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MITRE ATT&CK® Technique

T1584.008: Network Devices

Adversaries may compromise third-party network devices that can be used during targeting. Network devices, such as small office/home office (SOHO) routers, may be compromised where the adversary's ultimate goal is not Initial Access to that environment, but rather to leverage these devices to support additional targeting.

Once an adversary has control, compromised network devices can be used to launch additional operations, such as hosting payloads for Phishing campaigns (i.e., Link Target) or enabling the required access to execute Content Injection operations. Adversaries may also be able to harvest reusable credentials (i.e., Valid Accounts) from compromised network devices.

Adversaries often target Internet-facing edge devices and related network appliances that specifically do not support robust host-based defenses.[1][2]

Compromised network devices may be used to support subsequent Command and Control activity, such as Hide Infrastructure through an established Proxy and/or Botnet network.[3]

EnterpriseT1584.008Sub-techniqueObject v1.1 Modified
Glexia's Take

Analyst context for executives and security teams

Analyst confidence High

This technique matters because adversaries may compromise routers, VPN/SD-WAN appliances, SOHO devices, and other edge infrastructure not to break into that device owner, but to create reusable infrastructure for later targeting. For leaders, the risk is that weak or unmanaged network devices can become covert relay, hosting, credential-harvesting, or proxy infrastructure that makes later attacks harder to attribute and harder for SOC teams to see early.

Executive priority

Prioritize this as an exposure-management and resilience issue, especially where the organization depends on Internet-facing network appliances, managed service providers, ISPs, remote access, or distributed/critical infrastructure connectivity. Ask whether edge devices are inventoried, supported, patched, monitored, and included in incident response evidence collection. The relationship context includes campaigns involving SOHO routers, SD-WAN/VPN appliances, botnet/ORB activity, credential capture, and critical infrastructure targeting, so executive oversight should focus on reducing unmanaged edge-device risk and proving control coverage for audits and incident decisions.

Technical view

ATT&CK places this sub-technique under Resource Development with platform PRE, so much activity may occur before direct victim access and outside endpoint telemetry. SOC and IR teams should validate visibility around Internet-facing edge devices and traffic that may indicate use as proxy, botnet, payload-hosting, phishing link infrastructure, content injection support, or command-and-control relay. ATT&CK provides no official detection text for this object, though a related detection strategy DET0859 is listed; local teams must define practical analytics from available network, appliance, identity, and exposure data.

Likely telemetry

  • Authoritative inventory of Internet-facing routers, VPN gateways, SD-WAN controllers, firewalls, SOHO/branch devices, and other network appliances
  • Firmware, support-status, end-of-life, vulnerability, and patch-management records for network devices
  • Firewall, NetFlow/IPFIX, proxy, DNS, and web access logs showing unusual relay, hosting, or outbound connection patterns
  • Administrative authentication and configuration-change logs from network appliances and remote management interfaces
  • VPN, SD-WAN, and edge-device logs relevant to credential use or credential capture investigations

Detection direction

  • Treat detection as a visibility validation exercise first: confirm whether network appliances produce logs, where they are retained, and whether SOC content covers them.
  • Look for deviations from expected edge-device behavior, such as unusual outbound proxying, unexpected hosted content, suspicious DNS/web destinations, or new remote-management exposure.
  • Correlate appliance authentication, configuration changes, and network flow data with vulnerability and end-of-life status to prioritize suspicious devices.
  • Account for false positives from legitimate MSP, ISP, branch, and remote administration activity by baselining approved management sources and expected service ports.
  • Use relationship context to inform hunting for botnet/ORB-style relay behavior and abuse of SOHO, VPN, SD-WAN, and other edge infrastructure, without assuming any named campaign is present locally.

Mitigation priorities

  • Implement the related pre-compromise priority: reduce exposed attack surface and make adversarial preparation harder to use against the organization.
  • Maintain a complete inventory of Internet-facing and branch network devices, including ownership, firmware, support status, and logging capability.
  • Patch or replace unsupported and end-of-life devices, especially edge appliances that lack robust host-based defenses.
  • Restrict and monitor administrative access to network devices; remove unnecessary Internet-facing management services where feasible.
  • Ensure network devices are included in vulnerability management, configuration management, backup, and incident response collection plans.
Analyst notes and limits

The strongest decision value is not attribution; it is whether the organization can see, manage, and respond to compromise of edge infrastructure that may be used before or around an intrusion. ATT&CK relationships show use by multiple campaigns and groups, including activity involving SOHO routers, botnets, SD-WAN/VPN appliances, and critical infrastructure contexts, but those relationships should guide prioritization and hunting rather than be treated as proof of local compromise.

The official ATT&CK object does not provide detection guidance and lists the platform as PRE, meaning much of the behavior may occur outside the defender’s direct telemetry. The supplied mitigation relationship is general pre-compromise guidance. Local asset inventory, provider evidence, logging configuration, and exposure data are required to determine actual risk and coverage.

Official MITRE ATT&CK definition

Network Devices

Adversaries may compromise third-party network devices that can be used during targeting. Network devices, such as small office/home office (SOHO) routers, may be compromised where the adversary's ultimate goal is not Initial Access to that environment, but rather to leverage these devices to support additional targeting.

Once an adversary has control, compromised network devices can be used to launch additional operations, such as hosting payloads for Phishing campaigns (i.e., Link Target) or enabling the required access to execute Content Injection operations. Adversaries may also be able to harvest reusable credentials (i.e., Valid Accounts) from compromised network devices.

Adversaries often target Internet-facing edge devices and related network appliances that specifically do not support robust host-based defenses.[1][2]

Compromised network devices may be used to support subsequent Command and Control activity, such as Hide Infrastructure through an established Proxy and/or Botnet network.[3]

View the same entry on attack.mitre.org (MITRE-hosted reference; in-page links above use the Glexia ATT&CK library.)

Glexia analysis

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.

ATT&CK relationship table

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.

1 rows
Domain ID Name Relationship / procedure
Enterprise T1584 Compromise Infrastructure This object subtechnique of Compromise Infrastructure.
Associated objects

Groups, software, and campaigns

Group Enterprise

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]

Group Enterprise

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.

Group Enterprise

G0128: ZIRCONIUM

ZIRCONIUM is a threat group operating out of China, active since at least 2017, that has targeted individuals associated with the 2020 US presidential election and prominent leaders in the international affairs community.[1][2]

Group Enterprise

G0065: Leviathan

Leviathan is a Chinese state-sponsored cyber espionage group that has been attributed to the Ministry of State Security's (MSS) Hainan State Security Department and an affiliated front company.[1] Active since at least 2009, Leviathan has targeted the following sectors: academia, aerospace/aviation, biomedical, defense industrial base, government, healthcare, manufacturing, maritime, and transportation across the US, Canada, Australia, Europe, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia.[1][2][3][4]

Campaign Enterprise

C0053: FLORAHOX Activity

FLORAHOX Activity is conducted using a hybrid operational relay box (ORB) network, which combines two types of infrastructure: compromised devices and leased Virtual Private Servers (VPS). The compromised devices include end-of-life routers and IoT devices, while VPS space is commercially leased and managed by ORB network administrators. This hybrid ORB network allows adversaries to proxy and obscure malicious traffic, making the source of the traffic more difficult to trace.

The FLORAHOX ORB network has been leveraged by multiple cyber threat actors, including China-nexus actors like ZIRCONIUM. These adversaries conduct espionage campaigns through FLORAHOX Activity, relying on the ORB network's ability to funnel traffic through Tor nodes, provisioned VPS servers, and compromised routers to obfuscate malicious traffic.[1]

Campaign Enterprise

C0055: Quad7 Activity

Quad7 Activity, also known as CovertNetwork-1658 or the 7777 Botnet, is a network of compromised small office/home office (SOHO) routers. [1] [2] The botnet was initially composed primarily of TP-Link routers and was named Quad7 due to compromised devices exposing TCP port 7777 with the distinctive banner xlogin. Later activity showed a significant increase in compromised Asus routers and the addition of new ports and banners, including TCP port 63256 displaying alogin. Quad7 infrastructure functions as a collection of egress IPs that various China-affiliated threat actors have used to conduct password-spraying and brute-force operations. [1][3] Microsoft has reported that Storm-0940 leveraged credentials obtained through Quad7 Activity to target organizations in North America and Europe, including government agencies, non-governmental organizations, think tanks, law firms, energy firms, IT providers, and defense industrial base entities. [2]

Campaign Enterprise

C0035: KV Botnet Activity

KV Botnet Activity consisted of exploitation of primarily “end-of-life” small office-home office (SOHO) equipment from manufacturers such as Cisco, NETGEAR, and DrayTek. KV Botnet Activity was used by Volt Typhoon to obfuscate connectivity to victims in multiple critical infrastructure segments, including energy and telecommunication companies and entities based on the US territory of Guam. While the KV Botnet is the most prominent element of this campaign, it overlaps with another botnet cluster referred to as the JDY cluster.[1] This botnet was disrupted by US law enforcement entities in early 2024 after periods of activity from October 2022 through January 2024.[2]

Campaign Enterprise

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]

Campaign Enterprise

C0039: Versa Director Zero Day Exploitation

Versa Director Zero Day Exploitation was conducted by Volt Typhoon from early June through August 2024 as zero-day exploitation of Versa Director servers controlling software-defined wide area network (SD-WAN) applications. Since tracked as CVE-2024-39717, exploitation focused on credential capture from compromised Versa Director servers at managed service providers (MSPs) and internet service providers (ISPs) to enable follow-on access to service provider clients. Versa Director Zero Day Exploitation was followed by the delivery of the VersaMem web shell for both credential theft and follow-on code execution.[1]

Campaign Enterprise

C0029: Cutting Edge

Cutting Edge was a campaign conducted by suspected China-nexus espionage actors, variously identified as UNC5221/UTA0178 and UNC5325, that began as early as December 2023 with the exploitation of zero-day vulnerabilities in Ivanti Connect Secure (previously Pulse Secure) VPN appliances. Cutting Edge targeted the U.S. defense industrial base and multiple sectors globally including telecommunications, financial, aerospace, and technology. Cutting Edge featured the use of defense evasion and living-off-the-land (LoTL) techniques along with the deployment of web shells and other custom malware.[1][2][3][4][5]

Relationship explorer

All related ATT&CK context

Mitigations

Mitigation direction

Change history

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 .

ATT&CK release
19.1
Object version
1.1
Created
Modified
Raw hash
32cfe423a9010ead...
Imported snapshots across ATT&CK releases (1)
Release Bundle imported Object version Modified Status Raw hash
19.1 1.1 Current bundle 32cfe423a901…
Raw source

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.

Source references

External references and citations

MITRE external references are preserved separately from Glexia analysis so citations remain traceable to their original source records.

  1. [1]
    Mandiant Fortinet Zero Day

    Marvi, A. et al.. (2023, March 16). Fortinet Zero-Day and Custom Malware Used by Suspected Chinese Actor in Espionage Operation. Retrieved March 22, 2023.

    Open source URL
  2. [2]
    Wired Russia Cyberwar

    Greenberg, A. (2022, November 10). Russia’s New Cyberwarfare in Ukraine Is Fast, Dirty, and Relentless. Retrieved March 22, 2023.

    Open source URL
  3. [3]
    Justice GRU 2024

    Office of Public Affairs. (2024, February 15). Justice Department Conducts Court-Authorized Disruption of Botnet Controlled by the Russian Federation’s Main Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff (GRU). Retrieved March 28, 2024.

    Open source URL
  4. [4]
    mitre-attack T1584.008
    Open source URL
Source and licensing

Source: MITRE ATT&CK®. © 2026 The MITRE Corporation. This work is reproduced and distributed with the permission of The MITRE Corporation. MITRE ATT&CK and ATT&CK are registered trademarks of The MITRE Corporation. Glexia is not affiliated with or endorsed by MITRE.