S0097: Ping
Analyst context for executives and security teams
Ping is a normal network troubleshooting utility, but in ATT&CK it matters because adversaries have used it as part of Remote System Discovery. The business issue is not that ping is malicious by itself; it is that a built-in, trusted utility can help an intruder map reachable systems before lateral movement. Because it is common and noisy, value comes from knowing when ping activity is unusual for a user, host, segment, or incident timeline.
Executive priority
Treat this as a coverage and readiness question rather than a tool-blocking problem. Leaders should ask whether SOC and incident response teams can distinguish routine network diagnostics from discovery behavior after an exposed-server compromise, ransomware intrusion, or state-aligned campaign. This is especially relevant for environments where network reachability, segmentation, and critical infrastructure dependencies affect business continuity or audit evidence.
Technical view
ATT&CK links Ping to Remote System Discovery (T1018), where adversaries may identify other systems by IP address, hostname, or logical identifier. The Ping software object itself has no ATT&CK platform or detection text, so detection engineering should be driven by local telemetry and by the related T1018 context. Validate visibility into ping execution and network ICMP activity from endpoints and network segments, especially where a host begins probing many destinations or sensitive ranges after suspicious access.
Likely telemetry
- Process execution records showing ping invocation, parent process, user, command line, host, and timestamp where available
- Network telemetry for ICMP echo requests/replies, destination counts, and cross-segment reachability
- Endpoint or server logs that can correlate ping activity with remote access, web server compromise, or other discovery activity
- Asset inventory and network segmentation context to determine whether destinations are normal for the source host
- Incident timeline data linking ping activity to other ATT&CK discovery or lateral movement behaviors
Detection direction
- Baseline legitimate administrative and monitoring use; ping is common, so raw execution alerts will create false positives.
- Prioritize unusual patterns: high destination fan-out, sequential subnet probing, activity from servers that do not normally troubleshoot networks, or ping launched by unexpected parent processes.
- Correlate with T1018-style discovery and later lateral movement indicators rather than treating ping as a standalone high-severity event.
- Check blind spots in environments where ICMP is not logged, endpoint command lines are unavailable, or network devices suppress diagnostic traffic visibility.
- Use relationship context as a prioritization signal: multiple ATT&CK campaigns and groups are documented as using Ping, but the presence of ping alone does not establish attribution.
Mitigation priorities
- Do not rely on banning ping as the primary control; focus first on segmentation, least-privilege administration, and reducing unnecessary network reachability.
- Limit where ICMP is allowed if business operations permit, especially across sensitive segments, while preserving required diagnostics and monitoring.
- Ensure endpoint logging and network telemetry can support incident reconstruction for discovery activity.
- Include ping-based discovery in incident response playbooks and tabletop scenarios for exposed-server compromise and ransomware-like intrusions.
- Document approved administrative use to improve SOC triage and compliance evidence around monitoring and segmentation controls.
Analyst notes and limits
The supplied ATT&CK object describes Ping only as a common operating system utility and provides no official detection guidance. Its defensive significance comes primarily from the relationship to Remote System Discovery (T1018) and from the number of ATT&CK groups and campaigns recorded as using it. The provided relationship set includes campaigns such as C0017, C0018, Operation Digital Eye, and 2025 Poland Wiper Attacks, and groups including Ke3chang, Deep Panda, Naikon, Lotus Blossom, menuPass, Gamaredon Group, Magic Hound, FIN8, GALLIUM, APT41, Wizard Spider, HEXANE, Volt Typhoon, ToddyCat, and MirrorFace.
Platforms are not specified on the Ping software object, and no official ATT&CK detection text is provided. Any detection thresholds, platform-specific logging assumptions, or severity ratings require local environment evidence. Relationship data supports that this tool has been used by listed campaigns and groups, but ping activity by itself should not be used for attribution or impact conclusions.
Ping
How security teams should use this page
Treat this object as behavior context, not an attribution claim. Validate the related groups, software, data sources, and mitigations against official ATT&CK relationships and your own telemetry before making control-coverage decisions.
Techniques used
This mirrors the MITRE pattern of making group, software, campaign, and technique relationships scannable. Relationship notes come from mirrored ATT&CK relationship text when available.
| Domain | ID | Name | Relationship / procedure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enterprise | T1018 | Remote System Discovery | Ping can be used to identify remote systems within a network.CitationTechNet Ping |
Groups, software, and campaigns
G0093: GALLIUM
GALLIUM is a cyberespionage group that has been active since at least 2012, primarily targeting telecommunications companies, financial institutions, and government entities in Afghanistan, Australia, Belgium, Cambodia, Malaysia, Mozambique, the Philippines, Russia, and Vietnam. This group is particularly known for launching Operation Soft Cell, a long-term campaign targeting telecommunications providers.[1] Security researchers have identified GALLIUM as a likely Chinese state-sponsored group, based in part on tools used and TTPs commonly associated with Chinese threat actors.[1][2][3]
G1001: HEXANE
HEXANE is a cyber espionage threat group that has targeted oil & gas, telecommunications, aviation, and internet service provider organizations since at least 2017. Targeted companies have been located in the Middle East and Africa, including Israel, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Morocco, and Tunisia. HEXANE's TTPs appear similar to APT33 and OilRig but due to differences in victims and tools it is tracked as a separate entity.[1][2][3][4]
G0004: Ke3chang
G0061: FIN8
FIN8 is a financially motivated threat group that has been active since at least January 2016, and known for targeting organizations in the hospitality, retail, entertainment, insurance, technology, chemical, and financial sectors. In June 2021, security researchers detected FIN8 switching from targeting point-of-sale (POS) devices to distributing a number of ransomware variants.[1][2][3][4]
G0059: Magic Hound
Magic Hound is an Iranian-sponsored threat group that conducts long term, resource-intensive cyber espionage operations, likely on behalf of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. They have targeted European, U.S., and Middle Eastern government and military personnel, academics, journalists, and organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO), via complex social engineering campaigns since at least 2014.[1][2][3][4][5]
G0019: Naikon
Naikon is assessed to be a state-sponsored cyber espionage group attributed to the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) Chengdu Military Region Second Technical Reconnaissance Bureau (Military Unit Cover Designator 78020).[1] Active since at least 2010, Naikon has primarily conducted operations against government, military, and civil organizations in Southeast Asia, as well as against international bodies such as the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).[1][2]
While Naikon shares some characteristics with APT30, the two groups do not appear to be exact matches.[3]
G0009: Deep Panda
Deep Panda is a suspected Chinese threat group known to target many industries, including government, defense, financial, and telecommunications. [1] The intrusion into healthcare company Anthem has been attributed to Deep Panda. [2] This group is also known as Shell Crew, WebMasters, KungFu Kittens, and PinkPanther. [3] Deep Panda also appears to be known as Black Vine based on the attribution of both group names to the Anthem intrusion. [4] Some analysts track Deep Panda and APT19 as the same group, but it is unclear from open source information if the groups are the same. [5]
G0030: Lotus Blossom
Lotus Blossom is a long-standing threat group largely targeting various entities in Asia since at least 2009. In addition to government and related targets, Lotus Blossom has also targeted entities such as digital certificate issuers.[1][2][3]
G0102: Wizard Spider
Wizard Spider is a Russia-based financially motivated threat group originally known for the creation and deployment of TrickBot since at least 2016. Wizard Spider possesses a diverse arsenal of tools and has conducted ransomware campaigns against a variety of organizations, ranging from major corporations to hospitals.[1][2][3]
G0096: APT41
APT41 is a threat group that researchers have assessed as Chinese state-sponsored espionage group that also conducts financially-motivated operations. Active since at least 2012, APT41 has been observed targeting various industries, including but not limited to healthcare, telecom, technology, finance, education, retail and video game industries in 14 countries.[1] Notable behaviors include using a wide range of malware and tools to complete mission objectives. APT41 overlaps at least partially with public reporting on groups including BARIUM and Winnti Group.[2][3]
G1022: ToddyCat
G1017: Volt Typhoon
Volt Typhoon is a People's Republic of China (PRC) state-sponsored actor that has been active since at least 2021, primarily targeting critical infrastructure organizations in the US and its territories including Guam. Volt Typhoon's targeting and pattern of behavior have been assessed as pre-positioning to enable lateral movement to operational technology (OT) assets for potential destructive or disruptive attacks. Volt Typhoon has emphasized stealth in operations using web shells, living-off-the-land (LOTL) binaries, hands on keyboard activities, and stolen credentials.[1][2][3][4]. The group has leveraged compromised SOHO routers to proxy command and control traffic and obscure its infrastructure, activity associated with the KV botnet.[5].
Reporting indicates a separate initial access cluster, SYLVANITE, has been observed exploiting internet-facing edge devices and transferring access to Volt Typhoon, also tracked as VOLTZITE, for follow-on operations. [6]
C0061: Operation Digital Eye
Operation Digital Eye was conducted in June and July of 2024 by suspected People's Republic of China (PRC)-nexus threat actors targeting business-to-business IT service providers in Southern Europe. Operation Digital Eye activity included the use of Visual Studio Code tunnels for command and control (C2) and custom lateral movement capabilities. Overlaps in tooling between Digital Eye and previous China-nexus campaigns, Operation Soft Cell and Operation Tainted Love, indicate the potential use of shared vendors or digital quartermasters.[1]
C0018: C0018
C0018 was a month-long ransomware intrusion that successfully deployed AvosLocker onto a compromised network. The unidentified actors gained initial access to the victim network through an exposed server and used a variety of open-source tools prior to executing AvosLocker.[1][2]
C0063: 2025 Poland Wiper Attacks
2025 Poland Wiper Attacks is a Russian state-sponsored campaign that conducted destructive cyberattacks against Polish energy infrastructure in December 2025. Targets included more than 30 wind and photovoltaic farms, a combined heat and power (CHP) plant, and a manufacturing sector company. The attacks on the distributed energy resources (DER) disrupted communications between affected facilities and the distribution system operator, but did not impact electricity generation or heat supply. Across the campaign, threat actors deployed two previously undocumented wiper tools, DynoWiper, a Windows-based wiper and LazyWiper, a PowerShell wiper, distributed via malicious Group Policy Objects. At the CHP plant, threat actors had maintained access since at least March 2025, using that foothold to obtain credentials and move laterally before attempting wiper deployment. Some reporting has assessed the activity to be consistent with Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) threat activity group Dragonfly, also tracked as STATIC TUNDRA, while other reporting attributes the destructive wiper activities to the Russian General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) threat activity group ELECTRUM, also tracked as Sandworm Team.[1][2][3][4]
C0017: C0017
C0017 was an APT41 campaign conducted between May 2021 and February 2022 that successfully compromised at least six U.S. state government networks through the exploitation of vulnerable Internet facing web applications. During C0017, APT41 was quick to adapt and use publicly-disclosed as well as zero-day vulnerabilities for initial access, and in at least two cases re-compromised victims following remediation efforts. The goals of C0017 are unknown, however APT41 was observed exfiltrating Personal Identifiable Information (PII).[1]
All related ATT&CK context
Object version and sync metadata
The fields below describe the current mirrored snapshot. When Glexia retains multiple ATT&CK source imports, you can open the table to compare the same object across releases (hashes and MITRE timestamps). For MITRE’s own release notes and roadmap, see ATT&CK resources — Updates .
Imported snapshots across ATT&CK releases (1)
| Release | Bundle imported | Object version | Modified | Status | Raw hash |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19.1 | 1.5 | Current bundle | f13e0d4c723c… |
Mirrored ATT&CK source object
The raw object is retained through the mirrored ATT&CK source bundle and object hash. The raw endpoint returns the exact object from the mirrored bundle when available.
External references and citations
MITRE external references are preserved separately from Glexia analysis so citations remain traceable to their original source records.
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[1]
TechNet Ping
Microsoft. (n.d.). Ping. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
Open source URL -
[2]
mitre-attack S0097Open source URL
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