APT29
APT29 is a Russian state-sponsored threat actor publicly attributed by several governments to the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR). It is also known as Cozy Bear, The Dukes, NOBELIUM, UNC2452, Dark Halo, NobleBaron, SolarStorm, StellarParticle, Cloaked Ursa, CozyDuke, and Midnight Blizzard. The group is heavily focused on diplomatic and political intelligence collection, principally targeting Europe and NATO member states, and has also targeted technology companies, IT service providers, political parties, government organizations, NGOs, IGOs, think tanks, and Microsoft 365 accounts in NATO countries. The content describes APT29 as highly capable in cloud environments and focused on covering its tracks to evade detection and removal. Reported tradecraft includes spearphishing campaigns using malicious Microsoft Word documents, PDFs, and LNK files; password spraying against cloud tenants lacking MFA; abuse of a compromised or malicious OAuth application with elevated Exchange Online permissions to access email; use of HTTP for command and control and data exfiltration during the SolarWinds compromise; PowerShell-based account discovery using Get-ADUser and Get-ADGroupMember; and use of 7-Zip to decode Raindrop malware during SolarWinds. The content also notes use of Golden SAML and compromise of Azure AD service principals for persistence and lateral movement in the SolarWinds context. Specific activity referenced in the content includes spearphishing against NATO members and defense contractors in Poland and Germany, targeting of Microsoft 365 accounts in NATO countries for foreign policy intelligence, the SolarWinds compromise, and the November 2023 intrusion into Microsoft’s corporate environment that Microsoft disclosed in January 2024. In that Microsoft incident, APT29 reportedly password-sprayed a non-production tenant without MFA and then used a malicious or compromised test OAuth application with elevated privileges to access employee email, including leadership and legal mailboxes. The content also references Microsoft’s reporting on MagicWeb, a post-compromise capability attributed to NOBELIUM/Midnight Blizzard, used to maintain access by backdooring AD FS servers and manipulating authentication claims to bypass policies including MFA. APT29 is described as having a long history of spearphishing against NATO members, especially diplomatic entities, and as having breached executive agencies across Europe and the United States on several occasions.
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Tradecraft
65 distinct techniques observed across reporting, grouped by tactic. Hover any cell for the evidence excerpt; click through for MITRE's full description.
Associated malware families
50 malware families attributed to this actor across reporting.
45 additional families tracked in Mallory.
Associated vulnerabilities
43 CVEs this actor has used in observed campaigns. 43 of them exploited in the wild.
In its own advisory for the CVE-2023-50224 vulnerability, TP-Link said that many of its products are affected, but that all of them have reached end-of-life status, which means they are no longer supported by the company.
The following are the vulnerabilities exploited by APT29. CVE-2018-13379: Fortinet FortiOS SSL VPN Path Traversal Vulnerability.
The following are the vulnerabilities exploited by APT29. CVE-2019-11510: Ivanti Pulse Connect Secure Arbitrary File Read Vulnerability.
The following are the vulnerabilities exploited by APT29. CVE-2019-19781: Citrix ADC, Gateway, and SD-WAN WANOP Appliance Code Execution Vulnerability.
The following are the vulnerabilities exploited by APT29. CVE-2019-9670: Synacor Zimbra Collaboration (ZCS) Improper Restriction of XML External Entity Reference.
38 more CVEs tied to this actor tracked in Mallory.
Observables
348 indicators attributed to this actor: domains, IPs, hashes, and other artifacts pulled from reporting. View more in app.
Recent activity
20 sources tracked across advisories, community write-ups, and news. New activity surfaces here as Mallory finds it.
Example threat actor profile used to demonstrate AI enrichment of a spear-phishing campaign targeting NATO members and defense contractors.
Referenced as the threat actor used in a CyberDefenders/OpenCTI threat intelligence exercise focused on identifying the group's TTPs and IoCs.
Espionage-oriented activity using password spraying against a Microsoft tenant lacking MFA, followed by abuse of a compromised high-privilege test OAuth application to access employee email. The content also notes nation-state use of stealer logs for quiet access to diplomatic mail.
Referenced as another Russian intelligence-linked intrusion set observed targeting the same victim as APT28.
The version that knows your environment.
Match sector + geo + tech-stack targeting against your real footprint.
Every observed MITRE ATT&CK technique, grouped by tactic.
Families this actor is known to deploy, with IOCs and behavior.
CVEs this actor has used in known campaigns.
YARA, Sigma, Snort, and vendor rules, auto-deployed to your SIEM.
Domains, IPs, and hashes tied to this actor, refreshed continuously.