LATEST THREAT INTELLIGENCE.

Silent Push Traffic Origin Data Combined with Residential Proxy Data Uncovers Suspicious Chinese VPN

Description: An investigation using Silent Push's Traffic Origin and residential proxy data revealed a suspicious Chinese VPN provider. The analysis focused on IP address 205.198.91.155, which showed unusual traffic from Russia, China, Myanmar, Iran, and Venezuela. This IP was linked to the domain lvcha.in, hosting a Chinese-language VPN. Further investigation uncovered nearly 50 related domains promoting the same VPN, suggesting attempts to bypass country-level firewalls. The VPN's infrastructure was found to use residential proxies and had connections to various high-risk countries. This case study demonstrates the importance of verifying physical and technical behaviors of connections to protect against fraud and state-sponsored actors using stolen identities and spoofed locations.

Created at: 2026-02-10T09:09:44.803000

Updated at: 2026-02-10T10:05:27.619000

Infrastructure of Interest: Medium Confidence Command And Control

Description: These indicators of compromise (IOCs) were identified through LevelBlue Labs' proprietary collection and threat hunting processes, leveraging AI-driven heuristics to detect anomalous patterns, behavioral analysis of malicious activity, and cross-referenced intelligence from endpoint telemetry and external sources. The IOCs included in this pulse are associated with command and control (C2) infrastructure, facilitating malware communication, data exfiltration, and persistent threat actor operations. Use this data to enhance detection rules, block malicious infrastructure, or correlate with existing incident investigations. These indicators have been assigned a medium confidence level regarding their maliciousness. They are therefore subject to further review, and feedback is greatly appreciated.

Created at: 2025-08-07T07:29:37.542000

Updated at: 2026-02-10T09:46:28.356000

Dissecting UAT-8099: New persistence mechanisms and regional focus

Description: UAT-8099, a threat actor targeting vulnerable IIS servers across Asia, has launched a new campaign from late 2025 to early 2026. The group's tactics have evolved, focusing on Thailand and Vietnam, and employing web shells, PowerShell scripts, and the GotoHTTP tool for remote access. New variants of BadIIS malware now include region-specific features, with separate versions targeting Vietnam and Thailand. The actor has expanded their toolkit to include utilities for log removal, file protection, and anti-rootkit capabilities. They've also adapted their persistence methods, creating hidden user accounts and leveraging legitimate tools to evade detection. The campaign demonstrates significant operational overlaps with the WEBJACK campaign, including shared malware hashes, C2 infrastructure, and victimology.

Created at: 2026-01-29T17:20:34.042000

Updated at: 2026-02-09T21:41:54.376000

Cryptocurrency Sector Targeted with New Tooling and AI-Enabled Social Engineering

Description: North Korean threat actor UNC1069 has evolved its tactics to target the cryptocurrency and decentralized finance sectors. In a recent intrusion, they deployed seven unique malware families, including new tools SILENCELIFT, DEEPBREATH, and CHROMEPUSH, designed to capture host and victim data. The attack utilized social engineering involving a compromised Telegram account, fake Zoom meeting, and reported AI-generated video. UNC1069 has shifted from spear-phishing to targeting Web3 industry entities like centralized exchanges, software developers, and venture capital firms. The intrusion demonstrated sophisticated techniques to bypass macOS security features and harvest credentials, browser data, and cryptocurrency information. This marks a significant expansion in UNC1069's capabilities and highlights their focus on financial theft and fueling future social engineering campaigns.

Created at: 2026-02-09T19:29:20.975000

Updated at: 2026-02-09T20:26:12.333000

Technical Analysis of GuLoader Obfuscation Techniques

Description: GuLoader, a malware downloader active since 2019, primarily delivers RATs and information stealers. It employs sophisticated anti-analysis techniques, including polymorphic code for dynamic constant construction and complex exception-based control flow obfuscation. The malware has evolved to handle multiple exception types, making tracing its execution flow challenging. GuLoader uses dynamic hashing, encrypted strings, and stack-based string encryption to conceal critical information. It often hosts payloads on trusted cloud services to bypass reputation-based detection. The malware's consistent development and updating of anti-analysis techniques suggest it will remain a significant threat in the future.

Created at: 2026-02-09T19:07:10.863000

Updated at: 2026-02-09T20:18:39.892000

Investigation on the EmEditor Supply Chain Cyberattack

Description: A recent supply chain attack targeting EmEditor users has been uncovered, involving watering hole tactics. The investigation reveals multiple domains masquerading as EmEditor-related sites, all registered through NameSilo LLC in December 2025. The domains resolve to various IP addresses, with some changes observed in February 2026. Additional domains with similar patterns were discovered, along with peculiar HTTP header behavior. A potential early stage of the campaign was identified, sharing similar characteristics with the initial report. The attackers continued their activities even after exposure, utilizing PowerShell scripts and various domains for command and control purposes. The analysis provides a comprehensive list of indicators, including domain names, IP addresses, and file hashes associated with the attack.

Created at: 2026-02-09T14:52:16.312000

Updated at: 2026-02-09T20:16:16.247000

Yet Another Leak of China's Contractor-Driven Cyber-Espionage Ecosystem

Description: The Knownsec leak exposes a state-aligned Chinese cyber contractor deeply integrated with national security and intelligence operations. Internal documents reveal Knownsec's role in developing offensive cyber capabilities, large-scale reconnaissance systems, and data fusion platforms for public security bureaus and military clients. Key products include ZoomEye for global IP scanning, GhostX for exploitation, and Passive Radar for covert network mapping. The leak provides unprecedented insight into Knownsec's organizational structure, personnel, and strategic targeting of foreign critical infrastructure, particularly in Taiwan and other Asian countries. It demonstrates how commercial entities like Knownsec function as core components of China's cyber-espionage ecosystem, blending state objectives with industrial-scale development of intrusion and surveillance technologies.

Created at: 2026-01-10T13:29:36.119000

Updated at: 2026-02-09T13:05:03.614000

Knife Cutting the Edge: Disclosing a China-nexus gateway-monitoring AitM framework

Description: Cisco Talos uncovered 'DKnife', a sophisticated gateway-monitoring and adversary-in-the-middle (AitM) framework comprising seven Linux-based implants. Used since 2019, DKnife performs deep-packet inspection, traffic manipulation, and malware delivery via routers and edge devices. It targets various devices, including PCs, mobile devices, and IoT, delivering ShadowPad and DarkNimbus backdoors. The framework primarily targets Chinese-speaking users, with evidence suggesting China-nexus threat actors as operators. DKnife's capabilities include DNS hijacking, Android application update hijacking, Windows binary hijacking, anti-virus traffic disruption, and user activity monitoring. A link to the WizardNet campaign was also discovered, indicating a shared development or operational lineage.

Created at: 2026-02-05T20:16:27.292000

Updated at: 2026-02-09T12:15:04.704000

Danger Bulletin: Cyberattacks Against Ukraine and EU Countries Using CVE-2026-21509 Exploit

Description: UAC-0001 (APT28) has launched cyberattacks against Ukraine and EU countries exploiting the CVE-2026-21509 vulnerability in Microsoft Office products. The threat actor created malicious DOC files targeting government bodies and EU organizations. The attack chain involves WebDAV connections, COM hijacking, and the use of the COVENANT framework, which utilizes Filen cloud storage for command and control. The campaign began shortly after the vulnerability's disclosure, with multiple documents discovered containing similar exploits. The attackers employ sophisticated techniques to evade detection and maintain persistence, including disguising malicious files as legitimate Windows components and creating scheduled tasks.

Created at: 2026-02-04T14:15:57.152000

Updated at: 2026-02-09T12:07:44.149000

A security alert regarding APT-C-28 (ScarCruft) using MiradorShell to launch a cyberattack.

Description: A recent investigation reveals that the APT-C-28 (ScarCruft) group has expanded its targets to include the cryptocurrency industry. The group employs sophisticated phishing tactics, using LNK files disguised as PDFs to lure victims with investment proposals ranging from $1-3 million. Upon execution, a multi-stage payload deployment occurs, ultimately installing MiradorShell v2.0 to gain system control. The attack chain involves file downloads, decryption, and the creation of scheduled tasks for persistence. MiradorShell, an AutoIt-based backdoor, connects to a command and control server, offering reverse shell capabilities, file management, remote program execution, and victim fingerprinting. The malware employs various evasion techniques, including inline library files and direct API calls.

Created at: 2026-02-09T10:18:26.280000

Updated at: 2026-02-09T10:36:13.709000