated attack, dubbed "Operation DreamJob," to target...

Hackers Weaponizing LNK Files To Create Scheduled Task And Deliver Malware Payload

TA397, also known as Bitter, targeted a Turkish defense organization with a spearphishing email...

RiseLoader Attack Windows By Employed A VMProtect To Drop Multiple Malware Families

RiseLoader, a new malware family discovered in October 2024, leverages a custom TCP-based binary...