remove APT36/ Transpert Tribe from microsoft-activity-group.json cause we don't know any MSTIC name yet.

pull/756/head
Rony 2022-08-20 17:06:18 +00:00
parent 6b137ea12c
commit 6fd584fa88
1 changed files with 0 additions and 32 deletions

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@ -205,38 +205,6 @@
"uuid": "2d19c573-252b-49d8-8c2e-3b529b91e72d",
"value": "ZIRCONIUM"
},
{
"description": "This threat actor uses social engineering and spear phishing to target military and defense organizations in India, for the purpose of espionage.",
"meta": {
"cfr-suspected-state-sponsor": "Pakistan",
"cfr-suspected-victims": [
"India"
],
"cfr-target-category": [
"Government",
"Private sector"
],
"cfr-type-of-incident": "Espionage",
"refs": [
"https://www.cfr.org/interactive/cyber-operations/mythic-leopard"
],
"synonyms": [
"C-Major",
"Transparent Tribe"
]
},
"related": [
{
"dest-uuid": "acbb5cad-ffe7-4b0e-a57a-2dbc916e8905",
"tags": [
"estimative-language:likelihood-probability=\"likely\""
],
"type": "similar"
}
],
"uuid": "2a410eea-a9da-11e8-b404-37b7060746c8",
"value": "https://www.cfr.org/interactive/cyber-operations/mythic-leopard"
},
{
"description": "Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center (MSTIC) is raising awareness of the ongoing activity by a group we call GALLIUM, targeting telecommunication providers. When Microsoft customers have been targeted by this activity, we notified them directly with the relevant information they need to protect themselves. By sharing the detailed methodology and indicators related to GALLIUM activity, were encouraging the security community to implement active defenses to secure the broader ecosystem from these attacks.\nTo compromise targeted networks, GALLIUM target unpatched internet-facing services using publicly available exploits and have been known to target vulnerabilities in WildFly/JBoss. Once persistence is established in a network, GALLIUM uses common techniques and tools like Mimikatz to obtain credentials that allows for lateral movement across the target network. Within compromised networks, GALLIUM makes no attempt to obfuscate their intent and are known to use common versions of malware and publicly available toolkits with small modifications. The operators rely on low cost and easy to replace infrastructure that consists of dynamic-DNS domains and regularly reused hop points.\nThis activity from GALLIUM has been identified predominantly through 2018 to mid-2019. GALLIUM is still active; however, activity levels have dropped when compared to what was previously observed.",
"meta": {