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APT43: An investigation into the North Korean group’s cybercrime operations
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Introduction

As recently reported by our Mandiant's colleagues, APT43 is a threat actor believed to be associated with North Korea. APT43’s main targets include governmental institutions, research groups, think tanks, business services, and the manufacturing sector, with most victims located in the United States and South Korea. The group uses a variety of techniques and tools to conduct espionage, sabotage, and theft operations, including spear phishing and credential harvesting.

From VirusTotal we wanted to contribute to a better understanding of this actor’s latest activity based on their malware toolset’s telemetry, including geographical distribution, lookups, submissions, file types, detection ratios, and efficacy of crowdsourced YARA rules for the IOCs attributed by Mandiant to this threat actor. All the data provided in this post is also available for VirusTotal users through VT Intelligence. It can be obtained by aggregating Telemetry and Commonalities from a set of IOCs, which you can do using a VT Intelligence search, Collection or Graph.

Malware artifacts

File type distribution

We used Indicators of Compromise (IOCs) attributed to APT43 by Mandiant to collect telemetry on the threat actor’s latest activity, resulting in the following file type distribution.

Microsoft Word documents (docx) are the most common file format among the samples we analyzed. This suggests that APT43 relies heavily on Microsoft Word documents as a vector for delivering malicious payloads or exploiting vulnerabilities. We also found that most of these files used macros as their infection technique, while only a few of them exploited the CVE-2017-0199 vulnerability, which allows attackers to run malicious code on target systems by embedding malicious links in the docx file.

The file type distribution also reveals interesting patterns. For example, we can see that there are more pedll files than peexe files, even though both are executable formats. Further analysis of the pedll files revealed that the majority of them used the T1129 MITRE ATT&CK technique, which involves executing malicious payloads via loading shared modules. Another example is that there are more hwp files than doc files, even though both are word processing formats. This may indicate that APT43 targets specific regions or organizations that use Hangul Word Processor (HWP), a popular software in South Korea.
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