North Korean APT43 Uses PowerShell and Dropbox in Targeted South Korea Cyberattacks
A nation-state threat actor with ties to North Korea has been linked to an ongoing campaign targeting South Korean business, government, and cryptocurrency sectors
PowerShell is Microsoft's task-automation shell and scripting platform, whose capabilities affect endpoint administration, abuse, and security controls.
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Background for this topic.
PowerShell is a command-line shell and scripting language for automating administration and configuration. It began as a Windows technology and is also available on Linux and macOS; its security-relevant features include access to operating-system APIs, scripting, and remote management. Administrators and defenders use it for tasks such as configuration enforcement, log analysis, and investigation.
Because PowerShell can download, decode, and execute scripts and use trusted administrative interfaces, attackers may abuse it for execution, persistence, credential access, or lateral movement, especially after obtaining valid permissions. PowerShell itself is not inherently malicious or a universal antivirus bypass. Useful controls include applying updates to the relevant PowerShell edition and its runtime, limiting script and remoting privileges, and enabling detailed logging such as script-block and transcription logs. Security teams can correlate those records with process, authentication, and network telemetry; controls such as application allowlisting and constrained language mode can further reduce abuse, while preserving required administrative workflows.
A nation-state threat actor with ties to North Korea has been linked to an ongoing campaign targeting South Korean business, government, and cryptocurrency sectors
The North Korea-linked threat actor known as Kimsuky has been observed using a new tactic that involves deceiving targets into running PowerShell as an administrator and then instructing them to paste and run malicious code provided by them