Adversaries may clear artifacts associated with previously established persistence on a host system to remove evidence of their activity. This may involve various actions, such as removing services, deleting executables, Modify Registry, Plist File Modification, or other methods of cleanup to prevent defenders from collecting evidence of their persistent presence.(Citation: Cylance Dust Storm) Adversaries may also delete accounts previously created to maintain persistence (i.e. Create Account).(Citation: Talos - Cisco Attack 2022)
In some instances, artifacts of persistence may also be removed once an adversary’s persistence is executed in order to prevent errors with the new instance of the malware.(Citation: NCC Group Team9 June 2020)
Detection of Persistence Artifact Removal Across Host Platforms
Restrict File and Directory Permissions: Restricting file and directory permissions involves setting access controls at the file system level to limit which users, groups, or processes can read, write, or execute files. By configuring permissions appropriately, organizations can reduce the attack surface for adversaries seeking to access sensitive data, plant malicious code, or tamper with system files.
Enforce Least Privilege Permissions:
Example (Windows): Right-click the shared folder → Properties → Security tab → Adjust permissions for NTFS ACLs.
Harden File Shares:
Example: Set permissions to restrict write access to critical files, such as system executables (e.g., /bin or /sbin on Linux). Use tools like chown and chmod to assign file ownership and limit access.
On Linux, apply:
chmod 750 /etc/sensitive.conf
chown root:admin /etc/sensitive.conf
File Integrity Monitoring (FIM):
Audit File System Access:
Restrict Startup Directories:
C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu.Example: Restrict write access to critical directories like /etc/, /usr/local/, and Windows directories such as C:\Windows\System32.
icacls "C:\Windows\System32" /inheritance:r /grant:r SYSTEM:(OI)(CI)Flsattr or auditd.Remote Data Storage: Remote Data Storage focuses on moving critical data, such as security logs and sensitive files, to secure, off-host locations to minimize unauthorized access, tampering, or destruction by adversaries. By leveraging remote storage solutions, organizations enhance the protection of forensic evidence, sensitive information, and monitoring data. This mitigation can be implemented through the following measures:
Centralized Log Management:
sudo auditd | tee /var/log/audit/audit.log | nc <remote-log-server> 514Remote File Storage Solutions:
Intrusion Detection Log Forwarding:
Immutable Backup Configurations:
Data Encryption: