T1036.010SubTechniquestealth

T1036.010Masquerade Account Name

Sub-technique of T1036

Platforms: Containers · IaaS · Identity Provider · Linux · macOS · Office Suite · SaaS · Windows

ATT&CK version: v19.1

What it is

Adversaries may match or approximate the names of legitimate accounts to make newly created ones appear benign. This will typically occur during [Create Account](https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1136), although accounts may also be renamed at a later date. This may also coincide with [Account Access Removal](https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1531) if the actor first deletes an account before re-creating one with the same name.(Citation: Huntress MOVEit 2023) Often, adversaries will attempt to masquerade as service accounts, such as those associated with legitimate software, data backups, or container cluster management.(Citation: Elastic CUBA Ransomware 2022)(Citation: Aquasec Kubernetes Attack 2023) They may also give accounts generic, trustworthy names, such as “admin”, “help”, or “root.”(Citation: Invictus IR Cloud Ransomware 2024) Sometimes adversaries may model account names off of those already existing in the system, as a follow-on behavior to [Account Discovery](https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1087). Note that this is distinct from [Impersonation](https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1684/001), which describes impersonating specific trusted individuals or organizations, rather than user or service account names.

ATT&CK tactics· 1

Stealth

References

  1. https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1036/010
  2. https://www.elastic.co/security-labs/cuba-ransomware-campaign-analysis
  3. https://www.invictus-ir.com/news/ransomware-in-the-cloud
  4. https://www.huntress.com/blog/moveit-transfer-critical-vulnerability-rapid-response
  5. https://blog.aquasec.com/leveraging-kubernetes-rbac-to-backdoor-clusters
Sourced from MITRE ATT&CK Enterprise v14.1. Curated and contextualized for EU compliance use cases by Adam Lundqvist, Founder at SQUR.