Names | DustSquad (Kaspersky) Golden Falcon (Qihoo 360) APT-C-34 (Qihoo 360) Nomadic Octopus (ESET) | |
Country | ![]() | |
Motivation | Information theft and espionage | |
First seen | 2014 | |
Description | (Kaspersky) For the last two years we have been monitoring a Russian-language cyberespionage actor that focuses on Central Asian users and diplomatic entities. We named the actor DustSquad and have provided private intelligence reports to our customers on four of their campaigns involving custom Android and Windows malware. In this blogpost we cover a malicious program for Windows called Octopus that mostly targets diplomatic entities. The name was originally coined by ESET in 2017 after the 0ct0pus3.php script used by the actor on their old C2 servers. We also started monitoring the malware and, using Kaspersky Attribution Engine based on similarity algorithms, discovered that Octopus is related to DustSquad, something we reported in April 2018. In our telemetry we tracked this campaign back to 2014 in the former Soviet republics of Central Asia (still mostly Russian-speaking), plus Afghanistan. | |
Observed | Sectors: Defense, Government, Media and diplomats and dissidents. Countries: Afghanistan, Kazakhstan and Central Asia. | |
Tools used | Harpoon, Octopus, Remote Control System. | |
Information | <https://securelist.com/octopus-infested-seas-of-central-asia/88200/> <https://www.zdnet.com/article/extensive-hacking-operation-discovered-in-kazakhstan/> |
Last change to this card: 20 April 2020
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