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China's 'FamousSparrow' APT Nests in South Caucasus Energy Firm

China's 'FamousSparrow' APT Nests in South Caucasus Energy Firm

The cyberthreat group targets an Azerbaijani oil and gas firm with repeated attacks, as the China-linked actors extend targeting beyond hospitality, telecom, and government sectors.

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China's 'FamousSparrow' APT Nests in South Caucasus Energy Firm

Newsletter Sign-UpNewsletter Sign-UpCybersecurity TopicsRelated TopicsApplication SecurityCybersecurity CareersCloud SecurityCyber RiskCyberattacks & Data BreachesCybersecurity AnalyticsCybersecurity OperationsData PrivacyEndpoint SecurityICS/OT SecurityIdentity & Access Mgmt SecurityInsider ThreatsIoTMobile SecurityPerimeterPhysical SecurityRemote WorkforceThreat IntelligenceVulnerabilities & ThreatsRecent in Cybersecurity TopicsEndpoint SecurityChina's Webworm Uses Discord, Microsoft Graphs to Hack EU GovernmentsChina's Webworm Uses Discord, Microsoft Graphs to Hack EU GovernmentsbyAlexander CulafiMay 22, 20264 Min ReadApplication SecurityGitHub Confirms Breach, 4K Internal Repos StolenGitHub Confirms Breach, 4K Internal Repos StolenbyAlexander CulafiMay 20, 20263 Min ReadWorld Related TopicsDR GlobalMiddle East & AfricaAsia PacificLatin AmericaSee AllThe EdgeDR TechnologyEventsRelated TopicsUpcoming EventsPodcastsWebinarsSEE ALLResourcesRelated TopicsResource LibraryNewslettersPodcastsReportsVideosWebinarsWhite Papers Partner PerspectivesDark Reading Resource LibraryCyberattacks & Data BreachesCyber RiskCybersecurity OperationsEndpoint SecurityNewsBreaking cybersecurity news, news analysis, commentary, and other content from around the world, with an initial focus on the Middle East & Africa and the Asia PacificChina's 'FamousSparrow' APT Nests in South Caucasus Energy FirmThe cyberthreat group targets an Azerbaijani oil and gas firm with repeated attacks, as the China-linked actors extend targeting beyond hospitality, telecom, and government sectors.Robert Lemos,Contributing WriterMay 13, 20265 Min ReadSource: Alen Thien via ShutterstockAs oil-and-gas supplies have become increasingly disrupted in the Middle East and Eastern Europe, Russia- and China-linked cyber espionage groups have followed the economic ripples, targeting countries in which they have not always taken an interest.In the latest example, the China-linked FamousSparrow group has targeted an Azerbaijanian oil-and-gas company in the South Caucasus region, which sits between Iran, Turkey, and Russia, according to research published by cybersecurity firm Bitdefender today. The group used a unique sideloading technique for dynamic link libraries (DLLs) that allowed them to evade some defenses and install remote access tools, the firm stated. The operational technology (OT) networks were not affected.While Russian cyberthreat groups have targeted companies in the region, this is the first time that China-linked groups have been discovered in Azerbaijanian industries, says Martin Zugec, technical solutions director at Bitdefender.Related:Middle East Cyber Battle Field Broadens — Especially in UAE"This definitely looks like a targeted attack based on everything we've seen," he says. "China-aligned APTs are pushing at Russia's traditional sphere of influence, whereas before, it was staying away from it."The South Caucasus region — comprising Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia — has become an increasingly important energy corridor for the European Union, serving 16 nations with gas exports that have grown 56% over the past five years. Russia has typically taken a geopolitical interest in the region, often turning to cyber espionage and cyberattacks as a way to exert influence, especially around its 2008 invasion of northern Georgia.The latest research suggests that China has begun to focus on South Caucasus with its own cyber operations.Is FamousSparrow Flocking With Salt Typhoon?The FamousSparrow operations in Azerbaijan appear to have started in late December, and lasted until the end of February, according to Bitdefender's research. The tools discovered in the attack have shown signs of improvement, including the addition of a two-stage mechanism for sideloading malware using DLLs, and modifications to the Deed RAT remote access tool.The DLL side-loading changes gates the payload behind a specific execution path, allowing it to run only if the application follows an expected sequence of instruction — which makes analysis and sandbox detection more difficult, the researchers stated in the analysis. FamousSparrow has targeted firms across the globe, but Azerbaijan marks a new front. Source: Bitdefender"The malicious library will just prepare the staging and the payload, and not execute it, and as the legitimate executable is going through the process of execution, all the little pieces of the puzzle are being put in place, and then suddenly it becomes malicious," Bitdefender's Zugec says. "If you analyze all the pieces on its own, you can't see anything, they don't have any malicious behavior individually."Related:Chinese APT Abuses Multiple Cloud Tools to Spy on MongoliaFirst detected in 2021 by cybersecurity firm ESET, FamousSparrow has targeted hotels, government agencies, and financial organizations in North America, Europe, South America, and the Middle East. Azerbaijan appears to be a new focus, Zugec says.While other researchers have posited that FamousSparrow and the infamous Salt Typhoon are the same group, or significantly overlapping groups, there is not enough information to link the two, Alexandre Côté Cyr, a malware researcher with ESET, said in a recent analysis of FamousSparrow. Microsoft originally named Salt Typhoon, and has not released indicators of compromise that would help others to determine whether they are analyzing the same group, he says."FamousSparrow appears to be its own distinct cluster with loose links to the others," such as Salt Typhoon (which many also link to Earth Estries) and GhostEmperor, Côté Cyr says. "We believe those links are better explained by positing the existence of a shared third party, such as a digital quartermaster, than by conflating all of these disparate clusters of activity into one."Related:Chinese APT Targets Indian Banks, Korean Policy CirclesChina's Central Armory of APT Tools & Malware?A central repository of knowledge for Chinese threat groups would also explain Bitdefender's observation that once a tool or technique appears in one attack by a Chinese state-sponsored actor, it often appears to propagate out to other groups linked to China."One thing that you can see across all of these groups is that if one of them comes up with new technique, then probably all of them will start copying it," Bitdefender's Zugec says. "With Chinese APTs we are seeing that there is some kind of centralized knowledge about what works and what doesn't."Some companies have allowed them to build on that knowledge through poor cyber hygeine. In the latest case, the unnamed oil-and-gas company detected the attack on specific workstations and cleaned those systems, but the initial access vector — a vulnerable Microsoft Exchange server — was not fixed. FamousSparrow swooped in for two subsequent attacks as a result.Doing a full incident analysis and patching vulnerable systems could go a long way to keeping out the attackers, Bitdefender's Zugec says."This attack could be prevented if the victim would follow the basic security best practices that we've been teaching for many, many years," he says. "This is really good example of if you don't fix the underlying problem, they will come back."Don't miss the latest Dark Reading Confidential podcast, How the Story of a USB Penetration Test Went Viral. Two decades ago Dark Reading posted its first blockbuster piece — a column by a pen tester who sprinkled rigged thumb drives around a credit union parking lot and let curious employees do the rest. This episode looks back at the history-making piece with its author, Steve Stasiukonis. Listen now!Read more about:DR Global Middle East & AfricaAbout the AuthorRobert LemosContributing WriterRob is an award-winning, veteran technology journalist of more than 30 years, reporting on global cybersecurity issues, the latest offensive and defensive technologies, malware incidents, cyber conflict, and AI's impact on software and cybersecurity. A former research engineer, Rob has written for more than two dozen publications, including CNET News.com, Dark Reading, MIT's Technology Review, Popular Science, and Wired News. He has received five awards for journalism, including Best Deadline Journalism (Online) in 2003 for his coverage of the Blaster worm. Rob also analyzes data on various trends using Python and R for both his reporting and his clients. Recent reports include analyses of the shortage in cybersecurity workers, annual vulnerability trends, and annual threat reports.Rob holds degrees from Cornell University in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (double major).See more from Robert LemosWant more Dark Reading stories in your Google search results?Add Us NowMore InsightsIndustry ReportsHow Organizations Are Managing Incident ResponseHow Enterprises Are Developing Secure ApplicationsInside RSAC 2026: security leaders reveal the risks redefining your defense strategyHow Enterprises Are Harnessing Emerging Technologies in CybersecurityDitch the Data Center: Understanding Flexible Cloud Infrastructure Security ManagementAccess More ResearchWebinarsBuild vs. Buy: The Hidden Cost of Building Your Own AI Security StackDefending in the Shadow Era: When the CVE Feed Goes DarkBuilding SecOps That Make the Most of Every DollarAI-Powered Cybersecurity for Resource-Constrained OrganizationsAI-Powered Credential Security: Intelligence Without ExposureMore WebinarsEditor's ChoiceThreat IntelligenceFrom Stuxnet to ChatGPT: 20 News Events That Shaped CyberFrom Stuxnet to ChatGPT: 20 News Events That Shaped CyberbyDark Reading Editorial TeamMay 6, 202631 Min ReadCyber RiskPhysical Cargo Theft Gets a Boost From CybercriminalsPhysical Cargo Theft Gets a Boost From CybercriminalsbyRobert LemosMay 4, 20265 Min ReadWant more Dark Reading stories in your Google search results?Keep up with the latest cybersecurity threats, newly discovered vulnerabilities, data breach information, and emerging trends. 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