More details have emerged about the spyware implant that's delivered to iOS devices as part of a campaign called Operation Triangulation.
Kaspersky, which discovered the operation after becoming one of the targets at the start of the year, said the malware has a lifespan of 30 days, after which it gets automatically uninstalled unless the time period is extended by the attackers.
The Russian cybersecurity company has codenamed the backdoor TriangleDB.
"The implant is deployed after the attackers obtain root privileges on the target iOS device by exploiting a kernel vulnerability," Kaspersky researchers said in a new report published today.
"It is deployed in memory, meaning that all traces of the implant are lost when the device gets rebooted. Therefore, if the victim reboots their device, the attackers have to reinfect it by sending an iMessage with a malicious attachment, thus launching the whole exploitation chain again."
Operation Triangulation entails the use of zero-click exploits via the iMessage platform, thereby allowing the spyware to complete control over the device and user data.
"The attack is carried out using an invisible iMessage with a malicious attachment, which, using a number of vulnerabilities in the iOS operating system, is executed on a device and installs spyware," Eugene Kaspersky, CEO of Kaspersky, said earlier this month.
"The deployment of the spyware is completely hidden and requires no action from the user."
TriangleDB, written in Objective-C, forms the crux of the covert framework. It's designed to establish encrypted connections with a command-and-control (C2) server and periodically send a heartbeat beacon containing the device metadata.
The server, for its part, responds to the heartbeat messages with one of 24 commands that make it possible to dump iCloud Keychain data and load additional Mach-O modules in memory to harvest sensitive data.
This includes file contents, geolocation, installed iOS applications, and running processes, among others. The attack chains culminate with the erasure of the initial message to cover up the tracks.
A closer examination of the source code has revealed some unusual aspects where the malware authors refers to string decryption as "unmunging" and assign names from database terminology to files (record), processes (schema), C2 server (DB Server), and geolocation information (DB Status).
Another notable aspect is the presence of the routine "populateWithFieldsMacOSOnly." While this method is nowhere called in the iOS implant, the naming convention raises the possibility that TriangleDB could also be weaponized to target macOS devices.
"The implant requests multiple entitlements (permissions) from the operating system," Kaspersky researchers said.
"Some of them are not used in the code, such as access to camera, microphone and address book, or interaction with devices via Bluetooth. Thus, functionalities granted by these entitlements may be implemented in modules."
It's currently not known who is behind the campaign and what their ultimate objectives are. Apple, in a previous statement shared with The Hacker News, said it has "never worked with any government to insert a backdoor into any Apple product and never will."
The Russian government, however, has pointed fingers at the U.S., accusing it of breaking into "several thousand" Apple devices belonging to domestic subscribers and foreign diplomats as part of what it claimed to be a reconnaissance operation.
Kaspersky, which discovered the operation after becoming one of the targets at the start of the year, said the malware has a lifespan of 30 days, after which it gets automatically uninstalled unless the time period is extended by the attackers.
The Russian cybersecurity company has codenamed the backdoor TriangleDB.
"The implant is deployed after the attackers obtain root privileges on the target iOS device by exploiting a kernel vulnerability," Kaspersky researchers said in a new report published today.
"It is deployed in memory, meaning that all traces of the implant are lost when the device gets rebooted. Therefore, if the victim reboots their device, the attackers have to reinfect it by sending an iMessage with a malicious attachment, thus launching the whole exploitation chain again."
Operation Triangulation entails the use of zero-click exploits via the iMessage platform, thereby allowing the spyware to complete control over the device and user data.
"The attack is carried out using an invisible iMessage with a malicious attachment, which, using a number of vulnerabilities in the iOS operating system, is executed on a device and installs spyware," Eugene Kaspersky, CEO of Kaspersky, said earlier this month.
"The deployment of the spyware is completely hidden and requires no action from the user."
TriangleDB, written in Objective-C, forms the crux of the covert framework. It's designed to establish encrypted connections with a command-and-control (C2) server and periodically send a heartbeat beacon containing the device metadata.
The server, for its part, responds to the heartbeat messages with one of 24 commands that make it possible to dump iCloud Keychain data and load additional Mach-O modules in memory to harvest sensitive data.
This includes file contents, geolocation, installed iOS applications, and running processes, among others. The attack chains culminate with the erasure of the initial message to cover up the tracks.
A closer examination of the source code has revealed some unusual aspects where the malware authors refers to string decryption as "unmunging" and assign names from database terminology to files (record), processes (schema), C2 server (DB Server), and geolocation information (DB Status).
Another notable aspect is the presence of the routine "populateWithFieldsMacOSOnly." While this method is nowhere called in the iOS implant, the naming convention raises the possibility that TriangleDB could also be weaponized to target macOS devices.
"The implant requests multiple entitlements (permissions) from the operating system," Kaspersky researchers said.
"Some of them are not used in the code, such as access to camera, microphone and address book, or interaction with devices via Bluetooth. Thus, functionalities granted by these entitlements may be implemented in modules."
It's currently not known who is behind the campaign and what their ultimate objectives are. Apple, in a previous statement shared with The Hacker News, said it has "never worked with any government to insert a backdoor into any Apple product and never will."
The Russian government, however, has pointed fingers at the U.S., accusing it of breaking into "several thousand" Apple devices belonging to domestic subscribers and foreign diplomats as part of what it claimed to be a reconnaissance operation.