- Source: Advanced persistent threat
An advanced persistent threat (APT) is a stealthy threat actor, typically a state or state-sponsored group, which gains unauthorized access to a computer network and remains undetected for an extended period. In recent times, the term may also refer to non-state-sponsored groups conducting large-scale targeted intrusions for specific goals.
Such threat actors' motivations are typically political or economic. Every major business sector has recorded instances of cyberattacks by advanced actors with specific goals, whether to steal, spy, or disrupt. These targeted sectors include government, defense, financial services, legal services, industrial, telecoms, consumer goods and many more. Some groups utilize traditional espionage vectors, including social engineering, human intelligence and infiltration to gain access to a physical location to enable network attacks. The purpose of these attacks is to install custom malware (malicious software).
APT attacks on mobile devices have also become a legitimate concern, since attackers are able to penetrate into cloud and mobile infrastructure to eavesdrop, steal, and tamper with data.
The median "dwell-time", the time an APT attack goes undetected, differs widely between regions. FireEye reported the mean dwell-time for 2018 in the Americas as 71 days, EMEA as 177 days, and APAC as 204 days. Such a long dwell-time allows attackers a significant amount of time to go through the attack cycle, propagate, and achieve their objectives.
Definition
Definitions of precisely what an APT is can vary, but can be summarized by their named requirements below:
Advanced – Operators behind the threat have a full spectrum of intelligence-gathering techniques at their disposal. These may include commercial and open source computer intrusion technologies and techniques, but may also extend to include the intelligence apparatus of a state. While individual components of the attack may not be considered particularly "advanced" (e.g. malware components generated from commonly available do-it-yourself malware construction kits, or the use of easily procured exploit materials), their operators can typically access and develop more advanced tools as required. They often combine multiple targeting methods, tools, and techniques in order to reach and compromise their target and maintain access to it. Operators may also demonstrate a deliberate focus on operational security that differentiates them from "less advanced" threats.
Persistent – Operators have specific objectives, rather than opportunistically seeking information for financial or other gain. This distinction implies that the attackers are guided by external entities. The targeting is conducted through continuous monitoring and interaction in order to achieve the defined objectives. It does not mean a barrage of constant attacks and malware updates. In fact, a "low-and-slow" approach is usually more successful. If the operator loses access to their target they usually will reattempt access, and most often, successfully. One of the operator's goals is to maintain long-term access to the target, in contrast to threats who only need access to execute a specific task.
Threat – APTs are a threat because they have both capability and intent. APT attacks are executed by coordinated human actions, rather than by mindless and automated pieces of code. The operators have a specific objective and are skilled, motivated, organized and well funded. Actors are not limited to state sponsored groups.
History and targets
Warnings against targeted, socially-engineered emails dropping trojans to exfiltrate sensitive information were published by UK and US CERT organisations in 2005. This method was used throughout the early 1990s and does not in itself constitute an APT. The term "advanced persistent threat" has been cited as originating from the United States Air Force in 2006 with Colonel Greg Rattray cited as the individual who coined the term.
The Stuxnet computer worm, which targeted the computer hardware of Iran's nuclear program, is one example of an APT attack. In this case, the Iranian government might consider the Stuxnet creators to be an advanced persistent threat.
Within the computer security community, and increasingly within the media, the term is almost always used in reference to a long-term pattern of sophisticated computer network exploitation aimed at governments, companies, and political activists, and by extension, also to ascribe the A, P and T attributes to the groups behind these attacks. Advanced persistent threat (APT) as a term may be shifting focus to computer-based hacking due to the rising number of occurrences. PC World reported an 81 percent increase from 2010 to 2011 of particularly advanced targeted computer attacks.
Actors in many countries have used cyberspace as a means to gather intelligence on individuals and groups of individuals of interest. The United States Cyber Command is tasked with coordinating the US military's offensive and defensive cyber operations.
Numerous sources have alleged that some APT groups are affiliated with, or are agents of, governments of sovereign states.
Businesses holding a large quantity of personally identifiable information are at high risk of being targeted by advanced persistent threats, including:
Agriculture
Energy
Financial institutions
Health care
Higher education
Manufacturing
Technology
Telecommunications
Transportation
A Bell Canada study provided deep research into the anatomy of APTs and uncovered widespread presence in Canadian government and critical infrastructure. Attribution was established to Chinese and Russian actors.
Life cycle
Actors behind advanced persistent threats create a growing and changing risk to organizations' financial assets, intellectual property, and reputation by following a continuous process or kill chain:
Target specific organizations for a singular objective
Attempt to gain a foothold in the environment (common tactics include spear phishing emails)
Use the compromised systems as access into the target network
Deploy additional tools that help fulfill the attack objective
Cover tracks to maintain access for future initiatives
In 2013, Mandiant presented results of their research on alleged Chinese attacks using APT method between 2004 and 2013 that followed similar lifecycle:
Initial compromise – performed by use of social engineering and spear phishing, over email, using zero-day viruses. Another popular infection method was planting malware on a website that the victim's employees will be likely to visit.
Establish foothold – plant remote administration software in victim's network, create net backdoors and tunnels allowing stealth access to its infrastructure.
Escalate privileges – use exploits and password cracking to acquire administrator privileges over victim's computer and possibly expand it to Windows domain administrator accounts.
Internal reconnaissance – collect information on surrounding infrastructure, trust relationships, Windows domain structure.
Move laterally – expand control to other workstations, servers and infrastructure elements and perform data harvesting on them.
Maintain presence – ensure continued control over access channels and credentials acquired in previous steps.
Complete mission – exfiltrate stolen data from victim's network.
In incidents analysed by Mandiant, the average period over which the attackers controlled the victim's network was one year, with longest – almost five years. The infiltrations were allegedly performed by Shanghai-based Unit 61398 of People's Liberation Army. Chinese officials have denied any involvement in these attacks.
Previous reports from Secdev had previously discovered and implicated Chinese actors.
Mitigation strategies
There are tens of millions of malware variations, which makes it extremely challenging to protect organizations from APT. While APT activities are stealthy and hard to detect, the command and control network traffic associated with APT can be detected at the network layer level with sophisticated methods. Deep log analyses and log correlation from various sources is of limited usefulness in detecting APT activities. It is challenging to separate noises from legitimate traffic. Traditional security technology and methods have been ineffective in detecting or mitigating APTs. Active cyber defense has yielded greater efficacy in detecting and prosecuting APTs (find, fix, finish) when applying cyber threat intelligence to hunt and adversary pursuit activities. Human-Introduced Cyber Vulnerabilities (HICV) are a weak cyber link that are neither well understood nor mitigated, constituting a significant attack vector.
APT groups
= China
=PLA Unit 61398 (also known as APT1)
PLA Unit 61486 (also known as APT2)
Buckeye (also known as APT3)
Red Apollo (also known as APT10)
Numbered Panda (also known as APT12)
DeputyDog (also known as APT17)
Dynamite Panda or Scandium (also known as APT18, a unit of the People's Liberation Army Navy)
Codoso Team (also known as APT19)
Wocao (also known as APT20)
APT22 (aka Suckfly)
APT26 (aka Turbine Panda)
APT 27
PLA Unit 78020 (also known as APT30 and Naikon)
Zirconium (also known as APT31 and Violet Typhoon)
Periscope Group (also known as APT40)
Double Dragon (also known as APT41, Winnti Group, Barium, or Axiom)
Spamouflage (also known as Dragonbridge or Storm 1376)
Hafnium
LightBasin (Also known as UNC1945)
Tropic Trooper
Volt Typhoon
Flax Typhoon
Charcoal Typhoon (also known as CHROMIUM)
Salmon Typhoon (also known as SODIUM)
Salt Typhoon (also known as GhostEmperor or FamousSparrow)
Liminal Panda
= Iran
=Charming Kitten (also known as APT35)
Elfin Team (also known as APT33)
Helix Kitten (also known as APT34)
Pioneer Kitten
Remix Kitten (also known as APT39, ITG07, or Chafer)
= North Korea
=Kimsuky
Lazarus Group (also known as APT38)
Ricochet Chollima (also known as APT37)
= Russia
=Berserk Bear
Cozy Bear (also known as APT29)
Fancy Bear (also known as APT28)
FIN7
Gamaredon (also known as Primitive Bear)
Sandworm (also known as APT44)
Venomous Bear
= Türkiye
=StrongPity (also known as APT-C-41 or PROMETHIUM)
= United States
=Equation Group
= Uzbekistan
=SandCat, associated with the State Security Service according to Kaspersky
= Vietnam
=OceanLotus (also known as APT32)
Naming
Multiple organizations may assign different names to the same actor. As separate researchers could each have their own varying assessments of an APT group, companies such as CrowdStrike, Kaspersky, Mandiant, and Microsoft, among others, have their own internal naming schemes. Names between different organizations may refer to overlapping but ultimately different groups, based on various data gathered.
CrowdStrike assigns animals by nation-state or other category, such as "Kitten" for Iran and "Spider" for groups focused on cybercrime. Other companies have named groups based on this system — Rampant Kitten, for instance, was named by Check Point rather than CrowdStrike.
Dragos bases its names for APT groups on minerals.
Mandiant assigns numbered acronyms in three categories, APT, FIN, and UNC, resulting in APT names like FIN7. Other companies using a similar system include Proofpoint (TA) and IBM (ITG and Hive).
Microsoft used to assign names from the periodic table, often stylized in all-caps (e.g. POTASSIUM); in April 2023, Microsoft changed its naming schema to use weather-based names (e.g. Volt Typhoon).
See also
Notes
References
External links
Lists of APT groups
Mandiant: Advanced Persistent Threat Groups
MITRE ATT&CK security community tracked Advanced Persistent Group Pages
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ancaman persisten tingkat lanjut
- SK Communications
- Red Apollo
- Timbal
- Advanced persistent threat
- Salt Typhoon
- China Information Technology Security Evaluation Center
- Cyberwarfare by China
- Charming Kitten
- Volt Typhoon
- Hainan State Security Department
- Threat actor
- Fancy Bear
- Lazarus Group