Advanced malware also targeted venues linked to Iranian nuclear negotiations.
There are some security stories you couldn’t make up. The authors of an advanced malware tool have used a new version of that same tool to target a security company that played a prominent role in the discovery and analysis of the original version of said tool.
An employee at
Kaspersky Lab
was targeted with a piece of malware which researchers at the company believe to be a new variant of Duqu, the first variant of which was discovered in 2011 and was then found to have links (and possibly shared authors) with Stuxnet.
Like the original variant, Duqu 2.0, as it has been called, made use of a zero-day vulnerability:
CVE-2015-2360
, which allowed for privileges to be escalated in the
Windows
kernel, and which was patched
yesterday
. It may also have used two other vulnerabilities (CVE-2014-4148 and CVE-2014-6324) that have also since been patched but which were zero-days during the original infection.
And just like the original Duqu, the 2.0 variant is very sophisticated: from the use of various zero-days, to the fact that the malware ran inside memory and combined encryption and compression algorithms to avoid detection.
The Duqu 2.0 infection incident at
Kaspersky Lab
involved a cat-and-mouse game between researchers and the attackers. When
Kaspersky
disconnected critical systems following the discovery of the attack, the attackers realised they were being found out and quickly wiped the mailbox and browsing history of the targeted machine, thus preventing full analysis but at least suggesting that spear-phishing might have been used for the original infection.
Kaspersky
wasn’t the only target of Duqu 2.0 though. Other targets included a number of hotels where negotiations had been taking place on Iran’s nuclear programme, suggesting the actor could well be a nation state with a keen interest in learning about the developments of these negotiations.

Duqu 2.0 contains the magic string ‘romanian.antihacker’. It has been suggested that this could be a reference to Kaspersky researcher Costin Raiu. Source: Kaspersky Lab.
Full details on Duqu 2.0 can be found in a paper (
pdf
) published by
Kaspersky
, with good summaries written by Dan Goodin at
Ars Technica
and Kim Zetter at
Wired
. The latter’s book on Stuxnet,
Countdown to Zero Day
, which I reviewed
last year
, also covers the original Duqu attack.
Symantec
has also published a
blog
on Duqu, in which it mentions a few other targets in Europe, North Africa and Asia. Another report (
pdf
) was written by
CrySyS
, the Hungarian research lab which discovered the original Duqu infection in 2011.
Later this year,
Kaspersky
researcher Costin Raiu will deliver the closing keynote at
VB2015
, while researchers from
CrySyS
will give a
presentation
on a repository of signed software, which was inspired by attacks like Duqu.
VB2015 takes place 30 September to 2 October in Prague, Czech Republic.
Registration
for the conference is now open. A 10% early bird discount applies until 30 June 2015.

Posted on 10 June 2015 by
Martijn Grooten
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