Rootkit in the Cloud: Hacker Group Breaches AWS Servers
A sophisticated hacker group pwned Amazon Web Services (AWS) servers, set up a rootkit that let them remotely control servers, then merrily funnelled sensitive corporate data home to its command and control (C2) servers from a range of compromised Windows and Linux machines inside an AWS data centre.
That’s according to a report from the UK’s Sophos published late last week, which has raised eyebrows and questions in the security industry. The attackers neatly sidestepped AWS security groups (SGs); which, when correctly configured, act as a security perimeter for associated Amazon EC2 instances.
The unnamed target of this attack had correctly tuned their SGs. But the compromised Linux system was still listening for inbound connections on ports 2080/TCP and 2053/TCP: something that eventually triggered alerts, and Sophos’ intervention. Sophos was at pains to emphasise that while this particular attack targeted AWS servers, it was “not an AWS problem per se. It represents a method of piggybacking C2 traffic on a legitimate traffic… in a way that can bypass many, if not most, firewalls.”