T1213.002: Sharepoint
Adversaries may leverage the SharePoint repository as a source to mine valuable information. SharePoint will often contain useful information for an adversary to learn about the structure and functionality of the internal network and systems. For example, the following is a list of example information that may hold potential value to an adversary and may also be found on SharePoint:
* Policies, procedures, and standards * Physical / logical network diagrams * System architecture diagrams * Technical system documentation * Testing / development credentials (i.e., Unsecured Credentials) * Work / project schedules * Source code snippets * Links to network shares and other internal resources
Analyst context for executives and security teams
SharePoint is often where organizations centralize the information an intruder wants after gaining access: policies, architecture diagrams, network links, project schedules, code snippets, and sometimes development credentials. The business risk is not just document theft; it is that ordinary collaboration content can help an adversary understand the environment, identify sensitive systems, and plan follow-on activity using legitimate access patterns.
Executive priority
Treat SharePoint as a high-value information repository, not just a productivity platform. Leaders should ask whether sensitive technical documentation and credentials are governed, whether least-privilege access is enforced, and whether audit evidence exists to show who accessed or mined critical sites. This is especially relevant for IAM governance, compliance readiness, incident scoping, and prioritizing controls around collaboration platforms that may expose operational or cyber-physical documentation.
Technical view
T1213.002 is a collection sub-technique under Data from Information Repositories and applies to Office Suite and Windows contexts. ATT&CK provides no official detection text, but the related detection strategy DET0500 points defenders toward abnormal SharePoint data mining by privileged or rare users. SOC and IR teams should validate SharePoint audit logging, user access patterns, unusual bulk viewing or downloading, rare-user access to sensitive sites, and access to content categories called out by ATT&CK such as network diagrams, system documentation, links to internal resources, source code snippets, and credentials.
Likely telemetry
- SharePoint site collection audit logs and audit settings
- User and account access records for SharePoint sites and document libraries
- File access, view, download, modification, and sharing events where available
- Privileged-user and rare-user activity against sensitive SharePoint locations
- Access to documents containing technical diagrams, procedures, internal links, source snippets, or credential-like material
Detection direction
- Validate that SharePoint auditing is enabled for sensitive site collections and that logs are retained long enough to support incident response and compliance evidence.
- Tune for abnormal data mining patterns, especially privileged accounts or users who rarely access a site but suddenly enumerate, view, or download many files.
- Prioritize detections around sensitive repositories containing architecture, network, system, project, source-code, or credential-related information.
- Correlate SharePoint activity with user role, account status, and access history to reduce false positives from legitimate administrators, project transitions, audits, or migrations.
- Use relationship context carefully: ATT&CK lists multiple groups, a campaign, and tools associated with this technique, but local detection should be behavior-led rather than attribution-led.
Mitigation priorities
- Start with auditing: ensure SharePoint activity logging is configured, reviewed, and usable for investigation.
- Apply user account management and least privilege so users only retain access to repositories required for their role.
- Review sensitive SharePoint content for credentials, source snippets, internal links, and technical documentation that should be restricted or removed.
- Use user training to reduce unsafe storage and sharing of sensitive operational, technical, or credential material in collaboration spaces.
- Periodically test whether SOC and IR teams can answer: which user accessed which sensitive SharePoint content, when, from what account context, and whether that access was expected.
Analyst notes and limits
This object has no official ATT&CK detection guidance, so the take relies on the official description, the Microsoft SharePoint logging reference, mitigation relationships, and DET0500’s named detection strategy. Relationship context includes use by C0027, Ke3chang, APT28, Chimera, HAFNIUM, LAPSUS$, Akira, VOID MANTICORE, and software such as spwebmember and TruffleHog; this supports prioritizing SharePoint mining as a broadly relevant behavior, not making any claim about current activity in a specific environment.
Local SharePoint architecture, licensing, audit configuration, retention, permissions model, and content classification are required to determine actual exposure and coverage. ATT&CK does not provide detailed detection logic for this object, and the supplied fields do not support claims of guaranteed detection, active exploitation, or organization-specific impact.
Sharepoint
Adversaries may leverage the SharePoint repository as a source to mine valuable information. SharePoint will often contain useful information for an adversary to learn about the structure and functionality of the internal network and systems. For example, the following is a list of example information that may hold potential value to an adversary and may also be found on SharePoint:
* Policies, procedures, and standards * Physical / logical network diagrams * System architecture diagrams * Technical system documentation * Testing / development credentials (i.e., Unsecured Credentials) * Work / project schedules * Source code snippets * Links to network shares and other internal resources
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.
Related techniques
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 | T1213 | Data from Information Repositories | This object subtechnique of Data from Information Repositories. |
Groups, software, and campaigns
G1024: Akira
Akira is a ransomware variant and ransomware deployment entity active since at least March 2023.[1] Akira uses compromised credentials to access single-factor external access mechanisms such as VPNs for initial access, then various publicly-available tools and techniques for lateral movement.[1][2] Akira operations are associated with "double extortion" ransomware activity, where data is exfiltrated from victim environments prior to encryption, with threats to publish files if a ransom is not paid. Technical analysis of Akira ransomware indicates variants capable of targeting Windows or VMWare ESXi hypervisors and multiple overlaps with Conti ransomware.[3][4][5]
G0125: HAFNIUM
HAFNIUM is a likely state-sponsored cyber espionage group operating out of China that has been active since at least January 2021. HAFNIUM primarily targets entities in the US across a number of industry sectors, including infectious disease researchers, law firms, higher education institutions, defense contractors, policy think tanks, and NGOs. HAFNIUM has targeted remote management tools and cloud software for intial access and has demonstrated an ability to quickly operationalize exploits for identified vulnerabilities in edge devices.[1][2][3]
G1004: LAPSUS$
LAPSUS$ is cyber criminal threat group that has been active since at least mid-2021. LAPSUS$ specializes in large-scale social engineering and extortion operations, including destructive attacks without the use of ransomware. The group has targeted organizations globally, including in the government, manufacturing, higher education, energy, healthcare, technology, telecommunications, and media sectors.[1][2][3]
G0114: Chimera
G0007: APT28
APT28 is a threat group that has been attributed to Russia's General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) 85th Main Special Service Center (GTsSS) military unit 26165.[1][2] This group has been active since at least 2004.[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
APT28 reportedly compromised the Hillary Clinton campaign, the Democratic National Committee, and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in 2016 in an attempt to interfere with the U.S. presidential election.[5] In 2018, the US indicted five GRU Unit 26165 officers associated with APT28 for cyber operations (including close-access operations) conducted between 2014 and 2018 against the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), the US Anti-Doping Agency, a US nuclear facility, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), the Spiez Swiss Chemicals Laboratory, and other organizations.[14] Some of these were conducted with the assistance of GRU Unit 74455, which is also referred to as Sandworm Team.
G1055: VOID MANTICORE
VOID MANTICORE is a threat group assessed to operate on behalf of Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS).[1] Active since at least mid-2022, VOID MANTICORE has targeted government entities, critical infrastructure, and private sector organizations across Albania, Israel, and the United States.[1][2] VOID MANTICORE conducts destructive cyber operations, combining wiper attacks with hack-and-leak campaigns. The group has operated under multiple public-facing personas, including HomeLand Justice in operations against Albania, Karma and Karma Below in campaigns targeting Israeli organizations, and Handala Hack, its current primary persona, which has claimed activity against Israeli and U.S. entities, including a March 2026 attack against Stryker Corporation.[1][3] VOID MANTICORE has been observed collaborating with Scarred Manticore, which has been linked to initial access operations preceding VOID MANTICORE’s activity.[4]
G0004: Ke3chang
S9009: TruffleHog
TruffleHog is an open-source secrets-discovery tool that is used to search for credentials, API keys, and encryption keys across a variety of data sources and environments.[1][2] TruffleHog has the ability to discover credentials and secrets stored in code repositories, git history, CI/CD pipelines, among other common storage locations to include filesystems and cloud storage buckets.[1][3][2] TruffleHog was first released by its author in 2016.[2]
S0227: spwebmember
spwebmember is a Microsoft SharePoint enumeration and data dumping tool written in .NET. [1]
C0027: C0027
C0027 was a financially-motivated campaign linked to Scattered Spider that targeted telecommunications and business process outsourcing (BPO) companies from at least June through December of 2022. During C0027 Scattered Spider used various forms of social engineering, performed SIM swapping, and attempted to leverage access from victim environments to mobile carrier networks.[1]
All related ATT&CK context
Mitigation direction
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 | 1.1 | Current bundle | f9918db27953… |
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]
Microsoft SharePoint Logging
Microsoft. (2017, July 19). Configure audit settings for a site collection. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
Open source URL -
[2]
mitre-attack T1213.002Open source URL
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