Hackers broke into U.S. military contractor, stole sensitive data

October 6, 2022

A joint alert by CISA, the FBI, and the NSA revealed a cyberattack in which spies hid and stole sensitive data from a U.S. contractor’s corporate network for several months.

It remains unknown how the hackers broke into the defense organization’s Microsoft Exchange Server. The warning said that the threat actors spent hours searching mailboxes and using a compromised admin account to query Exchange through its EWS API.

Other malicious activities carried out by the hackers include executing Windows commands to learn more about IT setup and collecting other files in archives using WinRAR, as well as using the Impacket open-source network toolkit to remotely control machines on the network and move laterally.

The attackers then used a custom data exfiltration tool called CovalentStealer to siphon sensitive data, including contract-related information from shared drives.

The attackers’ activities were only discovered after someone realized something was wrong. As part of the investigation conducted by CISA and a “trusted third-party” security firm, officials investigated malicious network activity and discovered that some unnamed crews gained initial access to the organization’s Exchange Server as early as mid-January 2021.

The researchers’ findings showed that the attackers exploited several Microsoft bugs in 2021, including CVE-2021-26855, CVE-2021-26857, CVE-2021-26858, and CVE-2021-27065, to install 17 China Chopper webshells on the Exchange Server.

The sources for this piece include an article in TheRegister.

Top Stories

Related Articles

April 1, 2026 Anthropic has inadvertently exposed the full source code of its Claude Code tool for the second time more...

April 1, 2026 Cisco suffered a cyberattack after attackers used stolen credentials from a compromised developer tool to access its more...

March 30, 2026 Google has expanded its “Results about you” tool, allowing users to remove highly sensitive personal data, including more...

March 27, 2026 Microsoft is updating GitHub Copilot to train on real-world developer interactions, expanding beyond public code datasets to more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn