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Security Parrot - Cyber Security News, Insights and Reviews > News > Microsoft has identified the ultimate target of hackers hacked into SolarWinds
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Microsoft has identified the ultimate target of hackers hacked into SolarWinds

Last updated: 2020/12/30 at 3:54 PM
Jim Koohyar Biniyaz Published December 30, 2020
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According to Microsoft experts, the ultimate goal of the hackers who hacked SolarWinds was to gain access to the cloud assets of the victims through the Sunburst / Solorigate backdoor installed on their networks.

As the Microsoft 365 Defender Team explained , having penetrated the backdoor into the local network of the attacked organization, the attackers began to hunt for its cloud assets outside the local network.

“With such a vast foothold, attackers could choose specific organizations in which they wanted to continue their operations (at the same time, the rest remained available as long as the backdoor was in their networks and was not discovered),” the experts said.

Previous publications from Microsoft on the SolarWinds supply chain attack and the leadership of the US National Security Agency also mentioned in passing that the attackers’ ultimate goal was to create Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) tokens to forge authentication tokens that provide access to cloud resources.

Microsoft detailed the procedure used by cybercriminals to gain access to cloud resources of their victims:

Using a compromised SolarWinds DLL to activate a backdoor that allows attackers to remotely control a device;

Using a backdoor to access and steal credentials, escalation of privileges, and horizontal movement across the network to be able to create valid SAML tokens in one of two ways: by stealing the SAML signing certificate or by adding / modifying existing federation trust settings;

Using maliciously crafted SAML tokens to access cloud resources and perform actions leading to theft of emails and persistence in the cloud.

Earlier this month, Texas-based software maker SolarWinds reported that hackers gained access to its networks and implemented the Sunburst / Solorigate backdoor in updates to the Orion platform. The malicious update was downloaded by 18 thousand out of 33 thousand platform users, however, according to experts, only forty (about 0.2%) of them were subjected to further cyber attacks through the installed backdoor.

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Jim Koohyar Biniyaz December 30, 2020
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