Possible Satori botnet hacker indicted by Feds | Cyber Security

A 20 year-old man has been indicted for computer crimes by a federal court in Alaska. Evidence suggests that he could be linked to the Satori botnet that exploited a previously unknown bug in a Huawei router. If so, one of the most virulent botnets in recent times might have been engineered not by a sophisticated organized criminal or nation state actor, but by a relatively inexperienced dabbler who happened across a zero-day vulnerability.

Kenneth Currin Schuchman of Vancouver, Washington, has been indicted in an Alaskan federal court on two charges. Firstly, from August through November 2017, he allegedly:

Knowingly caused the transmission of a program, information, code, and command, and, as a result of such conduct, intentionally caused damage without authorization to protected computers; the offense caused damage affecting 10 or more protected computers during a 1-year period.

The second charge mirrors the first but focuses on a specific unnamed victim. Both of these offenses happened in Alaska, the indictment alleges.

Possible Satori link

Reporting by the Daily Beast speculates that Schuchman may have created the Satori botnet. This botnet, also tracked as Okiru, was identified in the wild on November 23 2017 exploiting a zero-day vulnerability in Huawei HG532 routers.

The person responsible for the Satori botnet went by the online handle Nexus Zeta. One security researcher on Twitter had identified a botnet binary calling itself ‘Satori’ in July 2017, three weeks after the registration of the nexusiotsolutions.net domain. A Twitter user called Nexus_Zeta responded that this was a test, based on the Mirai source code.

Two days earlier Nexus_Zeta also said:

A member of the Hack Forums hacking community who joined in 2015 and also went by the name Nexus Zeta seemed surprisingly inexperienced. On November 22 2017, that person posted a request to the forum::

hello, im looking for someone to help me compile the mirai botnet, i heard all you have to do is compile it and you have access to 1 terabit per second so please help me setup a mirai tel-net botnet

A day later, security researchers from Check Point noticed activity related to the previously unknown Huawei vulnerability, dubbing it Satori.

Satori was a variant of the Mirai botnet that originally infected various IoT devices and disrupted DNS services in October 2016. During its initial infection phase, Satori simply looked for more targets to infect, suggesting that its creator was expanding the base of infected machines as quickly as possible. It infected over 260,000 IP addresses in just 12 hours, according to researchers who analysed its activities.

Then, in January 2018, a variant called Satori.Coin.Robber started scanning for machines mining Ethereum using the Claymore mining software. Upon finding them, it replaced their wallet addresses with the bot owner’s own. Two more botnets, Masuta and PureMasuta, also appeared. Researchers linked the botnets to Satori because they used the same command and control server.

Several variants followed. One in May targeted Dasan GPON home routers, and in June, researchers noticed a resurgence of Satori infections using a new exploit that targeted the D-Link DSL-2750B router. It is unclear whether Satori’s original author also owned the subsequent variants, especially as the original source code was widely distributed via Pastebin in January.