Transfer Data to Cloud Account

Adversaries may exfiltrate data by transferring the data, including backups of cloud environments, to another cloud account they control on the same service to avoid typical file transfers/downloads and network-based exfiltration detection.

A defender who is monitoring for large transfers to outside the cloud environment through normal file transfers or over command and control channels may not be watching for data transfers to another account within the same cloud provider. Such transfers may utilize existing cloud provider APIs and the internal address space of the cloud provider to blend into normal traffic or avoid data transfers over external network interfaces.

Incidents have been observed where adversaries have created backups of cloud instances and transferred them to separate accounts.[1]

ID: T1537
Sub-techniques:  No sub-techniques
Tactic: Exfiltration
Platforms: IaaS
Permissions Required: User
Requires Network:  Yes
Contributors: Praetorian
Version: 1.1
Created: 30 August 2019
Last Modified: 08 March 2021
Provided by LAYER 8

Mitigations

ID Mitigation Description
M1037 Filter Network Traffic

Implement network-based filtering restrictions to prohibit data transfers to untrusted VPCs.

M1027 Password Policies

Consider rotating access keys within a certain number of days to reduce the effectiveness of stolen credentials.

M1018 User Account Management

Limit user account and IAM policies to the least privileges required. Consider using temporary credentials for accounts that are only valid for a certain period of time to reduce the effectiveness of compromised accounts.

Detection

ID Data Source Data Component
DS0010 Cloud Storage Cloud Storage Creation
Cloud Storage Modification
DS0020 Snapshot Snapshot Creation
Snapshot Modification

Monitor account activity for attempts to share data, snapshots, or backups with untrusted or unusual accounts on the same cloud service provider. Monitor for anomalous file transfer activity between accounts and to untrusted VPCs.

References