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Hardware wallet supply-chain tamper → pre-seeded seed

Intercept Trezor / Ledger / KeepKey in transit (or counterfeit on Amazon / eBay). Replace device with one that already has a known seed phrase the attacker controls — victim deposits, attacker drains.

Filed by AD Knowledge Base
§ Kill-chainDrag · zoom · scroll

§ Context

Assumed environment: victim buys a hardware wallet from a non-vendor channel (used market, marketplace seller, gifting). Doesn't verify the device by setting a fresh seed.

§ Steps

  1. 01
    Sweep funds at attacker's choosingExfiltration
    T1041Exfiltration Over C2 Channel
  2. 02
    Victim deposits funds to known seedInitial Access
    T1078Valid Accounts
  3. 03
    Sell via marketplace / used channelInitial Access
    T1195Supply Chain Compromise
  4. 04
    Acquire / counterfeit hardware walletsResource Development
    T1583Acquire Infrastructure
  5. 05
    Pre-load known seed phrase / backdoored firmwareInitial Access
    WLT-HW-SUPPLYHardware Wallet Supply-Chain Tamper

§ References

§ Frequently asked

What is the "Hardware wallet supply-chain tamper → pre-seeded seed" attack path?
Intercept Trezor / Ledger / KeepKey in transit (or counterfeit on Amazon / eBay). Replace device with one that already has a known seed phrase the attacker controls — victim deposits, attacker drains. It chains 5 steps drawn from real-world offensive-security techniques.
What starting position does this attack require?
The first step is Sweep funds at attacker's choosing (T1041) — a exfiltration primitive. Assumed environment: victim buys a hardware wallet from a non-vendor channel (used market, marketplace seller, gifting).
What is the final impact of this kill-chain?
The final step lands on Pre-load known seed phrase / backdoored firmware (WLT-HW-SUPPLY), which falls under Initial Access. From here, an operator typically pivots into post-exploitation or maintains persistence.
How can defenders detect or prevent this attack?
Detection and prevention vary per step. Refer to each linked MITRE ATT&CK entry under "References" — every technique on that page lists defensive controls, detection telemetry, and known threat-actor usage.

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