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January 26, 2020

How AI Can Detect Bitcoin Mining Attack Via Citrix Flaw

Discover how Darktrace AI stops bitcoin mining attacks via Citrix flaws. Learn about the power of Autonomous Response against cyber threats. Read now!
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
Max Heinemeyer
Global Field CISO
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26
Jan 2020

Over the last 14 days, Darktrace has detected at least 80 different customers all targeted by the same CVE-2019-19781 vulnerability — affecting the Citrix ADC (Citrix Application Delivery Controller) and Citrix Gateway solution for public cloud. Customers operating Darktrace Antigena in ‘active mode’ have all seen that this attack was neutralized within seconds.

According to the National Cyber Security Centre, the exploitation of this vulnerability allows an ‘unauthenticated attacker to perform arbitrary code execution’. While Citrix has released mitigation advice, patches are just being rolled out. This unfortunately left a critical window of time, during which the attackers could exploit the vulnerabilities. However, Darktrace’s immune system technology can effectively halt the attack and contain the damage.

This blog post outlines the attack lifecycle of a campaign exploiting the Citrix vulnerabilities to download crypto-mining malware. It is interesting to see how quick the cyber-criminals were to weaponize the Citrix exploits with crypto-mining payloads for generating profit. It shows that AI-powered Autonomous Response is pivotal in today’s fast-moving threat landscape, where patches might not be available or might take weeks to install safely.

Breaking down the attack lifecycle

The following description of the observed attack stages demonstrates how Darktrace Antigena’s independent and immediate action stops the attack in its tracks, provides visibility of the complete attack lifecycle, and significantly reduces security teams’ investigation time into this activity.

  1. Darktrace’s detection capabilities highlight the steps taken by exploited Citrix Netscaler devices executing shell commands.
  2. These devices begin by receiving HTTP POST requests to URIs that are vulnerable to directory traversal attacks, for example /vpn/…/vpns/cfg/smb.conf. This is visible in the below details provided by Darktrace.

Figure 1: A screenshot of the requests on a particular device

  1. These POST requests are followed by high confidence alerts created by Darktrace – the attack behavior was very similar in different targeted organizations. The high-confidence alerts were equally similar, regardless of the target, as the attack behavior was the same.
  2. Code execution is triggered, leading to the download of shell scripts and other malware with the end-goal of running crypto-mining malware.

Some of the high-confidence alerts are:

  • Compromise / High Volume of Connections with Beacon Score – used to identify command and control traffic
  • Compliance / Pastebin – triggers during suspicious and unusual Pastebin activity
  • Compliance / Crypto Currency Mining Activity
  • Anomalous Connection / Multiple Failed Connections to Rare Endpoint – indicating unsuccessful command and control traffic attempts
  • Anomalous File / Script from Rare External – indicating the download of a script file from a location on the internet that is not commonly visited by the targeted organization (often this is the initial infection or a later-stage payload)

In one example, a gateway device was seen downloading a shell script from a rare external endpoint in Russia, with a /ci.sh URI.

Figure 2: Darktrace’s Threat Visualizer showing an endpoint with 100% rarity

Next, compromised devices have been observed downloading an executable file from Ukraine (http://217.12.221[.]12/netscalerd), containing an ELF:BitCoinMiner Malware, triggering the cryptocurrency mining and command and control beaconing alerts.

Figure 3: The Anomalous File / EXE from Rare External Location alert triggered by C2 traffic

Figure 4: Darktrace showing further details about the downloaded malware

An immediate response

However, Darktrace Antigena kicks in as the machine defender, eliminating the incoming threat by blocking miner file downloads and activity for about a day. This offers the customer ample time to react to this anomalous activity and halts the malware’s spread to other devices. Intervening with surgical precision, Antigena stops the malicious activity while allowing normal business processes to continue.

Figure 5: Chronological sequence (bottom to top) of alerts and Antigena actions on the vulnerable device

Lessons for the future

The exploitation of Citrix ADC’s vulnerability has understandably caused concern across the security community. Based upon the cumulation and nature of alerts triggered, the malware aims to mine cryptocurrency like so many other campaigns these days.

On the other hand, and perhaps more importantly here, this recently discovered vulnerability strengthens the case for Autonomous Response and its proven ability to prevent novel attacks.

At Darktrace we are often asked how we detect zero-day exploits. Every stage in the attack lifecycle – from the execution of Pastebin-sourced commands to performing internal reconnaissance and mining crypto with impunity – involved behavior that in some way deviated from the Enterprise Immune System’s learned ‘pattern of life’. Antigena neutralized these attacks without relying on pre-defined blacklists, and no new detections were created. By leveraging Cyber AI, the Bitcoin malware using the Citrix vulnerabilities was instantly contained – before any damage could be done to the customer.

Indicators of compromise

  • 185.178.45[.]221 (hosting malicious shell scripts)
  • 92.63.99[.]17 (mining pool)
  • 217.12.221[.]12 (hosting malware)

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
Max Heinemeyer
Global Field CISO

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January 13, 2026

Runtime Is Where Cloud Security Really Counts: The Importance of Detection, Forensics and Real-Time Architecture Awareness

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Introduction: Shifting focus from prevention to runtime

Cloud security has spent the last decade focused on prevention; tightening configurations, scanning for vulnerabilities, and enforcing best practices through Cloud Native Application Protection Platforms (CNAPP). These capabilities remain essential, but they are not where cloud attacks happen.

Attacks happen at runtime: the dynamic, ephemeral, constantly changing execution layer where applications run, permissions are granted, identities act, and workloads communicate. This is also the layer where defenders traditionally have the least visibility and the least time to respond.

Today’s threat landscape demands a fundamental shift. Reducing cloud risk now requires moving beyond static posture and CNAPP only approaches and embracing realtime behavioral detection across workloads and identities, paired with the ability to automatically preserve forensic evidence. Defenders need a continuous, real-time understanding of what “normal” looks like in their cloud environments, and AI capable of processing massive data streams to surface deviations that signal emerging attacker behavior.

Runtime: The layer where attacks happen

Runtime is the cloud in motion — containers starting and stopping, serverless functions being called, IAM roles being assumed, workloads auto scaling, and data flowing across hundreds of services. It’s also where attackers:

  • Weaponize stolen credentials
  • Escalate privileges
  • Pivot programmatically
  • Deploy malicious compute
  • Manipulate or exfiltrate data

The challenge is complex: runtime evidence is ephemeral. Containers vanish; critical process data disappears in seconds. By the time a human analyst begins investigating, the detail required to understand and respond to the alert, often is already gone. This volatility makes runtime the hardest layer to monitor, and the most important one to secure.

What Darktrace / CLOUD Brings to Runtime Defence

Darktrace / CLOUD is purpose-built for the cloud execution layer. It unifies the capabilities required to detect, contain, and understand attacks as they unfold, not hours or days later. Four elements define its value:

1. Behavioral, real-time detection

The platform learns normal activity across cloud services, identities, workloads, and data flows, then surfaces anomalies that signify real attacker behavior, even when no signature exists.

2. Automated forensic level artifact collection

The moment Darktrace detects a threat, it can automatically capture volatile forensic evidence; disk state, memory, logs, and process context, including from ephemeral resources. This preserves the truth of what happened before workloads terminate and evidence disappears.

3. AI-led investigation

Cyber AI Analyst assembles cloud behaviors into a coherent incident story, correlating identity activity, network flows, and Cloud workload behavior. Analysts no longer need to pivot across dashboards or reconstruct timelines manually.

4. Live architectural awareness

Darktrace continuously maps your cloud environment as it operates; including services, identities, connectivity, and data pathways. This real-time visibility makes anomalies clearer and investigations dramatically faster.

Together, these capabilities form a runtime-first security model.

Why CNAPP alone isn’t enough

CNAPP platforms excel at pre deployment checks all the way down to developer workstations, identifying misconfigurations, concerning permission combinations, vulnerable images, and risky infrastructure choices. But CNAPP’s breadth is also its limitation. CNAPP is about posture. Runtime defense is about behavior.

CNAPP tells you what could go wrong; runtime detection highlights what is going wrong right now.

It cannot preserve ephemeral evidence, correlate active behaviors across domains, or contain unfolding attacks with the precision and speed required during a real incident. Prevention remains essential, but prevention alone cannot stop an attacker who is already operating inside your cloud environment.

Real-world AWS Scenario: Why Runtime Monitoring Wins

A recent incident detected by Darktrace / CLOUD highlights how cloud compromises unfold, and why runtime visibility is non-negotiable. Each step below reflects detections that occur only when monitoring behavior in real time.

1. External Credential Use

Detection: Unusual external source for credential use: An attacker logs into a cloud account from a never-before-seen location, the earliest sign of account takeover.

2. AWS CLI Pivot

Detection: Unusual CLI activity: The attacker switches to programmatic access, issuing commands from a suspicious host to gain automation and stealth.

3. Credential Manipulation

Detection: Rare password reset: They reset or assign new passwords to establish persistence and bypass existing security controls.

4. Cloud Reconnaissance

Detection: Burst of resource discovery: The attacker enumerates buckets, roles, and services to map high value assets and plan next steps.

5. Privilege Escalation

Detection: Anomalous IAM update: Unauthorized policy updates or role changes grant the attacker elevated access or a backdoor.

6. Malicious Compute Deployment

Detection: Unusual EC2/Lambda/ECS creation: The attacker deploys compute resources for mining, lateral movement, or staging further tools.

7. Data Access or Tampering

Detection: Unusual S3 modifications: They alter S3 permissions or objects, often a prelude to data exfiltration or corruption.

Only some of these actions would appear in a posture scan, crucially after the fact.
Every one of these runtime detections is visible only through real-time behavioral monitoring while the attack is in progress.

The future of cloud security Is runtime-first

Cloud defense can no longer revolve solely around prevention. Modern attacks unfold in runtime, across a fast-changing mesh of workloads, services, and — critically — identities. To reduce risk, organizations must be able to detect, understand, and contain malicious activity as it happens, before ephemeral evidence disappears and before attacker's pivot across identity layers.

Darktrace / CLOUD delivers this shift by turning runtime, the most volatile and consequential layer in the cloud, into a fully defensible control point through unified visibility across behavior, workloads, and identities. It does this by providing:

  • Real-time behavior detection across workloads and identity activity
  • Autonomous response actions for rapid containment
  • Automated forensic level artifact preservation the moment events occur
  • AI-driven investigation that separates weak signals from true attacker patterns
  • Live cloud environment insight to understand context and impact instantly

Cloud security must evolve from securing what might go wrong to continuously understanding what is happening; in runtime, across identities, and at the speed attackers operate. Unifying runtime and identity visibility is how defenders regain the advantage.

[related-resource]

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About the author
Adam Stevens
Senior Director of Product, Cloud | Darktrace

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January 12, 2026

Maduro Arrest Used as a Lure to Deliver Backdoor

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Introduction

Threat actors frequently exploit ongoing world events to trick users into opening and executing malicious files. Darktrace security researchers recently identified a threat group using reports around the arrest of Venezuelan President Nicolàs Maduro on January 3, 2025, as a lure to deliver backdoor malware.

Technical Analysis

While the exact initial access method is unknown, it is likely that a spear-phishing email was sent to victims, containing a zip archive titled “US now deciding what’s next for Venezuela.zip”. This file included an executable named “Maduro to be taken to New York.exe” and a dynamic-link library (DLL), “kugou.dll”.  

The binary “Maduro to be taken to New York.exe” is a legitimate binary (albeit with an expired signature) related to KuGou, a Chinese streaming platform. Its function is to load the DLL “kugou.dll” via DLL search order. In this instance, the expected DLL has been replaced with a malicious one with the same name to load it.  

DLL called with LoadLibraryW.
Figure 1: DLL called with LoadLibraryW.

Once the DLL is executed, a directory is created C:\ProgramData\Technology360NB with the DLL copied into the directory along with the executable, renamed as “DataTechnology.exe”. A registry key is created for persistence in “HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run\Lite360” to run DataTechnology.exe --DATA on log on.

 Registry key added for persistence.
Figure 2. Registry key added for persistence.
Folder “Technology360NB” created.
Figure 3: Folder “Technology360NB” created.

During execution, a dialog box appears with the caption “Please restart your computer and try again, or contact the original author.”

Message box prompting user to restart.
Figure 4. Message box prompting user to restart.

Prompting the user to restart triggers the malware to run from the registry key with the command --DATA, and if the user doesn't, a forced restart is triggered. Once the system is reset, the malware begins periodic TLS connections to the command-and-control (C2) server 172.81.60[.]97 on port 443. While the encrypted traffic prevents direct inspection of commands or data, the regular beaconing and response traffic strongly imply that the malware has the ability to poll a remote server for instructions, configuration, or tasking.

Conclusion

Threat groups have long used geopolitical issues and other high-profile events to make malicious content appear more credible or urgent. Since the onset of the war in Ukraine, organizations have been repeatedly targeted with spear-phishing emails using subject lines related to the ongoing conflict, including references to prisoners of war [1]. Similarly, the Chinese threat group Mustang Panda frequently uses this tactic to deploy backdoors, using lures related to the Ukrainian war, conventions on Tibet [2], the South China Sea [3], and Taiwan [4].  

The activity described in this blog shares similarities with previous Mustang Panda campaigns, including the use of a current-events archive, a directory created in ProgramData with a legitimate executable used to load a malicious DLL and run registry keys used for persistence. While there is an overlap of tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs), there is insufficient information available to confidently attribute this activity to a specific threat group. Users should remain vigilant, especially when opening email attachments.

Credit to Tara Gould (Malware Research Lead)
Edited by Ryan Traill (Analyst Content Lead)

Indicators of Compromise (IoCs)

172.81.60[.]97
8f81ce8ca6cdbc7d7eb10f4da5f470c6 - US now deciding what's next for Venezuela.zip
722bcd4b14aac3395f8a073050b9a578 - Maduro to be taken to New York.exe
aea6f6edbbbb0ab0f22568dcb503d731  - kugou.dll

References

[1] https://cert.gov.ua/article/6280422  

[2] https://www.ibm.com/think/x-force/hive0154-mustang-panda-shifts-focus-tibetan-community-deploy-pubload-backdoor

[3] https://www.ibm.com/think/x-force/hive0154-targeting-us-philippines-pakistan-taiwan

[4] https://www.ibm.com/think/x-force/hive0154-targeting-us-philippines-pakistan-taiwan

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About the author
Tara Gould
Malware Research Lead
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