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Hoje — 9 de Maio de 2026Stream principal

Inside Department 4: Russia’s secret school for hackers

8 de Maio de 2026, 11:36
Most universities have a careers fair. At Bauman Moscow State Technical University, however, an elite group of students appear to have something rather more unusual: a direct pipeline into some of the world's most notorious state-sponsored hacking groups. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.
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Operation Masquerade: FBI Disrupts Russian Router Hacking Campaign

Operation Masquerade: The FBI and DoJ disrupted a Russian GRU campaign that hijacked routers via DNS attacks to spy on users and steal credentials.
  • ✇Krebs on Security
  • Russia Hacked Routers to Steal Microsoft Office Tokens BrianKrebs
    Hackers linked to Russia’s military intelligence units are using known flaws in older Internet routers to mass harvest authentication tokens from Microsoft Office users, security experts warned today. The spying campaign allowed state-backed Russian hackers to quietly siphon authentication tokens from users on more than 18,000 networks without deploying any malicious software or code. Microsoft said in a blog post today it identified more than 200 organizations and 5,000 consumer devices that we
     

Russia Hacked Routers to Steal Microsoft Office Tokens

7 de Abril de 2026, 14:02

Hackers linked to Russia’s military intelligence units are using known flaws in older Internet routers to mass harvest authentication tokens from Microsoft Office users, security experts warned today. The spying campaign allowed state-backed Russian hackers to quietly siphon authentication tokens from users on more than 18,000 networks without deploying any malicious software or code.

Microsoft said in a blog post today it identified more than 200 organizations and 5,000 consumer devices that were caught up in a stealthy but remarkably simple spying network built by a Russia-backed threat actor known as “Forest Blizzard.”

How targeted DNS requests were redirected at the router. Image: Black Lotus Labs.

Also known as APT28 and Fancy Bear, Forest Blizzard is attributed to the military intelligence units within Russia’s General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU). APT 28 famously compromised the Hillary Clinton campaign, the Democratic National Committee, and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in 2016 in an attempt to interfere with the U.S. presidential election.

Researchers at Black Lotus Labs, a security division of the Internet backbone provider Lumen, found that at the peak of its activity in December 2025, Forest Blizzard’s surveillance dragnet ensnared more than 18,000 Internet routers that were mostly unsupported, end-of-life routers, or else far behind on security updates. A new report from Lumen says the hackers primarily targeted government agencies—including ministries of foreign affairs, law enforcement, and third-party email providers.

Black Lotus Security Engineer Ryan English said the GRU hackers did not need to install malware on the targeted routers, which were mainly older Mikrotik and TP-Link devices marketed to the Small Office/Home Office (SOHO) market. Instead, they used known vulnerabilities to modify the Domain Name System (DNS) settings of the routers to include DNS servers controlled by the hackers.

As the U.K.’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) notes in a new advisory detailing how Russian cyber actors have been compromising routers, DNS is what allows individuals to reach websites by typing familiar addresses, instead of associated IP addresses. In a DNS hijacking attack, bad actors interfere with this process to covertly send users to malicious websites designed to steal login details or other sensitive information.

English said the routers attacked by Forest Blizzard were reconfigured to use DNS servers that pointed to a handful of virtual private servers controlled by the attackers. Importantly, the attackers could then propagate their malicious DNS settings to all users on the local network, and from that point forward intercept any OAuth authentication tokens transmitted by those users.

DNS hijacking through router compromise. Image: Microsoft.

Because those tokens are typically transmitted only after the user has successfully logged in and gone through multi-factor authentication, the attackers could gain direct access to victim accounts without ever having to phish each user’s credentials and/or one-time codes.

“Everyone is looking for some sophisticated malware to drop something on your mobile devices or something,” English said. “These guys didn’t use malware. They did this in an old-school, graybeard way that isn’t really sexy but it gets the job done.”

Microsoft refers to the Forest Blizzard activity as using DNS hijacking “to support post-compromise adversary-in-the-middle (AiTM) attacks on Transport Layer Security (TLS) connections against Microsoft Outlook on the web domains.” The software giant said while targeting SOHO devices isn’t a new tactic, this is the first time Microsoft has seen Forest Blizzard using “DNS hijacking at scale to support AiTM of TLS connections after exploiting edge devices.”

Black Lotus Labs engineer Danny Adamitis said it will be interesting to see how Forest Blizzard reacts to today’s flurry of attention to their espionage operation, noting that the group immediately switched up its tactics in response to a similar NCSC report (PDF) in August 2025. At the time, Forest Blizzard was using malware to control a far more targeted and smaller group of compromised routers. But Adamitis said the day after the NCSC report, the group quickly ditched the malware approach in favor of mass-altering the DNS settings on thousands of vulnerable routers.

“Before the last NCSC report came out they used this capability in very limited instances,” Adamitis told KrebsOnSecurity. “After the report was released they implemented the capability in a more systemic fashion and used it to target everything that was vulnerable.”

TP-Link was among the router makers facing a complete ban in the United States. But on March 23, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) took a much broader approach, announcing it would no longer certify consumer-grade Internet routers that are produced outside of the United States.

The FCC warned that foreign-made routers had become an untenable national security threat, and that poorly-secured routers present “a severe cybersecurity risk that could be leveraged to immediately and severely disrupt U.S. critical infrastructure and directly harm U.S. persons.”

Experts have countered that few new consumer-grade routers would be available for purchase under this new FCC policy (besides maybe Musk’s Starlink satellite Internet routers, which are produced in Texas). The FCC says router makers can apply for a special “conditional approval” from the Department of War or Department of Homeland Security, and that the new policy does not affect any previously-purchased consumer-grade routers.

UAC-0001 (APT28) Attack Detection: russia-Backed Actor Actively Exploits CVE-2026-21509 Targeting Ukraine and the EU

2 de Fevereiro de 2026, 13:41

Right after Microsoft disclosed an actively exploited Office zero-day (CVE-2026-21509) on January 26, 2026, CERT-UA reported UAC-0001 (APT28) leveraging the vulnerability in the wild. The russia-backed threat actor targeted organizations in Ukraine and the EU with malicious Office documents, and metadata shows one sample was created on January 27 at 07:43 UTC, illustrating the rapid weaponization of CVE-2026-21509.

Detect UAC-0001 aka APT28 Activity Based on the CERT-UA#19542 Alert

APT28 (UAC-0001) has a long record of conducting cyber operations aligned with russian state interests, with a persistent focus on Ukraine and its allied partners. Ukraine frequently serves as an initial testing environment for newly developed tactics, techniques, and procedures that are later scaled to broader international targets. 

The latest UAC-0001 campaign in the limelight follows the same pattern. According to CERT-UA#19542, UAC-0001 targeted Ukrainian state bodies with malicious Office documents exploiting CVE-2026-21509 to deploy the COVENANT framework. The same attack pattern was later observed against EU organizations, demonstrating rapid operational expansion beyond Ukraine.

Sign up for the SOC Prime Platform to proactively defend your organization against UAC-0001 (APT28) attacks exploiting CVE-2026-21509. Just press Explore Detections below and access a relevant detection rule stack, enriched with AI-native CTI, mapped to the MITRE ATT&CK® framework, and compatible with a wide range of SIEM, EDR, and Data Lake technologies.

Explore Detections

Security experts can also use the “CERT-UA#19542” tag based on the relevant CERT-UA alert identifier to search for the detection stack directly and track any content changes.  For more rules to detect attacks related to the UAC-0001 adversary activity, security teams can search the Threat Detection Marketplace library leveraging the “UAC-0001” or “APT28” tags based on the group identifier, as well as the relevant “CVE-2026-21509” tag addressing the Microsoft Office zero-day exploitation.

Additionally, users can refer to a dedicated Active Threats item on the UAC-0001 (APT28) latest attacks to access the AI summary, related detection rules, simulations, and the attack flow in one place.

Security teams can also rely on Uncoder AI to create detections from raw threat reports, document and optimize code, and generate Attack Flows. Additionally, cyber defenders can easily convert IOCs from the latest CERT-UA#19542 alert into performance-optimized queries compatible with your security stack.

Analyzing UAC-0001 (APT28) Attacks Exploiting CVE-2026-21509

In late January 2026, CERT-UA observed a series of targeted cyber attacks attributed to UAC-0001 (APT28) that leveraged an actively exploited Microsoft Office vulnerability tracked as CVE-2026-21509. The malicious activity emerged shortly after Microsoft publicly disclosed the flaw and was initially directed at Ukrainian government entities before expanding to organizations across the European Union.

To establish initial access, attackers distributed specially crafted Microsoft Word documents exploiting CVE-2026-21509. One document, titled “Consultation_Topics_Ukraine(Final).doc,” referenced COREPER, the Committee of Permanent Representatives of the EU, which prepares decisions and coordinates policy among EU member states. Although the file became publicly accessible on January 29, metadata analysis showed it had been created on January 27 (one day after Microsoft’s advisory), indicating rapid weaponization of the vulnerability.

In parallel, CERT-UA received reports of phishing emails impersonating official correspondence from the Ukrainian Hydrometeorological Center. These messages, sent to more than 60 recipients primarily within central executive authorities of Ukraine, contained malicious DOC attachments. When opened in Microsoft Office, the documents established a network connection to an external resource over WebDAV and downloaded a shortcut file containing code designed to retrieve and launch an executable file.

Successful execution of the downloaded payload results in the creation of a malicious DLL file, EhStoreShell.dll, masquerading as the legitimate Enhanced Storage Shell Extension library, and an image file (SplashScreen.png) containing shellcode. The attack also modifies the Windows registry path for CLSID {D9144DCD-E998-4ECA-AB6A-DCD83CCBA16D}, implementing COM hijacking, and creates a scheduled task named OneDriveHealth.

Scheduled execution of the task causes the explorer.exe process to terminate and restart, which (due to the COM hijacking) ensures the loading of EhStoreShell.dll. The DLL executes shellcode from the image file, ultimately resulting in the launch of the COVENANT framework. Command-and-control communications for COVENANT relied on legitimate cloud storage infrastructure provided by Filen (filen.io).

Toward the end of January 2026, CERT-UA identified additional documents using the same exploit chain and delivery mechanisms in attacks against EU-based organizations. Technical overlaps in document structure, embedded URLs, and supporting infrastructure suggest these incidents were part of a coordinated UAC-0001 (APT28) campaign, demonstrating the rapid scaling of the operation beyond its initial Ukrainian targets.

Given the active exploitation of a Microsoft Office zero-day and the challenges many organizations face in promptly applying patches or mitigations, further abuse of CVE-2026-21509 is expected in the near term. 

To reduce the attack surface, organizations should implement the mitigation measures outlined in Microsoft’s advisory, including recommended Windows registry configurations. In addition, as UAC-0001 (APT28) leverages legitimate Filen cloud infrastructure for COVENANT command-and-control operations, network interactions with Filen-related domains and IP addresses should be restricted or placed under enhanced monitoring.

Additionally, security experts can rely on SOC Prime’s AI-Native Detection Intelligence Platform, which equips SOC teams with cutting-edge technologies and top cybersecurity expertise to stay ahead of APT28 attacks while maintaining operational effectiveness. 

MITRE ATT&CK Context

Leveraging MITRE ATT&CK offers in-depth insight into the latest UAC-0001 (APT28) attacks leveraging CVE-2026-21509 exploit to target Ukrainian and EU entities. The table below displays all relevant Sigma rules mapped to the associated ATT&CK tactics, techniques, and sub-techniques.

Tactics 

Techniques

Sigma Rule

Persistence

Scheduled Task/Job: Scheduled Task (T1053.005)

Event Triggered Execution: Component Object Model Hijacking (T1546.015)

Defense Evasion

Masquerading: Match Legitimate Resource Name or Location (T1036.005)

Command and Control

Application Layer Protocol: Web Protocols (T1071.001)

Ingress Tool Transfer (T1105)

Impact

Service Stop (T1489)



The post UAC-0001 (APT28) Attack Detection: russia-Backed Actor Actively Exploits CVE-2026-21509 Targeting Ukraine and the EU appeared first on SOC Prime.

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