Lateral Movement: Modified Boot Disk Attached to Instance
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This document describes a threat finding type in Security Command Center. Threat findings are generated by
threat detectors when they detect
a potential threat in your cloud resources. For a full list of available threat findings, see Threat findings index.
Overview
Audit logs are examined to detect suspicious disk movements among
Compute Engine instance resources. A potentially modified boot disk has been
attached to your Compute Engine.
How to respond
To respond to this finding, do the following:
Step 1: Review finding details
Open the Lateral Movement: Modify Boot Disk Attaching to Instance finding, as detailed in Reviewing findings. The details panel for the finding opens to the Summary tab.
On the Summary tab, note the values of
following fields.
Under What was detected:
Principal email: the service account that performed the action
Service name: the API name of the Google Cloud service that was accessed by the service account
Contact the owner of the service account in the Principal email field.
Confirm whether the legitimate owner conducted the action.
Step 3: Implement your response
The following response plan might be appropriate for this finding, but might also impact operations.
Carefully evaluate the information you gather in your investigation to determine the best way to
resolve findings.
Contact the owner of the project where the action was taken.
Consider using
Secure Boot for your
Compute Engine VM instances.
Consider deleting the potentially compromised service account and rotate and delete
all service account access keys for the potentially compromised project. After
deletion, applications that use the service account for authentication lose
access. Before proceeding, your security team should identify all impacted
applications and work with application owners to ensure business continuity.
Work with your security team to identify unfamiliar resources, including
Compute Engine instances, snapshots, service accounts, and IAM
users. Delete resources not created with authorized accounts.
Respond to any notifications from Google Cloud Support.
[[["Easy to understand","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Solved my problem","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Other","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Hard to understand","hardToUnderstand","thumb-down"],["Incorrect information or sample code","incorrectInformationOrSampleCode","thumb-down"],["Missing the information/samples I need","missingTheInformationSamplesINeed","thumb-down"],["Other","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Last updated 2025-09-04 UTC."],[],[],null,["| Premium and Enterprise [service tiers](/security-command-center/docs/service-tiers)\n\nThis document describes a threat finding type in Security Command Center. Threat findings are generated by\n[threat detectors](/security-command-center/docs/concepts-security-sources#threats) when they detect\na potential threat in your cloud resources. For a full list of available threat findings, see [Threat findings index](/security-command-center/docs/threat-findings-index).\n\nOverview\n\nAudit logs are examined to detect suspicious disk movements among\nCompute Engine instance resources. A potentially modified boot disk has been\nattached to your Compute Engine.\n\nHow to respond\n\nTo respond to this finding, do the following:\n\nStep 1: Review finding details\n\n1. Open the `Lateral Movement: Modify Boot Disk Attaching to Instance` finding, as detailed in [Reviewing findings](/security-command-center/docs/how-to-investigate-threats#reviewing_findings). The details panel for the finding opens to the **Summary** tab.\n2. On the **Summary** tab, note the values of\n following fields.\n\n Under **What was detected**:\n - **Principal email**: the service account that performed the action\n - **Service name**: the API name of the Google Cloud service that was accessed by the service account\n - **Method name**: the method that was called\n\nStep 2: Research attack and response methods\n\n1. Use [service account\n tools](/policy-intelligence/docs/service-account-usage-tools), like [Activity\n Analyzer](/policy-intelligence/docs/activity-analyzer-service-account-authentication), to investigate the activity of the associated service account.\n2. Contact the owner of the service account in the **Principal email** field. Confirm whether the legitimate owner conducted the action.\n\nStep 3: Implement your response\n\n\nThe following response plan might be appropriate for this finding, but might also impact operations.\nCarefully evaluate the information you gather in your investigation to determine the best way to\nresolve findings.\n\n- Contact the owner of the project where the action was taken.\n- Consider using [Secure Boot](/compute/shielded-vm/docs/shielded-vm#secure-boot) for your Compute Engine VM instances.\n- Consider [deleting the potentially compromised service account](/iam/docs/service-accounts-delete-undelete#deleting) and rotate and delete all service account access keys for the potentially compromised project. After deletion, applications that use the service account for authentication lose access. Before proceeding, your security team should identify all impacted applications and work with application owners to ensure business continuity.\n- Work with your security team to identify unfamiliar resources, including Compute Engine instances, snapshots, service accounts, and IAM users. Delete resources not created with authorized accounts.\n- Respond to any notifications from Google Cloud Support.\n\nWhat's next\n\n- Learn [how to work with threat\n findings in Security Command Center](/security-command-center/docs/how-to-investigate-threats).\n- Refer to the [Threat findings index](/security-command-center/docs/threat-findings-index).\n- Learn how to [review a\n finding](/security-command-center/docs/how-to-investigate-threats#reviewing_findings) through the Google Cloud console.\n- Learn about the [services that\n generate threat findings](/security-command-center/docs/concepts-security-sources#threats)."]]