Quote:Cybercriminals have been using a novel approach to exfiltrate data that involves directly injecting malicious Google Chrome extensions onto victims’ Windows machines via the abuse of Google’s cloud synching function.
The goal of the recently-identified campaign is to manipulate data in internal web applications that the victims have access to, according to an analysis.
According to Bojan Zdrnja, writing for the SANS Institute, attackers are directly planting malicious extensions on the targets’ computers, rather than uploading them to the Chrome Web Store and waiting for victims to download them.
The malicious add-on is disguised as a “Forcepoint Endpoint Chrome Extension for Windows,” with the attackers using the security company’s logo to enhance an air of legitimacy.
The threat actors “dropped the extension locally in a folder and loaded it directly from Chrome on a compromised workstation,” explained Zdrnja, in an analysis late last week. “This is actually a legitimate function in Chrome – you can access it by going to More Tools -> Extensions and enabling Developer mode, after which you can load any extensions locally, directly from a folder by clicking on ‘Load unpacked.'”
The analysis doesn’t detail how the initial compromise was carried out. However, when it comes to the attack goal, “they actually limited activities on this workstation to those related to web applications, which explains why they dropped only the malicious Chrome extension, and not any other binaries,” the researcher explained. “That being said, it also makes sense – almost everything is managed through a web application today, be it your internal CRM, document management system, access rights management system or something else.”
Read more: https://threatpost.com/fake-forcepoint-g...ks/163728/