T1594: Search Victim-Owned Websites
Adversaries may search websites owned by the victim for information that can be used during targeting. Victim-owned websites may contain a variety of details, including names of departments/divisions, physical locations, and data about key employees such as names, roles, and contact info (ex: Email Addresses). These sites may also have details highlighting business operations and relationships.[1]
Adversaries may search victim-owned websites to gather actionable information. Information from these sources may reveal opportunities for other forms of reconnaissance (ex: Phishing for Information or Search Open Technical Databases), establishing operational resources (ex: Establish Accounts or Compromise Accounts), and/or initial access (ex: Trusted Relationship or Phishing).
In addition to manually browsing the website, adversaries may attempt to identify hidden directories or files that could contain additional sensitive information or vulnerable functionality. They may do this through automated activities such as Wordlist Scanning, as well as by leveraging files such as sitemap.xml and robots.txt.[2][3]
Analyst context for executives and security teams
Search Victim-Owned Websites is pre-compromise reconnaissance: an adversary reviews an organization’s own public sites for names, roles, contact details, locations, business relationships, hidden files, directories, sitemap.xml, or robots.txt. The business risk is that normal marketing and operational transparency can become targeting material for phishing, trusted-relationship abuse, account setup or compromise, and follow-on technical reconnaissance.
Executive priority
Leaders should treat this as an exposure-management and readiness issue, not only a web-security issue. Ask whether public websites disclose information that would materially improve impersonation, supplier targeting, credential attacks, or discovery of vulnerable functionality. This is especially relevant for audit evidence around attack-surface reduction, incident preparedness, and business-continuity planning because the activity occurs before compromise and may leave limited security telemetry unless web, CDN, and WAF logging are retained.
Technical view
ATT&CK places this technique in the reconnaissance tactic on the PRE platform. MITRE provides no official detection text, but the object is linked to detection strategy DET0810 and mitigation M1056 Pre-compromise. SOC and detection teams should validate visibility into public web properties and look for enumeration patterns around employee/contact pages, department pages, physical-location information, sitemap.xml, robots.txt, hidden directories, sensitive files, and wordlist-style path probing. IR teams should use observed reconnaissance against owned sites to inform phishing-risk assessments, account-monitoring priorities, and trusted-relationship investigations.
Likely telemetry
- Public web server access logs for victim-owned websites
- CDN, reverse proxy, and WAF request logs
- Requests for sitemap.xml, robots.txt, hidden directories, and unusual files
- HTTP status-code patterns such as repeated 404/403 responses from path enumeration
- Search, CMS, and site analytics for unusual browsing of people, contact, department, location, or business-relationship pages
Detection direction
- Confirm that logs from all public websites, including CDN-hosted or third-party-managed sites, are collected and retained long enough to support pre-compromise investigation.
- Tune for enumeration behavior such as high-volume path guessing, repeated access to disallowed or hidden paths, and clustered requests to sitemap.xml or robots.txt followed by directory probing.
- Correlate website reconnaissance with later phishing, contact-form abuse, account activity, or trusted-relationship events when available.
- Account for false positives from search-engine crawlers, legitimate vulnerability scanning, partners, accessibility tools, and marketing analytics crawlers.
- Treat the absence of MITRE-provided detection guidance as a reason to validate local telemetry and baselines rather than assume coverage.
Mitigation priorities
- Use M1056 Pre-compromise as the control frame: reduce exposed information and make adversarial preparation harder before initial access.
- Review public websites for unnecessary disclosure of employee names, roles, direct contact details, physical locations, internal department structure, business relationships, and operational details.
- Review sitemap.xml and robots.txt for sensitive paths or information that unintentionally guides discovery.
- Inventory public web properties and ensure ownership, logging, and content-review responsibilities are clear across security, IT, marketing, and business units.
- Remove or restrict exposed files, directories, or functionality that are not intended for public use, and fold findings into attack-surface management and vulnerability prioritization.
Analyst notes and limits
Relationship context shows ATT&CK associates this technique with multiple campaigns and groups, including Cutting Edge, APT41 DUST, Leviathan Australian Intrusions, Sandworm Team, Kimsuky, Silent Librarian, EXOTIC LILY, Volt Typhoon, and TA578. Use those relationships to justify defensive priority, but do not infer current targeting of any specific organization without local evidence.
MITRE’s official detection field is not provided for this object, and the supplied mitigation description is high-level. The technique occurs before compromise and may resemble benign browsing or crawling, so reliable assessment depends on local web-property inventory, logging coverage, retention, and baseline knowledge.
Search Victim-Owned Websites
Adversaries may search websites owned by the victim for information that can be used during targeting. Victim-owned websites may contain a variety of details, including names of departments/divisions, physical locations, and data about key employees such as names, roles, and contact info (ex: Email Addresses). These sites may also have details highlighting business operations and relationships.[1]
Adversaries may search victim-owned websites to gather actionable information. Information from these sources may reveal opportunities for other forms of reconnaissance (ex: Phishing for Information or Search Open Technical Databases), establishing operational resources (ex: Establish Accounts or Compromise Accounts), and/or initial access (ex: Trusted Relationship or Phishing).
In addition to manually browsing the website, adversaries may attempt to identify hidden directories or files that could contain additional sensitive information or vulnerable functionality. They may do this through automated activities such as Wordlist Scanning, as well as by leveraging files such as sitemap.xml and robots.txt.[2][3]
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.
Groups, software, and campaigns
G0122: Silent Librarian
Silent Librarian is a group that has targeted research and proprietary data at universities, government agencies, and private sector companies worldwide since at least 2013. Members of Silent Librarian are known to have been affiliated with the Iran-based Mabna Institute which has conducted cyber intrusions at the behest of the government of Iran, specifically the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).[1][2][3]
G0094: Kimsuky
Kimsuky is a Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)-based cyber espionage group that has been active since at least 2012. The group initially targeted South Korean government agencies, think tanks, and subject-matter experts in various fields. Its operations expanded to include the United Nations and organizations in the government, education, business services, and manufacturing sectors across the United States, Japan, Russia, and Europe. Kimsuky has focused collection on foreign policy and national security issues tied to the Korean Peninsula, nuclear policy, and sanctions. Kimsuky operations have overlapped with those of other North Korean state-sponsored cyber espionage actors as a result of ad hoc collaborations or other limited resource sharing.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Kimsuky was assessed to be responsible for the 2014 Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power Co. compromise; other notable campaigns include Operation STOLEN PENCIL (2018), Operation Kabar Cobra (2019), and Operation Smoke Screen (2019).[7][8][9] In 2023, Kimsuky was observed using commercial large language models (LLMs) to assist with vulnerability research, scripting, social engineering and reconnaissance.[10]
DPRK threat actor cluster boundaries overlap in open source reporting, with some security researchers consolidating all attributed North Korean state-sponsored cyber activity under Lazarus Group, rather than tracking operationally distinct subgroups.
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]
G1011: EXOTIC LILY
EXOTIC LILY is a financially motivated group that has been closely linked with Wizard Spider and the deployment of ransomware including Conti and Diavol. EXOTIC LILY may be acting as an initial access broker for other malicious actors, and has targeted a wide range of industries including IT, cybersecurity, and healthcare since at least September 2021.[1]
G0034: Sandworm Team
Sandworm Team is a destructive threat group that has been attributed to Russia's General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) Main Center for Special Technologies (GTsST) military unit 74455.[1][2] This group has been active since at least 2009.[3][4][5][6]
In October 2020, the US indicted six GRU Unit 74455 officers associated with Sandworm Team for the following cyber operations: the 2015 and 2016 attacks against Ukrainian electrical companies and government organizations, the 2017 worldwide NotPetya attack, targeting of the 2017 French presidential campaign, the 2018 Olympic Destroyer attack against the Winter Olympic Games, the 2018 operation against the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, and attacks against the country of Georgia in 2018 and 2019.[1][2] Some of these were conducted with the assistance of GRU Unit 26165, which is also referred to as APT28.[7]
G1038: TA578
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]
C0049: Leviathan Australian Intrusions
Leviathan Australian Intrusions consisted of at least two long-term intrusions against victims in Australia by Leviathan, relying on similar tradecraft such as external service exploitation followed by extensive credential capture and re-use to enable privilege escalation and lateral movement. Leviathan Australian Intrusions were focused on exfiltrating sensitive data including valid credentials for the victim organizations.[1]
C0040: APT41 DUST
APT41 DUST was conducted by APT41 from 2023 to July 2024 against entities in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. APT41 DUST targeted sectors such as shipping, logistics, and media for information gathering purposes. APT41 used previously-observed malware such as DUSTPAN as well as newly observed tools such as DUSTTRAP in APT41 DUST.[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 | 494e99b22913… |
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]
Comparitech Leak
Bischoff, P. (2020, October 15). Broadvoice database of more than 350 million customer records exposed online. Retrieved October 20, 2020.
Open source URL -
[2]
Perez Sitemap XML 2023
Adi Perez. (2023, February 22). How Attackers Can Misuse Sitemaps to Enumerate Users and Discover Sensitive Information. Retrieved July 18, 2024.
Open source URL -
[3]
Register Robots TXT 2015
Darren Pauli. (2015, May 19). Robots.txt tells hackers the places you don't want them to look. Retrieved July 18, 2024.
Open source URL -
[4]
mitre-attack T1594Open source URL
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