February 24, 2023

A security firm has discovered that a six-year-old crafty botnet known as Mylobot appears to be powering a residential proxy service called BHProxies, which offers paying customers the ability to route their web traffic anonymously through compromised computers. Here’s a closer look at Mylobot, and a deep dive into who may be responsible for operating the BHProxies service.

The BHProxies website.

First identified in 2017 by the security firm Deep Instinct, Mylobot employs a number of fairly sophisticated methods to remain undetected on infected hosts, such as running exclusively in the computer’s temporary memory, and waiting 14 days before attempting to contact the botnet’s command and control servers.

Last year, researchers at Minerva Labs spotted the botnet being used to blast out sextortion scams. But according to a new report from BitSight, the Mylobot botnet’s main functionality has always been about transforming the infected system into a proxy.

The Mylobot malware includes more than 1,000 hard-coded and encrypted domain names, any one of which can be registered and used as control networks for the infected hosts. BitSight researchers found significant overlap in the Internet addresses used by those domains and a domain called BHproxies[.]com.

BHProxies sells access to “residential proxy” networks, which allow someone to rent a residential IP address to use as a relay for their Internet communications, providing anonymity and the advantage of being perceived as a residential user surfing the web. The service is currently advertising access to more than 150,000 devices globally.

“At this point, we cannot prove that BHProxies is linked to Mylobot, but we have a strong suspicion,” wrote BitSight’s Stanislas Arnoud.

To test their hypothesis, BitSight obtained 50 proxies from BHProxies. The researchers were able to use 48 of those 50 proxies to browse to a website they controlled — allowing them to record the true IP addresses of each proxy device.

“Among these 48 recovered residential proxies IP addresses, 28 (58.3%) of those were already present in our sinkhole systems, associated with the Mylobot malware family,” Arnoud continued. “This number is probably higher, but we don’t have a full visibility of the botnet. This gave us clear evidence that Mylobot infected computers are used by the BHProxies service.”

BitSight said it is currently seeing more than 50,000 unique Mylobot infected systems every day, and that India appears to be the most targeted country, followed by the United States, Indonesia and Iran.

“We believe we are only seeing part of the full botnet, which may lead to more than 150,000 infected computers as advertised by BHProxies’ operators,” Arnoud wrote.

WHO’S BEHIND BHPROXIES?

The website BHProxies[.]com has been advertised for nearly a decade on the forum Black Hat World by the user BHProxies. BHProxies has authored 129 posts on Black Hat World since 2012, and their last post on the forum was in December 2022.

BHProxies initially was fairly active on Black Hat World between May and November 2012, after which it suddenly ceased all activity. The account didn’t resume posting on the forum until April 2014.

According to cyber intelligence firm Intel 471, the user BHProxies also used the handle “hassan_isabad_subar” and marketed various software tools, including “Subar’s free email creator” and “Subar’s free proxy scraper.”

Intel 471’s data shows that hassan_isabad_subar registered on the forum using the email address jesus.fn.christ@gmail.com. In a June 2012 private message exchange with a website developer on Black Hat World, hassan_isabad_subar confided that they were working at the time to develop two websites, including the now-defunct customscrabblejewelry.com.

DomainTools.com reports that customscrabblejewelry.com was registered in 2012 to a Teresa Shotliff in Chesterland, Ohio. A search on jesus.fn.christ@gmail.com at Constella Intelligence, a company that tracks compromised databases, shows this email address is tied to an account at the fundraising platform omaze.com, for a Brian Shotliff from Chesterland, Ohio.

Reached via LinkedIn, Mr. Shotliff said he sold his BHProxies account to another Black Hat World forum user from Egypt back in 2014. Shotliff shared an April 2014 password reset email from Black Hat World, which shows he forwarded the plaintext password to the email address legendboy2050@yahoo.com. He also shared a PayPal receipt and snippets of Facebook Messenger logs showing conversations in March 2014 with legendboy2050@yahoo.com.

Constella Intelligence confirmed that legendboy2050@yahoo.com was indeed another email address tied to the hassan_isabad_subar/BHProxies identity on Black Hat World. Constella also connects legendboy2050 to Facebook and Instagram accounts for one Abdala Tawfik from Cairo. This user’s Facebook page says Tawfik also uses the name Abdalla Khafagy.

Tawfik’s Instagram account says he is a former operations manager at the social media network TikTok, as well as a former director at Crypto.com.

Abdalla Khafagy’s LinkedIn profile says he was “global director of community” at Crypto.com for about a year ending in January 2022. Before that, the resume says he was operations manager of TikTok’s Middle East and North Africa region for approximately seven months ending in April 2020.

Khafagy’s LinkedIn profile says he is currently founder of LewkLabs, a Dubai-based “blockchain-powered, SocialFi content monetization platform” that last year reported funding of $3.26 million from private investors.

The only experience listed for Khafagy prior to the TikTok job is labeled “Marketing” at “Confidential,” from February 2014 to October 2019.

Reached via LinkedIn, Mr. Khafagy told KrebsOnSecurity that he had a Black Hat World account at some point, but that he didn’t recall ever having used an account by the name BHProxies or hassan_isabad_subar. Khafagy said he couldn’t remember the name of the account he had on the forum.

“I had an account that was simply hacked from me shortly after and I never bothered about it because it wasn’t mine in the first place,” he explained.

Khafagy declined to elaborate on the five-year stint in his resume marked “Confidential.” When asked directly whether he had ever been associated with the BHProxies service, Mr. Khafagy said no.

That Confidential job listing is interesting because its start date lines up with the creation of BHproxies[.]com. Archive.org indexed its first copy of BHProxies[.]com on Mar. 5, 2014, but historic DNS records show BHproxies[.]com first came online Feb. 25, 2014.

Shortly after that conversation with Mr. Khafagy, Mr. Shotliff shared a Facebook/Meta message he received that indicated Mr. Khafagy wanted him to support the claim that the BHProxies account had somehow gone missing.

“Hey mate, it’s been a long time. Hope you are doing well. Someone from Krebs on Security reached out to me about the account I got from you on BHW,” Khafagy’s Meta account wrote. “Didn’t we try to retrieve this account? I remember mentioning to you that it got stolen and I was never able to retrieve it.”

Mr. Shotliff said Khafagy’s sudden message this week was the first time he’d heard that claim.

“He bought the account,” Shotliff said. “He might have lost the account or had it stolen, but it’s not something I remember.”

If you liked this story, you may also enjoy these other investigations into botnet-based proxy services:

A Deep Dive Into the Residential Proxy Service ‘911’
911 Proxy Service Implodes After Disclosing Breach
Meet the Administrators of the RSOCKS Proxy Botnet
The Link Between AWM Proxy & the Glupteba Botnet
15-Year-Old Malware Proxy Network VIP72 Goes Dark
Who’s Behind the TDSS Botnet?


15 thoughts on “Who’s Behind the Botnet-Based Service BHProxies?

  1. Marcus Fratz

    Aha, so another article which only contains accusations and names of people who could be the people behind it, but maybe aren’t, and yet you choose to name them publicly. Did you make mistakes like in the Dominic Szablewski case?

    1. Howard

      It’s an article exploring who might be behind it, I think that’s pretty clear? Personally I think the evidence is damming but you do you.

    2. Jim Jordan

      Aha, so another commenter who thinks they have all the answers. If you don’t like the writing, you don’t need to show up again. I’m sure Brian will miss you.

    3. mealy

      This isn’t a court of law. What mistakes have you found, or was your accusation one?

  2. dave

    Sounds a bit like HolaVPN and it’s premium paid services. The free HolaVPN instead is not distributed as a Malware. It’s spread through good marketing or via Android SDK frameworks (used in many PlayStore Apps) and without the knowledge of the users that their device will act as an exit node for the paid services. Other names involved are Luminati or Bright Data. The biggest issue is that exit nodes/proxies may pop up behind your very secure firewall…

    1. Brian Fiori (AKA The Dean)

      I would say anything that is installed without the knowledge of the user, and allows their device to be used by another, is by definition MALWARE.

  3. Mr Clown

    One question I have for Brian is that there are many residential proxy services advertised on the conventional web where for a reasonable fee of perhaps $40 per month, one gains access to a few GB of traffic from said residential IPs.

    From a FAQ:
    “Do you provide IPs that belong to real users?
    “Yes, all IPs that we offer belong to real users, and we access their channels on mutually rewarding terms.”

    So what does Brian think this means? Does it mean that the users are compromised and that the statement in the FAQ is a lie? Or are some residential users around the world willing to allow their IP to be used by goodness knows who.

    1. Howard

      I think there’s legitimate services like decentralized vpns. One example I happen to be familiar with is mysterium. Like tor, users volenteer to act as nodes and route traffic. They make money from the user that’s connecting to their node.

      Unless a service has a transparent process for becoming a node, it’s less likely to be legitimate.

    2. mealy

      A third option is that it’s not a lie, and the residential users are not aware.

      Tricky EULA? Totally omitted from a BS EULA? We’d have to look and see.
      Unintentional “unknown functionality” that acts like a private resold PROXY
      most would instantly consider MALWARE without a second thought.

    3. BrianKrebs Post author

      Yes, I am willing to bet their FAQ doesn’t tell the whole truth. It is possible some computers for sale on this service got there because someone got this proxy secretly bundled with something else they wanted, but that’s generally as far as the permissions for these kinds of services go. In other cases, the proxy service just works w/ a botmaster to install the proxy on a pay-per-install basis.

      1. Ploppa

        I mean – if you are allowing your residential IP to be used by anyone who pays $40 per month in crypto-currency then it can be used for anything – and I do mean anything. It strikes me as extremely risky especially when police assume that the owner of the residential IP must be the one accessing the “young models” site or whatever.

  4. Filmplus

    I would say anything that is installed without the knowledge of the user, and allows their device to be used by another

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