TeamPCP Worm Exploits Cloud Infrastructure for Criminal Operations
Summary
Hide ▲
Show ▼
TeamPCP, a threat cluster active since November 2025, has conducted a worm-driven campaign targeting cloud-native environments to build malicious infrastructure. The campaign, observed around December 25, 2025, leveraged exposed Docker APIs, Kubernetes clusters, Ray dashboards, Redis servers, and the React2Shell vulnerability (CVE-2025-55182) to compromise servers for data exfiltration, ransomware deployment, extortion, and cryptocurrency mining. The group operates as a cloud-native cybercrime platform, using misconfigured cloud services and known vulnerabilities to create a self-propagating criminal ecosystem. TeamPCP's activities include deploying various payloads such as proxy.sh, scanner.py, kube.py, react.py, and pcpcat.py to exploit and expand their reach within cloud environments. The group's operations are opportunistic, targeting AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google, and Oracle cloud environments, and have resulted in data leaks and extortion activities. The group has compromised at least 60,000 servers worldwide and has exfiltrated more than two million records from JobsGO, a recruitment platform in Vietnam.
Timeline
-
09.02.2026 23:14 1 articles · 1h ago
TeamPCP Exfiltrates Two Million Records from JobsGO
TeamPCP exfiltrated more than two million records from JobsGO, a recruitment platform in Vietnam, containing detailed personal and professional information on job candidates. The stolen data includes full names, national identification numbers, residential addresses, phone numbers, employment and business records, and detailed job application materials.
Show sources
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
09.02.2026 10:37 2 articles · 14h ago
TeamPCP Worm Campaign Targets Cloud Infrastructure
Around December 25, 2025, TeamPCP launched a worm-driven campaign targeting cloud-native environments using exposed Docker APIs, Kubernetes clusters, Ray dashboards, Redis servers, and the React2Shell vulnerability. The campaign aimed to build a distributed proxy and scanning infrastructure for follow-on exploitation, including data exfiltration, ransomware deployment, extortion, and cryptocurrency mining. The group deploys various payloads to exploit and expand within cloud environments, with a focus on AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google, and Oracle environments. The campaign has compromised at least 60,000 servers worldwide.
Show sources
- TeamPCP Worm Exploits Cloud Infrastructure to Build Criminal Infrastructure — thehackernews.com — 09.02.2026 10:37
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
Information Snippets
-
TeamPCP, also known as DeadCatx3, PCPcat, PersyPCP, and ShellForce, has been active since at least November 2025.
First reported: 09.02.2026 10:372 sources, 2 articlesShow sources
- TeamPCP Worm Exploits Cloud Infrastructure to Build Criminal Infrastructure — thehackernews.com — 09.02.2026 10:37
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
The campaign leveraged exposed Docker APIs, Kubernetes clusters, Ray dashboards, Redis servers, and the React2Shell vulnerability (CVE-2025-55182, CVSS score: 10.0).
First reported: 09.02.2026 10:372 sources, 2 articlesShow sources
- TeamPCP Worm Exploits Cloud Infrastructure to Build Criminal Infrastructure — thehackernews.com — 09.02.2026 10:37
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
TeamPCP's Telegram channel has over 700 members and publishes stolen data from victims across Canada, Serbia, South Korea, the U.A.E., and the U.S.
First reported: 09.02.2026 10:372 sources, 2 articlesShow sources
- TeamPCP Worm Exploits Cloud Infrastructure to Build Criminal Infrastructure — thehackernews.com — 09.02.2026 10:37
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
The group deploys payloads such as proxy.sh, scanner.py, kube.py, react.py, and pcpcat.py to exploit and expand within cloud environments.
First reported: 09.02.2026 10:372 sources, 2 articlesShow sources
- TeamPCP Worm Exploits Cloud Infrastructure to Build Criminal Infrastructure — thehackernews.com — 09.02.2026 10:37
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
The C2 server node at 67.217.57[.]240 has been linked to the operation of Sliver, an open-source C2 framework.
First reported: 09.02.2026 10:371 source, 1 articleShow sources
- TeamPCP Worm Exploits Cloud Infrastructure to Build Criminal Infrastructure — thehackernews.com — 09.02.2026 10:37
-
TeamPCP primarily targets AWS and Microsoft Azure environments, with attacks being opportunistic in nature.
First reported: 09.02.2026 10:372 sources, 2 articlesShow sources
- TeamPCP Worm Exploits Cloud Infrastructure to Build Criminal Infrastructure — thehackernews.com — 09.02.2026 10:37
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
TeamPCP has compromised at least 60,000 servers worldwide via a worm-like attack.
First reported: 09.02.2026 23:141 source, 1 articleShow sources
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
The operation has been observed using a dedicated script for Kubernetes (kube.py) environments to harvest credentials and push malicious containers across all accessible pods using administrative level APIs.
First reported: 09.02.2026 23:141 source, 1 articleShow sources
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
More than 60% of the attacks involved cloud infrastructure hosted on Azure; 37% were AWS-hosted. TeamPCP has also been actively targeting servers in Google and Oracle cloud environments.
First reported: 09.02.2026 23:141 source, 1 articleShow sources
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
TeamPCP has been monetizing its attacks through cryptomining, selling compromised systems as proxy access, leveraging them for additional scanning and exploitation, and using them to host command-and-control infrastructure for ransomware operations.
First reported: 09.02.2026 23:141 source, 1 articleShow sources
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
-
TeamPCP has exfiltrated more than two million records from JobsGO, a recruitment platform in Vietnam, containing detailed personal and professional information on job candidates.
First reported: 09.02.2026 23:141 source, 1 articleShow sources
- TeamPCP Turns Cloud Infrastructure into Crime Bots — www.darkreading.com — 09.02.2026 23:14
Similar Happenings
Bizarre Bazaar Campaign Exploits Exposed LLM Endpoints
A cybercrime operation named 'Bizarre Bazaar' is actively targeting exposed or poorly authenticated LLM (Large Language Model) service endpoints. Over 35,000 attack sessions were recorded in 40 days, involving unauthorized access to steal computing resources, resell API access, exfiltrate data, and pivot into internal systems. The campaign highlights the emerging threat of 'LLMjacking' attacks, where attackers exploit misconfigurations in LLM infrastructure to monetize access through cryptocurrency mining and darknet markets. The SilverInc service, marketed on Telegram and Discord, resells access to more than 50 AI models in exchange for cryptocurrency or PayPal payments. A recent investigation by SentinelOne SentinelLABS and Censys revealed 175,000 unique Ollama hosts across 130 countries, many of which are configured with tool-calling capabilities, increasing the risk of LLMjacking attacks.
Critical React Server Components (RSC) Bugs Enable Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution
A critical security vulnerability (CVE-2025-55182, CVSS 10.0) in React Server Components (RSC) allows unauthenticated remote code execution due to unsafe deserialization of payloads. The flaw affects multiple versions of React and Next.js, potentially impacting any application using RSC. The issue has been patched, but 39% of cloud environments remain vulnerable. Cloudflare experienced a widespread outage due to an emergency patch for this vulnerability, and multiple China-linked hacking groups have begun exploiting it. NHS England National CSOC has warned of the likelihood of continued exploitation in the wild. Major companies such as Google Cloud, AWS, and Cloudflare immediately responded to the vulnerability. The security researcher Lachlan Davidson disclosed the vulnerability on November 29, 2025, to the Meta team. The flaw has been dubbed React2Shell, a nod to the Log4Shell vulnerability discovered in 2021. The US National Vulnerability Database (NVD) rejected CVE-2025-66478 as a duplicate of CVE-2025-55182. Exploitation success rate is reported to be nearly 100% in default configurations. React servers that use React Server Function endpoints are known to be vulnerable. The Next.js web application is also vulnerable in its default configuration. At the time of writing, it is unknown if active exploitation has occurred, but there have been some reports of observed exploitation activity as of December 5, 2026. OX Security warned that the flaw is now actively exploitable on December 5, around 10am GMT. Hacker maple3142 published a working PoC, and OX Security successfully verified it. JFrog identified fake proof-of-concepts (PoC) on GitHub, warning security teams to verify sources before testing. Cloudflare started investigating issues on December 5 at 08:56 UTC, and a fix was rolled out within half an hour, but by that time outages had been reported by several major internet services, including Zoom, LinkedIn, Coinbase, DoorDash, and Canva. The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) added the vulnerability to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog on December 6, 2025, following confirmed active exploitation. The vulnerability is tracked as React2Shell and is related to a remote code execution flaw in React Server Components (RSC). The flaw is due to insecure deserialization in the Flight protocol used by React to communicate between a server and client. The vulnerability affects versions 19.0, 19.1.0, 19.1.1, and 19.2.0 of react-server-dom-webpack, react-server-dom-parcel, and react-server-dom-turbopack. Patched versions of React are 19.0.1, 19.1.2, and 19.2.1. Downstream frameworks impacted include Next.js, React Router, Waku, Parcel, Vite, and RedwoodSDK. Amazon reported attack attempts from Chinese hacking groups like Earth Lamia and Jackpot Panda within hours of public disclosure. Coalition, Fastly, GreyNoise, VulnCheck, and Wiz reported seeing exploitation efforts targeting the flaw. Some attacks involved the deployment of cryptocurrency miners and the execution of "cheap math" PowerShell commands. Censys identified about 2.15 million instances of internet-facing services potentially affected by the vulnerability. Palo Alto Networks Unit 42 confirmed over 30 affected organizations across numerous sectors, with activity consistent with Chinese hacking group UNC5174. Security researcher Lachlan Davidson released multiple proof-of-concept (PoC) exploits for the vulnerability. Another working PoC was published by a Taiwanese researcher with the GitHub handle maple3142. Federal Civilian Executive Branch (FCEB) agencies have until December 26, 2025, to apply the necessary updates to secure their networks. Over 77,000 Internet-exposed IP addresses are vulnerable to the critical React2Shell remote code execution flaw (CVE-2025-55182). Researchers have confirmed that attackers have already compromised over 30 organizations across multiple sectors using the React2Shell flaw. Shadowserver detected 77,664 IP addresses vulnerable to the React2Shell flaw, with approximately 23,700 in the United States. GreyNoise recorded 181 distinct IP addresses attempting to exploit the flaw over the past 24 hours, with most of the traffic appearing automated. Attackers frequently begin with PowerShell commands that perform a basic math function to confirm the device is vulnerable to the remote code execution flaw. Once remote code execution was confirmed, attackers were seen executing base64-encoded PowerShell commands that download additional scripts directly into memory. One observed command executes a second-stage PowerShell script from the external site (23[.]235[.]188[.]3), which is used to disable AMSI to bypass endpoint security and deploy additional payloads. The PowerShell script observed by GreyNoise installs a Cobalt Strike beacon on the targeted device, giving threat actors a foothold on the network. Amazon AWS threat intelligence teams saw rapid exploitation hours after the disclosure of the React CVE-2025-55182 flaw, with infrastructure associated with China-linked APT hacking groups known as Earth Lamia and Jackpot Panda. Palo Alto Networks observed similar exploitation, attributing some of it to UNC5174, a Chinese state-sponsored threat actor believed to be tied to the Chinese Ministry of State Security. The deployed malware in these attacks includes Snowlight and Vshell, both commonly used by Chinese hacking groups for remote access, post-exploitation activity, and to move laterally through a compromised network. Earth Lamia is known for exploiting web application vulnerabilities to target organizations across Latin America, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. Earth Lamia has historically targeted sectors across financial services, logistics, retail, IT companies, universities, and government organizations. Jackpot Panda primarily targets entities in East and Southeast Asia. The Shadowserver Foundation has identified over 77,000 vulnerable IPs following a scan of exposed HTTP services across a wide variety of exposed edge devices and other applications. Censys observed just over 2.15 million instances of internet-facing services that may be affected by this vulnerability, including exposed web services using React Server Components and exposed instances of frameworks such as Next.js, Waku, React Router, and RedwoodSDK. The bug is a pre-authentication remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability which exists in React Server Components versions 19.0.0, 19.1.0, 19.1.1, and 19.2.0. React issued a security advisory with the relevant patches and updates on December 3. Any internet-accessible server running the affected React Server Components code should be assumed vulnerable until updated as a precaution. AWS observed that many threat actors are attempting to use public PoCs that don’t work in real-world scenarios. AWS noted that the use of these PoCs shows that threat actors prioritize rapid operationalization over thorough testing, attempting to exploit targets with any available tool. Using multiple PoCs to scan for vulnerable environments also gives threat actors a higher chance of identifying vulnerable configurations, even if the PoCs are non-functional. The availability of the PoCs also allows less sophisticated actors to participate in exploitation campaigns. Finally, AWS noted that even failed exploitation attempts create significant noise in logs, potentially masking more sophisticated attacks. The invalid PoCs can give developers a false sense of security when testing for React2Shell. The Shadowserver Foundation detected 28,964 IP addresses vulnerable to the React2Shell flaw as of December 7, 2025, down from 77,664 on December 5, with approximately 10,100 located in the U.S., 3,200 in Germany, and 1,690 in China. Huntress observed attackers targeting numerous organizations via CVE-2025-55182, with a focus on the construction and entertainment industries. The first recorded exploitation attempt on a Windows endpoint by Huntress dates back to December 4, 2025, when an unknown threat actor exploited a vulnerable instance of Next.js to drop a shell script, followed by commands to drop a cryptocurrency miner and a Linux backdoor. Attackers were observed launching discovery commands and attempting to download several payloads from a command-and-control (C2) server. Huntress identified a Linux backdoor called PeerBlight, a reverse proxy tunnel named CowTunnel, and a Go-based post-exploitation implant referred to as ZinFoq. PeerBlight shares code overlaps with two malware families RotaJakiro and Pink that came to light in 2021, installs a systemd service to ensure persistence, and masquerades as a "ksoftirqd" daemon process to evade detection. CowTunnel initiates an outbound connection to attacker-controlled Fast Reverse Proxy (FRP) servers, effectively bypassing firewalls that are configured to only monitor inbound connections. ZinFoq implements a post-exploitation framework with interactive shell, file operations, network pivoting, and timestomping capabilities. Huntress assessed that the threat actor is likely leveraging automated exploitation tooling, supported by the attempts to deploy Linux-specific payloads on Windows endpoints, indicating the automation does not differentiate between target operating systems. PeerBlight supports capabilities to establish communications with a hard-coded C2 server ("185.247.224[.]41:8443"), allowing it to upload/download/delete files, spawn a reverse shell, modify file permissions, run arbitrary binaries, and update itself. ZinFoq beacons out to its C2 server and is equipped to parse incoming instructions to run commands using "/bin/bash," enumerate directories, read or delete files, download more payloads from a specified URL, exfiltrate files and system information, start/stop SOCKS5 proxy, enable/disable TCP port forwarding, alter file access and modification times, and establish a reverse pseudo terminal (PTY) shell connection. ZinFoq takes steps to clear bash history and disguises itself as one of 44 legitimate Linux system services to conceal its presence. CISA has urged federal agencies to patch the React2Shell vulnerability by December 12, 2025, amid reports of widespread exploitation. The vulnerability has been exploited by multiple threat actors in various campaigns to engage in reconnaissance efforts and deliver a wide range of malware families. Wiz observed a "rapid wave of opportunistic exploitation" of the flaw, with a vast majority of the attacks targeting internet-facing Next.js applications and other containerized workloads running in Kubernetes and managed cloud services. Cloudflare reported that threat actors have conducted searches using internet-wide scanning and asset discovery platforms to find exposed systems running React and Next.js applications. Some of the reconnaissance efforts have excluded Chinese IP address spaces from their searches. The observed activity targeted government (.gov) websites, academic research institutions, and critical-infrastructure operators. Early scanning and exploitation attempts originated from IP addresses previously associated with Asia-affiliated threat clusters. Kaspersky recorded over 35,000 exploitation attempts on a single day on December 10, 2025, with the attackers first probing the system by running commands like whoami, before dropping cryptocurrency miners or botnet malware families like Mirai/Gafgyt variants and RondoDox. Security researcher Rakesh Krishnan discovered an open directory hosted on "154.61.77[.]105:8082" that includes a proof-of-concept (PoC) exploit script for CVE-2025–55182 along with two other files: "domains.txt," which contains a list of 35,423 domains, and "next_target.txt," which contains a list of 596 URLs, including companies like Dia Browser, Starbucks, Porsche, and Lululemon. The Shadowserver Foundation reported more than 137,200 internet-exposed IP addresses running vulnerable code as of December 11, 2025, with over 88,900 instances located in the U.S., followed by Germany (10,900), France (5,500), and India (3,600). Google's threat intelligence team linked five more Chinese hacking groups to attacks exploiting the React2Shell vulnerability. The list of state-linked threat groups exploiting the flaw now also includes UNC6600, UNC6586, UNC6588, UNC6603, and UNC6595. GTIG researchers observed numerous discussions regarding CVE-2025-55182 in underground forums, including threads where threat actors shared links to scanning tools, proof-of-concept (PoC) code, and their experiences using these tools. GTIG also spotted Iranian threat actors targeting the flaw and financially motivated attackers deploying XMRig cryptocurrency mining software on unpatched systems. Shadowserver Internet watchdog group is currently tracking over 116,000 IP addresses vulnerable to React2Shell attacks, with over 80,000 in the United States. GreyNoise has observed over 670 IP addresses attempting to exploit the React2Shell remote code execution flaw over the past 24 hours, primarily originating from the United States, India, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Singapore, Russia, Australia, the United Kingdom, and China. Threat actors are exploiting the React2Shell vulnerability to deliver malware families like KSwapDoor and ZnDoor. KSwapDoor is a professionally engineered remote access tool designed with stealth in mind, building an internal mesh network and using military-grade encryption. KSwapDoor impersonates a legitimate Linux kernel swap daemon to evade detection. ZnDoor is a remote access trojan that contacts threat actor-controlled infrastructure to receive and execute commands. ZnDoor supports commands such as shell, interactive_shell, explorer, explorer_cat, explorer_delete, explorer_upload, explorer_download, system, change_timefile, socket_quick_startstreams, start_in_port_forward, and stop_in_port. Google identified five China-nexus groups exploiting React2Shell to deliver various payloads, including MINOCAT, SNOWLIGHT, COMPOOD, HISONIC, and ANGRYREBEL. Microsoft reported that threat actors have used the flaw to run arbitrary commands, set up reverse shells, drop RMM tools, and modify authorized_keys files. Payloads delivered in these attacks include VShell, EtherRAT, SNOWLIGHT, ShadowPad, and XMRig. Threat actors used Cloudflare Tunnel endpoints to evade security defenses and conducted reconnaissance for lateral movement and credential theft. Credential harvesting targeted Azure Instance Metadata Service (IMDS) endpoints for Azure, AWS, GCP, and Tencent Cloud. Threat actors deployed secret discovery tools such as TruffleHog and Gitleaks, along with custom scripts to extract various secrets. Beelzebub detailed a campaign exploiting Next.js flaws to extract credentials and sensitive data, including environment files, SSH keys, cloud credentials, and system files. The malware creates persistence, installs a SOCKS5 proxy, establishes a reverse shell, and installs a React scanner for further propagation. Operation PCPcat has breached an estimated 59,128 servers. The Shadowserver Foundation is tracking over 111,000 IP addresses vulnerable to React2Shell attacks, with over 77,800 instances in the U.S. GreyNoise observed 547 malicious IP addresses from the U.S., India, the U.K., Singapore, and the Netherlands partaking in exploitation efforts over the past 24 hours. The RondoDox botnet has been observed exploiting the critical React2Shell flaw (CVE-2025-55182) to infect vulnerable Next.js servers with malware and cryptominers. First documented by Fortinet in July 2025, RondoDox is a large-scale botnet that targets multiple n-day flaws in global attacks. In November, VulnCheck spotted new RondoDox variants that featured exploits for CVE-2025-24893, a critical remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability in the XWiki Platform. A new report from cybersecurity company CloudSEK notes that RondoDox started scanning for vulnerable Next.js servers on December 8 and began deploying botnet clients three days later. React2Shell is an unauthenticated remote code execution vulnerability that can be exploited via a single HTTP request and affects all frameworks that implement the React Server Components (RSC) 'Flight' protocol, including Next.js. The flaw has been leveraged by several threat actors to breach multiple organizations. North Korean hackers exploited React2Shell to deploy a new malware family named EtherRAT. As of December 30, the Shadowserver Foundation reports detecting over 94,000 internet-exposed assets vulnerable to React2Shell. CloudSEK says that RondoDox has passed through three distinct operational phases this year: Reconnaissance and vulnerability testing from March to April 2025, Automated web app exploitation from April to June 2025, Large-scale IoT botnet deployment from July to today. Regarding React2Shell, the researchers report that RondoDox has focused its exploitation around the flaw significantly lately, launching over 40 exploit attempts within six days in December. During this operational phase, the botnet conducts hourly IoT exploitation waves targeting Linksys, Wavlink, and other consumer and enterprise routers to enroll new bots. After probing potentially vulnerable servers, CloudSEK says that RoundDox started to deploy payloads that included a coinminer (/nuts/poop), a botnet loader and health checker (/nuts/bolts), and a variant of Mirai (/nuts/x86). The 'bolts' component removes competing botnet malware from the host, enforces persistence via /etc/crontab, and kills non-whitelisted processes every 45 seconds, the researchers say. CloudSEK provides a set of recommendations for companies to protect against this RondoDox activity, among them auditing and patching Next.js Server Actions, isolating IoT devices into dedicated virtual LANs, and monitoring for suspicious processes being executed.
ArcaneDoor Campaign Exploits Cisco Zero-Day Vulnerabilities
A threat cluster dubbed ArcaneDoor has been exploiting two zero-day vulnerabilities in Cisco firewalls to deliver previously undocumented malware families, RayInitiator and LINE VIPER. These vulnerabilities, CVE-2025-20362 and CVE-2025-20333, allow attackers to bypass authentication and execute malicious code on susceptible appliances. The campaign is linked to a suspected China-linked hacking group known as UAT4356 (aka Storm-1849). The malware families represent a significant evolution in sophistication and evasion capabilities compared to previous campaigns. The attacks have been ongoing since at least September 2025, targeting organizations in various sectors. The exploitation of these vulnerabilities underscores the need for immediate patching and enhanced security measures for Cisco firewalls.
Erlang/OTP SSH RCE Exploits Targeting OT Firewalls
A surge in exploitation of CVE-2025-32433, a critical security flaw in Erlang/OTP SSH, has been observed since May 2025. Approximately 70% of these exploits target operational technology (OT) firewalls. This vulnerability, patched in April 2025, allows attackers to execute arbitrary code on vulnerable systems without authentication. The attacks have primarily affected healthcare, agriculture, media, entertainment, and high technology sectors in the U.S., Canada, Brazil, India, Australia, Japan, the Netherlands, Ireland, and France. The exploitation involves using reverse shells to gain unauthorized remote access to target networks. The specific threat actors behind these efforts remain unidentified. The flaw is due to improper state enforcement in the Erlang/OTP SSH daemon, allowing unauthenticated clients to execute commands by sending SSH connection protocol messages to open SSH ports. The flaw has been exploited to create TCP connections and bind them to a shell, allowing interactive command execution over the network. The flaw could have severe consequences on an organization, their network, and operations, including the compromise of sensitive information and disruption of operations.