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Saturday, January 16, 2010

What Is APT and What Does It Want?

Posted on 7:38 PM by Unknown
This has been the week to discuss the advanced persistent threat, although some people are already telling me Google v China with respect to APT is "silly," or that the attack vectors were what everyone has been talking about for years, and were somewhat sloppily orchestrated at that.

I think many of these critics are missing the point. As is often the case with sensitive issues, 1) those who know often can't say and 2) those who say often don't know. There are some exceptions worth noting!

One company that occupies a unique position with respect to this problem is Mandiant. Keep an eye on the APT tag of their M-unition blog. Mandiant's role as a consulting firm to many APT victims helps them talk about what they see without naming any particular victim.

I also recommend following Mike Cloppert's posts. He is a deep thinker with respect to counter-APT operations. Incidentally I agree with Mike that the US Air Force invented the term "advanced persistent threat" around 2006, not Mandiant.

Reviewing my previous blogging, a few old posts stand out. 4 1/2 years ago I wrote Real Threat Reporting, describing the story of Shawn Carpenter as reported by Time magazine. Back then the threat was called "Titan Rain" by Time. (This reflects the use of a so-called "intrusion set" to describe an incident.) Almost a year later Air Force Maj Gen Lord noted "China has downloaded 10 to 20 terabytes of data from the NIPRNet. They're looking for your identity, so they can get into the network as you."

Now we hear of other companies beyond Google involved in this latest incident, including Yahoo, Symantec, Adobe, Northrop Grumman, Dow Chemical, Juniper Networks, and "human rights groups as well as Washington-based think tanks." (Sources 1 and 2.)

Let me put on the flight cap of a formally trained Air Force intelligence officer and try to briefly explain my understanding of APT in a few bullets.

  • Advanced means the adversary can operate in the full spectrum of computer intrusion. They can use the most pedestrian publicly available exploit against a well-known vulnerability, or they can elevate their game to research new vulnerabilities and develop custom exploits, depending on the target's posture.

  • Persistent means the adversary is formally tasked to accomplish a mission. They are not opportunistic intruders. Like an intelligence unit they receive directives and work to satisfy their masters. Persistent does not necessarily mean they need to constantly execute malicious code on victim computers. Rather, they maintain the level of interaction needed to execute their objectives.

  • Threat means the adversary is not a piece of mindless code. This point is crucial. Some people throw around the term "threat" with reference to malware. If malware had no human attached to it (someone to control the victim, read the stolen data, etc.), then most malware would be of little worry (as long as it didn't degrade or deny data). Rather, the adversary here is a threat because it is organized and funded and motivated. Some people speak of multiple "groups" consisting of dedicated "crews" with various missions.


Looking at the target list, we can perceive several potential objectives. Most likely, the APT supports:

  • Political objectives that include continuing to suppress its own population in the name of "stability."

  • Economic objectives that rely on stealing intellectual property from victims. Such IP can be cloned and sold, studied and underbid in competitive dealings, or fused with local research to produce new products and services more cheaply than the victims.

  • Technical objectives that further their ability to accomplish their mission. These include gaining access to source code for further exploit development, or learning how defenses work in order to better evade or disrupt them. Most worringly is the thought that intruders could make changes to improve their position and weaken the victim.

  • Military objectives that include identifying weaknesses that allow inferior military forces to defeat superior military forces. The Report on Chinese Government Sponsored Cyber Activities addresses issues like these.


Notice "stealing money" is not listed here. Although threats exist that target cash, those groups are not considered "APT".

Footnote: my Google query for advanced peristent threat that omits a few organization names (including this blog) now yields 169 non-duplicative hits as of this writing, up from 34 in July 2009.
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