ESET researchers uncover a new cyberespionage group FamousSparrow

ESET researchers have uncovered a new cyberespionage group attacking mainly hotels worldwide but also governments, international organizations, engineering companies and law firms. ESET has named this group FamousSparrow and believes it has been active since at least 2019.

FamousSparrow’s victims are located in Europe (France, Lithuania, the UK), the Middle East (Israel, Saudi Arabia), the Americas (Brazil, Canada, Guatemala), Asia (Taiwan) and Africa (Burkina Faso). The targeting suggests that FamousSparrow’s intent is cyberespionage.

Reviewing telemetry data during its investigation, ESET Research discovered that FamousSparrow leveraged the Microsoft Exchange vulnerabilities known as ProxyLogon that ESET reported on in March 2021. This remote code execution vulnerability chain was used by more than 10 APT groups to take over Exchange email servers worldwide.

According to ESET telemetry, FamousSparrow started to exploit the vulnerabilities on March 3, 2021, the day following the release of the patches, meaning it is yet another APT group that had access to the details of the ProxyLogon vulnerability chain in March 2021. “This is another reminder that it is critical to patch internet-facing applications quickly, or, if quick patching is not possible, to not expose them to the internet at all,” advises Matthieu Faou, ESET researcher who uncovered FamousSparrow along with his colleague Tahseen Bin Taj.

“FamousSparrow is currently the only user of a custom backdoor that we discovered in the investigation and called SparrowDoor. The group also uses two custom versions of Mimikatz. The presence of any of these custom malicious tools could be used to connect incidents to FamousSparrow,” explains ESET researcher Tahseen Bin Taj.

Although ESET Research considers FamousSparrow to be a separate entity, there are some connections to other known APT groups.