How Water Labbu Exploits Electron-Based Applications
In the second part of our Water Labbu blog series, we explore how the threat actor exploits Electron-based applications using Cobalt Strike to deploy backdoors.
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Background for this topic.
Cobalt Strike is a commercial penetration testing tool designed to simulate advanced attacker behaviors, including command and control (C2) communication, lateral movement, and data exfiltration. Originally intended for red team exercises, it provides features such as customizable payloads, beacon implants, and post-exploitation modules that mimic real-world attack techniques.
Its dual-use nature means threat actors often repurpose Cobalt Strike for unauthorized intrusions, leveraging its stealthy C2 channels and modular capabilities to maintain persistence and evade detection. Security teams should monitor for Cobalt Strike indicators like unusual beacon traffic and employ endpoint detection strategies focused on its known payload behaviors to mitigate risks associated with its misuse.
In the second part of our Water Labbu blog series, we explore how the threat actor exploits Electron-based applications using Cobalt Strike to deploy backdoors.