Human Behavior In Digital Forensics

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I've always been a fan of books or shows where someone follow clues and develops an overall picture to lead them to their end goal. I've always like the "hot on the trail" mysteries, particularly when the clues are assembled in a way to understand that the antagonist was going to do next, what their next likely move would be. Interestingly enough, a lot of the shows I've watched have been centered around the FBI, shows like "The X-Files", and "Criminal Minds". I know intellectually that these shows are contrived, but assembling a trail of technical bread crumbs to develop a profile of human behavior is a fascinating idea, and something I've tried to bring to my work in DFIR. 

Former FBI Supervisory Special Agent and Behavioral Profiler Cameron Malin recently shared that his newest endeavor, Modus Cyberandi, has gone live! The main focus of his effort, cyber behavior profiling, is right there at the top of the main web page. In fact, the main web page even includes a brief history of behavioral profiling.

This seems to be similar to Len Opanashuk's endeavor, Motives Unlocked, which leads me to wonder, is this a thing

Is this something folks are interested in?

Apparently ,it is, as there's research to suggest that this is, in fact, the case. Consider this research paper describing behavioral evidence analysis as a "paradigm shift", or this paper on idiographic digital profiling from the Journal of Digital Forensics, Security, and Law, to name but a few. Further, Google lists a number of (mostly academic) resources dedicated to cyber behavioral profiling.

This topic seems to be talked about here and there, so maybe there is an interest in this sort of analysis, but the question is, is the interest more academic, is the focus more niche (law enforcement), or is this something that can be effectively leveraged in the private sector, particularly where digital forensics and intrusion intelligence intersect?

I ask the question, as this is something I've looked at for some time now, in order to not only develop a better understanding of targeted threat actors who are still active during incident response, but to also determine the difference between a threat actor's actions during the response, and those of others involved (IT staff, responders, legitimate users of endpoints, etc.). 

In a recent comment on social media, Cameron used the phrase, "...adversary analysis and how human behavior renders in digital forensics...", and it occurred to me that this really does a great job of describing going beyond just individual data points and malware analysis in DFIR, particularly when it comes to hands-on targeted threat actors. By going beyond just individual data points and looking at the multifaceted, nuanced nature of those artifacts, we can begin to discern patterns that inform us about the intent, sophistication, and situational awareness of the threat actor.

To that end, Joe Slowik has correctly stated that there's a need in CTI (and DFIR, SOC, etc.) to view indicators as composite objects, that things like hashes and IP addresses have greater value when other aspects of their nature is understood. Many times we tend to view IP addresses (and other indicators) one-dimensionally; however, there's so much more about those indicators that can provide insight to the threat actor behind them, such as when, how, and in what context that IP address was used. Was it the source of a login, and if so, what type? Was it a C2 IP address, or the source of a download or upload? If so, how...via HTTP, curl, msiexec, BITS, etc?

Here's an example of an IP address; in this case, 185.56.83.82. We can get some insight on this IP address from VirusTotal, enough to know that we should probably pay attention. However, if you read the blog post, you'll see that this IP address was used as the target for data exfiltration. 

Via finger.exe.

Add to that the use of the LOLBin is identical to what was described in this 2020 advisory, and it should be easy to see that we've gone well beyond just an IP address, by this point, as we've started to unlock and reveal the composite nature of that indicator. 

The point of all this is that there's more to the data we have available than just the one-dimensional perspective that we're used to thinking in, in which we've been viewing that data. Now, if we begin to incorporate other data sources that are available to us (EDR telemetry, endpoint data and configurations, etc.), we'll being to see exactly how, as Cameron stated, human behavior renders in digital forensics. Some of the things I've pursued and been successful in demonstration during previous engagements includes things like hours of operations, preferred TTPs and approaches, enough so to separate the actions of two different threat actors on a single endpoint. 

I've also gained insight into the situational awareness of a threat actor by observing how they reacted to stimulus; during one incident, the installed EDR framework was blocking the threat actor's tools from executing on different endpoints. The threat actor never bothered to query any of the three endpoints to determine what was blocking their attempts; rather, on one endpoint, they attempted to disable Windows Defender. On the second endpoint, they attempted to delete a specific AV product, without ever first determining if it was installed on the endpoint; the batch file they ran to delete all aspects and variations of the product were not preceded by query commands. Finally, on the third endpoint, the threat actor ran a "spray-and-pray" batch file that attempted to disable or delete a variety of products, none of which were actually installed on the endpoint. When none of these succeeded in allowing them to pursue their goals, they left.

So, yes, viewed through the right lens, with the right perspective, human behavior can be discerned through digital forensics. But the question remains...is this useful? Is the insight that this approach provides valuable to anyone?

Article Link: Windows Incident Response: Human Behavior In Digital Forensics