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Daxin Malware All the Way from China

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Researchers from Symantec have discovered a highly sophisticated dubbed Daxin, Chinese hacking tool that has been able to escape public attention for more than a decade.

CISA was announcing Symantec’s inclusion into a joint public-private cybersecurity information sharing partnership, known as the JCDC.

The JCDC, or Joint Cyber Defense Collaborative, is a collective of government defense agencies, including the FBI and National Security Agency, and 22 U.S. technology companies that share intelligence about active cyberattacks with one another.

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Chinese officials have previously said China is also a victim of hacking and opposes all forms of cyber attacks. Symantec’s attribution to China is based on instances where components of Daxin were combined with other known, Chinese-linked computer hacker infrastructure or cyberattacks.

Symantec researchers said the discovery of Daxin was noteworthy because of the scale of the intrusions and the advanced nature of the tool.

Daxin operates as a Windows kernel driver. It is designed “optimized,” for the use of single external command to hop from infected system to infected system on a single network with varying security measures put in place. While it is not unusual to use multiple infected systems to bridge across systems, usually it takes individual instructions from node to node.

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Daxin appears to have been in continuous use since its development, with the most recent sample being collected by Symantec in November 2021. There is code overlap with Exforel (a.k.a. Zala) malware, which had similar features but less obsessive security and Symantec now assumes came from the same development team. Symantec believes that team was active since 2009.

Daxin’s capabilities suggest the attackers invested significant effort into developing communication techniques that can blend in unseen with normal network traffic. Daxin’s victims included high-level, non-western government agencies in Asia and Africa, including Ministries of Justice.

Indicators of Compromise

File names attributed to Daxin activity:

“ipfltdrvs.sys”

“ndislan.sys”

“ndislan_win2008_x64.sys”

“ntbios.sys”

“patrol.sys”

“performanceaudit.sys”

“print64.sys”

“printsrv64.sys”

“prv64.sys”

“sqlwriter.sys”

“srt.sys”

“srt64.sys”

“syswant.sys”

“usbmrti.sys”

“vncwantd.sys”

“wantd.sys”

“win2k8.sys”

“wmipd.sys”

“[CSIDL_SYSTEM]\drivers\pagefile.sys”

“[CSIDL_SYSTEM]\spool\drivers\ntds.sys”

Malware observed during overlapping activities:

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