Apple iTunes for Windows Zero-day Exploited by BitPaymer Ransomware
October 13, 2019 Share

Apple iTunes for Windows Zero-day Exploited by BitPaymer Ransomware

Researchers found a new footprint about the recent BitPaymer ransomware campaign that was exploited the Apple iTunes for Windows Zero-day vulnerability to attacker public and private sectors across the U.S.

Threat actors took advantage of a zero-day vulnerability that resides in the Bonjour Updater that comes packaged with iTunes for Windows and abused the unquoted path vulnerability to evade the detection and maintain the persistence.

Bonjour is an updater mechanism used by Apple to deliver future updates, and it has a separate installation entry to perform a scheduled task.

The BitPaymer ransomware attack was targeting the industries such as finance, agriculture, technology, and is targeting at least 15 organizations.

The unquoted path vulnerability is one of the rarely seen flaws and is well known in the cybersecurity industry for 15 years, which often the vulnerability is used to perform a privilege escalation attack since it exists in a process with admin rights.

BitPaymer Ransomware Attack Surface in Bonjour
Windows users unaware that they need to separately uninstall the Bonjour component when uninstalling the iTunes, but if it is failed to uninstall, then the machine has still allowed the updater task where the vulnerability resides.

Morphisec researchers found that the Bonjour updater is installed on a large number of computers across different enterprises even after they uninstall iTunes from their system.

But Bonjour component remains silently in the system without updates and working in the background. This attack surface motivates attackers to choose this process for evasion.

In this case, attackers taking advantage of the presence of Bonjour to perform an attack since the Bonjour component is signed, and known which help to remain undetected.

Basically, a malicious “program” doesn’t come with .exe extension which doesn’t fall under the security software scanning since it tends to scan only specific file extensions to prevent the infection.

“Bonjour was trying to run from the “Program Files” folder, but because of the unquoted path, it instead ran the BitPaymer ransomware since it was named “Program”. This is how the zero-day was able to evade detection and bypass AV.”

Bonjour updater zero-day vulnerability mainly used to evade detection, and there is no evidence found that the BitPaymer ransomware neither writes any files on victims machine nor escalate any privileges.

Apple patched the vulnerability in both iTunes 12.10.1 for Windows and iCloud for Windows 7.14. users are highly recommended to update the new version to prevent a future attacks.

This post Apple iTunes for Windows Zero-day Exploited by BitPaymer Ransomware originally appeared on GB Hackers.

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