A vulnerability in the ESXi hypervisor was patched by VMware last week, but Microsoft has revealed that it has already been exploited by ransomware groups to gain administrative permissions.
VMware ESXi is a bare-metal hypervisor that enables the creation and management of virtual machines directly on server hardware, which may include critical servers. CVE-2024-37085 is an authentication bypass vulnerability that allows malicious actors with sufficient permissions to gain full access to a domain-joined ESXi host.
The issue arises when the configured Active Directory group is deleted and recreated, as any user added to a new group named “ESX Admins” will have administrator privileges by default. A domain group can also simply be renamed “ESX Admins,” and any new or existing members will have administrative privileges.
But to exploit CVE-2024-37085, the hacker needs privileged access to the Active Directory environment, which must have been gained through a previously successful cyberattack. The organisation also needs to have joined their ESXi host to the Active Directory for user management purposes, which many do for convenience.
Broadcom, the owner of VMware, released several fixes for affected devices between June 25 and July 25. The vulnerability affects ESXi versions 7.0 and 8.0 and VMware Cloud Foundation versions 4.x and 5.x., but patches were only rolled out for ESXi 8.0 and VMware Cloud Foundation 5.x. It has a relatively low CVSS severity score of 6.8.
However, on July 29, Microsoft’s Threat Intelligence team released a report that claims CVE-2024-37085 has been exploited by ransomware groups such as Storm-0506, Storm-1175, Octo Tempest and Manatee Tempest, and led to Akira and Black Basta ransomware deployments. Such in-the-wild exploitations were not mentioned in Broadcom’s advisory.
SEE: Black Basta Ransomware Struck More Than 500 Organizations Worldwide
Microsoft said: “In a ransomware attack, having full administrative permission on an ESXi hypervisor can mean that the threat actor can encrypt the file system, which may affect the ability of the hosted servers to run and function. It also allows the threat actor to access hosted VMs and possibly to exfiltrate data or move laterally within the network.”
CVE-2024-37085 stems from ESXi hypervisors joined to an Active Directory domain automatically granting full administrative access to any member of a domain group named “ESX Admins.”
Such a group does not exist by default, but cyber criminals can easily create one with the command “net group ‘ESX Admins’ /domain /add.” Membership to this group is also determined by name and not security identifier (SID), so adding a member is trivial too.
“Any domain user with the ability to create a group can escalate privileges to full administrative access to domain-joined ESXi hypervisors by creating such a group, and then adding themselves, or other users in their control, to the group,” Microsoft researchers wrote.
According to Microsoft, cyber criminals could exploit CVE-2024-37085 by doing one of the following:
Microsoft states that the number of Incident Response engagements involving the targeting and impacting of ESXi hypervisors have more than doubled in the last three years. It suggests that they have become popular targets because many security products have limited visibility and protection for an ESXi hypervisor and that their file systems allow for one-click mass encryption.
A number of ransomware-as-a-service groups have developed ESXi-specific malware since 2021, including Royal, Play, Cheers and TargetCompany.
SEE: Ransomware Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know In 2024
Earlier this year, Storm-0506 attempted to deploy Black Basta ransomware on the system of an unnamed North American engineering firm using the CVE-2024-37085 vulnerability. The group gained Initial access through a Qakbot infection and then exploited a Windows CLFS privilege escalation vulnerability. Next, hackers used the Pypykatz tool to steal the credentials of domain controllers before taking other measures to establish persistent access.
Finally, the group used the CVE-2024-37085 vulnerability to gain elevated privileges to the ESXi hypervisors. Microsoft observed that the threat actor created an “ESX Admins” group and added a new user to it before encrypting the ESXi file system and commandeering the virtual machines hosted on the ESXi hypervisor.