oss-sec mailing list archives
Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git
From: Alejandro Colomar <alx () kernel org>
Date: Thu, 11 Apr 2024 19:25:11 +0200
Hi Jacob, [reordered]
Lastly, I believe that if (a big "if") enough evidence can be found to make attribution of the xz backdoor stick, the results are likely to be a political scandal that will serve to deter others from similarly going rogue, so pinning the "Jia" on the sockmaster might be a good step to reduce the overall threat to the community.
Agree. On Wed, Apr 10, 2024 at 10:26:13PM -0500, Jacob Bachmeyer wrote:
Note that other recent threads in here about search for code patterns similar to Jia Tan's and even for PGP keys similar to Jia Tan's are more relevant to oss-security, because they're aimed to uncover potential related backdoor code in other projects. In contrast, identifying who Jia Tan is or what country/ies they're from doesn't obviously help. At best, it may give us guesses on where the presumed targets are, but then what? We need to protect the whole ecosystem regardless of who/where the current attackers are, and we need to develop means to detect such attacks everywhere, not only at currently likely targets.First, a factual correction: The hypothesis that "Jia Tan" was actually in UTC+03 seems to have been backwards, since the peak activity overlaps only partially with office hours in UTC+03, but does indeed start with 9AM in *UTC-03* by my reckoning. The only problem is that UTC-01 through UTC-03 cover various islands in the Atlantic Ocean and a few Eastern parts of South America. All of these strike me as unlikely sockmaster bases. The problem with time zones east of UTC is the observed UTC 17:00 "quitting time" (more below) which only gets /later/ in the local day as you move east. Second, I think that we can probably put the "Israeli" hypothesis to bed:
The timezone can be faked, but it still has implications. Why would 4 commits in the recent period be committed allegedly in (winter) +0200? I can think of a few options. The person had something to do in a country of that timezone. Maybe it worked for a country in that timezone. Maybe it worked for a different country but was infiltrated in that country. Maybe it was a false flag to implicate that country. But I would discard the "it's just a random timezone that the person chose". For a random timezone, you use either UTC, or the one in a country that would be unsuspicious. I used UTC in the past, but that might be suspicious in Spain where I live, so at some point I decided to use CET/CEST, which would be unsuspicious for a computer in Spain. Now, for the false flag. This attack was very likely something that they didn't intend to be discovered, as it would be significantly more valuable if undiscovered. So we can assume they didn't put those 4 commits for us to find them. Yet, that person could have participated in other false flag attacks, and have its computer set up for them, so there's some chance that the +0200 timezone was false on purpose. If that would be the case, and clearly it wasn't careful because it leaked the timezone in the commit, it might have left a few other traces (for example, when git pushing; maybe the logs have an IP). If it was not a side effect of a false flag from the same computer, this timezone was probably because the person has some implication with a country of that timezone. Either infiltrated (working against them) or working for them. In either case, it was a big mistake to leak the timezone, and it would mean those commits have been likely done from an important computer. It could be a computer of an intelligence agency, or maybe of a programmer infiltrated in a country of the timezone. I tend to favor the former. Programmers don't really need to infiltrate often, since we work remotely just fine (there are reasons to physically infiltrate, but it's less likely, I think); also, this kind of long-term work isn't the kind of work you'd use an infil for. In any of those cases, the timezone is useful information, I think, and shouldn't be discarded easily.
There seems to be no 24 hour period where "Jia" made no commits, and what I think is Friday night into Saturday (therefore the Jewish Sabbath) is one of the more frequent late-night periods, while "Jia" seemingly (mostly) took Sundays off. I have read reports where activities were attributed to Israel and two of the key arguments were that APT group did /nothing/ on Friday evenings or Saturdays, and Sunday seemed to be an ordinary work day for them. These characteristics do /not/ describe the "Jia" crew. Whoever "Jia" is, an observant Jew he is not.
That's a very interesting observation.
I have been looking at this from a different angle, assuming that all of the time zone information in the commits is bogus and looking for patterns in the commit epoch timestamps, which are harder to convincingly fake. The attached "collect.sh" is intended to run in a directory next to a copy of the repository as "xz-backdoored" and extracts the commit and author timestamps in epoch time, further decomposing them into week/time-of-week and day/time-of-day for analysis and plotting. The week and day numbers are counted from 1 Jan 1970, which was a Thursday, so the time-of-week numbers in the output of the attached script are seconds from midnight Thursday. An epoch day number X can be converted back to a date with `date --date='1 Jan 1970 UTC + X days'` and an analogous command converts week numbers to Thursdays. This is a work in progress and I am not yet fully confident that I have correct analysis, in part because my results are different from what others had found before I started, so I am presenting the data extraction script for others to either find problems with or replicate my results. The script was run on a repository clone with master checked out at commit f9cf4c05edd14dedfe63833f8ccbe41b55823b00.
How did you plot them? Do you have a gnuplot script handy or something?
There is a noticeable cluster in the plot, and about 85% of "Jia Tan"'s commits were in the five hours starting at UTC noon. If we exclude 2024, which seems to have been "crunch time" on getting the backdoor out, that jumps to about 91%. I believe that this pattern *might* be a good indicator for the sock farm containing "Jia Tan" but there are likely to be false positives, so it is probably a weak indicator. Combining this pattern with a claimed timezone (like "Jia"'s UTC+08) where that period is into the night might work better. In UTC+08, that period is 8PM to 1AM, which are unlikely office hours. The peak also ends almost as abruptly as it begins, suggesting that UTC 17:00 was "quitting time" at "Jia"'s office, but that "Jia" did occasionally work late. The five hour active period is consistent with morning planning meetings, followed by general work keeping up "Jia"'s appearances, with a floating lunch break somewhere. Think "rogue state bureaucracy" here.
Hmmm.
The percentages above were calculated with these Awk commands: awk '{ if ($5>(12*3600) && $5<(17*3600)) A++; else B++ } END {print "in: "A" out: "B" all: "A+B" %in: "100*A/(A+B)}' timedata-committer-JiaTan awk '$4 < 19723 { if ($5>(12*3600) && $5<(17*3600)) A++; else B++ } END {print "in: "A" out: "B" all: "A+B" %in: "100*A/(A+B)}' timedata-committer-JiaTan Epoch day 19723 is 1 Jan 2024 by my reckoning, (`TZ=UTC date --date='1 jan 1970 UTC + 19723 days'`) so the second command repeats the count, excluding 2024. This thread landed in my inbox as I was planning to start work on further partitioning the "Jia Tan" commits, initially by keywords in the commit message. Do commits involving "ifunc" stand out in time from all others? Alejandro's work raises another question: Does time-of-commit correlate to diff size? Alternately: Was the more complex work seemingly done in a different time zone?
I'll try to investigate this. Please update when you finish your study. I'm interested.
-- Jacob
Have a lovely day! Alex -- <https://www.alejandro-colomar.es/>
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Current thread:
- Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Alejandro Colomar (Apr 10)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Alejandro Colomar (Apr 10)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Joey Hess (Apr 10)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Alejandro Colomar (Apr 10)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Vegard Nossum (Apr 10)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Alejandro Colomar (Apr 10)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Solar Designer (Apr 10)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Jacob Bachmeyer (Apr 11)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Alejandro Colomar (Apr 11)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Jacob Bachmeyer (Apr 12)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Alejandro Colomar (Apr 12)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Jacob Bachmeyer (Apr 13)
- Re: Analysis on who is Jia Tan, and who he could work for, reading xz.git Jacob Bachmeyer (Apr 11)