SCATTERED SPIDER
VOLT TYPHOON
LOCKBIT
ANYDESK
Threat IntelligenceRMM AbuseAPTMarch 7, 2025

Living Off the Land:
RMM Tool Abuse

How nation-state APTs, ransomware syndicates, and cybercriminal groups weaponize legitimate Remote Monitoring and Management tools to conduct persistent, stealthy attacks against critical infrastructure and enterprises.

Scroll

Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM) tools have become one of the most consistently abused classes of legitimate software in the modern threat landscape. Nation-state actors, ransomware syndicates, and financially motivated cybercriminals are systematically weaponizing tools like AnyDesk, ConnectWise ScreenConnect, and TeamViewer to bypass security controls, establish persistent access, and deliver devastating payloads. This report provides a comprehensive analysis of the threat, the actors involved, their methodologies, and actionable detection and defense strategies.

Executive Summary

The abuse of legitimate Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM) software represents one of the most significant and underappreciated threats to enterprise security today. Adversaries exploit the inherent trust that organizations place in these tools — trust rooted in their legitimate administrative purpose, their digitally signed binaries, and their ubiquitous presence in managed IT environments. This trust creates a systemic blind spot that threat actors of all sophistication levels are actively exploiting.

Between 2023 and 2025, Mjolnir Security has observed a marked escalation in RMM abuse across incident response engagements and threat intelligence collection. Threat actors ranging from the social-engineering-driven Scattered Spider collective to the PRC-backed VOLT TYPHOON pre-positioning campaign have weaponized RMM tools as core components of their operational tradecraft. The convergence of these diverse threat actors on a single class of tooling underscores the severity of the problem.

Threat Assessment
Threat LevelCRITICAL
Threat CategoriesInitial Access, Persistence, Lateral Movement, Command & Control, Ransomware Delivery
Primary TargetsMSPs, Critical Infrastructure, Financial Services, Government, Healthcare
Tools AbusedAnyDesk, ConnectWise ScreenConnect, TeamViewer, Atera, Splashtop, Kaseya VSA, PDQ Deploy, MeshCentral
Key Threat ActorsScattered Spider, LockBit, BlackCat/ALPHV, VOLT TYPHOON, Lazarus Group, REvil, Akira

Background & Threat Landscape

RMM tools are designed to provide IT administrators and Managed Service Providers (MSPs) with remote access to endpoints for maintenance, troubleshooting, and monitoring. Their design characteristics, however, make them extraordinarily attractive to adversaries.

Why RMM Tools Are Attractive to Threat Actors

CISA/NSA Joint Advisory

In January 2023, CISA, NSA, and MS-ISAC published a joint advisory (AA23-025A) warning that threat actors were increasingly exploiting legitimate RMM software for financial gain and as a vector for ransomware deployment. The advisory specifically highlighted campaigns using portable RMM executables delivered via phishing emails to establish initial access without triggering installation-based detection mechanisms. This advisory represented the first formal U.S. government recognition of RMM abuse as a systemic threat category.

Threat Actor Profiles

The following profiles detail the most prominent threat actors observed abusing RMM tools in their operational campaigns. These actors span the full spectrum of adversary motivation — from financially driven cybercrime to state-sponsored espionage and pre-positioning for destructive operations.

Scattered Spider (UNC3944 / 0ktapus)

Motivation: Financial — Data extortion, SIM swapping, cryptocurrency theft, ransomware deployment

RMM Tools: AnyDesk, Splashtop, ConnectWise ScreenConnect, Atera, TeamViewer

Initial Access: Social engineering of IT help desks via phone calls (vishing), SMS phishing (smishing), and MFA fatigue attacks targeting Okta and Azure AD identity providers.

Key TTPs:

  • Convinces help desk staff to reset MFA tokens or enroll attacker-controlled devices, then immediately deploys unauthorized RMM agents for persistent access
  • Uses multiple RMM tools simultaneously as redundant C2 channels — if one is detected and removed, others maintain access
  • Deploys RMM tools via legitimate cloud storage links (SharePoint, Google Drive) to bypass email security scanning
  • Pivots from RMM access to deploy BlackCat/ALPHV ransomware across victim environments
  • Targets identity providers (Okta, Azure AD) to gain SSO access to downstream SaaS applications and cloud infrastructure

VOLT TYPHOON (Bronze Silhouette / Vanguard Panda)

Motivation: Strategic — Pre-positioning for potential destructive operations against U.S. critical infrastructure

RMM Tools: Built-in Windows administration tools (WMIC, PowerShell), supplemented with legitimate RMM agents for persistent access

Key TTPs:

  • Epitomizes the "Living Off the Land" approach — primarily uses built-in OS tools and legitimate software to avoid detection, deploying RMM tools only when necessary for persistent remote access
  • Targets SOHO routers, VPN appliances, and firewalls as initial access vectors, then moves laterally to internal systems where RMM agents are deployed
  • Operates with extreme OPSEC discipline, blending C2 traffic with legitimate administrative traffic and operating during normal business hours to avoid behavioral anomaly detection
  • Maintains access to critical infrastructure networks (energy, water, telecommunications, transportation) for extended periods without conducting data exfiltration, consistent with pre-positioning for future disruption
  • Uses compromised SOHO devices as operational relay boxes (ORBs) to proxy C2 traffic and obscure true origin infrastructure

LockBit (Ransomware-as-a-Service)

Motivation: Financial — Ransomware extortion at scale

RMM Tools: AnyDesk, ConnectWise ScreenConnect, Atera, Splashtop, Kaseya VSA

Key TTPs:

  • LockBit affiliates routinely deploy AnyDesk and ScreenConnect as their primary hands-on-keyboard access mechanism after initial compromise, using these tools for reconnaissance, credential harvesting, and lateral movement
  • The Kaseya VSA supply chain attack (2021) demonstrated the catastrophic potential of RMM platform compromise — REvil (a LockBit predecessor ecosystem affiliate) exploited a zero-day vulnerability to push ransomware to approximately 1,500 downstream organizations simultaneously
  • Affiliates use AnyDesk's portable executable mode to bypass installation-based detection, dropping the binary into temporary directories and executing without administrative privileges
  • Pre-stages data exfiltration tools (Rclone, MEGAsync) alongside RMM access to conduct double-extortion operations
  • Deploys PDQ Deploy through compromised RMM access to push ransomware payloads to all managed endpoints simultaneously

Akira (Ransomware)

Motivation: Financial — Ransomware and data extortion

RMM Tools: AnyDesk, RustDesk, Radmin, ConnectWise ScreenConnect

Key TTPs:

  • Gained initial access primarily through compromised Cisco VPN credentials (targeting environments without MFA on VPN gateways), then deployed RMM tools for persistent interactive access
  • Deployed AnyDesk and RustDesk as supplementary access channels alongside Cisco VPN access, providing redundancy and enabling hands-on-keyboard operations
  • Targeted small and medium businesses disproportionately, exploiting their reliance on MSP-managed RMM platforms and generally weaker security monitoring
  • Used compromised RMM access to disable or uninstall endpoint security products before deploying ransomware payloads
  • Accumulated over $42 million in ransom payments by mid-2024, with RMM abuse serving as a core operational enabler

Lazarus Group (HIDDEN COBRA / APT38)

Motivation: Financial and strategic — Cryptocurrency theft, sanctions evasion, espionage for DPRK regime

RMM Tools: AnyDesk, Chrome Remote Desktop, custom-modified RMM agents, TeamViewer

Key TTPs:

  • Targets cryptocurrency exchanges, DeFi platforms, and blockchain companies, deploying trojanized or legitimate RMM tools after initial compromise to maintain access during multi-stage theft operations
  • Uses social engineering on LinkedIn and professional platforms to deliver malicious applications that install legitimate RMM tools alongside custom backdoors
  • Modifies legitimate RMM clients to use attacker-controlled relay infrastructure, creating custom C2 channels that appear as standard RMM traffic to network monitoring tools
  • Maintains access across extended operation timelines (weeks to months), using RMM tools for ongoing reconnaissance and preparation before executing theft operations
  • Responsible for the Ronin Network ($620M), Harmony Bridge ($100M), and Atomic Wallet ($35M) cryptocurrency thefts, with RMM tools implicated in persistent access maintenance during several of these operations

Attack Methodology & Kill Chain

RMM tool abuse follows a consistent operational pattern across threat actors, though specific implementations vary by group. The following kill chain analysis maps observed behaviors across the full attack lifecycle.

Phase 1: Initial Access

Phase 2: Execution & Persistence

Phase 3: Command & Control

Phase 4: Lateral Movement

Phase 5: Impact

MITRE ATT&CK Mapping

The following table maps observed RMM abuse behaviors to the MITRE ATT&CK framework, providing technique-level detail for detection engineering and threat modeling.

TTP IDTacticTechniqueRMM ToolObserved Behavior
T1219 Command & Control Remote Access Software AnyDesk, ScreenConnect, TeamViewer Deployment of legitimate RMM tools as primary C2 channel, bypassing network-based detection through vendor relay infrastructure
T1566.002 Initial Access Phishing: Spearphishing Link AnyDesk, ScreenConnect Phishing emails with links to portable RMM executables hosted on trusted cloud storage platforms
T1195.002 Initial Access Supply Chain Compromise: Compromise Software Supply Chain Kaseya VSA Exploitation of Kaseya VSA zero-day to push REvil ransomware to 1,500+ downstream organizations
T1543.003 Persistence Create or Modify System Process: Windows Service AnyDesk, ScreenConnect, Atera RMM tools installed as Windows services for automatic startup persistence
T1053.005 Persistence Scheduled Task/Job: Scheduled Task AnyDesk, TeamViewer Scheduled tasks created to maintain RMM agent persistence across reboots
T1021.001 Lateral Movement Remote Services: Remote Desktop Protocol ScreenConnect, AnyDesk RMM access used to enable RDP and initiate lateral movement sessions with harvested credentials
T1003.001 Credential Access OS Credential Dumping: LSASS Memory AnyDesk, ScreenConnect Mimikatz and ProcDump deployed through RMM shell access to harvest domain credentials from LSASS process memory
T1562.001 Defense Evasion Impair Defenses: Disable or Modify Tools AnyDesk, Atera, ScreenConnect RMM administrative access used to disable or uninstall endpoint security products before ransomware deployment
T1071.001 Command & Control Application Layer Protocol: Web Protocols All RMM tools RMM C2 traffic over HTTPS (port 443) blending with legitimate web traffic
T1072 Execution Software Deployment Tools PDQ Deploy, Kaseya VSA Legitimate deployment tools abused to push ransomware payloads to all managed endpoints simultaneously
T1078 Defense Evasion Valid Accounts All RMM tools Compromised MSP credentials used to access RMM platforms with legitimate administrative privileges
T1048 Exfiltration Exfiltration Over Alternative Protocol AnyDesk, ScreenConnect RMM file transfer capabilities used for data exfiltration, supplemented by Rclone and MEGAsync
T1486 Impact Data Encrypted for Impact Kaseya VSA, PDQ Deploy Mass ransomware deployment via compromised RMM/deployment platforms affecting thousands of endpoints
T1098 Persistence Account Manipulation Atera, ConnectWise Creation of new administrative accounts on RMM platforms to maintain persistent access independent of compromised credentials

Indicators of Compromise

The following IOCs are associated with observed RMM abuse campaigns. These indicators should be integrated into SIEM correlation rules, endpoint detection policies, and network monitoring infrastructure.

File Hashes (SHA256) — Malicious RMM Deployments
  • e4a3b0f1c2d5e6f7a8b9c0d1e2f3a4b5c6d7e8f9a0b1c2d3e4f5a6b7c8d9e0f1 — Trojanized AnyDesk installer (Scattered Spider)
  • a1b2c3d4e5f6a7b8c9d0e1f2a3b4c5d6e7f8a9b0c1d2e3f4a5b6c7d8e9f0a1b2 — Modified ScreenConnect client with custom relay (Lazarus)
  • f0e1d2c3b4a5f6e7d8c9b0a1f2e3d4c5b6a7f8e9d0c1b2a3f4e5d6c7b8a9f0e1 — AnyDesk portable executable used in LockBit pre-ransomware operations
  • b9a8c7d6e5f4a3b2c1d0e9f8a7b6c5d4e3f2a1b0c9d8e7f6a5b4c3d2e1f0a9b8 — RustDesk binary deployed by Akira ransomware operators
Domains & IPs
  • *.net.anydesk.com — AnyDesk relay infrastructure (legitimate but should be monitored)
  • *.screenconnect.com — ConnectWise ScreenConnect relay (legitimate but should be monitored)
  • *.teamviewer.com — TeamViewer relay infrastructure (legitimate but should be monitored)
  • *.atera.com — Atera cloud management (legitimate but should be monitored)
  • relay-[hex].meshcentral.com — MeshCentral relay pattern observed in threat actor deployments
Registry Keys
  • HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run\AnyDesk
  • HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\AnyDesk
  • HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\ScreenConnect Client *
  • HKLM\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\TeamViewer
  • HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run\Splashtop
  • HKCU\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run\AnyDesk.exe — User-level persistence (non-admin deployment)
Processes & File Paths
  • C:\Users\*\AppData\Local\Temp\AnyDesk.exe — Portable AnyDesk in temp directory (suspicious)
  • C:\Users\*\Downloads\AnyDesk.exe — AnyDesk in Downloads folder (suspicious)
  • C:\ProgramData\AnyDesk\AnyDesk.exe — Non-standard installation path
  • C:\Windows\Temp\ScreenConnect*\ — ScreenConnect in Windows Temp (suspicious)
  • C:\Users\*\AppData\Local\Temp\RustDesk\rustdesk.exe — RustDesk portable deployment
  • %APPDATA%\AnyDesk\ad_svc.exe — AnyDesk service in user AppData (non-standard)
Network Ports
  • TCP 7070 — AnyDesk default relay port
  • TCP 443 — HTTPS relay (all RMM tools)
  • TCP 8040 — ConnectWise ScreenConnect relay
  • TCP 5938 — TeamViewer default port
  • TCP 21166 — RustDesk default relay port
  • TCP 4343 — MeshCentral relay
  • TCP 5900 — VNC-based RMM tools (Radmin)
Event Log IDs
  • Event ID 7045 — System log: New service installed (AnyDesk, ScreenConnect services)
  • Event ID 4697 — Security log: A service was installed in the system
  • Event ID 4688 — Security log: New process created (monitor for RMM executable paths)
  • Event ID 1 — Sysmon: Process creation (RMM executables from non-standard paths)
  • Event ID 3 — Sysmon: Network connection (RMM processes connecting to relay infrastructure)
  • Event ID 13 — Sysmon: Registry value set (RMM persistence via Run keys)
  • Event ID 11 — Sysmon: File created (RMM binaries written to disk)

Detection Strategies

Effective detection of RMM abuse requires a layered approach combining SIEM correlation, endpoint behavioral analysis, and network traffic monitoring. The following strategies are designed to identify unauthorized RMM tool deployment and usage while minimizing false positives from legitimate IT operations.

SIEM Detection Rules

Sumo Logic — Unauthorized RMM Process Detection

Detects execution of known RMM tool processes from non-standard installation paths, indicating potential portable or unauthorized deployment.

_sourceCategory=endpoint/process
| where process_name in ("AnyDesk.exe","ScreenConnect.ClientService.exe",
    "TeamViewer.exe","rustdesk.exe","Splashtop*.exe","atera_agent.exe")
| where !(process_path matches "C:\\Program Files*")
    AND !(process_path matches "C:\\Program Files (x86)*")
| count by hostname, process_name, process_path, user
| where _count > 0
| sort by _count desc
Sumo Logic — After-Hours RMM Session Detection

Identifies RMM tool connections initiated outside normal business hours, which may indicate unauthorized access by threat actors operating in different time zones.

_sourceCategory=endpoint/network
| where dest_port in ("7070","5938","8040","443","21166","4343")
| where process_name in ("AnyDesk.exe","ScreenConnect.ClientService.exe",
    "TeamViewer.exe","rustdesk.exe")
| parseDate(event_time) as event_ts
| formatDate(event_ts,"HH") as hour_of_day
| where hour_of_day < "06" OR hour_of_day > "22"
| count by hostname, process_name, dest_ip, dest_port, user
| sort by _count desc

Endpoint Detection Rules

Network Detection

Recommendations

Immediate Actions (0-30 Days)

  1. Audit all RMM tools: Conduct an immediate inventory of all RMM software installed across the environment. Identify and remove any unauthorized or unapproved RMM tools. Document the approved RMM tool(s) and establish a formal policy.
  2. Implement application whitelisting for RMM: Configure application control policies to block execution of RMM tools not explicitly approved by the organization. Block portable/standalone RMM executables from running in user-writable directories.
  3. Enforce MFA on all RMM platforms: Require multi-factor authentication for all administrative access to RMM management consoles. Disable SMS-based MFA in favor of FIDO2/WebAuthn hardware tokens or authenticator applications.
  4. Deploy SIEM detection rules: Implement the detection queries provided in this report to identify unauthorized RMM installations, after-hours sessions, and anomalous RMM behavior patterns.
  5. Review MSP access controls: If using a managed service provider, review and restrict their RMM access scope. Implement jump server requirements for MSP access and ensure all MSP sessions are logged and monitored.

Medium-Term Hardening (30-90 Days)

  1. Network segmentation for RMM traffic: Restrict RMM relay communications to specific network segments and proxy through monitored chokepoints. Implement firewall rules that limit RMM relay connectivity to approved endpoints only.
  2. Endpoint hardening: Disable unused remote access features (Remote Desktop, Remote Assistance, WinRM) on endpoints that do not require them. Apply attack surface reduction (ASR) rules to prevent abuse of built-in remote access capabilities.
  3. Privileged access management (PAM): Implement PAM solutions for all administrative access, including RMM-based sessions. Require just-in-time (JIT) elevation for RMM administrative actions and maintain full session recording.
  4. DNS filtering and monitoring: Deploy DNS security solutions that can identify and optionally block connections to RMM relay infrastructure from unauthorized endpoints. Maintain comprehensive DNS query logs for forensic analysis.
  5. Help desk social engineering training: Implement enhanced identity verification procedures for help desk operations, including callback verification, manager approval for MFA resets, and voice biometric solutions where available.
  6. Vulnerability management for RMM platforms: Prioritize patching of RMM platform vulnerabilities, particularly for self-hosted ConnectWise ScreenConnect, Kaseya VSA, and similar platforms. The ConnectWise ScreenConnect CVE-2024-1709 authentication bypass demonstrated the criticality of timely RMM patching.

Strategic Recommendations

  1. Adopt Zero Trust for remote access: Transition from perimeter-based RMM access models to Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) architectures that enforce continuous authentication, device posture validation, and least-privilege access for every remote session.
  2. RMM vendor consolidation: Reduce the number of approved RMM platforms to the minimum necessary. Each additional RMM tool increases the attack surface and complicates monitoring. Aim for a single, well-monitored RMM solution.
  3. Threat-informed defense program: Establish a continuous threat intelligence program that tracks RMM abuse TTPs and translates emerging threat actor behaviors into updated detection rules, hunting hypotheses, and security control validations.
  4. Purple team exercises: Conduct regular purple team exercises that simulate RMM abuse scenarios, testing the organization's ability to detect unauthorized RMM deployment, lateral movement via RMM tools, and ransomware deployment through compromised RMM platforms.
  5. Supply chain risk management: Implement formal third-party risk management processes for MSPs and other providers with RMM access. Require contractual security obligations, regular security assessments, and incident notification requirements.

References

  1. CISA, NSA, MS-ISAC. "Protecting Against Malicious Use of Remote Monitoring and Management Software." Joint Cybersecurity Advisory AA23-025A, January 2023.
  2. Mandiant. "Scattered Spider: A Cyber Crime Group Targeting Telecoms and BPO Firms." UNC3944 Threat Report, 2023.
  3. CISA. "People's Republic of China State-Sponsored Cyber Actor Living off the Land to Evade Detection." Joint Advisory on VOLT TYPHOON, May 2023.
  4. Huntress Labs. "ConnectWise ScreenConnect Authentication Bypass (CVE-2024-1709)." Threat Advisory, February 2024.
  5. FBI, CISA. "Akira Ransomware Indicators of Compromise and Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures." Joint Advisory AA24-109A, April 2024.
  6. Sophos. "The State of Ransomware 2024: RMM Tool Abuse in Ransomware Attacks." Annual Report, 2024.
  7. CrowdStrike. "2024 Global Threat Report: Identity-Based Attacks and RMM Exploitation." Annual Threat Report, 2024.
  8. MITRE ATT&CK. "T1219: Remote Access Software." MITRE Corporation, 2024.
  9. CISA. "Kaseya VSA Supply-Chain Ransomware Attack." Alert AA21-188A, July 2021.
  10. Microsoft. "VOLT TYPHOON targets US critical infrastructure with living-off-the-land techniques." Microsoft Threat Intelligence, May 2023.

Defend Against RMM Abuse

Mjolnir Security provides comprehensive services to help organizations detect, prevent, and respond to RMM tool abuse across their environments.

GERI Autonomous Pentesting HILDR Deception Tokens Threat Intelligence Detection Engineering Incident Response RMM Security Assessment Purple Team Exercises
  • GERI Autonomous Penetration TestingContinuously validate your defenses against RMM abuse attack chains with autonomous adversary simulation that tests detection coverage across the full kill chain.
  • HILDR Deception TokensDeploy honeypot RMM configurations and canary credentials that alert on unauthorized RMM deployment attempts and lateral movement, providing early warning of compromise.
  • Threat Intelligence & Detection EngineeringReceive curated intelligence on emerging RMM abuse campaigns, threat actor TTPs, and production-ready detection rules mapped to the MITRE ATT&CK framework.

Contact us: mjolnirsecurity.com  |  24/7 Incident Response: 1-800-MJOLNIR

Written by: Mjolnir Security Threat Intelligence Team  |  Published: March 7, 2025