Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
LightBasin
Cyber espionage group From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
LightBasin, also called UNC1945 by Mandiant, is a suspected Chinese cyber espionage group that has been described as an advanced persistent threat that has been linked to multiple cyberattacks on telecommunications companies.[1][2][3] As an advanced persistent threat, they seek to gain unauthorized access to a computer network and remain undetected for an extended period. They have been linked to attacks targeting Linux and Solaris systems.[1][2][3]
![]() | This article may be confusing or unclear to readers. In particular, the article does not explain what a LightBasin is to a non-technical reader who is not a computer security specialist in persistent threats. (April 2022) |
Remove ads
History
The LightBasin cyber espionage group has operated since 2016.[1][2] CrowdStrike say that they are based in China, though their exact location isn't known.[1] They have targeted 13 telecoms operators.[2]
Targets
Summarize
Perspective
CrowdStrike says that the group is unusual in targeting protocols and technology of telecoms operators.[1] According to CrowdStrike's investigation of one such breach, LightBasin leveraged external Domain Name System (eDNS) servers — which are part of the General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) network and play a role in roaming between different mobile operators — to connect directly to and from other compromised telecommunication companies’ GPRS networks via Secure Shell and through previously established implants. Many of their tools are written for them rather than being off the shelf.[1]
After compromising a system, they then installed a backdoor, known as SLAPSTICK, for the Solaris Pluggable authentication module.[2] They utilize TinyShell, which is a Python command shell used to control and execute commands through HTTP requests to a web shell,[4] to communicate with attackers' ip addresses. The scripts are tunneled through an SGSN emulator, which CrowdStrike says is to maintain OPSEC.[3] Serving GPRS Support Node (SGSN) is a main component of the GPRS network, which handles all packet switched data within the network, e.g. the mobility management and authentication of the users.[5] Utilizing this form of tunneling makes it less likely to be restricted or inspected by network security solutions.[1][3]
CrowdStrike recommends that firewalls dealing with GPRS traffic be configured to limit access to DNS or GPRS tunneling protocol traffic.[1]
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads