Data From Chinese Security Services Company i-Soon Linked to Previous Chinese APT Campaigns
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Published:February 23, 2024 - ๐ Tags Icon
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Executive Summary
On Feb. 16, 2024, someone uploaded data to GitHub that included possible internal company communications, sales-related materials and product manuals belonging to the Chinese IT security services company i-Soon, also known as Anxun Information Technology. The leaked materials appear to show how a commercial entity developed and supported cyber espionage tools in support of Chinese-affiliated threat actors. As part of initial investigation into the leaked data, Unit 42 discovered links between information in the data leak and previous Chinese-affiliated advanced persistent threat (APT) campaigns. Unit 42 assesses with high confidence that the leaks are genuine.
For example, documents in the leak appear to show i-Soon was marketing the Treadstone malware controller software, which was attributed to Elemental Taurus (aka APT41) in the 2019 U.S. grand jury indictment against three Chengdu 404 employees [PDF].
Through analysis of the leaked data, Unit 42 has identified actor-owned infrastructure and potential malware related to historic reporting on Chinese threat actors. Given the scope of the data leak, this report will cover initial analysis and significant findings, with further reporting likely to come at a future time. (While the original GitHub repo where the leak was posted has now been taken down by GitHub staff, citing a violation of terms of service, researchers will continue to study what was initially shared.)
Based on our current understanding of the data leak, customers can be better protected through Palo Alto Networks security products against the tools and techniques used by the Chinese threat actors mentioned in this article.
| Related Unit 42 Topics | GitHub, China |
Technical Analysis
Text on the GitHub repository claims that i-Soon has targeted the governments of India, Thailand, Vietnam and South Korea, as well as the intergovernmental organization NATO. We continue to analyze the leaked data to verify these claims.
The GitHub repository contains a mixture of online chat conversations, screenshots and probable victim data, as well as sales- and support-related documents. The text conversations dated between November 2018 and January 2023, and they involve 37 unique usernames.
The conversations range from general conversation and workplace issues to talking about targets, software vulnerabilities and customers.
Figure 1 graphs the text communications observed between the members of i-Soon, showing relationships between employees and the volume of messages between them. (Specific user names and given names have been redacted.)
Links to Previous Threat Intelligence Reporting
Unit 42 has found links in the leaked i-Soon text message conversations to two previously reported campaigns attributed to Chinese advanced persistent threat (APT) groups.
Campaign 1: 2022 Supply Chain Attack
In September 2022, Trend Micro reported about a supply chain attack on the Canadian software company Comm100. The attackers trojanized the installer for Comm100โs chat-based customer engagement application hosted on their official website. When we looked through the i-Soon data leak, we found indications that i-Soon was involved in that attack.
Table 1 includes an excerpt taken from a conversation between two members of i-Soon where they claim IP address 8.218.67[.]52 is their server.
| Date | From | To | Message | Translated |
| 2022-06-13 7:39:19 | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๆฌๅท้ฃ่พน้ฎไธชไบบpc็้้ | [A person or organization from Yangzhou] wants to ask for or request access to a PC channel that belongs to a specific individual. |
| 2022-06-13 7:39:21 | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | [ๆ่ธ] | [emoji suggesting embarrassment or sorry to bother you] |
| 2022-06-13 7:39:23 | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | ็ฐๅจ่ฝ็ปไธ | Can you give it now? |
| 2022-06-13 7:40:26 | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | ใๅฝฉๅฎ่ดใ
ใไปฃ็ใ 8.218.67[.]52:27011 ใTCP้ง้ใ 8.218.67[.]52:17011 ใ่ดฆๅทใ admin ใๅฏ็ ใ 88888888 |
ใGambling or lottery siteใ
ใProxyใ 8.218.67[.]52:27011 ใTCP Tunnelใ 8.218.67[.]52:17011 ใaccountใ admin ใpasswordใ 88888888 |
| 2022-06-13 7:40:34 | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๅฏๅฏ | Uh-huh |
| 2022-06-13 7:40:37 | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๆๆฅ | [Expletive] |
| 2022-06-13 7:40:54 | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | ่ฟไธชๆๅกๅจๅจ้ฆๆธฏ็ | This server is in Hong Kong |
| 2022-06-13 7:41:06 | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | ไฝ ไธ็ฎก | You don't need to worry about it |
| 2022-06-13 7:41:07 | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | <a
href='068f70a1-1ff9-451 b-999e-2569860fd348. md'>domain_access_r esult(1).csv</a> |
|
| 2022-06-13 7:41:11 | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๅฏ | Um |
| 2022-06-13 7:41:14 | wxid_zbxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_c9xxxxxxxxxxxx | ่ฟไธชๆๅกๅจๆฏๆไปฌ็ | This server is ours |
Table 1. Transcript of conversation between i-Soon members about IP address 8.218.67[.]52.
On June 17, 2022, days after the above conversation occurred, the IP address 8.218.67[.]52 served a Linux ELF file with the SHA256 of db4497090a94d0189aa3c3f4fcee30d5381453ec5aa38962e2ca971074b74e8b. The file was served from the URL hxxp[://]8.218.67[.]52/js/xxx.jpg. When executed, the file attempts to contact the domain unix.s3amazonbucket[.]com (which is not a legitimate Amazon domain).
The Trend Micro report also mentioned that another subdomain of s3amazonbucket[.]com (analyaze.s3amazonbucket[.]com) was used as a command and control (C2) server for the trojanized installers.
Given the domain s3amazonbucket[.]com was likely under the control of i-Soon, Unit 42 assesses with moderate confidence that a group of hackers within i-Soon was involved in the supply chain attack on Comm100.
Campaign 2: 2019 Poison Carp Attack
In September 2019, Citizen Lab reported on attackers targeting Tibetan groups via multiple iOS and Android exploits. Citizen Lab attributed the attack to the Chinese threat group they track as POISON CARP. The report references domains that were tied to an IP address that we found references to in this data leak.
The IP address 74.120.172[.]10 was associated with the domain mailteso[.]online between Sept. 22, 2020, and Feb. 20, 2024, and mailnotes[.]online between Aug. 7, 2021, and July 12, 2022.
Table 2 outlines the conversation between i-Soon employees about IP address 74.120.172[.]10.
| Date | From | To | Message | Translated |
| 2023-01-09 02:28:14 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | ็ญไธไธ ๅนณๅฐๆ็น้ฎ้ข | Wait, there are some issues with the platform |
| 2023-01-09 02:28:18 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๅฅฝ็ | OK |
| 2023-01-09 02:36:19 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | hxxps[://]74.120.172[.]10:100
92/home |
|
| 2023-01-09 02:36:25 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | access OrFRXV
LZtestUser lzqzmp@123 |
|
| 2023-01-09 02:43:51 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๆผ็คบ่งๅฑๅไธไธช | Send over a demo video |
| 2023-01-09 02:44:06 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ่ฟไธช่ตๆ้ฝไธ็จ็ปไบ | No need to give this information |
| 2023-01-09 02:44:09 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | [ๅฒ็] | [Grinning emoji] |
| 2023-01-09 02:44:20 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | ่ฟๆฏๅพฎ่ฝฏ็่ฏ็จ็ | This is the trial version of the Microsoft [tool] |
| 2023-01-09 02:44:33 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๆฉ๏ผๆ็ๅฐไบ | I saw it |
| 2023-01-09 02:44:51 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๅพฎ่ฝฏ็ๆผ็คบ่ง้ขๆๅ | Do you have a demo video [for Microsoft Windows tool]? |
| 2023-01-09 02:44:58 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | ๆ้ฎไธ | Let me ask |
| 2023-01-09 02:48:54 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | <a
href='12cef436-c870-4e0e -b36c-ae2a4e839f79.md'> ๅพฎ่ฝฏ้ฎไปถๅฏๅๅนณๅฐ.7z</a> |
<a
href='12cef436-C870 -4E0E-B36C-AE2A4 E839F79.MD'> Microsoft Mail Secret Platform .7z </a> |
| 2023-01-09 02:52:01 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๆฏไธๆฏไฝ ไปฌ่ง้ข้ไบๅ | Is your video wrong? |
| 2023-01-09 02:52:03 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๆๆไธๅผ | I can not open it |
| 2023-01-09 02:55:53 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | ๅฏ๏ผ | Huh? |
| 2023-01-09 02:55:56 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | ่งฃๅๅฐฑ่กไบๅ | Just decompress it |
| 2023-01-09 02:56:36 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ไผฐ่ฎกๆฏๆๆฒก็่งๅฑ็ | I guess I didn't watch the video |
| 2023-01-09 03:01:26 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ่ฟๆๅฎๅ็่ฟๆง | Also the Android RAT |
| 2023-01-09 03:02:07 | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | ๅฎๅ็จ็ญไธไธ ๆ็น้ฎ้ข | Wait, thereโs some issues with the Android one |
| 2023-01-09 03:02:26 | wxid_12xxxxxxxxxxxx | wxid_hlxxxxxxxxxxxx | ๅฅฝ | ok |
Table 2. Transcript of conversation between i-Soon employees about IP address 74.120.172[.]10.
At the time of Citizen Lab publication, mailnotes[.]online was associated with IP address 207.246.101[.]169, which was concurrently associated with the domain gmail.isooncloud[.]com.
Links to Known Chinese Intrusion Sets
The data leaks include manuals and whitepapers for various software tools. Of particular importance, these tools include software previously attributed to Chinese APT groups.
We do not currently know whether i-Soon were developers, resellers or even simply end users of these tools. However, the leaked documents help confirm previous reporting that multiple China-attributed threat actor groups often use the same, likely commercialized, malware tool sets.
One document contains a footer that translates to โAnxun Information Technology Co., Ltd.โ and appears to be a product manual for a range of software tools sold by i-Soon. These tools include remote control management systems for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Linux.
The Linux remote control management software shown in Figure 2 is notable because the screenshot provided in the document to help explain the toolโs functionality shows the malware control panel is named โTreadstone.โ The 2019 U.S. grand jury indictment of three Chengdu 404 employees directly references Treadstone.
The indictment claims the Treadstone malware controller software โwas designed to work with Winnti malware which, at the time, was used only by a small group of hackers.โ Given reporting from October 2023 of Chengdu 404 taking i-Soon to court for a software development contract dispute, i-Soon might have developed the Treadstone panel.
Another document relating to known Chinese APT tools is a whitepaper for a Windows remote control management system. This document covers the system and network architecture and the productโs features. On one of the pages explaining management of the tool is a screenshot of what is likely the administrator panel, shown in Figure 3.
The screenshot shows the configured public IP address and port as TCP[://]118.31.3[.]116:44444. SentinelLabs reported this IP address was used as a ShadowPad C2 server in August 2021 and attributed to the Winnti group. This second link to the Winnti group adds further evidence that i-Soon was involved in the development of known Winnti tool sets.
Conclusion
This data leak provides unique insight into the Chinese private-sector hacking industry, which had previously only been seen through U.S. government indictments and reports. It also gives us a better understanding of the capabilities of Chinese threat actors, including how these groups are likely sharing or reselling the same tool sets. This dissemination of tools makes attribution more difficult for defenders and threat intelligence analysts.
Unit 42 will continue to analyze the leaked data, and we will update this post periodically, as we have more information to share.
Based on our understanding of the data leak, customers should be better protected through Palo Alto Networks security products against the tools and techniques used by the Chinese threat actors mentioned in this article. Malicious IPs related to the campaigns discussed have been blocked by Advanced URL Filtering.
If you think you might have been compromised or have an urgent matter, get in touch with the Unit 42 Incident Response team or call:
- North America Toll-Free: 866.486.4842 (866.4.UNIT42)
- EMEA: +31.20.299.3130
- APAC: +65.6983.8730
- Japan: +81.50.1790.0200
Palo Alto Networks has shared these findings with our fellow Cyber Threat Alliance (CTA) members. CTA members use this intelligence to rapidly deploy protections to their customers and to systematically disrupt malicious cyber actors. Learn more about the Cyber Threat Alliance.
Additional Resources
- Probing Weaponized Chat Applications Abused in Supply-Chain Attacks โ Trend Micro
- Missing Link: Tibetan Groups Targeted with 1-Click Mobile Exploits โ The Citizen Lab, Munk School of Global Affairs and Policy, University of Toronto
- ShadowPad | A Masterpiece of Privately Sold Malware in Chinese Espionage โ SentinelLabs, SentinelOne
Updated Feb. 27, 2024, at 8:03 a.m. PT to switch the images for figures 2 and 3.
