MirrorFace aims for high‑value targets in Japan – Week in security with Tony Anscombe

Share This Post

Share

The group’s proprietary backdoor LODEINFO delivers additional malware, exfiltrates credentials, and steals documents and emails

This week, the ESET research team published their findings about a spearphishing campaign that the Chinese-speaking threat actor MirrorFace launched in Japan and that mainly focused on members of a specific Japanese political party. The campaign – which ESET Research has named Operation LiberalFace and which occurred in the lead-up to the House of Councillors elections in July 2022 – involved the group’s flagship backdoor LODEINFO. The backdoor, which is the group’s s proprietary malware deployed exclusively against targets in Japan, was used to deliver additional malware, exfiltrate the victims’ credentials, and steal the victims’ documents and emails.

To learn more about the attacks and the group’s targets and tactics, read the full blog: Unmasking MirrorFace: Operation LiberalFace targeting Japanese political entities.

WeLiveSecurity

Read More

More Articles

Article

Navigating SEC Regulations In Cybersecurity And Incident Response

Free video resource for cybersecurity professionals. As 2024 approaches, we all know how vital it is to keep up to date with regulatory changes that affect our work. We get it – it’s a lot to juggle, especially when you’re in the trenches working on an investigation, handling, and responding to incidents.

Article

BFU – Seeing is Believing

Oh no, the device is in BFU. This is the common reaction; a device needs extracting, and you find it in a BFU state. Often, there’s an assumption that a BFU extraction will only acquire basic information, but that isn’t always the case.