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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2025-02-10 09:46:26.808

Source: https://thehackernews.com/2025/02/dragonrank-exploits-iis-servers-with.html

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DragonRank Exploits IIS Servers with BadIIS Malware for SEO Fraud and Gambling Redirects. Threat actors have been observed targeting Internet Information Services (IIS) servers in Asia as part of a search engine optimization (SEO) manipulation campaign designed to install BadIIS malware. "It is likely that the campaign is financially motivated since redirecting users to illegal gambling websites shows that attackers deploy BadIIS for profit," Trend Micro researchers Ted Lee and Lenart Bermejo said in an analysis published last week, Targets of the campaign include IIS servers located in India, Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, and Brazil. These servers are associated with government, universities, technology companies, and telecommunications sectors. Requests to the compromised servers can then be served altered content from attackers, ranging from redirections to gambling sites to connecting to rogue servers that host malware or credential harvesting pages. It's suspected that the activity is the work of a Chinese-speaking threat group known as DragonRank, which was documented by Cisco Talos last year as delivering the BadIIS malware via SEO manipulation schemes. The DragonRank campaign, in turn, is said to be associated with an entity referred to as Group 9 by ESET in 2021 that leverages compromised IIS servers for proxy services and SEO fraud. Trend Micro, however, noted that the detected malware artifacts share similarities with a variant used by Group 11, featuring two different modes for conducting SEO fraud and injecting suspicious JavaScript code into responses for requests from legitimate visitors. "The installed BadIIS can alter the HTTP response header information requested from the web server," the researchers said. "It checks the 'User-Agent' and 'Referer' fields in the received HTTP header." "If these fields contain specific search portal sites or keywords, BadIIS redirects the user to a page associated with an online illegal gambling site instead of a legitimate web page." The development comes as Silent Push linked the China-based Funnull content delivery network (CDN) to a practice it calls infrastructure laundering, in which threat actors rent IP addresses from mainstream hosting providers such as Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure and use them to host criminal websites. Funnull is said to have rented over 1,200 IPs from Amazon and nearly 200 IPs from Microsoft, all of which have since been taken down. The malicious infrastructure, dubbed Triad Nexus, has been found to fuel retail phishing schemes, romance baiting scams, and money laundering operations via fake gambling sites. "But new IPs are continually being acquired every few weeks," the company said. "FUNNULL is likely using fraudulent or stolen accounts to acquire these IPs to map to their CNAMEs."

Daily Brief Summary

CYBERCRIME // DragonRank Targets IIS Servers in Asia for SEO Fraud and Malware

Threat actors linked to the DragonRank group have been actively compromising Internet Information Services (IIS) servers across various Asian countries, including India, Thailand, and Japan, for a search engine optimization (SEO) fraud campaign.

The campaign involves installing BadIIS malware on the targeted servers, which then modifies the traffic to redirect users to illegal gambling websites and possibly other malicious sites.

This SEO manipulation effort is financially motivated and targets sectors such as government, technology, and telecommunications.

The compromised servers can alter HTTP response headers based on certain user-agent or referrer fields, redirecting legitimate traffic to unauthorized pages.

The DragonRank campaign is associated with previously identified threat groups such as Group 9 and Group 11, who have been known for similar malicious activities in the past using compromised IIS servers.

Research findings link the China-based Funnull CDN to infrastructure laundering practices that include renting IPs from major providers like Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure for hosting criminal websites.

Funnull has been implicated in various cybercrimes including retail phishing, romance scams, and money laundering through deceptive gambling platforms.