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Waterbear is Back, Uses API Hooking to Evade Security Product Detection

By Vickie Su, Anita Hsieh, and Dove Chiu

Waterbear, which has been around for several years, is a campaign that uses modular malware capable of including additional functions remotely. It is associated with the cyberespionage group BlackTech, which mainly targets technology companies and government agencies in East Asia (specifically Taiwan, and in some instances, Japan and Hong Kong) and is responsible for some infamous campaigns such as PLEAD and Shrouded Crossbow. In previous campaigns, we’ve seen Waterbear primarily being used for lateral movement, decrypting and triggering payloads with its loader component. In most cases, the payloads are backdoors that are able to receive and load additional modules. However, in one of its recent campaigns, we’ve discovered a piece of Waterbear payload with a brand-new purpose: hiding its network behaviors from a specific security product by API hooking techniques. In our analysis, we have discovered that the security vendor is APAC-based, which is consistent with BlackTech’s targeted countries.

Knowing which specific APIs to hook might mean that the attackers are familiar with how certain security products gather information on their clients’ endpoints and networks. And since the API hooking shellcode adopts a generic approach, a similar code snippet might be used to target other products in the future and make Waterbear harder to detect.

A closer look at Waterbear

Waterbear employs a modular approach to its malware. It utilizes a DLL loader to decrypt and execute an RC4-encrypted payload. Typically, the payload is the first-stage backdoor which receives and loads other executables from external attackers. These first-stage backdoors can be divided into two types: First, to connect to a command-and-control (C&C) server, and second, to listen in on a specific port. Sometimes, the hardcoded file paths of the encrypted payloads are not under Windows native directories (e.g., under security products or third-party libraries’ directories), which may indicate that the attackers might have prior knowledge of their targets’ environments. It is also possible that the attackers use Waterbear as a secondary payload to help maintain presence after gaining some levels of access to the targets’ systems. The evidence is that Waterbear frequently uses internal IPs as its own C&C servers (for instance, b9f3a3b9452a396c3ba0ce4a644dd2b7f494905e820e7b1c6dca2fdcce069361 uses an internal IP address of 10[.]0[.]0[.]211 as its C&C server).

The typical Waterbear infection chain

Figure 1. A typical Waterbear infection chain

A Waterbear infection starts from a malicious DLL loader, as shown in Figure 1. We have seen two  techniques of DLL loader triggering. One is modifying a legitimate server application to import and load the malicious DLL loader, while the second technique is performing phantom DLL hijacking and DLL side loading. Some Windows services try to load external DLLs with hardcoded DLL names or paths during boot-up. However, if the DLL is a legacy DLL (i.e., one that is no longer supported by Windows) or a third-party DLL (i.e., one that is not part of the original Windows system DLLs), attackers can give their malicious DLL a hardcoded DLL name and place it under one of the searched directories during the DLL loading process. After the malicious DLL is loaded, it will gain the same permission level as the service that loads it.

During our recent Waterbear investigation, we discovered that the DLL loader loaded two payloads. The payloads performed functionalities we have never seen in other Waterbear campaigns. The first payload injects code into a specific security product to hide the campaign’s backdoor. The second payload is a typical Waterbear first-stage backdoor, which we will attempt to dissect first based on a specific case we observed during our analysis.

Waterbear’s first-stage backdoor

We saw a Waterbear loader named “ociw32.dll” inside one of the folders in the %PATH% environmental variable. This DLL name is hardcoded inside “mtxoci.dll” which is loaded by the MSDTC service during boot-up. “mtxoci.dll” first tries to query the registry key “HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftMSDTCMTxOCI” to see if the value “OracleOciLib” exists. If so, it retrieves the data inside it and loads the corresponding library. If the value doesn’t exist, “mtxoci.dll” tries to load “ociw32.dll” instead. During our investigation, we noticed that the value “OracleOciLib” was deleted from the victim’s machine, as shown in Figure 2. Hence, the malicious loader “ociw32.dll” was loaded and successfully executed on the host.

Figure 2. The deleted value “OracleOciLib” on the victim’s host

Note: The image on the left  shows how  the DLL on a normal machine normally looks. The image on the right showcases how the DLL on a victim’s machine appears. Because there is no “OracleOciLib” value, it loads the hardcoded DLL “ociw32.dll” instead, which triggers the malicious Waterbear DLL loader.

After the Waterbear DLL loader is executed, it searches for a hardcoded path and tries to decrypt the corresponding payload, which is a piece of encrypted shellcode. The decryption algorithm is RC4, which takes the hardcoded path to form the decryption key. If the decrypted payload is valid, it picks a specific existing Windows Service — LanmanServer, which is run by svchost.exe — and injects the decrypted shellcode into the legitimate service. In most cases, the payload is a first-stage backdoor, and its main purpose is to retrieve second-stage payloads — either by connecting to a C&C server or opening a port to wait for external connections and load incoming executables.

Configuration of the first-stage backdoor

Waterbear’s first-stage backdoor configuration contains the information required for the proper execution of and communication with external entities.

  • Offset 0x00, Size 0x10: Encryption / decryption key for the functions
  • Offset 0x10, Size 0x04: 0x0BB8 (reserved)
  • Offset 0x14, Size 0x10: Version (e.g., 0.13, 0.14, 0.16, and so on)
  • Offset 0x24, Size 0x10: Mutex or reserved bytes
  • Offset 0x34, Size 0x78: C&C server address which is XOR-encrypted by key 0xFF. If the backdoor is intended to listen in on a specific port, this section will be filled with 0x00.
  • Offset 0xAC, Size 0x02: Port
  • Offset 0xAE, Size 0x5A: Reserved bytes
  • Table: The function address table of the payload. The block is initially filled with 0x00 and will be propagated during runtime.
  • Table: The sizes of functions
  • Table: The API address table. The block is initially filled with 0x00 and will be filled with loaded API addresses during runtime.
  • Table: The API hashes for dynamic API loading
  • A list of DLL names and the number of APIs to be loaded

Figure 3. The first-stage backdoor’s configuration structure

Anti-memory scanning of shellcode payload

In order to avoid in-memory scanning during runtime, the payload encrypts all of the function blocks before executing the actual malicious routine. Afterwards, whenever it needs to use a function, it will decrypt the function, execute it, and encrypt the function back again, as can be seen in Figure 4. If a function will not be used on the rest of the execution, it will be scrambled by another mess-up function, as illustrated in Figure 6. The mess-up function muddles up the bytes with random values and makes the input blocks unrecoverable. The purpose of this is to further avoid being detected by a certain cybersecurity solution.

Figure 4. The decryption-execution-encryption flow in the shellcode execution routine

Figure 5. The function for the function block encryption and decryption

Figure 6. The payload’s mess-up function

Same Waterbear, different story

During our investigation, we found a peculiar incident that stands out from most of the Waterbear infections we’ve previously seen. This time, the DLL loader loaded two payloads – the first payload performed functionalities we have not seen before: It injected codes into a specific security product to do API hooking in order to hide the backdoor from the product. Meanwhile, the second payload is a typical Waterbear first-stage backdoor.

Figure 7. An unusual Waterbear infection chain

Figure 7. An unusual Waterbear infection chain

Both payloads were encrypted and stored on the victim’s disk and were injected into the same service, which was, in this case, LanmanServer. We have observed that the loader tried to read the payloads from the files, decrypted them, and performed thread injections with the following conditions:

  1. If the first payload could not be found on the disk, the loader would be terminated without loading the second one.
  2. If the first payload was successfully decrypted and injected into the service, the second piece would also be loaded and injected regardless of what happened to the first thread.
  3. In the first injected thread, if the necessary executable from the security product was not found, the thread would be terminated without performing other malicious routines. Note that only the thread would be terminated, but the service would still be running.

Regardless if the API hooking was performed or otherwise, the second backdoor would still be executed after having been successfully loaded.

API hooking to evade detection

In order to hide the behaviors of the first-stage backdoor (which is the second payload), the first payload uses API hooking techniques to avoid being detected by a specific security product and to make an interference in the result of the function execution. It hooks two different APIs, namely “ZwOpenProcess” and “GetExtendedTcpTable”, to hide its specific processes. The payload only modifies the functions in the memory of the security product process, hence the original system DLL files remain unchanged.

The payload is composed of a two-stage shellcode. The first-stage shellcode finds a specific security product’s process with a hardcoded name and injects the second-stage shellcode into  that process. The second-stage shellcode then performs API hooking inside the targeted process.

Hiding process identifiers (PIDs)

The process identifiers or PIDs to be hidden are stored in the shared memory “Global.” If the shared memory doesn’t exist, it takes the PID embedded by the first-stage shellcode. In this case, the intention of the malicious code is to hide Waterbear’s  backdoor activities from the security product. Therefore, the first-stage shellcode takes the PID of the Windows Service — which the first-stage shellcode and the succeeding backdoor both inject into — hides the target process, and embeds that PID into the second-stage shellcode.

 

Figure 8. Code that injects current PID into the second-stage shellcode

Hooking “ZwOpenProcess” in ntdll.dll

The purpose of hooking “ZwOpenProcess” is to protect the specific process from being accessed by the security product. Whenever “ZwOpenProcess” is called, the injected code will first check if the opened process hits any PIDs in the protected process ID list. If yes, it modifies the process ID, which should open on another Windows Service PID.

First, it builds the hooked function and writes the function at the end of “ntdll.dll”. This function includes two parts, as shown in Figure 9:

  1. The PID checking procedure. It recursively checks if the PID to be opened by “ZwOpenProcess” is in the list of the protected process IDs. If yes, it replaces the PID to be opened with another Windows Service PID that has been written by the Waterbear loader in the beginning.
  2. After the PID checking procedure, it executes the original “ZwOpenProcess” and returns the result.

Figure 9. The function hook of “ZwOpenProcess” to check and modify the output of the function

Secondly, it writes “push

ret” at the beginning of the original “ZwOpenProcess” address. Hence, when “ZwOpenProcess” is called, the modified version of “ZwOpenProcess” will be executed.

Figure 10. “ZwOpenProcess” after modification

The API hooking on “ZwOpenProcess” will only be triggered if “%temp%KERNELBASE.dll” exists on the host. It is possible that this check is designed according to the nature of the security product it targets.

“GetExtendedTcpTable” and “GetRTTAndHopCount” hooks in iphlpapi.dll

The second part of API hooking hooks on “GetExtendedTcpTable.” “GetExtendedTcpTable” is used for retrieving a table that contains a list of TCP endpoints available to the application, and it is frequently used in some network-related commands, such as netstat. The purpose of the hook is to remove TCP endpoint records of certain PIDs. In order to achieve that, it modifies two functions: “GetExtendedTcpTable” and “GetRTTAndHopCount.” The second function, “GetRTTAndHopCount,” acts as the place to put the injected hooking code.

“GetExtendedTcpTable” only writes a jump to “GetRTTAndHopCount” in the beginning of the function. Only the first 5 bytes of the code of the API “GetExtendedTcpTable” are changed, as shown in Figure 11.

Figure 11. Only 5 bytes changed in the “GetExtendedTcpTable”

The rest of the routine is all placed in “GetRTTAndHopCount.” In the first part of the code, it pushes [“GetRTTAndHopCount”+0x3E] as the return address and then executes the first four instructions of the original “GetExtendedTcpTable” function (which has already been replaced by the jump instruction in Figure 11). After that, it jumps to “GetExtendedTcpTable” to execute the function normally and to catch its return values. The code is shown in Figure 12.

Figure 12. The first part of injected code in “GetRTTAndHopCount,” which executes “GetExtendedTcpTable” and returns back to the next instruction

After “GetExtendedTcpTable” is executed and the process returns back to the second part of the code, it iteratively checks every record in the returned Tcp table. If any record contains the PID Waterbear wants to hide, it will remove the corresponding record, modify the record number inside the table, and continue to check the succeeding records. In the end, it returns the modified table.

Figure 13. The first part of injected code in “GetRTTAndHopCount,” which executes “GetExtendedTcpTable” and returns back to the next instruction

Rather than directly disabling these two functions, this method of using API hooking makes noticing malicious behaviors more difficult, especially since both functions still work and return results normally. Although in this case, the affected process is specified in the first-stage shellcode, the API hooking logic is quite generic that the same piece of shellcode can be used to hook other vendors’ products.

Conclusion

This is the first time we’ve seen Waterbear attempting to hide its backdoor activities. By the hardcoded product name, we infer that the attackers are knowledgeable of the victims’ environment and which security product(s) they use. The attackers might also be familiar with how security products gather information on their clients’ endpoints and networks, so that they know which APIs to hook. Since the API hooking shellcode adopts a generic approach, the similar code snippet might be used to target other products in the future and make the activities of Waterbear harder to detect.

Tactic

TechniqueID

Description

ExecutionExecution through Module LoadT1129

 

Dynamically loads the DLLs through the shellcode
Execution through APIT1106

 

Dynamically loads the APIs through the shellcode
Persistence

 

HookingT1179

 

Hooks security product’s commonly used APIs
Privilege Escalation

 

Process InjectionT1055Injects the decrypts payload into svchost.exe process
HookingT1179

 

Hooks security products’ commonly used APIs
Defense EvasionBinary PaddingT1009Adds junk data to evade anti-virus scan
Disabling Security ToolsT1089Targets a specific security product’s process for injection purposes
Deobfuscate/Decode Files or InformationT1140Uses TROJ_WATERBEAR to decrypt encrypted payload
Execution GuardrailsT1480Targets specific software in the victim’s environment
DLL Side-LoadingT1073

 

Uses modified legitimate DLL to load the malicious DLL
Process InjectionT1055Injects the decrypted payload into svchost.exe process
ExfiltrationExfiltration Over Command and Control ChannelT1041Possibly sends collected data to attackers via C&C channel

Indicators of Compromise (IoCs)

SHA256

Detection Name

649675baef92381ffcdfa42e8959015e83c1ab1c7bbfd64635ce5f6f65efd651BKDR_WATERBEAR.ZTGF
3909e837f3a96736947e387a84bb57e57974db9b77fb1d8fa5d808a89f9a401bTROJ_WATERBEAR.ZTGD
fcfdd079b5861c0192e559c80e8f393b16ba419186066a21aab0294327ea9e58TROJ_WATERBEAR.ZTGJ
3f26a971e393d7f6ce7bf4416abdbfa1def843a0cf74d8b7bb841ca90f5c9ed9TROJ_WATERBEAR.ZTGH
abb91dfd95d11a232375d6b5cdf94b0f7afb9683fb7af3e50bcecdb2bd6cb035TROJ_WATERBEAR.ZTGH
bda6812c3bbba3c885584d234be353b0a2d1b1cbd29161deab0ef8814ac1e8e1TROJ_WATERBEAR.ZTGI
53402b662679f0bfd08de3abb064930af40ff6c9ec95469ce8489f65796e36c3TROJ_WATERBEAR.ZTGH
f9f6bc637f59ef843bc939cb6be5000da5b9277b972904bf84586ea0a17a6000TROJ_WATERBEAR.ZTGI
3442c076c8824d5da065616063a6520ee1d9385d327779b5465292ac978dec26BKDR_WATERBEAR.ZTGD
7858171120792e5c98cfa75ccde7cba49e62a2aeb32ed62322aae0a80a50f1eaTROJ64_WATERBEAR.ZTGI
acb2abc7fb44c2fdea0b65706d1e8b4c0bfb20e4bd4dcee5b95b346a60c6bd31BKDR_WATERBEARENC.ZTGF
b9f3a3b9452a396c3ba0ce4a644dd2b7f494905e820e7b1c6dca2fdcce069361BKDR64_WATERBEAR.ZTGD
7c0d2782a33debb65b488893705e71a001ea06c4eb4fe88571639ed71ac85cddBKDR_WATERBEARENC.ZTGH
c7c7b2270767aaa2d66018894a7425ba6192730b4fe2130d290cd46af5cc0b7bBKDR_WATERBEARENC.ZTGI
7532fe7a16ba1db4d5e8d47de04b292d94882920cb672e89a48d07e77ddd0138BKDR_WATERBEARENC.ZTGI
dea5c564c9d961ccf2ed535139fbfca4f1727373504f2972ac92acfaf21da831BKDR_WATERBEARENC.ZTGI
05d0ab2fbeb7e0ba7547afb013d307d32588704daac9c12002a690e5c1cde3a4BKDR64_WATERBEARENC.ZTGJ
39668008deb49a9b9a033fd01e0ea7c5243ad958afd82f79c1665fb73c7cfadfBKDR_WATERBEARENC.ZTGD

 

 

 

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