Menu

  • Alerts
  • Incidents
  • News
  • APTs
  • Cyber Decoded
  • Cyber Hygiene
  • Cyber Review
  • Cyber Tips
  • Definitions
  • Malware
  • Threat Actors
  • Tutorials

Useful Tools

  • Password generator
  • Report an incident
  • Report to authorities
No Result
View All Result
CTF Hack Havoc
CyberMaterial
  • Education
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Definitions
  • Information
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
  • Insights
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Tips
    • Tutorials
  • Support
    • Contact Us
    • Report an incident
  • About
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
Get Help
Hall of Hacks
  • Education
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Definitions
  • Information
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
  • Insights
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Tips
    • Tutorials
  • Support
    • Contact Us
    • Report an incident
  • About
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
Get Help
No Result
View All Result
Hall of Hacks
CyberMaterial
No Result
View All Result
Home Alerts

Eastern Europe Targeted: Red Stinger APT

May 12, 2023
Reading Time: 2 mins read
in Alerts
Eastern Europe Targeted: Red Stinger APT

 

A previously unknown advanced persistent threat (APT) group named Red Stinger has been identified, targeting Eastern European entities such as military, transportation, critical infrastructure, and those involved in the September East Ukraine referendums. The attackers have managed to exfiltrate various types of data, including snapshots, USB drives, keyboard strokes, and microphone recordings.

Red Stinger overlaps with another threat cluster called Bad Magic, which targeted government, agriculture, and transportation organizations in Donetsk, Lugansk, and Crimea. While there were indications of Red Stinger’s activity since at least September 2021, new findings push their origins back to December 2020.

The attack chain of Red Stinger involves the use of malicious installer files to drop the DBoxShell implant on compromised systems. Subsequent attacks in April and September 2021 followed similar patterns with minor variations.

A significant wave of attacks occurred in February 2022 during Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine, and the last known activity associated with Red Stinger took place in September 2022. The malware DBoxShell utilizes cloud storage services as a command-and-control mechanism, serving as an entry point for attackers to assess the interest of their targets.

The exact scale of infections remains unclear, but evidence points to two victims in central Ukraine, a military target, and an officer in critical infrastructure, who were compromised during the February 2022 attacks. The attackers exfiltrated screenshots, microphone recordings, office documents, and logged keystrokes from these victims.

The September 2022 intrusion focused primarily on Russia-aligned regions, targeting officers and individuals involved in elections. Red Stinger also infected a library in the Ukrainian city of Vinnytsia, although the motivations behind the campaign are unknown.

The origins of the Red Stinger threat group remain mysterious, but it was discovered that the threat actors inadvertently or for testing purposes infected their own Windows 10 machines in December 2022, providing insights into their activities. Notable characteristics include the choice of English as the default language and the use of the Fahrenheit temperature scale, suggesting the involvement of native English speakers.

Attribution of the attack to a specific country is challenging, as victims aligned with both Russia and Ukraine were targeted. The primary motive of the attack appears to be surveillance and data gathering, as evidenced by the extensive toolset and targeted approach used by the attackers.

Reference:
  • Uncovering RedStinger – Undetected APT cyber operations in Eastern Europe since 2020
Tags: APTCyber AlertCyber Alerts 2023CyberattackMay 2023Red StingerVulnerabilities
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Fake Firms Push Malware on Crypto Users

Fake Sites Push Investment Scams

July 11, 2025
Fake Firms Push Malware on Crypto Users

Severe WordPress Flaw 200K Sites at Risk

July 11, 2025
Fake Firms Push Malware on Crypto Users

Fake Firms Push Malware on Crypto Users

July 11, 2025
Hackers Revive SEO Poisoning

Hackers Revive SEO Poisoning

July 10, 2025
Hackers Revive SEO Poisoning

RondoDox Botnet Exploits Router Flaws

July 10, 2025
Hackers Revive SEO Poisoning

ServiceNow Data Exposure via ACLs

July 10, 2025

Latest Alerts

Fake Sites Push Investment Scams

Fake Firms Push Malware on Crypto Users

Severe WordPress Flaw 200K Sites at Risk

RondoDox Botnet Exploits Router Flaws

ServiceNow Data Exposure via ACLs

Hackers Revive SEO Poisoning

Subscribe to our newsletter

    Latest Incidents

    Microsoft’s Outlook Long Outage

    Avantic Lab Affected By Ransomware

    $40M+ Stolen from GMX Crypto Platform

    Bitcoin Depot Breach Exposes Data

    McDonald’s AI Hiring Bot Exposes Data

    Nippon Steel Solutions Data Breach

    CyberMaterial Logo
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Jobs
    • Legal and Privacy Policy
    • Site Map

    © 2025 | CyberMaterial | All rights reserved

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password?

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In

    Add New Playlist

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Definitions
    • Malware
    • Cyber Tips
    • Tutorials
    • Advanced Persistent Threats
    • Threat Actors
    • Report an incident
    • Password Generator
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise with us

    Copyright © 2025 CyberMaterial