Threat Intelligence Blog
Contact us to discuss any insights from our Blog, and how we can support you in a tailored threat intelligence report.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 19 April 2024
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 19 April 2024:
-94% of Ransomware Victims Have Their Backups Targeted by Attackers
-Sharing IT Providers Is a Risk for Financial Services, Says IMF, as Rising Cyber Threats Pose Serious Concerns for Financial Stability
-Hackers are Threatening to Publish a Huge Stolen Sanctions and Financial Crimes Watchlist
-Your Annual Cyber Security Is Not Working, but There is a Solution
-73% of Security Professionals Say They’ve Missed, Ignored or Failed to Act on a High Priority Security Alert
-Russia and Ukraine Top Inaugural World Cyber Crime Index
-Police Takedown Major Cyber Fraud Superstore: Will the Cyber Crime Industry Become More Fragmented?
-Small Businesses See Stable Business Climate; Cite Cyber Security as Top Threat
-The Threat from Inside: 14% Surge in Insider Threats Compared to Previous Year
-Dark Web Sales Driving Major Rise in Credential Attacks as Attackers Pummel Networks with Millions of Login Attempts
-Large Enterprises Experience Breaches, Despite Large Security Stacks - Report Finds 93% of Breaches Lead to Downtime and Data Loss
-Charities Doing Worse than Private Sector in Staving off Cyber Attacks
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
94% of Ransomware Victims Have Their Backups Targeted by Attackers
Organisations that have backed up sensitive data may believe they are safe from the effects of ransomware attacks; however a new study by Sophos reported that cyber criminals attempted to compromise the backups of 94% of companies hit by ransomware in the past year. The research found that criminals can demand a higher ransom when they compromise an organisation’s backup data, and those victims are twice as likely to pay. The median ransom demand is $2.3 million when backups are compromised, compared to $1 million otherwise.
Additionally, sectors like state and local governments, along with media and entertainment, are particularly vulnerable with nearly all affected organisations experiencing backup compromises.
Source: [Tech Republic]
Sharing IT Providers Is a Risk for Financial Services, Says IMF, as Rising Cyber Threats Pose Serious Concerns for Financial Stability
The International Monetary Fund has found that with greater digitalisation and heightened geopolitical tensions comes a greater risk of cyber attack with systemic consequences. The IMF noted that losses more than quadrupled since 2017 to $2.5 billion.
The push for technology has led to a number of financial services institutions relying on third-party IT firms, increasing their susceptibility to cyber disruption on a wider scale and a potential ripple effect were a third party to be hit. Whilst such third parties can increase the cyber resilience of a financial services institution, they also expose the industry to systemwide shocks, the IMF reports.
The IMF recommend institutions should identify potential systematic risks in their third-party IT firms. If the organisation is unable to perform such risk assessments, they should seek the expert support of an independent cyber security specialist.
Sources: [The Banker] [IMF]
Hackers are Threatening to Publish a Huge Stolen Sanctions and Financial Crimes Watchlist
A cyber crime group named GhostR has claimed responsibility for stealing 5.3 million records from the World-Check database, which companies use for "know your customer" (KYC) checks to screen potential clients for financial crime risks. The data theft occurred in March and originated from a Singapore-based firm with access to World-Check. The London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG), which owns World-Check, confirmed that the breach involved a third-party's dataset and not their systems directly. The stolen data includes sensitive information on individuals identified as high-risk, such as government-sanctioned figures and those linked to organised crime. LSEG is coordinating with the affected third party and authorities to protect the compromised data and prevent its dissemination.
Source: [TechCrunch]
Your Annual Cyber Security Is Not Working, But There is a Solution
Most organisations utilise annual security training in an attempt to ensure every department develops their cyber awareness skills and is able to spot and report a threat. However, this training is often out of date. Additionally, often training has limited interactivity, failing to capture and maintain employees’ attention and retention. On top of this, many training courses fail to connect employees to real-world scenarios that could occur in their specific job.
To get the most return on investment, organisations need to have more regular education, with the aim of long-term behavioural shifts in the work place, nudging employees towards greater cyber hygiene.
Source: [TechRadar]
73% of Security Professionals Say They’ve Missed, Ignored or Failed to Act on a High Priority Security Alert
A new survey from Coro, targeting small medium enterprises (SME) cyber security professionals, reveals that 73% have missed or ignored high priority security alerts due to overwhelming workloads and managing multiple security tools. The 2024 SME Security Workload Impact Report highlights that SMEs are inundated with alerts and responsibilities, which dilute their focus from critical security threats. On average, these professionals manage over 11 security tools and spend nearly five hours daily on tasks like monitoring and patching vulnerabilities. Respondents handle an average of over 2,000 endpoint security agents across 656 devices, more than half dealing with frequent vendor updates.
Source: [Business Wire]
Russia and Ukraine Top Inaugural World Cyber Crime Index
The inaugural World Cybercrime Index (WCI) identifies Russia, Ukraine, and China as the top sources of global cyber crime. This index, the first of its kind, was developed over four years by an international team from the University of Oxford and the University of New South Wales, with input from 92 cyber crime experts. These experts ranked countries based on the impact, professionalism, and technical skills of their cyber criminals across five cyber crime categories, including data theft, scams, and money laundering. Russia topped the list, followed by Ukraine and China, highlighting their significant roles in high-tech cyber criminal activities. The index, expected to be updated regularly, aims to provide a clearer understanding of cyber crime's global geography and its correlation with national characteristics like internet penetration and GDP. Of note the UK and US also made the top ten list, so it is not just other countries we need to worry about.
Top ten Countries in full:
1. Russia
2. Ukraine
3. China
4. United States
5. Nigeria
6. Romania
7. North Korea
8. United Kingdom
9. Brazil
10. India
Source: [Infosecurity Magazine]
Police Takedown Major Cyber Fraud Superstore: Will the Cyber Crime Industry Become More Fragmented?
The London Metropolitan Police takedown of online fraud service LabHost serves as a reminder of the industrial scale on which cyber crimes are being performed, with the service amassing 480,000 debit or credit card numbers and 64,000 PINs: all for the subscription price of £300 a month. The site even included tutorial videos on how to commit crime and offered customer service.
Such takedowns can lead to fragmentation. The 2,000 individuals subscribed to LabHost may have lost access but where there is demand, supply will be found. The takedown of one service allows other, small services to fill the gap. As the saying goes ‘nature abhors a vacuum’ and it is especially true when it comes to cyber crime; there is too much business for empty spaces not to be filled.
Sources: [ITPro] [The Guardian]
Small Businesses See Stable Business Climate; Cite Cyber Security as Top Threat
Small businesses are experiencing a stable business climate, as reflected by the Small Business Index, indicating an increasing optimism about the economy. However, the recent surge in cyber attacks, including major assaults on UnitedHealth Group and MGM Resorts, has underscored the growing vulnerability of these businesses to cyber crime. Despite 80% of small to medium-sized enterprises feeling well-protected by their IT defences, a Devolutions survey reveals that 69% of them still fell victim to cyber attacks last year. This has led to cyber security being viewed as the greatest threat by 60% of small businesses, even surpassing concerns over supply chain disruptions and the potential for another pandemic.
The average cost of these attacks ranges from $120,000 to $1.24 million, leading to 60% of affected businesses closing within six months. This vulnerability is further compounded by a common underestimation of the ransomware threat. While 71% of businesses feel prepared for future threats, the depth of this preparedness varies, with only 23% feeling very prepared for cyber security challenges.
Sources: [Claims Journal] [Inc.com]
The Threat from Inside: Insider Threats Surge 14% Annually as Cost-of-Living Crisis Bites
Employee fraud grew significantly last year thanks to the opportunities afforded by remote working and the pressures of a cost-of-living crisis in the UK, according to Cifas, an anti-fraud non-profit. The number of individuals recorded in its cross-sector Insider Threat Database (ITD) increased 14% year-on-year (YoY) in 2023, with the most common reason being “dishonest action to obtain benefit by theft or deception” (49%).
Insider threats – both by accident or with malicious intent – by their own employees are overlooked, despite accounting for 58% of cybersecurity breaches in recent years. As a result, a large proportion of businesses may lack any strategy to address insider risks, leaving them vulnerable to financial, operational and reputational harm.
Source: [Infosecurity Magazine] [TechRadar]
Dark Web Sales Driving Major Rise in Credential Attacks as Attackers Pummel Networks with Millions of Login Attempts
Dark web sales are driving a major rise in credential attacks, with a surge in infostealer malware attacks over the last three years significantly heightening the cyber crime landscape. Kaspersky reports a sevenfold increase in data theft attacks, leading to the compromise of over 26 million devices since 2022. Cyber criminals stole roughly 400 million login credentials last year alone, often sold on dark web markets for as low as $10 per log file. These stolen credentials have become a lucrative commodity, fostering a complex economy of initial access brokers who facilitate broader corporate network infiltrations. The Asia-Pacific and Latin America regions have been particularly affected, with millions of credentials stolen annually.
Simultaneously, Cisco’s Talos team warns of a current credential compromise campaign targeting networks via mass login attempts to VPN, SSH, and web apps. Attackers use a mix of generic and specific usernames with nearly 100 passwords from about 4,000 IP addresses, likely routed through anonymising services (such as TOR). These attacks pose risks like unauthorised access, account lockouts, and potential denial-of-service. The attack volume has increased since 18 March this year mirroring a previous alert by Cisco about a similar campaign affecting VPNs. Despite method and infrastructure similarities, a direct link between these campaigns is yet to be confirmed.
Sources: [Ars Technica] [Data Breach Today]
Large Enterprises Experience Breaches, Despite Large Security Stacks; Report Finds 93% of Breaches Lead to Downtime and Data Loss
93% of enterprises admitting to having had a breach have suffered significant consequences, ranging from unplanned downtime to data exposure or financial loss, according to a recent report. 73% of organisations made changes to their IT environment at least quarterly, however only 40% tested their security at the same frequency. Unfortunately, this means that many organisations are facing a significant gap in which changes in the IT environment are untested, and therefore their risk unknown.
Security tools can aid this, however as the report finds, despite having a large number of security stacks, 51% still reported a breach in the past 24 months. Organisations must keep in mind that security extends beyond the technical realm, and it needs to include people and operations.
Sources: [Infosecurity Magazine] [Help Net Security]
Charities Doing Worse than Private Sector in Staving off Cyber Attacks
Recent UK Government data reveals a significant cyber security challenge for charities, with about a third experiencing breaches this past year, equating to nearly 924,000 cyber crimes. Notably, 83% of these incidents involved phishing, with other prevalent threats including fraud emails and malware. The data found that 63% of charities said cyber security was a high priority for senior management, however, charities lag behind the private sector in adopting security monitoring tools and conducting risk assessments.
Additionally, while half of the charities implement basic cyber hygiene defences like malware protection and password policies, only about 40% seek external cyber security guidance.
Source: [TFN]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Cyber attack volumes peak in first quarter | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Annual cyber security training isn’t working, so what’s the alternative? | TechRadar
Security breaches are causing more damage than ever before | TechRadar
Small Businesses See Stable Business Climate; Cite Cyber Security as Top Threat (claimsjournal.com)
51% of enterprises experienced a breach despite large security stacks - Help Net Security
Rising Cyber Threats Pose Serious Concerns for Financial Stability (imf.org)
Ex-Uber security exec Joe Sullivan is advising CISOs on how to avoid his legal fate (axios.com)
Cyber Security Tips for Small Businesses Now Considered Big Hacking Targets | Inc.com
The Five Main Steps In A Compliance Risk Assessment Plan (forbes.com)
Pentesting accounts for an average of 13% of total IT security budgets | Security Magazine
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Sophos Study: 94% of Ransomware Victims Have Their Backups Targeted (techrepublic.com)
FBI: Akira ransomware raked in $42 million from 250+ victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
What if we made ransomware payments illegal? | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Critical Atlassian Flaw Exploited to Deploy Linux Variant of Cerber Ransomware (thehackernews.com)
Moldovan charged for operating botnet used to push ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware, meet DRaaS: The future of disaster mitigation (betanews.com)
A whole new generation of ransomware makers are attempting to shake up the market | TechRadar
Security Think Tank: Approaches to ransomware need a course correction | Computer Weekly
Ransomware Victims Who Pay a Ransom Drops to Record Low (databreachtoday.co.uk)
Ransomware Victims
Change Healthcare’s ransomware attack costs reach nearly $1B • The Register
Ransomware attacks against food, agriculture industry examined | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Ransomware attack compromises UN agency data | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
840-bed hospital in France postpones procedures after cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
US think tank Heritage Foundation hit by cyber attack | TechCrunch
Daixin ransomware gang claims attack on Omni Hotels (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware feared as Octapharma Plasma closes 150+ centers • The Register
Cyber Attack Takes Frontier Communications Offline (darkreading.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
FBI warns of massive wave of road toll SMS phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
FIN7 targets American automaker’s IT staff in phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Other Social Engineering
Quishing: The New Cyber Threat to the Cleared Workplace - ClearanceJobs
FBI warns of massive wave of road toll SMS phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber criminals pose as LastPass staff to hack password vaults (bleepingcomputer.com)
Artificial Intelligence
CISOs not changing priorities in response to AI threats (betanews.com)
92% of enterprises unprepared for AI security challenges - Help Net Security
AI Copilot: Launching Innovation Rockets, But Beware of the Darkness Ahead (thehackernews.com)
Best Practices & Guidance For AI Security Deployment 2024 (gbhackers.com)
C-suite weighs in on generative AI and security (securityintelligence.com)
2FA/MFA
Cisco Duo warns third-party data breach exposed SMS MFA logs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Roku Mandates 2FA for Customers After Credential-Stuffing Compromise (darkreading.com)
Malware
LockBit 3.0 Variant Generates Custom, Self-Propagating Malware (darkreading.com)
TA558 Hackers Weaponize Images for Wide-Scale Malware Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Evil XDR: Researcher Turns Palo Alto Software Into Perfect Malware (darkreading.com)
Firebird RAT creator and seller arrested in the US and Australia (bleepingcomputer.com)
Destructive ICS Malware 'Fuxnet' Used by Ukraine Against Russian Infrastructure - Security Week
New SteganoAmor attacks use steganography to target 320 orgs globally (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russian APT Deploys New 'Kapeka' Backdoor in Eastern European Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Malicious Google Ads Pushing Fake IP Scanner Software with Hidden Backdoor (thehackernews.com)
Fake cheat lures gamers into spreading infostealer malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
Government spyware is another reason to use an ad blocker | TechCrunch
iPhone users warned to disable iMessage temporarily to avoid getting hacked - PhoneArena
Enterprises face significant losses from mobile fraud - Help Net Security
SoumniBot malware exploits Android bugs to evade detection (bleepingcomputer.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Internet of Things – IoT
How to protect IP surveillance cameras from Wi-Fi jamming - Help Net Security
CISA warns of critical vulnerability in Chirp smart locks • The Register
New rules for security of connected products in the UK and EU - Lexology
Data Breaches/Leaks
CISA orders agencies impacted by Microsoft hack to mitigate risks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Panama Papers: Money laundering trial of 27 defendants begins
Giant Tiger data breach may have impacted millions of customers (securityaffairs.com)
5 Ways Your Personal Information May End Up On The Dark Web (slashgear.com)
Law Firm to Pay $8M to Settle Health Data Hack Lawsuit (databreachtoday.co.uk)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Chinese fraud victims seek return of £3bn in bitcoin seized in UK (ft.com)
Ex-Amazon engineer gets 3 years for hacking crypto exchanges (bleepingcomputer.com)
Security engineer jailed for 3 years for $12M crypto hacks | TechCrunch
Hackers hijack OpenMetadata apps in Kubernetes cryptomining attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Insurance
Cloud/SaaS
What Is Microsoft's Role in the Shared Responsibility Model for Data Security? (prweb.com)
For Service Accounts, Accountability Is Key to Security (darkreading.com)
Identity and Access Management
Linux and Open Source
Open source groups say more software projects may have been targeted for sabotage (yahoo.com)
Critical Atlassian Flaw Exploited to Deploy Linux Variant of Cerber Ransomware (thehackernews.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Attackers are pummelling networks around the world with millions of login attempts | Ars Technica
Roku Mandates 2FA for Customers After Credential-Stuffing Compromise (darkreading.com)
Cisco warns of large-scale brute-force attacks against VPN and SSH services (securityaffairs.com)
For Service Accounts, Accountability Is Key to Security (darkreading.com)
Dark Web Sales Driving Major Rise in Credential Attacks (databreachtoday.co.uk)
Social Media
Malvertising
Government spyware is another reason to use an ad blocker | TechCrunch
Google to crack down on third-party YouTube apps that block ads (bleepingcomputer.com)
Training, Education and Awareness
Annual cyber security training isn’t working, so what’s the alternative? | TechRadar
Cyber security training: How to make it more motivating (hrexecutive.com)
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
US Supreme Court ruling suggests change in cyber security disclosure process | CSO Online
New rules for security of connected products in the UK and EU - Lexology
Congress votes to kick Uncle Sam’s data broker habit • The Register
Cops can force suspect to unlock phone with thumbprint, US court rules | Ars Technica
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Backup and Recovery
Data Protection
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
IT and security professionals demand more workplace flexibility - Help Net Security
National Security at Risk as Essential Cyber Security Roles Face Sharp Decline (prnewswire.com)
Break Security Burnout: Combining Leadership With Neuroscience (darkreading.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Firebird RAT creator and seller arrested in the US and Australia (bleepingcomputer.com)
Moldovan charged for operating botnet used to push ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
China
Chinese, Russian Hackers Keep Getting Past Microsoft's Security (businessinsider.com)
Leaked FBI document shows MPs were kept in dark over China hack for two years (inews.co.uk)
Risks are higher than ever for US- China cyber war | Responsible Statecraft
State-Sponsored Hackers Exploit Zero-Day to Backdoor Palo Alto Networks Firewalls - Security Week
Singapore infosec boss: splinternet hinders interoperability • The Register
FBI says Chinese hackers preparing to attack US infrastructure | Reuters
Chinese fraud victims seek return of £3bn in bitcoin seized in UK (ft.com)
Russia
Chinese, Russian Hackers Keep Getting Past Microsoft's Security (businessinsider.com)
CISA orders agencies impacted by Microsoft hack to mitigate risks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft breach allowed Russia to steal Feds' emails • The Register
State-Sponsored Hackers Exploit Zero-Day to Backdoor Palo Alto Networks Firewalls - Security Week
How Ukraine’s cyber police fights back against Russia’s hackers | TechCrunch
Russian 'Cyber Sabotage' A Global Threat: Security Firm | IBTimes
Mandiant upgrades Sandworm to APT44 due to increasing threat | TechTarget
Russia's Sandworm 'cyber attacked US, EU water utilities' • The Register
Sandworm Group Shifts to Espionage Attacks, Hacktivist Personas | Decipher (duo.com)
Russia is trying to sabotage European railways, Czech minister said (securityaffairs.com)
Singapore infosec boss: splinternet hinders interoperability • The Register
Russian APT Deploys New 'Kapeka' Backdoor in Eastern European Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Destructive ICS Malware 'Fuxnet' Used by Ukraine Against Russian Infrastructure - Security Week
Iran
Iranian MuddyWater Hackers Adopt New C2 Tool 'DarkBeatC2' in Latest Campaign (thehackernews.com)
Middle East Cyber Ops Intensify, With Israel the Main Target (darkreading.com)
Iran-Backed Hackers Blast Out Threatening Texts to Israelis (darkreading.com)
Israel Holds Hybrid Cyber & Military Readiness Drills (darkreading.com)
North Korea
Other Nation State Actors, Hacktivism, Extremism, Terrorism and Other Geopolitical Threat Intelligence
Vulnerability Management
How to conduct security patch validation and verification | TechTarget
Zero-Day Vulnerabilities: A Beginner’s Guide - The New Stack
The importance of the Vulnerability Operations Centre for cyber security | TechRadar
Vulnerabilities
State-Sponsored Hackers Exploit Zero-Day to Backdoor Palo Alto Networks Firewalls - Security Week
“Highly capable” hackers root corporate networks by exploiting firewall 0-day | Ars Technica
Cisco discloses root escalation flaw with public exploit code (bleepingcomputer.com)
PuTTY SSH client flaw allows recovery of cryptographic private keys (bleepingcomputer.com)
Citrix Releases Security Updates for XenServer and Citrix Hypervisor | CISA
Yubico Issues YubiKey Security Alert For Windows Users (forbes.com)
Samsung Issues Update Now Warning For Millions Of Galaxy Users (forbes.com)
Juniper Networks Publishes Dozens of New Security Advisories - Security Week
Ivanti warns of critical flaws in its Avalanche MDM solution (bleepingcomputer.com)
Oracle Patches 230 Vulnerabilities With April 2024 CPU - Security Week
iPhone users warned to disable iMessage temporarily to avoid getting hacked - PhoneArena
Delinea Fixes Flaw After Analyst Goes Public With Disclosure First (darkreading.com)
Critical Atlassian Flaw Exploited to Deploy Linux Variant of Cerber Ransomware (thehackernews.com)
Telegram fixes Windows app zero-day used to launch Python scripts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical RCE Vulnerability in 92,000 D-Link NAS Devices - Security Boulevard
Tools and Controls
Sophos Study: 94% of Ransomware Victims Have Their Backups Targeted (techrepublic.com)
Evil XDR: Researcher Turns Palo Alto Software Into Perfect Malware (darkreading.com)
CISA's Malware Analysis Platform Could Foster Better Threat Intel (darkreading.com)
Pentesting accounts for an average of 13% of total IT security budgets | Security Magazine
Annual cyber security training isn’t working, so what’s the alternative? | TechRadar
6 Ways Businesses Can Boost Their Cloud Security Resilience - Compare the Cloud
Dark Web Monitoring: What's the Value? (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware, meet DRaaS: The future of disaster mitigation (betanews.com)
Cyber security training: How to make it more motivating (hrexecutive.com)
The Five Main Steps In A Compliance Risk Assessment Plan (forbes.com)
AI set to enhance cyber security roles, not replace them - Help Net Security
Stateful vs. stateless firewalls: Understanding the differences | TechTarget
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Charities doing worse than private sector in staving off cyber attacks - TFN
The US counterintelligence head says the list of threats is long and getting longer (cfpublic.org)
Critical Infrastructure Security: Observations From the Front Lines (darkreading.com)
Geopolitical tensions escalate OT cyber attacks - Help Net Security
Microsoft, Beset by Hacks, Grapples With Problem Years in the Making - BNN Bloomberg
The invisible seafaring industry that keeps the internet afloat (theverge.com)
Do we have a plan on how to deal with subsea cables sabotage? | Euronews
Ex-GCHQ chief: Cyber attacks could target fragile trust in utilities - Utility Week
University chiefs to get security service Cobra briefing on hostile states | The Argus
SAP Applications Increasingly in Attacker Crosshairs, Report Shows - Security Week
Emergency services a likely target for cyber attacks, warns DHS - ABC News (go.com)
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 09 February 2024
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 09 February 2024:
-Over Half of Companies Experienced Cyber Security Incidents Last Year
-Deepfake Video Conference Costs Business $25 Million
-Watershed Year for Ransomware as Victims Rose by Almost 50% and Payments Hit $1 Billion All-Time High
-Malware-as-a-Service Now the Top Threat to Organisations
-Over 9 in 10 UK Firms Who Fell Victim to Ransomware Paid the Ransom, Despite Alleged “No Pay” Stances
-Chinese State Hackers Hid in National Infrastructure for at Least 5 Years
-Email Attacks on Businesses Tripled and AI is a Huge Contributing Factor
-Security Leaders, C-Suite Unite to Tackle Cyber Threats
-UN Experts Investigate Cyber Attacks by North Korea that Raked in $3 Billion to Build Nuclear Weapons
-What Does a ‘Cyber Security Culture’ Actually Entail?
-Beyond Checkboxes: Security Compliance as a Business Enabler
-No One in Cyber Security Is Ready for the SolarWinds Prosecution
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Over Half of Companies Experienced Cyber Security Incidents Last Year
According to a recent global survey, over half of the participating companies faced major security incidents in the past year, necessitating additional resources to tackle these challenges. Despite these incidents, many organisations claim improved performance on key cyber security indicators and express confidence in their threat detection capabilities. The research highlights a concerning discrepancy between perceived security measures and the actual state of security operations, underscoring a lack of comprehensive visibility and effective response mechanisms within companies. Particularly concerning is the finding that organisations can typically monitor only two-thirds of their IT environments, exposing significant vulnerabilities. Furthermore, the study points to a greater need for greater automation and third-party assistance in threat detection and response, suggesting that while companies are aware of their shortcomings, the path to enhanced security involves embracing AI-driven solutions to close these gaps. This insight highlights to leadership the importance of investing in advanced cyber security technologies and expertise to safeguard the organisation’s digital assets effectively.
Sources: [Beta News] [Verdict]
Deepfake Video Conference Costs Business $25 Million
There has been a surge in the number of artificial intelligence deepfake attacks where technology is being used to impersonate individuals. In one case, a finance professional at a multinational was reportedly swindled out of $25 million (HK$200 million) of company money when scammers created a deepfake of his London-based chief financial officer in a video conference call, faking both the CFO’s look and voice. The scam involved the fake CFO making increasingly urgent demands to execute money transfers, resulting in 15 transfers from the victim employee. The reality of the attack was only discovered by the victim after he had contacted the company’s corporate head office.
Sources: [The Register] [Help Net Security] [TechCentral ] [Tripwire]
Watershed Year for Ransomware as Victims Rose by Almost 50% And Payments Hit $1 Billion All-Time High
Even with enforcers shutting down some ransomware gangs, the business of ransomware is booming. A recent report from Palo Alto Networks Unit 42 found a 49% increase in the number of victims reported on ransomware leak sites; this does not include those who were victims but did not appear on sites. This comes as ransomware hit an all time high, with over $1b made in ransomware payments. Of note, this is just ransom payments; this does not take in to account reputational damage, recovery costs and loss in share value. The real effects of a ransomware attack may take months or even years to materialise. As ransomware remains a constant threat, it is important for organisations to be prepared.
Sources: [The Verge ] [Malwarebytes] [Infosecurity Magazine] [CSO Online] [ITPro] [TechRadar]
Malware-as-a-Service Now the Top Threat to Organisations
Recent studies have underscored a significant shift in the cyber threat landscape, with Malware-as-a-Service (MaaS) and Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) now dominating. These ‘as-a-service’ tools are particularly concerning as they lower the barrier to entry for cyber criminals, enabling even those with limited technical knowledge to launch sophisticated attacks. The report found that the most common as-a-Service tools were Malware loaders (77% of investigated threats), crypto-miners (52% of investigated threats) and botnets (39% of investigated threats). These findings underscore the adaptability of these threats, with malware strains being developed with multiple functions to maximise damage. Despite these trends, traditional methods like phishing continue to pose significant challenges for security teams. It’s clear that staying ahead of these evolving threats requires a proactive and comprehensive approach to cyber security.
Sources:[Infosecurity Magazine] [Beta News] [Help Net Security]
Over 9 in 10 UK Firms Who Fell Victim to Ransomware Paid the Ransom, Despite Alleged “No Pay” Stances
A recent report has found that over 97% of UK firms have paid a ransom in the last two years, finding even more reason to operate in a when-not-if environment. When asked about their recovery in an event, 38% said they could recover in four to six days, and 34% need one to two weeks to recover; almost one in four (24%) need over three weeks to recover data and restore business processes. Only 12% said their company had stress-tested their data security, data management, and data recovery processes or solutions in the six months prior to being surveyed, and 46% had not tested their processes or solutions in over 12 months.
Sources: [The FinTech Times] [ Help Net Security]
Chinese State Hackers Hid in National Infrastructure for at Least 5 Years
US cyber officials have said that they discovered China-sponsored hackers lurking in American computer networks, positioning themselves to disrupt communications, energy, transportation and water systems; and this had been going on for at least 5 years. This has led to a joint warning from the US FBI, National Security Agency and Cyber Infrastructure and Security Agency, which has been cosigned by Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. This dwell time isn’t just something that is encountered in critical infrastructure networks; attackers lurk on networks, undiscovered often for years, allowing them to see everything going on in the corporate environment.
Sources: [NTD] [Washington Times]
Email Attacks on Businesses Tripled and AI is a Huge Contributing Factor
Email attacks against businesses have increased dramatically as hackers continually use generative AI tools to optimise their content and streamline malicious campaigns, new research has claimed.
The report from Acronis is based on data collected from more than a million unique endpoints across 15 countries, and found AI-powered phishing affected more than 90% of organisations last year. AI helped has email attacks grow by 222% since the second half of 2023.
Sources: [New Electronics] [TechRadar]
Security Leaders, C-Suite Unite to Tackle Cyber Threats
A recent survey found that CEOs are taking a more hands-on approach and prioritising cyber resilience in 2024, leading to the breakdown of traditional silos between IT operations and security teams. The survey polled over 200 C-Suite and senior-level IT executives globally, and revealed a growing recognition of the importance of collaboration in combating sophisticated cyber threats, with 99% of respondents observing increased connectivity between the teams over the past year. While progress has been made, challenges remain, with only 48% of organisations establishing joint protocols for incident mitigation or recovery. Looking ahead, respondents anticipate a significant role for artificial intelligence (AI) in enhancing security efforts, with 68% expecting AI to streamline threat detection and response. Despite advancements, fragmented data protection solutions persist as a challenge, impacting over 90% of organisations' cyber resiliency. This underscores the need for a top-down approach to cyber security, with CEOs and boards driving collaboration between IT operations and security teams to optimise cyber preparedness initiatives and mitigate cyber risks effectively.
Source: [Security Boulevard]
UN Experts Investigate Cyber Attacks by North Korea that Raked in $3 Billion to Build Nuclear Weapons
UN sanction monitors are investigating dozens of suspected cyber attacks by North Korea that have raked in $3 billion to help North Korea further its nuclear weapons programme, according to excerpts of an unpublished UN report. “The panel is investigating 58 suspected DPRK cyber attacks on cryptocurrency-related companies between 2017 and 2023, valued at approximately $3 billion, which reportedly help fund DPRK’s WMD development,” according to the monitors, who report twice a year to the 15-member security council.
Source: [The Guardian]
What Does a ‘Cyber Security Culture’ Actually Entail?
Fostering a robust cyber security culture emerges as a critical imperative for organisations in 2023, as revealed by ITPro Today's "State of Cybersecurity in 2023" study. Despite this recognition, organisations grapple with various challenges, including budget constraints, staffing shortages, and the failure to implement fundamental security practices like the principle of least privilege and zero trust. Insufficient staffing and constrained budgets elevate the risk of breaches, emphasising the need for a collective effort to bolster security measures.
Cultivating a cyber security culture entails educating every employee on security risks and holding them accountable for risk reduction efforts. While security teams play a pivotal role in setting expectations and providing guidance, a culture of cyber security necessitates continuous training, integration of security into everyday work, and clear delineation of risk ownership throughout the organisation. By prioritising proactive measures and fostering individual responsibility, organisations can fortify their defences against evolving cyber threats and mitigate risks effectively.
Source: [ITPro Today]
Beyond Checkboxes: Security Compliance as a Business Enabler
In today's complex business landscape, regulatory requirements are increasingly intricate, especially concerning cyber security compliance. While compliance might evoke images of stringent regulations and time-consuming audits, reframing our perspective reveals its potential as a vital business enabler. Security leaders, in collaboration with senior management, must cultivate a culture where commitment to cyber security compliance permeates the organisation, emphasising its role in fostering trust, facilitating global market access, and even serving as a competitive advantage. Moreover, robust compliance programs drive operational efficiency, innovation, and cost savings in the long run. Embracing cyber security compliance as a strategic enabler, rather than a regulatory burden, positions businesses for success, innovation, and resilience in an ever-evolving digital landscape.
Source: [Forbes]
No One in Cyber Security Is Ready for the SolarWinds Prosecution
The concept of "materiality" has taken centre stage for Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) in light of new SEC regulations, requiring US public companies to disclose "material cyber security incidents" within four days. The SolarWinds breach and subsequent SEC charges against the company and its CISO highlight the seriousness of these regulations. This shift necessitates a deeper understanding of what constitutes "material" risk in cyber security and a more transparent approach to risk communication. However, many CISOs face challenges in quantifying and communicating cyber risks effectively to boards and executives, who often lack familiarity with cyber security terminology. This regulatory change underscores the need for CISOs to bridge the gap between cyber security and financial reporting, ensuring accurate and precise risk communication at the C-Suite level. Additionally, policymakers should incentivise C-Suite accountability for cyber risk management, fostering a culture where cyber risks are addressed proactively and transparently.
Source:[Council on Foreign Relations]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Over half of companies experienced cyber security incidents last year (betanews.com)
Beyond Checkboxes: Security Compliance As Business Enabler (forbes.com)
Why an HR-IT Partnership is Critical for Managing Cyber Security Risk - Security Boulevard
The Cyber Threats Every C-Level Exec Should Care About In 2024 (forbes.com)
Security Leaders, C-Suite Unite to Tackle Cyberthreats - Security Boulevard
Cyber Security, Hybrid Workforce Management Among Top 2024 Business Challenges (allwork.space)
How CISOs navigate policies and access across enterprises - Help Net Security
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
The ransomware business is booming, even as enforcers shut down some players - The Verge
Paying ransoms is becoming a cost of doing business for many - Help Net Security
Chainalysis: 2023 a 'watershed' year for ransomware | TechTarget
The hidden cost of ransomware is more painful than many realize | ITPro
Is critical infrastructure prepared for OT ransomware? • The Register
Akira and 8Base are the ransomware gangs to watch in 2024 • The Register
Crypto-related ransomware attacks made 'major comeback' in 2023 (verdict.co.uk)
NCC Group records the most ransomware victims ever in 2023 | TechTarget
US govt ups bounty on Hive ransomware gang members to $15M • The Register
Ransomware Victims
Clorox says cyber attack caused $49 million in expenses (bleepingcomputer.com)
Blackbaud blasted for failing to prevent customer breaches | Computer Weekly
Lurie Children's Hospital cyber attack forces systems offline • The Register
Blackbaud settles FTC data security probe into 2020 ransomware attack | K-12 Dive (k12dive.com)
California union confirms ransomware attack following LockBit claims (therecord.media)
Another Chicago hospital announces cyber attack (therecord.media)
Funerals reportedly canceled due to ransomware attack on Austrian town (therecord.media)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Fake board meeting nets cyber criminals more than €28m - TechCentral.ie
QR Code 'Quishing' Attacks on Execs Surge, Evading Email Security (darkreading.com)
Email attacks on business tripled in 2023 — and ChatGPT was often the culprit | TechRadar
South African Railways Lost Over $1M in Phishing Scam (darkreading.com)
Artificial Intelligence
Fake board meeting nets cyber criminals more than €28m - TechCentral.ie
Surge in deepfake "Face Swap" attacks puts remote identity verification at risk | Tripwire
Email attacks on business tripled in 2023 — and ChatGPT was often the culprit | TechRadar
Could a threat actor socially engineer ChatGPT? (securityintelligence.com)
Current approaches can’t mitigate the AI cyber security threat. What can? (networkingplus.co.uk)
Malware
Malware-riddled Android apps spotted on Google Play Store — here's what to avoid | TechRadar
Google Play Used to Spread 'Patchwork' APT's Espionage Apps (darkreading.com)
macOS Malware Campaign Showcases Novel Delivery Technique (darkreading.com)
China Caught Dropping RAT Designed for FortiGate Devices (darkreading.com)
Netherlands accuses China of cyber spying after security service makes malware discovery | NL Times
Mobile
Malware-riddled Android apps spotted on Google Play Store — here's what to avoid | TechRadar
Google Links Over 60 Zero-Days to Commercial Spyware Vendors - SecurityWeek
'Coyote' Malware Begins Its Hunt, Preying on 61 Banking Apps (darkreading.com)US insurance firms sound alarm after 66,000 individuals impacted by SIM swap attack (bitdefender.com)
Google Play Used to Spread 'Patchwork' APT's Espionage Apps (darkreading.com)
Government hackers targeted iPhones owners with zero-days, Google says | TechCrunchWizz Removed from Apple and Google Stores for Sextortion Concerns - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
February 2024 Android security patch here for Pixels - Android Authority
Google fixed an Android critical remote code execution flaw (securityaffairs.com)
Warning from LastPass as fake app found on Apple App Store | Malwarebytes
Android XLoader malware can now auto-execute after installation (bleepingcomputer.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Internet of Things – IoT
Data Breaches/Leaks
HPE investigates new breach after data for sale on hacking forum (bleepingcomputer.com)
Blackbaud Comments on FTC Settlement, Continues to Strengthen Cyber Security - MarketWatch
FTC orders Blackbaud to overhaul ‘reckless’ security practices in wake of 2020 breach | TechCrunch
Looted RIPE Credentials for Sale on the Dark Web (darkreading.com)
Millions of User Records Stolen From 65 Websites via SQL Injection Attacks - SecurityWeek
'ResumeLooters' Attackers Steal Millions of Career Records (darkreading.com)
Data breach at French healthcare services firm puts millions at risk (bleepingcomputer.com)
Verizon Says Data Breach Impacted 63,000 Employees - SecurityWeek
Data breaches at Viamedis and Almerys impact 33 million in France (bleepingcomputer.com)
Report: More Than Half of Americans Have Had Their Data Exposed (govtech.com)
HopSkipDrive says personal data of 155,000 drivers stolen in data breach | TechCrunch
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Over half of companies experienced cyber security incidents last year (betanews.com)
As-a-Service tools empower criminals with limited tech skills - Help Net Security
Teens Committing Scary Cyber Crimes, What's Behind the Trend? (darkreading.com)
Nigerian President Dismisses Nation's 'Cyber Crime Haven' Image (darkreading.com)
Lessons Learned From Tracing Cyber Crime’s Evolution On The Dark Web (forbes.com)
US must ratchet up its response in pursuing hackers, MITRE CTO argues - Nextgov/FCW
Report: Blocked IP addresses increased by 116.42% | Security Magazine
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Pig-butchering scams morph into DeFi threats (cointelegraph.com)
Crypto-related ransomware attacks made 'major comeback' in 2023 (verdict.co.uk)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Former CIA worker spilled to WikiLeaks, jailed for 40 years • The Register
How bias can undermine insider threat monitoring | TechRadar
What is a Behavioral Risk Indicator? Demystifying Insider Risk Indicators - Security Boulevard
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Blackbaud blasted for failing to prevent customer breaches | Computer Weekly
Removing the weakest link: Strengthen the security of your supply chain (techuk.org)
Cloud/SaaS
Stop chasing shadow IT: Tackle the root causes of cloud breaches | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Midnight Blizzard and Cloudflare-Atlassian Cyber Security Incidents - Security Boulevard
Organisations Left Grappling for Solutions Amid Alarming Cloud Security Gaps | Network Computing
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
Linux and Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Credential Harvesting Vs. Credential Stuffing Attacks: What’s the Difference? - Security Boulevard
Looted RIPE Credentials for Sale on the Dark Web (darkreading.com)
AnyDesk downplays impact of cyber attack | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Midnight Blizzard and Cloudflare-Atlassian Cyber Security Incidents - Security Boulevard
Social Media
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
How the SEC's Rules on Cyber Security Incident Disclosure Are Exploited (darkreading.com)
No one's happy with latest US cyber incident reporting plan • The Register
2023 Cyber Security Regulation Recap (Part 3): Privacy Protection - Security Boulevard
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Combatting Stress In The Cyber Security Industry (forbes.com)
IT Security Hiring Must Adapt to Skills Shortages (informationweek.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Former CIA worker spilled to WikiLeaks, jailed for 40 years • The Register
Romance fraudster jailed after conning women out of £300k - BBC News
Cops arrest 17-year-old suspected of hundreds of swattings nationwide | Ars Technica
US must ratchet up its response in pursuing hackers, MITRE CTO argues - Nextgov/FCW
Report: Blocked IP addresses increased by 116.42% | Security Magazine
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Google Play Used to Spread 'Patchwork' APT's Espionage Apps (darkreading.com)
How to Win a Cyberwar: Use a Combined Intelligence Strategy (inforisktoday.com)
Nation State Actors
China
Chinese Hackers Preparing ‘Destructive Attacks,’ CISA Warns (govinfosecurity.com)
Chinese Hackers Hid in US Infrastructure for 5 Years | Newsmax.com
China's Cyber Attackers Target US and Allied Militaries (newsweek.com)
FBI Issues Ominous Warning of Imminent Cyber Attack on Critical Infrastructure - Security Boulevard
Dutch intelligence finds Chinese hackers spying on secret Defence Ministry network (therecord.media)
Shutting Down the Grid: Possible Cyber Attacks From Chinese Hackers | NTD
China Caught Dropping RAT Designed for FortiGate Devices (darkreading.com)
Top US venture capitalists invest in China tech for big returns (nypost.com)
Classified Japanese diplomatic info leaked after Chinese cyber attacks - The Japan Times
Philippines Says Hacker in China Behind Foiled Attack on Government Website - Bloomberg
Chinese hackers fail to rebuild botnet after FBI takedown (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russia
Iran
Designating Iranian Cyber Officials - United States Department of State
Microsoft: Iran is refining its cyber operations | CyberScoop
US sanctions Iranian officials over cyber attacks on water plants - BBC News
North Korea
Other Nation State Actors, Hacktivism, Extremism, Terrorism and Other Geopolitical Threat Intelligence
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
Fortinet FortiSIEM hit by two 10/10 severity vulns • The Register
Fortinet warns of new FortiSIEM RCE bugs in confusing disclosure (bleepingcomputer.com)
Experts Detail New Flaws in Azure HDInsight Spark, Kafka, and Hadoop Services (thehackernews.com)
Critical Patches Released for New Flaws in Cisco, Fortinet, VMware Products (thehackernews.com)
Ivanti: Patch new Connect Secure auth bypass bug immediately (bleepingcomputer.com)
Newest Ivanti SSRF zero-day now under mass exploitation (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical vulnerability in Mastodon sparks patching frenzy • The Register
Mastodon Vulnerability Allows Hackers to Hijack Any Decentralized Account (thehackernews.com)
February 2024 Android security patch here for Pixels - Android Authority
Government hackers targeted iPhones owners with zero-days, Google says | TechCrunch
JetBrains warns of new TeamCity auth bypass vulnerability (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical vulnerability affecting most Linux distros allows for bootkits | Ars Technica
Google fixed an Android critical remote code execution flaw (securityaffairs.com)
Cisco fixes critical Expressway Series CSRF vulnerabilities (securityaffairs.com)
QNAP Patches High-Severity Bugs in QTS, Qsync Central - SecurityWeek
Tools and Controls
What is a Behavioral Risk Indicator? Demystifying Insider Risk Indicators - Security Boulevard
How to Win a Cyberwar: Use a Combined Intelligence Strategy (inforisktoday.com)
Surge in deepfake "Face Swap" attacks puts remote identity verification at risk | Tripwire
Close security gaps with attack path analysis and management | TechTarget
Using Proactive Intelligence Against Adversary Infrastructure - Security Boulevard
A Hacker’s Perspective For Building Proactive Organisational Defences (forbes.com)
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Report: Mac security threats on the rise, here’s what to watch out for - 9to5Mac
Trustees urged to review cyber incident frameworks following NCSC changes - Pensions Age Magazine
Airbus App Vulnerability Introduced Aircraft Safety Risk: Security Firm - SecurityWeek
What Will the Future of Cyber Security Bring? - Security Boulevard
Cyber attacks on knowledge institutions are increasing: what can be done? (nature.com)
McPartland Review - Driving Economic Growth through Cyber Security (techuk.org)
A view from Brussels: ENISA celebrates 20th anniversary amid 'grim times' (iapp.org)
Revealed – top 10 cyber incidents of 2023 | Insurance Business America (insurancebusinessmag.com)
NCSC warns CNI operators over ‘living-off-the-land’ attacks | Computer Weekly
Super Bowl LVIII Presents a Vast Attack Surface for Threat Actors (darkreading.com)
We Need Cyber Security in Space to Protect Satellites | Scientific American
Inquiry to explore cyber risk to Sunak-Starmer showdown | Computer Weekly
Three predictions for responding to the cyber threat landscape in 2024 | Computer Weekly
How Hospitals Can Help Improve Medical Device Data Security (darkreading.com)
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 26 January 2024
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 26 January 2024:
-Russian Hackers' Breach of Microsoft and Hewlett Packard Corporate Mailboxes is an Identity Threat Detection Wake-up Call
-94% of CISOs are Concerned About Third-Party Cyber Threats, Yet Only 3% Have Started Implementing Security Measures
-Cyber Risks Needs to be Prioritised as a Key Business Risk Says UK Government, as New Cyber Security Governance Code Puts Cyber Risks on Boardroom Agenda
-81% of Security Professionals Say Phishing Is Top Threat
-Ransomware Attacks Cause Significant Psychological Harm
-Breached Password Report Reveals Two Million Compromised Cloud Credentials Used '123456' as Password
-NCSC: UK Intelligence Fears AI will Fuel Ransomware and Exacerbate Cyber Crime
-Cyber Attacks More than Doubled in 2023, so Why Are So Many Firms Still Not Taking Security Seriously, or Why Firms Ignore Vulnerabilities at Their Own Risk
-Historic Data Leak Reveals 26 billion Records: Check What is Exposed
-Boardroom Cyber Expertise Comes Under Scrutiny
-“It is a whole new bar”: Months Left for Applicable Firms to Prepare for New EU Cyber Security Rules
-Ransomware Attacks Break Records In 2023: The Number of Victims Rose By 128%
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 26 January 2024
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Russian Hackers’ Breach of Microsoft and Hewlett Packard Corporate Mailboxes is an Identity Threat Detection Wake-up Call
Just recently, it was publicly disclosed that Microsoft and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) had their corporate mailboxes breached by threat actors. In the Microsoft breach, a hacking group had used a password spray attack to compromise a non-production test account, and leverage that to access corporate accounts. In the HPE breach, corporate access was gained through unauthorised access to SharePoint files. Both attacks highlight the need for identity threat detection: the ability to identify malicious activity from trusted identities before more sophisticated damage is caused. Cyber incidents are a matter of when, not if, and it is important to have detection capabilities, even for trusted accounts.
Sources: [Help Net Security] [Security Boulevard]
94% of CISOs are Concerned About Third-Party Cyber Threats, Yet Only 3% Have Started Implementing Security Measures
A recent study found that while 94% of CISOs are concerned with third-party cyber security threats, including 17% who view it as a top priority, only 3% have implemented a third -party cyber risk management solution and 33% have noted plans to implement this year. Small and medium sized businesses may not have the resources of a larger organisation yet will have a similar level of third-party risk. This makes the need for an effective solution even more important, and in some cases this may include outsourcing to cyber experts.
Sources: [Dark Reading]
Cyber Risks Needs to be Prioritised as a Key Business Risk, Says UK Government, as New Cyber Security Governance Code Puts Cyber Risks on Boardroom Agenda
The UK Government has proposed a new Code of Practice on cyber security governance, aimed at directors and senior business leaders. The draft document emphasises the need to prioritise cyber security on par with financial and legal risks. It outlines several key areas for focus, including risk management, cyber strategy, fostering a cyber security culture among employees, incident planning and response, and establishing clear governance structures. With digital technologies playing a crucial role in business resilience, the code calls for greater involvement of executive and non-executive directors in technology governance strategies. The UK Minister for AI and Intellectual Property has highlighted that cyber attacks are as damaging to organisations as financial and legal pitfalls. It is crucial that directors take a firm grip of their organisation’s cyber security regimes to protect their customers, workforce, business operations and the wider economy. This initiative reinforces the importance of a holistic approach to cyber security, including robust incident response plans and regular practice to enhance cyber resilience. It’s a timely reminder that cyber threats are as detrimental to organisations as financial and legal challenges, and this code aims to empower leaders to navigate these threats effectively.
Sources: [Computer Weekly] [Electronics Specifier] [GOV UK] [TechRadar] [Infosecurity Magazine]
81% of Security Professionals Say Phishing Is Top Threat
A recent study found 81% of organisations anticipated phishing as their top security risk over the coming months. In a separate report, it was found that 94% of organisations globally had experienced an email security incident in the past 12 months, with a 10% rise in phishing. It is not just emails where phishing attacks are occurring: in another report, the second half of 2023 saw a 198% increase in browser based phishing attacks. It is clear that phishing is a threat to organisations, and it is important to be prepared.
Sources: [ITPro] [Beta News] [Security Magazine]
Ransomware Attacks Cause Significant Psychological Harm
One area of ransomware that often gets overlooked, is the psychological impact. A recent report by the Royal United Services Institute found that some attacks had caused so much impact that organisations hired post-traumatic stress disorder support teams. A significant number of respondents experienced sleep deprivation, resulting in them developing extreme fatigue and falling asleep at work. Various levels of stress were experienced by security workers, with one interviewee citing the stress of a ransomware attack as a potential cause for a heart attack that required surgery. This highlights that, as with the wider subject of cyber and information security, consideration needs to be given to more than just IT and IT controls: it shows the need for a holistic approach to include people, operations and technology.
Sources: [The Record Media] [TechRadar]
Breached Password Report Reveals Two Million Compromised Cloud Credentials Used '123456' as Password
A recent report has revealed that two million compromised cloud credentials used ‘123456’ as a password. This alarming trend underscores the ongoing issue of weak passwords, which are easily exploited by hackers. Despite the availability of advanced password creation and storage tools, a significant number of individuals and organisations continue to use weak passwords. Furthermore, the report found that 88% of organisations still rely on passwords as their primary authentication method. Despite the focus on password security, nearly every organisation has had risk management lapses. The report highlights the urgent need for stronger password policies and the adoption of more secure authentication methods. Equally, the attacks highlight that simply moving to the cloud does not solve security challenges, and poor cyber hygiene in the cloud will lead to problems.
Sources: [ITPro] [Business Wire] [Security Magazine]
NCSC: UK Intelligence Fears AI will Fuel Ransomware and Exacerbate Cyber Crime
An article published by the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) states that AI is already being used to increase the efficacy of cyber attacks, and that AI will continue to significantly increase the odds of a successful attack. AI models will build capability as they are informed by data describing previous successful attacks. The NCSC noted that “It is likely that highly capable unfriendly nation states have repositories of malware that are large enough to effectively train an AI model for this purpose”. The message from the NCSC is clear: AI will propel cyber incidents and organisation must take this into consideration as part of their wider cyber risk management strategy.
Sources: [The Register] [PC Mag] [The Messenger ] [Silicon UK]
Cyber Attacks More than Doubled in 2023, so Why Are So Many Firms Still Not Taking Security Seriously, or Why Firms Ignore Vulnerabilities at Their Own Risk
Cyber attacks soared again last year, and attackers are increasingly taking advantage of software vulnerabilities to breach organisations. This is due to the continuous discovery of new vulnerabilities, and with that, a constant challenge for firms to apply patches. A report found many organisations lack an effective vulnerability management programme and are leaving themselves open to attacks; and in some cases they are left vulnerable for years.
One key hindrance found by the report is the sheer volume of vulnerabilities identified and patched by vendors, leaving organisations with the perpetual challenge of timely patching. This complication is made worse for small and medium sized businesses where they have less resources. The report found that legacy systems are a large risk for many organisations; in fact, older Windows server OS versions - 2012 and earlier – were found to be 77% more likely to experience attack attempts than newer versions. Many firms are still not taking this danger seriously enough and as a result, blind spots and critical vulnerabilities are worsening, creating more opportunities for attackers.
Sources: [ITPro] [Help Net Security] [ITPro]
Historic Data Leak Reveals 26 billion Records: Check What is Exposed
In what has been described as the ‘mother of all breaches’, 26 billion records have been exposed. These aren’t all new, as a lot of the records are from numerous breaches, however they are all in one location, compiled and index for use. With the emergence of this, there is will likely be a surge in attacks and if you haven’t changed your credentials, or are reusing these same credentials, you may find yourself a victim. To check if your email has been compromised in a breach, you can check on the website www.HaveIBeenPwned.com
Source: [Security Affairs]
Boardroom Cyber Expertise Comes Under Scrutiny
Cyber security concerns continue to be a critical issue for organisations, driven by factors such as data protection, compliance, risk management, and business continuity. However, a recent report reveals a concerning trend where only 5% of Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) report directly to the CEO, down from 11% in 2021. This gap between cyber security leadership and board-level involvement is a challenge. A report emphasises that many board members lack the technical expertise to understand cyber security, while CISOs often communicate in technical jargon, making it difficult for boards to grasp the significance of security issues. To bridge this gap, it's crucial to educate board members on the real-world risks and costs associated with cyber incidents. Sharing simple metrics like the global average cost of a data breach, which is $4.45 million, can help them understand the financial impact. Moreover, CISOs should learn to convey cyber security matters in business terms and quantify the organisation's cyber risk exposure. By providing boards with information to understand and engaging in informed discussions, they can enhance their cyber security strategy and ensure that these vital issues are prioritised appropriately.
Source: [Security Intelligence]
“It is a whole new bar”: Months Left for Applicable Firms to Prepare for New EU Cyber Security Rules
The landscape of cyber security is evolving rapidly, with two significant EU regulations: the Network and Information Security Directive (NIS2) and the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA), set to take effect in the coming months. NIS2 expands cyber security standards to include critical services like transportation, water services, and health services, while DORA focuses on the financial services sector and aims to ensure resilience against cyber threats.
These regulations necessitate strong cyber security testing, incident reporting processes, and comprehensive assessments of third-party providers' security. Compliance with these regulations will introduce complexity and costs, requiring organisations to prepare comprehensively for the evolving cyber security landscape, including the implications of artificial intelligence. Transparency and understanding are key, as boards must fully comprehend data processing and technology usage within their organisations, ushering in a new era of cyber security governance.
Source: [The Currency]
Ransomware Attacks Break Records In 2023: The Number of Victims Rose By 128%
In 2023, there was a significant surge in ransomware attacks globally. The number of attack attempts more than doubled, increasing by 104%. A report shows that there were 1,900 total ransomware attacks within just four countries: the US, UK, Germany, and France. The use of double extortion techniques, where hackers not only encrypt the data but also steal confidential data beforehand and threaten to release it if their demands are not fulfilled, are becoming increasingly common, with now triple and quadruple extortion techniques also being increasingly deployed. It was also found that data exfiltration was present in approximately 91% of all publicly recorded ransomware attacks in 2023. These figures underscore the growing threat of ransomware and the need for robust cyber security measures.
Sources: [Security Boulevard] [Security Affairs] [Security Brief] [Business Wire]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Treat cyber risk like financial or legal issue, says UK government | Computer Weekly
Business leaders urged to toughen up cyber attack protections - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Organisations face devastating financial consequences from cyber attacks (betanews.com)
Cyber Security Attack Attempts More Than Doubled, Increasing 104% in 2023 | Business Wire
The growing role of CISOs in cyber security governance - APDR (asiapacificdefencereporter.com)
Boardroom cyber expertise comes under scrutiny (securityintelligence.com)
Resilience: The New Priority for Your Security Model (inforisktoday.com)
10 must-have security tips for digital nomads | Computerworld
CISOs Struggle for C-Suite Status Even as Expectations Skyrocket (darkreading.com)
Why cyber attacks mustn’t be kept secret - Help Net Security
Business continuity vs. disaster recovery vs. incident response | TechTarget
Why resilience leaders must prepare for polycrises - Help Net Security
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Ransomware attacks break records in 2023: the number of victims rose by 128% (securityaffairs.com)
UK Intelligence Fears AI Will Fuel Ransomware, Exacerbate Cyber Crime (pcmag.com)
Medibank hack: Russian sanctioned over Australia's worst data breach - BBC News
UK gov tells SMBs to get better at protecting themselves from cyber attacks | TechRadar
Researchers link 3AM ransomware to Conti, Royal cyber crime gangs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Kasseika ransomware uses antivirus driver to kill other antiviruses (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organisations invest more in data protection but recover less - Help Net Security
Evolving BianLian ransomware attack strategies detailed | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Hackers target TeamViewer to try and get access to your company's network | TechRadar
Ransomware Victims
Major US, UK Water Companies Hit by Ransomware - SecurityWeek
Sweden’s Riksbank Turns to Police as Cyber Attack Hits IT Firm - BNN Bloomberg
Owner of The North Face, Supreme, Vans, Reports Breach Affecting 35M Users (pcmag.com)
Primary Health & Wellness Center, LLC’s public notice of ransomware incident (databreaches.net)
LockBit gang claims the attack on the sandwich chain Subway (securityaffairs.com)
loanDepot says ransomware gang stole data of 16.6 million people (bleepingcomputer.com)
Aviation Leasing Giant AerCap Hit by Ransomware Attack - SecurityWeek
Global fintech firm EquiLend offline after recent cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Group Offers Hacked Serbian Electricity Provider's Data For Download (rferl.org)
Cyber attack in Merseyside as 'immediate steps taken' (msn.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
81 percent of security pros say phishing is the top threat (betanews.com)
Browser Phishing Threats Grew 198% Last Year - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Invoice Phishing Alert: TA866 Deploys WasabiSeed & Screenshotter Malware (thehackernews.com)
Organisations need to switch gears in their approach to email security - Help Net Security
HPE Says Russian Government Hackers Had Access to Emails for 6 Months - SecurityWeek
Russian hackers breached Microsoft, HPE corporate maliboxes - Help Net Security
Don’t Take The Bait: How To Prevent A Phishing Attack | Kohrman Jackson & Krantz LLP - JDSupra
Trezor reveals 66,000 users could face phishing attack (coinjournal.net)
PHP-less phishing kits that can run on any website | Netcraft
New KnowBe4 Report Shows Major Spike in Public Sector Attacks in 2023 | Business Wire
Artificial Intelligence
AI Will ‘Almost Certainly’ Turbocharge Cyber attacks, UK Warns - The Messenger
The near-term impact of AI on the cyber threat - NCSC.GOV.UK
NCSC: AI to boost nation-states’ malware potency • The Register
Battling Misinformation During Election Season (darkreading.com)
Unmasking Deceptive Behaviour: Risks and Challenges in Large Language Models (azoai.com)
AI-driven cyber attacks and defences to create a battle of algorithms in 2024 (securitybrief.co.nz)
Researchers Map AI Threat Landscape, Risks (darkreading.com)
The Cyber Security Horizon: AI, Resilience and Collaboration in 2024 - Security Boulevard
Malware
NCSC: AI to boost nation-states’ malware potency • The Register
MacOS devices are being targeted by pirated apps that want to hijack your machine | TechRadar
Invoice Phishing Alert: TA866 Deploys WasabiSeed & Screenshotter Malware (thehackernews.com)
'Inhospitality' malspam campaign targets hotel industry | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Blackwood APT delivers malware by hijacking legitimate software update requests - Help Net Security
SystemBC Malware's C2 Server Analysis Exposes Payload Delivery Tricks (thehackernews.com)
Mobile
Apple Issues Patch for Critical Zero-Day in iPhones, Macs - Update Now (thehackernews.com)
iPhone, Android Ambient Light Sensors Allow Stealthy Spying (darkreading.com)
New method to safeguard against mobile account takeovers - Help Net Security
Bluetooth Flaw Let Hackers Takeover of iOS & Android Devices (cybersecuritynews.com)
SEC confirms X account was hacked in SIM swapping attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Zero-Click Bluetooth Attack: A Growing Threat for Unpatched Android Phones - gHacks Tech News
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Internet of Things – IoT
Data Breaches/Leaks
Historic data leak reveals 26 billion records: check what's exposed (securityaffairs.com)
Data of 15 million Trello users scraped and offered for sale - Help Net Security
Personal details of 6,000 people leaked in Greater Manchester council data breach (msn.com)
BreachForums hacking forum admin sentenced to 20 years supervised release (bleepingcomputer.com)
Healthtech firm's cyber attack victim list keeps growing - Digital Journal
VF Corp Says Data Breach Resulting From Ransomware Attack Impacts 35 Million - SecurityWeek
Class Actions Filed Over Builders Mutual, Progressive’s Own Data Breaches (claimsjournal.com)
loanDepot cyber attack causes data breach for 16.6 million people (bleepingcomputer.com)
Jason’s Deli says customer data exposed in credential stuffing attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
The growing threat of data breaches in the age of AI and data privacy | TechRadar
23andMe data breach: Hackers stole raw genotype data, health reports (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Grooming, radicalization and cyber attacks: INTERPOL warns of ‘Metacrime’
Bulletproof Hosting: A Critical Cyber Criminal Service | Intel471
'VexTrio' TDS: The Biggest Cyber Crime Operation on the Web? (darkreading.com)
Researchers link 3AM ransomware to Conti, Royal cyber crime gangs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber criminal malice shifts away from Russia and Ukraine | Insurance Times
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
US regulator admits cyber security lapse before rogue Bitcoin post - BBC News
Trezor reveals 66,000 users could face phishing attack (coinjournal.net)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Majority of companies not prepared for insider threats (betanews.com)
Fighting insider threats is tricky but essential work - Help Net Security
Insurance
Supply Chain and Third Parties
From vulnerability to vigilance: strategies for ensuring supply chain security (techuk.org)
Supply chain security: Responding to emerging cyber threats (techuk.org)
CISOs' role in identifying tech components and managing supply chains - Help Net Security
Rethinking supply chain resilience as cyber attacks get more disruptive (techuk.org)
Cloud/SaaS
On premises vs. cloud pros and cons, key differences | TechTarget
The biggest cloud security risk in 2024 will be stolen and exposed credentials | ITPro
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Why Microsoft’s Latest Breach is an Identity Threat Detection Wake-Up Call - Security Boulevard
Accepting a calendar invite in Outlook could leak your password | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Jason’s Deli says customer data exposed in credential stuffing attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
88% of organisations use passwords as primary authentication method | Security Magazine
The biggest cloud security risk in 2024 will be stolen and exposed credentials | ITPro
Social Media
Meta won't remove fake Instagram profiles that are clearly catfishing (bleepingcomputer.com)
Watch out for "I can't believe he is gone" Facebook phishing posts (bleepingcomputer.com)
SEC confirms X account was hacked in SIM swapping attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Malvertising
Google Updates Chrome's Incognito Warning to Admit It Tracks Users in ‘Private’ Mode | WIRED
Cryptographers Are Getting Closer to Enabling Fully Private Internet Searches | WIRED
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Without clear guidance, SEC’s new rule on incident reporting may be detrimental - Help Net Security
SEC confirms X account was hacked in SIM swapping attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
US regulator admits cyber security lapse before rogue Bitcoin post - BBC News
Countdown for businesses to comply with leaked EU AI Act draft begins | Biometric Update
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
BreachForums hacking forum admin sentenced to 20 years supervised release (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ring Will No Longer Allow Police to Request Doorbell Camera Footage From Users - SecurityWeek
Secret Service to revive the Cyber Investigations Advisory Board | CyberScoop
Court charges dev with hacking after cyber security issue disclosure (bleepingcomputer.com)
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Nation State Actors
China
Chinese Spies Exploited VMware vCenter Server Vulnerability Since 2021 - SecurityWeek
The small print leaving UK plc exposed to ‘nuclear level’ cyber attacks (telegraph.co.uk)
Cyber criminal malice shifts away from Russia and Ukraine | Insurance Times
Russia
Microsoft's Top Execs' Emails Breached in Sophisticated Russia-Linked APT Attack (thehackernews.com)
Why Microsoft’s Latest Breach is an Identity Threat Detection Wake-Up Call - Security Boulevard
Microsoft Says Russians Hacked It to Find Information About Themselves (businessinsider.com)
Microsoft Warns of Widening APT29 Espionage Attacks Targeting Global Orgs (thehackernews.com)
HPE Says Russian Government Hackers Had Access to Emails for 6 Months - SecurityWeek
Russian hackers shift to new malware tactics, Google says (siliconrepublic.com)
Massive cyber attack targets Ukrainian online bank (kyivindependent.com)
Learning From Ukraine's Pioneering Approaches to Cyber Security (darkreading.com)
Cyber criminal malice shifts away from Russia and Ukraine | Insurance Times
Ukraine’s Largest Gas and Oil Company Under Cyber Attack (kyivpost.com)
Medibank hack: Russian sanctioned over Australia's worst data breach - BBC News
Hundreds of Russian sites breached by Ukrainian hackers | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Apple Pays $13 Million Russian Fine, Goes Directly Into Federal Budget (businessinsider.com)
Iran
North Korea
Vulnerability Management
45% of critical CVEs left unpatched in 2023 - Help Net Security
Patch management: Why firms ignore vulnerabilities at their own risk | ITPro
What Is Vulnerability Management? Definition, Process Steps, Benefits and More - Security Boulevard
Security vendors are accused of bending CVE assignment rules • The Register
German IT Consultant Fined Thousands for Reporting Security Failing (darkreading.com)
The effect of omission bias on vulnerability management - Help Net Security
52% of Serious Vulnerabilities We Find are Related to Windows 10 (thehackernews.com)
Vulnerabilities
Cisco warns of critical RCE flaw in communications software (bleepingcomputer.com)
CISA emergency directive: Mitigate Ivanti zero-days immediately (bleepingcomputer.com)
Third Ivanti Vulnerability Exploited in the Wild, CISA Reports (darkreading.com)
Ivanti: VPN appliances vulnerable if pushing configs after mitigation (bleepingcomputer.com)
Chrome 121 ships with security updates and new AI tools - gHacks Tech News
Apple Issues Patch for Critical Zero-Day in iPhones, Macs - Update Now (thehackernews.com)
Accepting a calendar invite in Outlook could leak your password | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Hackers Targeting Critical Atlassian Confluence Vulnerability Days After Disclosure - SecurityWeek
Chinese Spies Exploited VMware vCenter Server Vulnerability Since 2021 - SecurityWeek
Critical Vulnerabilities Found in Open Source AI/ML Platforms - SecurityWeek
Threat actors exploit Apache ActiveMQ flaw to deliver the Godzilla Web Shell (securityaffairs.com)
Bluetooth Flaw Let Hackers Takeover of iOS & Android Devices (cybersecuritynews.com)
High-Severity Vulnerability Patched in Splunk Enterprise - SecurityWeek
Millions at Risk As 'Parrot' Web Server Compromises Take Flight (darkreading.com)
Security vendors are accused of bending CVE assignment rules • The Register
Mozilla Releases Security Updates for Thunderbird and Firefox | CISA
5379 GitLab servers vulnerable to zero-click account takeover attacks (securityaffairs.com)
Hackers target WordPress database plugin active on 1 million sites (bleepingcomputer.com)
Tools and Controls
Why Microsoft’s Latest Breach is an Identity Threat Detection Wake-Up Call - Security Boulevard
Resilience: The New Priority for Your Security Model (inforisktoday.com)
With so much data at hand, should cyber defences be more effective? | TechRadar
How to Shine in Your Next Cyber Security Audit - Security Boulevard
AI-driven cyber attacks and defences to create a battle of algorithms in 2024 (securitybrief.co.nz)
Business continuity vs. disaster recovery vs. incident response | TechTarget
Why resilience leaders must prepare for polycrises - Help Net Security
Court charges dev with hacking after cyber security issue disclosure (bleepingcomputer.com)
German IT Consultant Fined Thousands for Reporting Security Failing (darkreading.com)
The 9 best incident response metrics and how to use them | TechTarget
The Cyber Security Horizon: AI, Resilience and Collaboration in 2024 - Security Boulevard
We Must Consider Software Developers a Key Part of the Cyber Security Workforce | CISA
Cyber Insurance Industry Suggests Cyber Security Best Practices (networkcomputing.com)
Emerging trends and strategies in digital forensics - Help Net Security
Cyber Security Risk Management: Frameworks, Plans, & Best Practices - Security Boulevard
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
With so much data at hand, should cyber defences be more effective? | TechRadar
Threat actors are exploiting web applications - Security Boulevard
Public Sector Cyber Attacks Rise By 40% in 2023 - IT Security Guru
Cyber Security Challenges at the World Economic Forum (govtech.com)
The Threat Landscape Is Always Changing: What to Expect in 2024 | Proofpoint US
What is Lateral Movement in Cyber Security? - Security Boulevard
Cyber Security and Trends in 2024 Based on WEF 2024 Outcomes | HackerNoon
US suffered cyber attacks from 168 threat actors in 2023 | Security Magazine
US continues to be leading cyber threat target | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Rise in cyber crime attacks against Industrial IoT sparks alarm (securitybrief.co.nz)
Offshore wind farms are vulnerable to cyber attacks, study shows (techxplore.com)
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory 23 January 2024 – Apple, Atlassian, Ivanti and VMware Vulnerabilities Under Active Exploitation
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory 23 January 2024 – Apple, Atlassian, Ivanti and VMware Security Updates
Executive Summary
Vulnerabilities in Apple, Atlassian, Ivanti and VMware are currently being actively exploited in the wild. All of the vendors have a security patch available to address the vulnerabilities and due to the active exploitation of the vulnerabilities, it is recommended to apply them immediately.
Apple
Following a report that Chinese authorities revealed they have used previously known vulnerabilities in Apple's AirDrop functionality to help law enforcement, Apple have released a patch for an actively exploited critical Zero-day in iOS, iPadOS, macOS, tvOS and Safari web browser,. The zero-day vulnerability is a type confusion exploit that allows an attacker to perform arbitrary code execution.
Impacted Versions:
iOS 17.3 and iPadOS 17.3 - iPhone XS and later, iPad Pro 12.9-inch 2nd generation and later, iPad Pro 10.5-inch, iPad Pro 11-inch 1st generation and later, iPad Air 3rd generation and later, iPad 6th generation and later, and iPad mini 5th generation and later
iOS 16.7.5 and iPadOS 16.7.5 - iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X, iPad 5th generation, iPad Pro 9.7-inch, and iPad Pro 12.9-inch 1st generation
macOS Sonoma 14.3 - Macs running macOS Sonoma
macOS Ventura 13.6.4 - Macs running macOS Ventura
macOS Monterey 12.7.3 - Macs running macOS Monterey
Safari 17.3 - Macs running macOS Monterey and macOS Ventura
What can I do?
Updates to vulnerable devices should be applied immediately due to this vulnerability being under active exploitation.
Atlassian
Following the disclosure of the Atlassian Confluence vulnerability, it has become a target for active exploitation. Researchers have observed attackers attempting to exploit this vulnerability. At present, there are 11,000 Confluence instances exposed on the internet, and Shadowserver has recorded nearly 40,000 exploitation attempts. For further information on the vulnerability see our advisory posted linked below.
Ivanti
Following the public disclosure of two Ivanti vulnerabilities being actively exploited, a third vulnerability has now been added to the CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog.
CVE-2023-35082 - This vulnerability enables a remote unauthorised attacker to access users’ personally identifiable information and make limited modifications to the server.
Impacted versions:
his vulnerability impacts all versions of Ivanti Endpoint Manager Mobile (EPMM) 11.10, 11.9, and 11.8. MobileIron Core 11.7 and earlier versions are also affected by this vulnerability.
What can I do?
Ivanti released a patch for this vulnerability in August 2023. It is recommended to update any impacted products to version 11.11.0.0 or later to safeguard them from this vulnerability.
VMware
A critical vulnerability in VMware vCenter Server Management has been exploited in the wild by a Chinese hacking group since 2021. The vulnerability (CVE-2023-34048) allows an attacker to write out of bounds potentially leading to remote code execution. VMware released a patch in October 2023 stating that it was not under active exploitation. VMware have recommend customers update to the latest version, which is 9.0U2.
Further Information
For further information on Ivanti and Atlassian see our previous advisory:
Apple
Further details on the Apple vulnerabilities can be found here:
https://support.apple.com/en-gb/HT201222
Ivanti
Further details on the Ivanti vulnerabilities can be found here:
VMware
Further details on the VMware vCenter Server Management vulnerability can be found here:
https://www.vmware.com/security/advisories/VMSA-2023-0023.html
Need help understanding your gaps, or just want some advice? Get in touch with us.
#threatadvisory #threatintelligence #cybersecurity
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory 17 January 2024 – Citrix and Ivanti Vulnerabilities Under Active Exploitation - Atlassian, Oracle, SonicWall, and VMware also Address Security Flaws
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory 17 January 2024 – Citrix and Ivanti Vulnerabilities Under Active Exploitation - Atlassian, Oracle, SonicWall, and VMware Also Address Security Flaws
This week Atlassian, Citrix, Ivanti, Oracle, SonicWall and VMware have addressed multiple vulnerabilities across their product range. Included in the vulnerabilities addressed are two actively exploited 0-days, impacting Ivanti and Citrix products. At the time of writing, over 1700 Ivanti devices have been compromised and over 15,000 devices remain exposed.
Executive Summary
This week Atlassian, Citrix, Ivanti, Oracle, SonicWall and VMware have addressed multiple vulnerabilities across their product range. Included in the vulnerabilities addressed are two actively exploited 0-days, impacting Ivanti and Citrix products. At the time of writing, over 1700 Ivanti devices have been compromised and over 15,000 devices remain exposed.
Atlassian
CVE-2023-22527 - This exploit is a template injection vulnerability which if successfully exploited, allows an unauthenticated attacker to perform remote code execution on an affected instance.
Impacted Versions:
This vulnerability affects versions 8.0.x, 8.1.x, 8.2.x, 8.3.x, 8.4.x, and 8.5.0-8.5.3.
What can I do?
Atlassian has released patches for the affected products, and it is advised to patch immediately. The listed Fixed Versions are no longer the most up-to-date and do not protect your instance from other non-critical vulnerabilities as outlined in Atlassian’s January Security Bulletin.
Citrix NetScaler
CVE-2023-6548 – Allows authenticated (low privileged user) remote code execution on Management interface. Requires access to NSIP, CLIP or SNIP with management interface.
CVE-2023-6549 - If exploited allows an attacker to perform a denial of service attack. Appliance must be configured as a gateway or AAA virtual server.
Impacted Versions:
NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway 14.1 before 14.1-12.35
NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway 13.1 before 13.1-51.15
NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway 13.0 before 13.0-92.21
NetScaler ADC 13.1-FIPS before 13.1-37.176
NetScaler ADC 12.1-FIPS before 12.1-55.302
NetScaler ADC 12.1-NDcPP before 12.1-55.302
NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway version 12.1 (currently end-of-life)
What can I do?
Citrix have released patches for the impacted products. Citrix have reported that this is being actively exploited and seen in the wild so it is advised that the patches are applied immediately.
Ivanti
CVE-2023-46805 - This is an authentication bypass which enables an attacker to access restricted resources by circumventing control checks.
CVE-2024-21887 - This is a command injection that lets authenticated admins execute arbitrary commands on vulnerable appliances.
Impacted Versions:
These vulnerabilities impact all supported versions, 9.x and 22.x
What can I do?
Ivanti have released mitigation files which can be found below, it is advised to install immediately. Patches are being developed however they are being staggered with the first patches being released on January 22nd and the final patches released on February the 19th.
Oracle
In their first Critical Patch Update of 2024, Oracle hae released 389 security patches, addressing 200 vulnerabilities. Financial Services Applications were the most impacted, with 71 new security patches. Oracle have urged all customers to apply the patches as soon as possible, warning that it periodically receives reports of in-the-wild exploitation of issues for which it has released fixes.
SonicWall
CVE-2022-22274 - This is a buffer overflow which if exploited successfully allows a remote unauthenticated attacker to cause a denial of service or potentially result in a code execution in the firewall.
CVE-2023-0656 - This is a buffer overflow which if exploited successfully allows a remote unauthenticated attacker to cause a denial of service attack which could cause the impacted firewall to crash.
What can I do?
SonicWall have released patches for affected products and it is advised to update to the latest available version.
VMware
CVE-2023-34063 – The affected products contain a missing access control vulnerability, which if successfully exploited, this vulnerability may lead to unauthorised access to remote organisations and workflows.
VMware Aria Automation (8.11.x, 8.12.x, 8.13.x, and 8.14.x)
VMware Cloud Foundation (4.x and 5.x)
What can I do?
VMware have released patches which can be found in the Security Advisory. It is advised to update as soon as possible. There are no current workarounds.
Further Information
Atlassian
Further details on the Atlassian vulnerabilities can be found here:
https://confluence.atlassian.com/security/security-bulletin-january-16-2024-1333335615.html
Citrix NetScaler
Further details on the Citrix NetScaler vulnerabilities can be found here:
Ivanti
Further details on the Ivanti vulnerabilities can be found here:
Oracle
Further details on the Oracle vulnerabilities can be found here:
https://www.oracle.com/security-alerts/cpujan2024.html
SonicWall
Further details on the SonicWall vulnerabilities can be found here:
https://bishopfox.com/blog/its-2024-and-over-178-000-sonicwall-firewalls-are-publicly-exploitable
VMware
Further details on the VMware vulnerability can be found here:
https://www.vmware.com/security/advisories/VMSA-2024-0001.html
https://core.vmware.com/resource/vmsa-2024-0001-questions-answers
Need help understanding your gaps, or just want some advice? Get in touch with us.
#threatadvisory #threatintelligence #cybersecurity
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 17 November 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 17 November 2023:
-Cyber Resilience Requires Maturity, Persistence & Board Engagement
-Security is a Process, Not a Tool
-46% of SMBs and Enterprises Have Experienced a Ransomware Attack
-Cyber Threat Intelligence: Getting on the Front Foot Against Adversaries
-67% of Workers Put Businesses at Risk by Downloading Applications and Software Without Permission
-The Persistent Menace: Understanding And Combating Ransomware, as New Ransomware Groups Account for Quarter of All Leaks in 2023
-Financial Services still Stubbornly Vulnerable to Cyber Disruption
-Worlds Biggest Bank Hit by Ransomware, Workers Forced to Trade With USB Sticks
-NCSC Warns UK Over Significant Threat to Critical Infrastructure
-Ransomware Gang Files SEC Complaint Over Victim’s Undisclosed Breach
-Businesses are Losing Huge Chunks of Their Revenue to Cyber Attacks
-Phishing Emails Are More Believable Than Ever. Here's What to Do About It.
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Cyber Resilience Requires Maturity, Persistence & Board Engagement
Cyber resilience is more important than ever, particularly with the added dimensions of deepening geopolitical threats and risks coming from new technology like AI. In cyber security, it is commonly accepted that it is a matter of when, not if, an organisation will experience an attack. It is imperative to ensure there is an ability across the organisation to bounce back.
Source: [Dark Reading]
Security is a Process, not a Tool
The cyber security industry is constantly seeing tools that claim to make organisations 100% secure, despite this never being achievable. A recent report found 55% of all security tools are not put into operation or are not actively managed. Additionally, the report found that 33% of all security incidents are identifiably traced to process errors. The findings are further evidence that cyber security is more than just technology tools: it requires a mindset that aligns controls across people, operations and technology.
Source: [Dark Reading]
46% of SMBs and Enterprises Have Experienced a Ransomware Attack
A recent report found that 46% of small and medium businesses (SMBs) and enterprises have experienced ransomware attacks. In addition, 90% of SMBs and 87% of enterprises are extremely or somewhat concerned about ransomware attacks, and 64% of SMBs and 70% of enterprises don’t believe in paying a ransom.
Despite the fact that nearly 50% of the firms have suffered ransomware, too many businesses still seem to think this is something that will not happen to them and is something only other businesses need to worry about.
Source: [Security Magazine] [IT Business]
Cyber Threat Intelligence: Getting on the Front Foot Against Adversaries
In the realm of cyber security, threat intelligence (TI) is a crucial yet often underused asset for countering sophisticated cyber attacks. TI involves gathering, analysing, and contextualising information about potential cyber threats, including advanced ones, thus enabling organisations to identify, assess, and mitigate cyber risks effectively. The TI market, expected to exceed $44 billion by 2033, offers four main types: Strategic, Tactical, Technical, and Operational.
Each type serves different organisational needs, from informing senior leadership to aiding security operations teams. When thinking about TI, organisations should focus on completeness, accuracy, relevance, timeliness, scalability, vendor reputation, and integration capabilities. The rapidly evolving nature of TI demands a careful, long-term approach to choosing the right services, considering an organisation's maturity and specific needs. Effective TI not only aids in countering immediate threats but also builds long-term resilience. With 80% of the top 2000 global companies projected to increase their TI investment in 2024, it's crucial for organisations to find a trusted vendor to ensure their cyber security success.
Black Arrow conducts daily threat intelligence analyses from trusted specialist sources, and interprets the TI in the context of our client organisations to support them in proactively addressing risks. In addition to our weekly Threat Briefing and subscription email, we offer tailored briefings for organisations in various sectors and geographies.
Source: [welivesecurity]
67% of Workers Put Businesses at Risk by Downloading Applications and Software Without Permission
New research has found that 67% of UK employees are endangering their business by downloading applications and software without the knowledge of IT or security teams.
Other key findings included 39% of respondent organisations lacked total visibility of applications and software on company owned assets, and 77% lacked visibility over employee owned assets connected to the corporate environment. Of total respondents, 69% acknowledged their organisations required better policies and procedures in order to deal with security vulnerabilities, with 39% of total respondents feeling challenged by UK and other jurisdictions’ increasingly complicated regulations and governance requirements.
Black Arrow help organisations of all sizes to design and deliver comprehensive asset visibility programmes that lay the foundation for proportionate and credible cyber security controls to protect the organisation. We enable organisations to adhere to regulatory and governance requirements, by providing expert cyber security resources on a flexible basis for technical, governance and transformational positions.
Sources: [Tech Radar] [the HR Director]
The Persistent Menace: Understanding and Combating Ransomware, as New Ransomware Groups Account for Quarter of All Leaks in 2023
In 2023, the landscape of cyber threats, particularly ransomware, has significantly evolved, remaining a primary concern for businesses.
This change has been further facilitated by the emergence of Ransomware as a Service (RaaS) and the increased sophistication of phishing attacks, supported by advancements in AI. This has led at least in part to almost half (29) of the ransomware groups tracked by WithSecure in 2023 having begun operations this year. These groups accounted for 25% of data leaks in this period, helping to drive a 50% year-on-year increase in data leaks.
Businesses face not only the immediate costs of ransom demands but also indirect impacts such as operational downtime and damage to reputation. Key trends include the exploitation of basic security vulnerabilities, the role of access brokers in facilitating attacks, and innovative evasion techniques used by ransomware groups. Ransomware is not going away, and organisations need to ensure they are prepared given the realistic probability of an attack.
Black Arrow works with organisations of all sizes and sectors to design and prepare for managing a cyber security incident such as ransomware; this can include an Incident Response Plan and an educational tabletop exercise for the leadership team that highlights the proportionate controls to help the organisation prevent and mitigate an incident.
Sources: [Forbes] [Infosecurity Magazine] [ITPro]
Financial Services Still Stubbornly Vulnerable to Cyber Disruption
A recent report found the UK financial system remains stubbornly vulnerable to disruption caused by cyber and IT-related incidents, and that regulated firms are not acting quickly enough to affect required changes designed to ensure firms’ systems are resilient against significant operational shocks.
According to the UK FCA’s records, the total number of cyber incidents reported between January 2018 to May 2023 was 4,192. In general terms, incidents are reportable where they are of a certain level of materiality; for instance, where there has been a “significant failure in the firm's systems or controls.
Source: [FTAdviser]
World’s Biggest Bank Hit by Ransomware; Workers Forced to Trade with USB Sticks
The US subsidiary of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) experienced a ransomware attack earlier this month, which reportedly forced the bank (ICBC Financial Services) to handle trades through messengers carrying USB thumb drives. This attack has sent shockwaves through financial services and banking and has prompted an increase in vigilance within the financial sector. The US Financial Services Information Sharing and Analysis Center (FS-ISAC) has urged financial services organisations to ensure their systems are protected and vulnerabilities are immediately resolved.
Sources: [SC Media] [Bit Defender]
NCSC Warns UK Over Significant Threat to Critical Infrastructure
The UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) has once again sounded its concern over the rising threat level to the nation's critical national infrastructure (CNI), with its annual review admitting the level of cyber security resilience in the UK’s most critical areas is not in a satisfactory place.
The NCSC stated that CNI in the UK faces an “enduring and significant” threat from state-aligned threat actors aggressively ramping up activity, and the UK must therefore work more closely with allies and industry in countering “epoch-defining” cyber challenges.
They noted a 64% increase on last year’s voluntary report figures; to note, this refers to organisations voluntarily self-reporting suffering a cyber incident.
For wider context, the Russian cyber attacks on Ukraine began a month and a half before the invasion. In 2022 Ukraine’s national incident response team dealt with 2,194 cyber incidents, followed by another 2,054 attacks in the first 10 months of this year and Ukraine’s defence chief warns that Russia will soon attack companies that provide services to Ukraine as part of their larger cyber efforts.
This comes as Russian hackers were linked to what is being described as the largest ever cyber attack on Danish critical infrastructure. The attack involved 22 companies associated with the operation of Denmark’s energy sector.
Sources: [Computer Weekly] [The Register] [The Record Media] [The Irish Times] [The Hacker News]
Ransomware Gang Files SEC Complaint Over Victim’s Undisclosed Breach
The ALPHV ransomware group, also known as BlackCat, has taken extortion to a new level by filing a US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) complaint against one of their alleged victims, MeridianLink, for not complying with the four-day rule to disclose a cyber attack. The ransomware group said it compromised the digital lending solutions provider on November 7 and told the SEC the victim suffered a “significant breach and did not disclose it as required in Form 8-k”. While many ransomware and extortion gangs have threatened to report breaches and data theft to the SEC, this may be the first public confirmation that they have done so. Previously, ransomware actors exerted pressure on victims by contacting customers to let them know of the intrusion. Sometimes, they would also try to intimidate the victim by contacting them directly over the phone.
Sources: [Infosecurity Magazine] [Bleeping Computer]
Businesses are Losing Huge Chunks of Their Revenue to Cyber Attacks
A new report has found that businesses are paying a huge price for not properly securing their digital assets. The report found that businesses on average suffered 46 attacks (successful and unsuccessful) over the last year, resulting in the loss of 9% of their annual income. Cyber attacks are hurting their businesses in other ways such as network outages (34%), data loss (29%), web apps going offline (24%) and customer account compromises (22%).
Firms are reevaluating their cyber security approaches, with 76% planning increased spending despite concerns about current investment efficiency, as 35% feel they've overspent and only 55% of tools are fully utilised. A significant talent gap is also a challenge, with 30% attributing recent issues to a shortage of skilled personnel, and 33% expecting this trend to continue. Nearly half are seeking to address this by boosting recruitment budgets. Additionally, 51% of respondents are focusing on investing in Generative AI tools for cyber security in the next two years.
Source: [TechRadar]
Phishing Emails Are More Believable Than Ever. Here's What to Do About It.
Phishing is not new. This social engineering tactic has existed in the attack toolbox for decades, with threat actors posing as trusted contacts and then targeting unsuspecting victims through email or text messages to steal sensitive data. According to a recent report by Fortinet, phishing is the top tactic (56%) malicious actors use to infiltrate a network and launch ransomware successfully. With the turn of AI-driven content tools, cyber criminals are using them to make their phishing emails and texts appear more realistic than ever before.
It is crucial to focus on employee education to protect organisations. Customised training programs are essential. Security awareness training is fundamental in creating a cyber-aware culture, keeping employees informed about current security threats and meeting compliance requirements.
Black Arrow supports organisations of all sizes in designing and delivering proportionate user education and awareness programmes, including in-person and online training as well as simulated phishing campaigns. Our programmes help secure employee engagement and build a cyber security culture to protect the organisation.
Source: [CSO Online]
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Governance, Risk and Compliance
29% of organisations cite data loss as top security breach result | Security Magazine
Financial services still 'stubbornly vulnerable' to cyber disruption - FTAdviser
Cyber Resilience Requires Maturity, Persistence & Board Engagement (darkreading.com)
Businesses are losing huge chunks of their revenue to cyber attacks | TechRadar
6% of companies have not had a digital risk cyber attack since 2020 | Security Magazine
Cyber threat intelligence: Getting on the front foot against adversaries (welivesecurity.com)
Should cyber security overconfidence be on your threat radar? | TechRadar
Insiders and outsiders: Why cyber security strategies need to look all ways - Digital Journal
Navigating the complex role of the CISO under SEC disclosure rules (betanews.com)
Every Business Owner Should Be Thinking About Improving Online Security | Inc.com
The Role of Cyber Wellness in Safeguarding Businesses - IT Security Guru
The cultural shift that’s needed to see greater ROI in cyber | Federal News Network
Business urged to increase cyber resilience as 2024 set to deliver new threats (emergingrisks.co.uk)
How to withstand the onslaught of cyber security threats - Help Net Security
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Financial services still 'stubbornly vulnerable' to cyber disruption - FTAdviser
Law practices and government agencies experience the largest ransomware spikes - Digital Journal
Orgs still losing logs, powerless to speedy ransomware • The Register
Ransomware gang files SEC complaint over victim’s undisclosed breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
46% of SMBs and enterprises have experienced a ransomware attack | Security Magazine
Many organisations don’t believe they are targets of ransomware gangs: OpenText | IT Business
LockBit ransomware exploits Citrix Bleed in attacks, 10K servers exposed (bleepingcomputer.com)
The Persistent Menace: Understanding And Combating Ransomware (forbes.com)
Phishing emails are more believable than ever. Here’s what to do about it. | CSO Online
Ransomware tracker: The latest figures [November 2023] (therecord.media)
Nuclear and Oil & Gas are Major Targets of Ransomware Groups in 2024 (securityaffairs.com)
Ransomware Gang LockBit Revises Its Tactics as Payouts Slip (bloomberglaw.com)
Fast-acting cyber gangs increasingly disabling telemetry logs | Computer Weekly
Uncovering the ransomware threat from global supply chains | ITPro
Business leaders need help in getting off the ransomware merry-go-round (thetimes.co.uk)
Hackers Could Exploit Google Workspace and Cloud Platform for Ransomware Attacks (thehackernews.com)
BlackCat affiliate seen using malvertising to spread ransomware | Computer Weekly
The Rise of Ransomware in Healthcare: What IT Leaders Need to Know (bleepingcomputer.com)
What Do You Do When You’re Hit by Russian Ransomware? - Bloomberg
Success eludes the International Counter Ransomware Initiative - Help Net Security
New Ransomware Group Emerges with Hive's Source Code and Infrastructure (thehackernews.com)
How to combat ransomware in the face of tight security staffing | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Ransomware attacks: Cyber criminals tout their ‘honesty’ in negotiating ransoms (afr.com)
New approaches to fighting ransomware are emerging | Mimecast
FBI 'Knows Identities' Of MGM, Caesars Hacking Gang | Silicon UK
FBI and CISA warn of opportunistic Rhysida ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
FBI pumping 'significant' resources into Scattered Spider • The Register
New BiBi-Windows Wiper Targets Windows Systems in Pro-Hamas Attacks (thehackernews.com)
It ain’t what you store, it’s the way you restore it. • The Register
Ransomware Victims
Ransomware gang files SEC complaint over victim’s undisclosed breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
How a cyber attack crippled the world's largest bank for hours | Euronews
ICBC -- China's biggest bank -- paid ransom: Lockbit hackers (nypost.com)
FBI: Royal ransomware asked 350 victims to pay $275 million (bleepingcomputer.com)
Rackspace Ransomware Costs Soar to Nearly $12M (darkreading.com)
Tri-City Medical Center cyber attack impacting patient care (10news.com)
Maine govt notifies 1.3 million people of MOVEit data breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
LockBit leaks Boeing files after failed ransom negotiations • The Register
'CitrixBleed' Linked to Ransomware Hit on China's State-Owned Bank (darkreading.com)
World's biggest bank hit by ransomware, forced to trade via USB stick (bitdefender.com)
Mortgage giant Mr. Cooper says customer data exposed in breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
British Library’s Halloween cyber scare was ransomware | Computer Weekly
Royal Mail ransomware recovery to cost at least $12 million • The Register
9 million patients had data stolen after US medical transcription firm hacked | TechCrunch
Clorox CISO flushes self after multimillion-dollar attack • The Register
Toyota confirms breach after Medusa ransomware threatens to leak data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Government doesn't know details behind cyber hack that shut down port operator DP World - ABC News
Lorenz ransomware gang hit Texas-based Cogdell Memorial Hospital (securityaffairs.com)
Dragos Says No Evidence of Breach After Ransomware Gang Claims Hack via Third Party - Security Week
Long Beach, California turns off IT systems after cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Stellantis production affected by cyber attack at auto supplier - The Columbian
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Phishing emails are more believable than ever. Here’s what to do about it. | CSO Online
From Scanning to Scamming: The Rise of QR Codes in Phishing - VMRay
Zero-Day Flaw in Zimbra Email Software Exploited by Four Hacker Groups (thehackernews.com)
APTs Swarm Zimbra Zero-Day to Steal Government Info Worldwide (darkreading.com)
FBI Warns: Five Weeks In, Gaza Email Scams Still Thriving (darkreading.com)
Police takes down BulletProftLink large-scale phishing provider (bleepingcomputer.com)
Artificial Intelligence
UK told of significant threat as state actors seek to use AI attack systems (emergingrisks.co.uk)
UK NCSC Warns Of Threat To Critical Infrastructure | Silicon UK
AI disinformation campaigns pose major threat to 2024 elections - Help Net Security
Microsoft blocks internal access to ChatGPT over security • The Register
This new ChatGPT-powered infostealer is targeting cloud platforms | TechRadar
The US and 30 Other Nations Agree to Set Guardrails for Military AI | WIRED
Mitigating Deepfake Threats in the Corporate World | MSSP Alert
A Closer Look at ChatGPT's Role in Automated Malware Creation (trendmicro.com)
Organisations Rush to Use Generative AI Tools Despite Risks (globenewswire.com)
How scammers' use of AI is affecting fintech investment | PaymentsSource | American Banker
Malware
This new ChatGPT-powered infostealer is targeting cloud platforms | TechRadar
Infostealers and the high value of stolen data - Help Net Security
Malware was downloaded over 600 million times in 2023 from the Google Play Store - PhoneArena
This fake Windows news site is spreading malware via hacked Google ads | TechRadar
A Closer Look at ChatGPT's Role in Automated Malware Creation (trendmicro.com)
Russian-Moldovan National Admits to Infecting 23,000 Devices with Botnet Malware (occrp.org)
Children’s tablet has malware and exposes kids’ data, researcher finds | TechCrunch
Ducktail Malware Targets the Fashion Industry (darkreading.com)
Mobile
Malware was downloaded over 600 million times in 2023 from the Google Play Store - PhoneArena
Temu Sued in Class Action for Risking User Data to Chinese Government Control | Law.com
Children’s tablet has malware and exposes kids’ data, researcher finds | TechCrunch
How to spot a fake data blocker that could hack your computer in seconds | ZDNET
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Misconfigured Docker API endpoints allow attackers to deliver DDoS botnet agent | CSO Online
How DDoS attacks are taking down even the largest tech companies (bleepingcomputer.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
How to protect your organisation from IoT malware | TechTarget
Defending Against Attacks on Vulnerable IoT Devices (darkreading.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
Infostealers and the high value of stolen data - Help Net Security
29% of organisations cite data loss as top security breach result | Security Magazine
McLaren Health Care revealed that a data breach impacted 2.2 million people (securityaffairs.com)
Hacker Leaks 800,000 Scraped Chess.com User Records (hackread.com)
Hacker Leaks 35 Million Scraped LinkedIn User Records (hackread.com)
Fourth time unlucky: Okta hit by new cyber attack - Digital Journal
Maine govt notifies 1.3 million people of MOVEit data breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
The real cost of healthcare cyber security breaches - Help Net Security
Mortgage giant Mr. Cooper says customer data exposed in breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Pharmacy provider Truepill data breach hits 2.3 million customers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Samsung warns some customers their data may have been stolen by hackers | TechRadar
Hackers Claim Major Data Breach at Smart WiFi Provider Plume (hackread.com)
Vietnam Post exposes 1.2TB of data, including email addresses (securityaffairs.com)
Morgan Stanley fined over computers with personal data (cnbc.com)
Samsung says hackers accessed customer data during year-long breach | TechCrunch
A Spy Agency Leaked People's Data Online—Then the Data Was Stolen | WIRED
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Russian admits building now-dismantled IPStorm proxy botnet • The Register
Australian Intelligence Report Identifies China as Major Backer of Cyber Crime (voanews.com)
'AlphaLock' Hackers Launch 'Pen-Testing Training' Group (darkreading.com)
Cyber crime Victims Can Turn to New Nonprofit, Intelligence for Good | MSSP Alert
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Ethereum hacked to steal millions from users across the world | TechRadar
Fraudsters make $50,000 a day by spoofing crypto researchers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Insiders and outsiders: Why cyber security strategies need to look all ways - Digital Journal
The Role of Cyber Wellness in Safeguarding Businesses - IT Security Guru
3 Ways Behavioural Economics Obstructs Cyber security (darkreading.com)
Insurance
Bridging the Gap: The Vital Role of Skilled Brokers in Cyber Insurance
Aon president warns insurers against ‘walking away’ from major risks (ft.com)
Cyber insurance market attractive despite ransomware uptick: JP Morgan - Reinsurance News
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Uncovering the ransomware threat from global supply chains | ITPro
How top CISOs are transforming third-party risk management | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Cloud/SaaS
This new ChatGPT-powered infostealer is targeting cloud platforms | TechRadar
Hackers Could Exploit Google Workspace and Cloud Platform for Ransomware Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Traditional cloud security isn't up to the task - Help Net Security
Transforming cyber security from reactive to proactive with attack path analysis - Help Net Security
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
The new frontier in online security: Quantum-safe cryptography (techxplore.com)
In a first, cryptographic keys protecting SSH connections stolen in new attack | Ars Technica
TETRA encryption algorithms entering the public domain • The Register
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
70% of passwords can be cracked in less than a second, shows NordPass study (business-standard.com)
Google Workspace security flaws could see hackers easily snaffle your password | TechRadar
Stop using weak passwords for streaming services - it's riskier than you think | ZDNET
The worst passwords of 2023 are also the most common, "123456" comes in first | TechSpot
Social Media
Meta and YouTube face criminal surveillance complaints • The Register
How Much Your Social Media Profile Data Is Worth on the Dark Web (makeuseof.com)
Malvertising
BlackCat affiliate seen using malvertising to spread ransomware | Computer Weekly
This fake Windows news site is spreading malware via hacked Google ads | TechRadar
Training, Education and Awareness
Phishing emails are more believable than ever. Here’s what to do about it. | CSO Online
The Role of Cyber Wellness in Safeguarding Businesses - IT Security Guru
3 Ways Behavioural Economics Obstructs Cyber security (darkreading.com)
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
EU Tightens Cyber security Requirements for Critical Infrastructure and Services (darkreading.com)
Meta and YouTube face criminal surveillance complaints • The Register
SEC Suit Ushers in New Era of Cyber Enforcement (darkreading.com)
Make Changes to be Ready for the New SEC Cyber security Disclosure Rule (darkreading.com)
Navigating the complex role of the CISO under SEC disclosure rules (betanews.com)
Clorox CISO flushes self after multimillion-dollar attack • The Register
Morgan Stanley fined over computers with personal data (cnbc.com)
White House is ‘working on version 2.0’ of cyber implementation plan | CyberScoop
Models, Frameworks and Standards
What You Need to Know About NIST CSF 2.0 | Accelerynt, Inc. - JDSupra
Modelling organisations' defensive mechanisms with MITRE D3FEND - Help Net Security
Backup and Recovery
Data Protection
Web browsing data collected in more detail than previously known, report finds (ft.com)
Online ad auction data harms national security – claim • The Register
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
The challenges and opportunities of working in cyber security | TechRadar
How US SEC legal actions put CISOs at risk and what to do about it | CSO Online
Is ‘overwork’ culture a problem for cyber security professionals? (siliconrepublic.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Serbian pleads guilty to running ‘Monopoly’ dark web drug market (securityaffairs.com)
Russian admits building now-dismantled IPStorm proxy botnet • The Register
European Police Take Down $9m Vishing Gang - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Russian-Moldovan National Admits to Infecting 23,000 Devices with Botnet Malware (occrp.org)
Private Investigator Aviram Azar Gets Almost 7 Years for Hedge Fund Hacking Ring - Bloomberg
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Activity
Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
NCSC Annual Review on 'state-aligned actors' | Professional Security
Zero-Days in Edge Devices Become China's Cyber Warfare Tactic of Choice (darkreading.com)
Cyber espionage operation on embassies linked to Russia’s Cozy Bear hackers (therecord.media)
New NATO cyber forum to support collective response to cyber attacks – EURACTIV.com
Nation State Actors
China
China's Lending Giant Paid Ransom To Russia-Linked Group After It Got Hacked Last Week - Benzinga
ICBC/ransomware: China’s cyber security industry moves out of the shadows
Cyber attack shines light on role of China’s largest lender in US Treasury market (ft.com)
Australian Intelligence Report Identifies China as Major Backer of Cyber Crime (voanews.com)
Zero-Days in Edge Devices Become China's Cyber Warfare Tactic of Choice (darkreading.com)
Labour warns against watering down of UK’s takeover screening powers
Russia
China's Lending Giant Paid Ransom To Russia-Linked Group After It Got Hacked Last Week - Benzinga
Cyber attack shines light on role of China’s largest lender in US Treasury market (ft.com)
Danish Energy Attacks Portend Targeting More Critical Infrastructure (darkreading.com)
Could Russia’s Ukraine Cyber attacks Clue Global Threat? | MSSP Alert
EU Formalizes Cyber security Support For Ukraine - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Meet the Unique New "Hacking" Group: AlphaLock (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber espionage operation on embassies linked to Russia’s Cozy Bear hackers (therecord.media)
What Do You Do When You’re Hit by Russian Ransomware? - Bloomberg
Ukraine at D+670: GRU may be expanding its targeting. (thecyberwire.com)
Iran
North Korea
Microsoft Warns of Fake Skills Assessment Portals Targeting IT Job Seekers (thehackernews.com)
Novel social engineering attack infrastructure established by BlueNoroff | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Other Nation State Actors, Hacktivism, Extremism, Terrorism and Other Geopolitical Threat Intelligence
Vulnerabilities
'CitrixBleed' Linked to Ransomware Hit on China's State-Owned Bank (darkreading.com)
LockBit ransomware exploits Citrix Bleed in attacks, 10K servers exposed (bleepingcomputer.com)
Zero-Day Flaw in Zimbra Email Software Exploited by Four Hacker Groups (thehackernews.com)
APTs Swarm Zimbra Zero-Day to Steal Government Info Worldwide (darkreading.com)
CISA warns of actively exploited Juniper pre-auth RCE exploit chain (bleepingcomputer.com)
WP Fastest Cache plugin bug exposes 600K WordPress sites to attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft November 2023 Patch Tuesday fixes 5 zero-days, 58 flaws (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft fixes critical Azure CLI flaw that leaked credentials in logs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Adobe Releases Security Updates for Multiple Products | CISA
ICS Patch Tuesday: 90 Vulnerabilities Addressed by Siemens and Schneider Electric - Security Week
Chipmaker Patch Tuesday: Intel, AMD Address Over 130 Vulnerabilities - Security Week
Fortinet Releases Security Updates for FortiClient and FortiGate | CISA
Urgent: VMware Warns of Unpatched Critical Cloud Director Vulnerability (thehackernews.com)
New PoC Exploit for Apache ActiveMQ Flaw Could Let Attackers Fly Under the Radar (thehackernews.com)
SAP Patches Critical Vulnerability in Business One Product - Security Week
Critical flaw fixed in SAP Business One product (securityaffairs.com)
Citrix Releases Security Updates for Citrix Hypervisor | CISA
Fortinet warns of critical command injection bug in FortiSIEM (bleepingcomputer.com)
An email vulnerability let hackers steal data from governments around the world (engadget.com)
Experts Uncover DarkCasino: New Emerging APT Threat Exploiting WinRAR Flaw (thehackernews.com)
Some AMD EPYC server CPUs have a serious security flaw, so patch now | TechRadr
Microsoft Extends Windows Server 2012 ESUs Until 2026 (petri.com)
Tools and Controls
Building resilience to shield your digital transformation from cyber threats - Help Net Security
Against the Clock: Cyber Incident Response Plan (trendmicro.com)
Fast-acting cyber gangs increasingly disabling telemetry logs | Computer Weekly
Cyber threat intelligence: Getting on the front foot against adversaries (welivesecurity.com)
The New 80/20 Rule for SecOps: Customize Where it Matters, Automate the Rest (thehackernews.com)
Phishing emails are more believable than ever. Here’s what to do about it. | CSO Online
Web Application Attacks | Types of Web Application Attacks | Mimecast
Traditional cloud security isn't up to the task - Help Net Security
National security at risk from web browsing data collection, report finds (ft.com)Zero-Days in Edge Devices Become China's Cyber Warfare Tactic of Choice (darkreading.com)
The cultural shift that’s needed to see greater ROI in cyber | Federal News Network
NCSC backs use of security.txt for cyber resilience | UKAuthority
New approaches to fighting ransomware are emerging | Mimecast
Telemetry gaps leave networks vulnerable as attackers move faster - Help Net Security
The new imperative in API security strategy - Help Net Security
How to Automate the Hardest Parts of Employee Offboarding (thehackernews.com)
Steps CISOs Should Take Before, During & After a Cyber attack (darkreading.com)
Threat Intel: To Share or Not to Share is Not the Question - Security Week
As perimeter defences fall, the identify-first approach steps into the breach | CSO Online
The Role of Cyber Wellness in Safeguarding Businesses - IT Security Guru
OODA Loop - A Model for Cyber security Threat Sharing: Embracing the USA PATRIOT Act & FinCEN
How to speak the board's language with cyber security ROI so it makes sense | Fierce Electronics
Three Ways Generative AI Can Bolster Cyber security | NVIDIA Blogs
Hackers breach healthcare orgs via ScreenConnect remote access (bleepingcomputer.com)
Kubernetes adoption creates new cyber security challenges - Help Net Security
Aon president warns insurers against ‘walking away’ from major risks (ft.com)
CISOs vs. developers: A battle over security priorities - Help Net Security
Hundreds of websites cloned to run ads for Chinese gambling • The Register
AI helps leaders optimize costs and mitigate risks - Help Net Security
It ain’t what you store, it’s the way you restore it. • The Register
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
'Alarming': big gaps in organisations' cyber security | The Canberra Times | Canberra, ACT
National security at risk from web browsing data collection, report finds (ft.com)
CISOs vs. developers: A battle over security priorities - Help Net Security
Collaborative strategies are key to enhanced ICS security - Help Net Security
Web Application Attacks | Types of Web Application Attacks | Mimecast
Telemetry gaps leave networks vulnerable as attackers move faster - Help Net Security
Cyber crime Victims Can Turn to New Nonprofit, Intelligence for Good | MSSP Alert
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 10 November 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 10 November 2023:
-Boardroom Woes on Ransomware Intensify as Organisations Face an Average of 86 Ransomware-linked Events Annually
-Many SMBs Have No Real Way to Deal with Cyber Threats, Leaving Them Vulnerable
-Cyber Attacks Top Global Risk – 2023 Aon Survey
-To Improve Cyber Defences, Practice for Disaster
-Meet Your New Cyber Security Auditor: Your Insurer
-Allen and Overy Suffer Ransomware Attack
-Shadow IT Remains a Top Threat, as Shown by Attack on Okta
-Ransomware, AI, and Social Engineering All Set to Be 2024's Biggest Security Threats
-Cyber Governance: Growing Expectations for Information Security Oversight and Accountability
-Generative AI Will Level Up Cyber Attacks, According to New Google Report
-Public Wi-Fi Remains a Huge Risk, is Your Organisation Prepared?
-88% of Security Leaders Think Their Organisation Is Falling Short Addressing Cyber Security
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Boardroom Woes on Ransomware Intensify as Organisations Face an Average of 86 Ransomware-linked Events Annually
A recent report by Akamai Technologies has found that organisations experienced an average of 86 ransomware-linked events in the past 12 months (successful or not), double the number of annual attacks from 2 years ago.
The most common issues impacting organisations after a ransomware attack were network downtime (44%), data loss (42%) and brand/reputation damage (39%).
Ransomware attackers have increasingly employed tactics like double and triple extortion. These methods combine encryption, data exfiltration, and distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks to extort money. While these strategies are not new, their prevalence has significantly increased in recent times.
With 81% of companies experiencing ransomware attacks in the previous 12 months this is increasingly something that company Boards are concerned about, not only the organisation’s ability to stop a ransomware attack in the first place, but also the organisation’s ability to recover when an attack happens.
Sources: [TechTarget] [PRNewsWire] [Security Magazine] [InsuranceJournal] [Financial Times]
Many SMBs Have No Real Way to Deal with Cyber Threats, Leaving Them Vulnerable
A recent report found that of nearly 6,000 small and medium-sized business (SMB) IT professionals surveyed across Europe, a third of those based in the UK have no cyber security in place to protect assets such as their own printers, with 16% suffering a printer breach alone in the past. Despite this, less than a quarter educated their employees about printer (23%) IT security. With hybrid working seen as a security concern for 38% of SMEs, and potentially leading to more remote use of these devices, surprisingly just 4 in 10 (41%) cover hybrid working as part of their current security training.
Black Arrow supports organisations of all sizes in designing and delivering proportionate user education and awareness programmes, including in-person and online training as well as simulated phishing campaigns. Our programmes help secure employee engagement and build a cyber security culture to protect the organisation.
Sources: [TechRadar] [The Recycler]
Cyber Attacks Top Global Risk – 2023 Aon Survey
Aon’s Global Risk Management Survey identified cyber attacks and data breaches as the leading business risk worldwide, followed by business interruption. Aon warned that deficits in talent or specialised skills may exacerbate cyber risks in particular.
Supply chain disruptions were ranked as another area of concern, with risks associated with supply chain failure hitting a 14-year high in the survey. However, less than 40% of organisations have conducted supplier resilience assessments. which contributes to cyber risk when organisations hand data to suppliers without considering whether their suppliers keep that data safe.
Source: [Investing]
To Improve Cyber Defences, Practice for Disaster
If you aren’t already running incident simulations in your organisation, it’s time to start. Such simulations allow employees to understand their roles and responsibilities, as well as providing a great opportunity to educate. Cyber attacks are a matter of when, not if, and no-one wants to be improvising their security response in the event of a real cyber incident.
Black Arrow works with organisations of all sizes and sectors to design and prepare for managing a cyber security incident; this can include an Incident Response Plan and an educational tabletop exercise for the leadership team that highlights the proportionate controls to help the organisation prevent and mitigate an incident.
Source: [Dark Reading]
Meet Your New Cyber Security Auditor: Your Insurer
In the dynamic world of cyber security, cyber insurers are emerging as key players, reshaping the landscape with ever more stringent requirements. With ransomware attacks becoming more complex, cyber insurance premiums have surged by 50%, challenging Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) to demonstrate their organisation's cyber defence capabilities. Insurers, using detailed risk assessments, are influencing cyber security strategies, compelling organisations to adapt and meet higher standards.
CISOs are now tasked with ensuring their security measures are comprehensive and transparent, as insurers scrutinise everything from multifactor authentication to Active Directory policies. Accurate self-assessment is critical, as any misrepresentation can lead to denied coverage or legal repercussions. In this competitive market, organisations must showcase their cyber maturity, particularly in high-risk industries, to secure coverage. The evolving cyber insurance landscape demands a clear understanding of risk factors and continuous improvement in cyber defence strategies, ultimately aiming to enhance overall protection against cyber threats.
Source: [Dark Reading]
Allen and Overy Suffer Ransomware Attack
Allen & Overy, the “magic circle” law firm, has suffered a cyber attack on its systems, making it the latest large corporation to fall victim to a ransomware hack. A&O confirmed the incident after the infamous ransomware gang LockBit posted on social media platform X, formerly Twitter, claiming to have breached the legal giant and threatening to publish data from the firm’s files on 28 November.
Earlier this year, the UK National Cyber Security Centre reported that law firms of all sizes were at risk from cyber attackers because of the sensitive client information they routinely handle. The importance of reputation to the business also made law firms attractive targets for extortion.
Sources: [Financial Times] [Law Gazette]
Shadow IT Remains a Top Threat, as Shown by Attack on Okta
Shadow IT refers to IT resources used by employees or end users that don’t have IT approval or oversight. This was the case in the recent Okta attack in which an Okta employee signed into their personal Google account on a company-owned device. It is believed that the employee’s personal Google account had been compromised, and unfortunately since the employee had configured it in a way to save credentials of Okta accounts, the attacker now also had these credentials. The result? 134 downstream customers impacted.
Source: [Computer Weekly]
Ransomware, AI, and Social Engineering All Set to Be 2024's Biggest Security Threats
Ransomware attacks surged to record highs in 2023 and are expected to escalate further, especially with key 2024 elections approaching, ZeroFox Intelligence's 2024 Key Forecasts report indicates. This trend is driven by evolving cyber threats, including sophisticated social engineering and AI-generated synthetic media, aimed at spreading misinformation and targeting electoral processes.
ZeroFox also highlights a concerning shift towards physical damages from cyber attacks, with critical sectors like finance, energy, and healthcare being vulnerable due to outdated security infrastructures. These sectors are likely targets for nation-state and state-sponsored attacks amidst global geopolitical tensions. To counter these threats, the report suggests enhanced security measures, including encrypted cloud backups, vigilant network monitoring, and a zero-trust cyber security approach to safeguard against the evolving landscape of cyber threats.
Source: [TechRadar]
Cyber Governance: Growing Expectations for Information Security Oversight and Accountability
In today's interconnected digital economy, cyber security is a critical governance issue for businesses, necessitating effective oversight and strategic planning. The SEC's new rules, effective July 2023, require public companies to transparently disclose their cyber security strategies and report significant incidents, highlighting the increasing importance of cyber security in corporate governance. This regulatory development aims to improve transparency and accountability in managing cyber risks.
Corporations are responding by emphasising detailed cyber security disclosures, employee training programmes, and board-level expertise in information security. As the landscape of cyber threats evolves, timely and comprehensive reporting of breaches becomes more crucial, aligning with both regulatory requirements and stakeholder expectations for robust cyber security governance.
Black Arrow supports business leaders in organisations of all sizes to demonstrate governance of their cyber security by owning their cyber security strategy and leveraging their existing internal and external resources to build resilience against a cyber security incident.
Source: [Harvard]
Generative AI Will Level Up Cyber Attacks, According to New Google Report
Google's Cloud Cyber Security Forecast 2024 report reveals a growing trend of using generative AI in cyber attacks. The technology, particularly large language models (LLMs), is enhancing phishing and social engineering tactics by producing content that appears more legitimate, making it difficult to spot errors typically associated with such attacks. This advancement allows attackers to mimic natural language effectively and create authentic-looking fake news, phone calls, and deepfake videos, potentially eroding public trust in online information.
On the flip side, the report highlights the potential of AI as a powerful tool for cyber defence. Cyber security professionals can leverage AI for rapid data synthesis, efficient threat detection, and swift response actions. As defenders direct AI development with specific security objectives, its capabilities are expected to significantly bolster cyber security measures in the near future.
Source: [ZDNET]
Public Wi-Fi Remains a Huge Risk, is Your Organisation Prepared?
New research found that half of UK participants believed they are most at risk of a cyber attack when using public Wi-Fi, which is Wi-Fi that anyone, including an attacker, can connect to. However, in contrast to concerns, the report found that 41% will use unsecured Wi-Fi if given the opportunity. Further, 53% of participants would enter or access sensitive information whilst connected to an unsecured public Wi-Fi network; this includes bring your own devices (BYOD) that have access to corporate data.
Source: [TechRadar]
88% of Security Leaders Think Their Organisation Is Falling Short in Addressing Cyber Security
A recent study by Foundry reveals a trend towards AI-driven security measures and increased reliance on cyber insurance among organisations. Key priorities for security leaders include preparedness for incidents, data protection, and enhancing IT and cloud data security. Despite this, 88% of security leaders feel their organisations are inadequate in addressing cyber security risks, mainly due to budget limitations, talent scarcity, and challenges in stakeholder communication.
To improve the situation, more top security executives are having regular engagements with the board of directors (85% this year compared to 82% in 2022), aiding in better cyber security initiatives. Security budgets are expected to remain stable or increase, with investments focused on authentication, data analytics, and cloud security, complemented by cyber insurance. AI's role is expanding in threat detection, malware identification, and automated responses, showcasing its growing importance in evolving security landscapes.
Source: [Foundry]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Exec security habits are shockingly bad compared to average workers | ITPro
To Improve Cyber Defences, Practice for Disaster (darkreading.com)
Cyber attacks top global risks, talent retention surges in Aon 2023 survey By Investing.com
Meet Your New Cyber security Auditor: Your Insurer (darkreading.com)
Use business technology? You’re on the cyber security frontline - Digital Journal
No, Okta, senior management, not an errant employee, caused you to get hacked | Ars Technica
Securing data at the intersection of the CISO and CDO - Help Net Security
UK warned cyber security teams buckling under complexity of threats (emergingrisks.co.uk)
Enhancing security: The crucial role of incident response plans | Computer Weekly
Most cyber security investments aren't used to their full advantage - Help Net Security
Improving cyber resilience to prevent devastating cyber attacks | TechRadar
The roadblocks to preventive cyber security success - Help Net Security
SolarWinds fires back at SEC over fraud charges | TechTarget
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Organisations face an average of 86 ransomware attacks annually | Security Magazine
Ransomware, Extortion Claims See ‘Worrying Resurgence,’ Says Allianz (insurancejournal.com)
The 3 key stages of ransomware attacks and useful indicators of compromise - Help Net Security
Ransomware, AI, and social engineering all set to be 2024's biggest security threats | TechRadar
The ransomware warning sign we should all have on our radar | World Economic Forum (weforum.org)
Critical Confluence flaw exploited in ransomware attacks (securityaffairs.com)
Russian-speaking threat actor "farnetwork" linked to 5 ransomware gangs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsegmentation proves its worth in ransomware defence - Help Net Security
Ransomware Mastermind Uncovered After Oversharing on Dark Web (darkreading.com)
Ransomware gang behind MOVEit attacks are targeting new zero-day, Microsoft says (therecord.media)
Ransomware Readiness Assessments: One Size Doesn't Fit All (darkreading.com)
TellYouThePass ransomware joins Apache ActiveMQ RCE attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
FBI: Ransomware gangs hack casinos via 3rd party gaming vendors (bleepingcomputer.com)
Healthcare Struggles with Impact of Ransomware Attacks | MSSP Alert
Iranian APT Targets Israeli Education, Tech Sectors With New Wipers - SecurityWeek
Ransomware Victims
Allen & Overy data hit by hackers in ransomware attack (ft.com)
ICBC hit by ransomware impacting global trades • The Register
Cyber attack takes down one of the largest mortgage lenders in the US | TechRadar
American Airlines Pilot Union Recovering After Ransomware Attack - SecurityWeek
Marina Bay Sands Becomes Latest Hospitality Cyber Victim (darkreading.com)
Scottish council's computer systems suffer cyber attack | The National
Dolly.com pays ransom, attackers release data anyway (securityaffairs.com)
Women sue plastic surgery after hack saw their naked photos posted online (bitdefender.com)
TransForm says ransomware data breach affects 267,000 patients (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Artificial Intelligence
Ransomware, AI, and social engineering all set to be 2024's biggest security threats | TechRadar
Companies have good reasons to be concerned about generative AI - Help Net Security
Virtual Kidnapping: AI Tools Are Enabling IRL Extortion Scams (darkreading.com)
Offensive and Defensive AI: Let's Chat(GPT) About It (thehackernews.com)
Here's what to know about elections, cyber security and AI | World Economic Forum (weforum.org)
Microsoft, Meta detail plans to fight election deception • The Register
Watch out: Generative AI will level up cyber attacks, according to new Google report | ZDNET
Data protection demands AI-specific security strategies - Help Net Security
Exploring the global shift towards AI-specific legislation - Help Net Security
2FA/MFA
Microsoft Authenticator is now blocking suspicious MFA phone notifications by default - Neowin
Microsoft unhappy with MFA uptake, starts auto-deploying it • The Register
Suspicious Microsoft Authenticator requests don't trigger notifications anymore - gHacks Tech News
23andMe data theft prompts DNA testing companies to switch on 2FA by default | TechCrunch
Malware
Gootloader Aims Malicious, Custom Bot Army at Enterprise Networks (darkreading.com)
48 Malicious npm Packages Found Deploying Reverse Shells on Developer Systems (thehackernews.com)
StripedFly Malware Operated Unnoticed for 5 Years, Infecting 1 Million Devices (thehackernews.com)
This new macOS malware could leave you severely short-changed | TechRadar
Even Google Calendar isn't safe from hackers any more | TechRadar
Hacked proxy service has already infected 10,000 systems worldwide with malware | TechRadar
Evasive Jupyter Infostealer Campaign Showcases Dangerous Variant (darkreading.com)
Beware of BlueNoroff: Mac users targeted with new malware variant - 9to5Mac
How to Outsmart Malware Attacks That Can Fool Antivirus Protection (darkreading.com)
Malicious Python packages spread BlazeStealer malware | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Mobile
Google Play Store Introduces 'Independent Security Review' Badge for Apps (thehackernews.com)
Apple 'Find My' network can be abused to steal keylogged passwords (bleepingcomputer.com)
Samsung monthly updates: November 2023 security patch fixes 65 security flaws - SamMobile
37 Vulnerabilities Patched in Android With November 2023 Security Updates - SecurityWeek
Android 14’s storage disaster gets patched, but your data might be gone | Ars Technica
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
OpenAI confirms DDoS attacks behind ongoing ChatGPT outages (bleepingcomputer.com)
Suspected DDoS attack impacts AP news site | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Cloudflare website downed by DDoS attack claimed by Anonymous Sudan (bleepingcomputer.com)
OpenAI Battles Service Disruption Linked to Russian Hackers - Decrypt
DDoS attack leads to significant disruption in ChatGPT services (securityaffairs.com)
Russian state-owned Sberbank hit by 1 million RPS DDoS attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Data Breaches/Leaks
2023 Microsoft Data Breach Statistics: A Comprehensive Overview (techreport.com)
No, Okta, senior management, not an errant employee, caused you to get hacked | Ars Technica
Okta Hack Blamed on Employee Using Personal Google Account on Company Laptop - SecurityWeek
Shadow IT use at Okta behind series of damaging breaches | Computer Weekly
Okta breach affected 134 customers, company admits • The Register
Another top casino has been hit with a massive data breach | TechRadar
Marina Bay Sands Discloses Data Breach Impacting 665k Customers - SecurityWeek
Hilb fears email crooks stole 81K people's financial data • The Register
23andMe data theft prompts DNA testing companies to switch on 2FA by default | TechCrunch
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Dutch hacker jailed for extortion, selling stolen data on RaidForums (bleepingcomputer.com)
How cyber criminals adapt and thrive amidst changing consumer trends - Help Net Security
Ransomware Mastermind Uncovered After Oversharing on Dark Web (darkreading.com)
Operation Monopoly: Dubai Police bust cyberfraud, arrest 43 | Crime – Gulf News
Unraveling cyber crime network's underground operations (crime-research.org)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
The 10 Biggest Crypto Hacks and Scams of 2023 (makeuseof.com)
Monero Project admits thieves stole $437k in mystery breach • The Register
Insurance
Meet Your New Cyber security Auditor: Your Insurer (darkreading.com)
Hiscox cyber threat ranking reveals UK's most vulnerable industries (reward-strategy.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Cloud/SaaS
The perils of over-reliance on single cloud providers - Help Net Security
Secure Cloud Infrastructure from New Cyber Threats (trendmicro.com)
Hackers exploit Looney Tunables Linux bug, steal cloud creds (bleepingcomputer.com)
What We Can Learn from Major Cloud Cyber attacks (darkreading.com)
Encryption
UK NCSC issues new guidance on post-quantum cryptography migration | CSO Online
Outdated cryptographic protocols put vast amounts of network traffic at risk - Help Net Security
Tech groups fear new powers will allow UK to block encryption (ft.com)
Linux and Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
How global password practices are changing - Help Net Security
Apple 'Find My' network can be abused to steal keylogged passwords (bleepingcomputer.com)
LEGO urges fans to change passwords after cyber attack - Dexerto
Global breached accounts down 76% in Q3, study finds (techinformed.com)
Malvertising
Training, Education and Awareness
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
EU Tries To Slip In New Powers To Intercept Encrypted Web Traffic Without Anyone Noticing | Techdirt
Telecom vendors sound alarm over EU Cyber Resilience Act - Telecoms.com
Europe is trading security for digital sovereignty | CyberScoop
Steps to Follow to Comply With the SEC Cyber security Disclosure Rule (darkreading.com)
Vendors caution on risks of EU cyber security law - Mobile World Live
Tech groups fear new powers will allow UK to block encryption (ft.com)
King’s Speech 'missed opportunity' to update cyber laws | Professional Security
UK wants prior notice from Big Tech of security rollouts • The Register
Exploring the global shift towards AI-specific legislation - Help Net Security
SolarWinds fires back at SEC over fraud charges | TechTarget
SolarWinds: SEC lacks 'competence' to regulate cyber security • The Register
Models, Frameworks and Standards
MITRE partners with Microsoft to address generative AI security risks - Help Net Security
The plan for the inevitable cyber attack: Get the gist of NIST | Computer Weekly
NIST releases revised cyber requirements for controlled unclassified information - Nextgov/FCW
Data Protection
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
UK warned cyber security teams buckling under complexity of threats (emergingrisks.co.uk)
Cyber security pros are putting everyone at risk by working too much | TechRadar
A third of cyber security pros report crumbling work-life balance | ITPro
CISOs Beware: SEC's SolarWinds Action Shows They're Scapegoating Us (darkreading.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Dutch hacker jailed for extortion, selling stolen data on RaidForums (bleepingcomputer.com)
Operation Monopoly: Dubai Police bust cyberfraud, arrest 43 | Crime – Gulf News
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Israeli SMBs Warned to Cut External Comms to Reduce Risks (inforisktoday.com)
As war continues, Israeli government wants more cyber control | Ctech (calcalistech.com)
The new ‘Geneva code’ for hackers on the cyber battlefield | The Strategist (aspistrategist.org.au)
Nation State Actors
Russia
Sandworm Cyber attackers Down Ukrainian Power Grid During Missile Strikes (darkreading.com)
Russian-speaking threat actor "farnetwork" linked to 5 ransomware gangs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware gang behind MOVEit attacks are targeting new zero-day, Microsoft says (therecord.media)
OpenAI Battles Service Disruption Linked to Russian Hackers - Decrypt
US Treasury Sanctions Russian Money Launderer in Cyber crime Crackdown (thehackernews.com)
Russian state-owned Sberbank hit by 1 million RPS DDoS attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Iran
Iranian APT Targets Israeli Education, Tech Sectors With New Wipers - SecurityWeek
Imperial Kitten APT Claws at Israeli Industry with Multiyear Spy Effort (darkreading.com)
North Korea
Other Nation State Actors, Hacktivism, Extremism, Terrorism and Other Geopolitical Threat Intelligence
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
New Microsoft Exchange zero-days allow RCE, data theft attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Atlassian Bug Escalated to 10, All Unpatched Instances Vulnerable (darkreading.com)
Critical Confluence flaw exploited in ransomware attacks (securityaffairs.com)
Cloudflare, Google and AWS Disclose HTTP/2 Zero-Day Vulnerability (infoq.com)
Microsoft 365 apps have a lot of new security vulnerabilities - here's what we know | TechRadar
Critical Vulnerabilities Expose Veeam ONE Software to Code Execution - SecurityWeek
Microsoft is killing off three Windows services because of security concerns (betanews.com)
37 Vulnerabilities Patched in Android With November 2023 Security Updates - SecurityWeek
TellYouThePass ransomware joins Apache ActiveMQ RCE attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Android 14’s storage disaster gets patched, but your data might be gone | Ars Technica
Tools and Controls
To Improve Cyber Defences, Practice for Disaster (darkreading.com)
Meet Your New Cyber security Auditor: Your Insurer (darkreading.com)
Start with Passwords When Incorporating the 5 Pillars of Zero Trust | EdTech Magazine
How global password practices are changing - Help Net Security
Is Cyber security A Line Or A Circle? The Shape Of Incident Response (forbes.com)
The roadblocks to preventive cyber security success - Help Net Security
Microsegmentation proves its worth in ransomware defence - Help Net Security
Microsoft Authenticator is now blocking suspicious MFA phone notifications by default - Neowin
Microsoft unhappy with MFA uptake, starts auto-deploying it • The Register
Suspicious Microsoft Authenticator requests don't trigger notifications anymore - gHacks Tech News
23andMe data theft prompts DNA testing companies to switch on 2FA by default | TechCrunch
Offensive and Defensive AI: Let's Chat(GPT) About It (thehackernews.com)
Enhancing security: The crucial role of incident response plans | Computer Weekly
Most cyber security investments aren't used to their full advantage - Help Net Security
Improving cyber resilience to prevent devastating cyber attacks | TechRadar
Data protection demands AI-specific security strategies - Help Net Security
7 free cyber threat maps showing attack intensity and frequency - Help Net Security
What is threat detection and response (TDR)? (techtarget.com)
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
US calls for unity against cyber-threats to finance (globalcapital.com)
Royal Mail jeopardizes users with open redirect flaw (securityaffairs.com)
Cyber attacks 'constantly happening' - warning from intelligence expert (securitybrief.co.nz)
Startling Cyber security Statistics for 2023 You Need to Know (techreport.com)S
Study: Companies aren't keeping up with cybersecurity needs (iapp.org)
How to avoid cyber security nightmares (networkingplus.co.uk)
Forecasting the future without falling for the hype | TechRadar
Elevate Your School’s Security Posture as 2024 Approaches | EdTech Magazine
Optus loses court bid to keep report into cause of cyber-attack secret (yahoo.com)
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory 09 November 2023 – Critical Atlassian Vulnerability Actively Exploited
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory 09 November 2023 – Critical Atlassian Confluence Vulnerability Actively Exploited
Executive summary
Atlassian has published a security advisory warning users of an active exploitation of a critical vulnerability in all versions of Atlassian Confluence Data Center and Server, which could allow an unauthenticated attacker to perform actions with administrative functions. The vulnerability has been added to the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog.
What’s the risk to me or my business?
There is a risk that organisations operating a vulnerable version are leaving themselves at risk of allowing an unauthenticated attacker to reset confluence and create an administrator account. Atlassian has stated that exploitation can lead to a full loss of confidentiality, integrity and availability. This vulnerability affects all versions of Atlassian Confluence Data Center and Server.
What can I do?
Black Arrow recommends following Atlassian’s advice and applying updates immediately, which can be found in their advisory linked below. Atlassian have stated that publicly accessible Confluence Data Center and Server versions in particular, are at critical risk of exploitation.
In the event that you are unable to apply the updates, mitigations have been provided by Atlassian, however updates should be applied as soon as possible. The fixed versions of Confluence Data Center and Server are as follows:
7.19.16
8.3.4
8.4.4
8.5.3
8.6.1
Technical Summary
CVE-2023-22518- An improper authorisation vulnerability in Atlassian Confluence Data Center and Server.
Need help understanding your gaps, or just want some advice? Get in touch with us.
Further information can be found here:
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2023-22518
#threatadvisory #threatintelligence #cybersecurity
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 03 November 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 03 November 2023:
-Surviving a Ransomware Attack Begins by Acknowledging it’s Inevitable
-Are You and Your Clients Soft Targets?
-Cyber Attacks Cause Revenue Losses in 42% of Small Businesses
-Executives May be The Biggest Risk to Your Business
-Organisations Can Only Stop 57 Percent of Cyber Attacks
-Many Businesses Remain Unprepared for AI as Phishing Attacks Rise 1,265% Since Launch of ChatGPT
-Business Email Compromise is Most Common Entry Point for Cyber Attack
-US Regulator Charges Firm and its CISO For Fraud and Cyber Security Failures
-Companies Scramble to Integrate Immediate Recovery into Ransomware Plans
-Your End-Users are Reusing Passwords, That’s a Big Problem
-Cyber Workforce Demand is Outpacing Supply
-What the Boardroom Is Missing: CISOs
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Surviving a Ransomware Attack Begins by Acknowledging it’s Inevitable
The best defence against a ransomware attack is assuming it will happen before it does. Research by Visa Inc found that ransomware continues to rapidly rise. One of the main factors is the use of AI services to mass produce highly personalised and plausible emails. The second is the proliferation of highly professional do-it-yourself ransomware kits, which frequently come with 24/7 tech support. These two factors drastically lower the skill level required for cyber criminals to successfully pull off an attack.
Another new ransomware trend is “dual ransomware attacks”. This is where criminals carry out two or more attacks in close proximity of each other, ranging between 48 hours to a maximum of 10 days. With an 80% chance of re-attack, small and medium sized businesses in hard-hit industries including healthcare and manufacturing are primary targets; organisations must be extra vigilant as the holidays approach because this is when cyber criminals are most likely to attack.
Black Arrow works with organisations of all sizes and sectors to design and prepare for managing a cyber security incident; this can include an Incident Response Plan and an educational tabletop exercise for the leadership team that highlights the proportionate controls to help the organisation prevent and mitigate an incident.
Source: [Venture Beat] [SC Media] [Help Net Security] [Infosecurity Magazine] [Help Net Security] [Tech Crunch]
Are You and Your Clients Soft Targets?
Cyber attacks are not a matter of "if" but "when," and the question you need to ask yourself is, ‘Are you a soft target?’. A soft target is a network or organisation that is relatively unprotected or vulnerable to cyber attacks.
You may feel confident in your ability to recover from an attack, but if you've never thoroughly tested your backup and recovery procedures, and when the time comes you find that it does not work, the result will leave you more likely to pay a ransom in an encryption based ransomware scenario. Reliance on legacy antivirus, which often fails to detect modern threats, can also render your network a soft target. Additionally, the absence of a rigorous vulnerability scanning and patching process leaves vulnerabilities undiscovered, and attackers are quick to exploit them. If you rely solely on prevention measures like firewalls and endpoint protection platforms, you are making yourself an appealing soft target for cyber criminals.
No organisation is entirely immune to cyber attacks. The key to defending you and your client's information effectively is to anticipate attacks, understand your security posture, recognise potential adversaries, and recover correctly in the event of an attack.
Source: [MSSP Alert]
Cyber Attacks Cause Revenue Losses in 42% of Small Businesses
Small businesses may be discouraged from investing in preventive cyber security measures due to the expense involved and the mistaken belief that only larger companies are the target of cyber crimes. However, according to a recent report nearly 8 in 10 small business leaders admit they are anxious about the safety of their company’s sensitive data and information. The report found that employee and customer data continue to be the most impacted categories of information in data breaches with 42% of small businesses losing revenue due to a cyber event.
The widespread use of internet-connected devices has given rise to a substantial surge in threat actors targeting small and medium-sized businesses, with malware, phishing and botnets being the most common threats. Daily malware activity has doubled year over year, and peaks in holiday seasons.
Sources: [Help Net Security] [Security Magazine] [Help Net Security] [JDSupra]
Executives May be The Biggest Risk to Your Business as One in Five Share Work Passwords Outside the Company
According to a recent report, nearly half (49%) of C-level executives have requested to bypass one or more security measures in the past year, highlighting a concerning disparity between what business leaders say about cyber and what they do. The research reported one in five sharing their work password with someone outside the company, 77% using easy-to-remember passwords including birth dates, and a third admitting to accessing unauthorised files and data with nearly two-thirds having the ability to edit those files/data.
Additionally, the C-suite was found to be more than three times as likely than regular users to share work devices with unauthorised users. An essential approach to reducing the risks is a tailored training programme that enables all users, including the C-suite, to understand the objective of security controls and the risks caused by bypassing them. Black Arrow offers bespoke training to all roles within the organisation as well as upskilling tailored to those at the board level.
Sources: [Infosecurity Magazine] [Tech Radar] [Security Magazine] [Help Net Security]
Organisations Can Only Stop 57 Percent of Cyber Attacks
According to a report from Tenable, over the last two years, the average organisation's cyber security program was prepared to preventatively defend against, or block, just 57 percent of the cyber attacks it encountered. The report found that 58% of respondents focus almost entirely on fighting successful attacks rather than working to prevent them in the first place. This is put down largely to a struggle to obtain an accurate picture of their attack surface. When it came to risks, 75% viewed cloud infrastructure as the greatest source of exposure risk in their organisation.
Source: [Beta News]
Many Businesses Remain Unprepared for AI as Phishing Attacks Rise 1,265% Since Launch of ChatGPT
Generative AI has revolutionised many aspects of life, offering new opportunities that have also greatly benefited malicious actors. A report has found that since the launch of ChatGPT, phishing attacks have increased by 1,265%. A separate report found that many businesses remain unprepared for the impact of AI, with just 16% of respondents satisfied in their organisation’s understanding of these AI tools.
Sources: [Decrypt] [Infosecurity Magazine] [Emerging Risks]
Business Email Compromise is Most Common Entry Point for Cyber Attack
According to cyber insurance provider Hiscox, almost half of UK businesses have experienced a cyber attack in the last year, an increase of 9% from the previous year. Business email compromise was recorded as the most common point of entry, mentioned by 35% of companies who suffered an attack.
The report found that 20% of attacked organisations received a ransomware demand, slightly up from 19% the previous year. The proportion paying the ransom fell from 66% to 63%, but the median ransom rose 13%.
Sources: [Hiscox] [Digital Journal]
US Regulator Charges Firm and its CISO For Fraud and Cyber Security Failures
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced plans to charge a Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) with fraud for their role in allegedly lying to investors, overstating cyber security practices, and understating or failing to disclose known risks. A key piece of evidence presented by the SEC involved a presentation that was shared with the CISO, detailing a lack of security in the CISO employer’s setup. The presentation highlighted how exploitation could lead to major reputational and financial loss.
The case represents a larger shift in the dynamics and corporate reporting of security issues and within this, lies the professionalism of the CISO role. It is likely that this incident could become the start of something larger.
Sources: [The Record] [Security Week ] [Forbes]
Companies Scramble to Integrate Immediate Recovery into Ransomware Plans
A survey found that 66% of companies are reevaluating their data protection and cyber resilience strategies. Despite this, 35% are not prioritising recovery and only half (56.6%) focused on both recovery and prevention.
Whilst it is important to prevent attacks, nothing is 100% secure and organisations need to ensure that their ransomware plans include recovery as a part of this. If, or when, you experience an attack, you will not want to improvise your recovery.
Source: [Help Net Security]
Your End-Users are Reusing Passwords: That’s a Big Problem
Password reuse is a difficult vulnerability for IT teams to get full visibility over. The danger is often hidden until it turns up in the form of hackers using compromised credentials as an initial access vector. A recent survey revealed that 53% of people admit to reusing passwords, making it easier for attackers to gain access to multiple applications with a single compromised password.
While it is difficult for organisations to maintain visibility over who is reusing passwords, especially if employees are reusing passwords outside of the organisation, there are still ways to combat this. Implementing tools that can check for compromised passwords, using multi-factor authentication and ensuring all employees carry out cyber security and awareness training are a few methods to help combat password re-use.
Source: [Bleeping Computer]
Cyber Workforce Demand is Outpacing Supply
A study by ISC2 stated that we would need to double the cyber workforce to adequately protect organisations and their critical assets. The study found that the gap between the demand and supply grew 12.6%. For organisations, this can mean a struggle in hiring cyber expertise.
To address the challenge of attracting and retaining quality senior security professionals, Black Arrow offers a fractional CISO service that gives flexible access to a whole team of specialists with wide expertise, experience and backgrounds in technology, governance and transformation, for less than the cost of hiring one individual.
Source: [Cyber Scoop]
What the Boardroom Is Missing: CISOs
According to a new study only 12% of S&P 500 companies have board directors with relevant cyber credentials, highlighting a major gap in expertise needed to keep organisations secure. As most organisations shift to digital and cloud-first strategies, businesses of all shapes and sizes must protect their assets. Unfortunately, there's a considerable gap between security leaders and the board directors responsible for managing businesses. A recent Harvard Business Review survey revealed just 47% regularly interact with their company's Chief Information Security Officer (CISO). That's a severe knowledge gap for a company's security and business leaders.
Introducing CISOs to the boardroom is not just about compliance, it's also about ensuring transparency and accountability. CISOs are already building security programs from the ground up. They provide business compliance, hire the right people, and find the right technology to supplement their team's efforts. Security posture is critical to an enterprise's future success, and having a CISO on the board that speaks the language can help a board understand if their business is making suitable security investments.
Source: [Dark Reading]
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Governance, Risk and Compliance
SEC Charges SolarWinds and Its CISO With Fraud and Cyber security Failures - SecurityWeek
SolarWinds Is A Game Changer - You Cannot Sugarcoat Cyber security (forbes.com)
Part of an executive team? You might be the biggest security risk to your business | TechRadar
One in five executives have shared work passwords outside the company | Security Magazine
Organisations can only stop 57 percent of cyber attacks (betanews.com)
Cyber attacks cause revenue losses in 42% of small businesses - Help Net Security
Huge Cyber security Industry Survey Reveals Concerns Over Cuts Amid New Threats - The Messenger
'Are we adversary aligned?' is the new 'Are we secure?' (betanews.com)
Cyber security habits and behaviours executives need to be aware of - Help Net Security
The hidden costs of data breaches for small businesses - Help Net Security
Cyber workforce demand is outpacing supply, survey finds | CyberScoop
How Do We Truly Make Security 'Everyone's Responsibility'? (darkreading.com)
Why lack of training can put cyber security at risk [Q&A] (betanews.com)
Threat Prevention Begins With IT & Security Team Collaboration (darkreading.com)
The CISO’s toolkit must include political capital within the C-suite | CSO Online
CISO Skills in a Changing Security Market: Are You Prepared? (darkreading.com)
Why there’s no one-size-fits all solution to security maturity | TechRadar
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Ransom Groups Threaten Physical Violence as Social Engineering Tactic (darkreading.com)
Companies scramble to integrate immediate recovery into ransomware plans - Help Net Security
Surviving a ransomware attack begins by acknowledging it's inevitable | VentureBeat
Do government sanctions against ransomware groups work? | TechCrunch
Why rookie hackers are capitalizing on ransomware | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Experts Reconsider Banning Ransom Payments as Ransomware Attacks Surge (pymnts.com)
Why ransomware victims can’t stop paying off hackers | TechCrunch
Key Learnings from “Big Game” Ransomware Campaigns - SecurityWeek
New Hunters International ransomware possible rebrand of Hive (bleepingcomputer.com)
SIM Swappers Are Working Directly with Ransomware Gangs Now (404media.co)
One of the most dangerous ransomware kits around might have just gotten a rebrand | TechRadar
Ransomware attacks set to break records in 2023 - Help Net Security
HelloKitty Ransomware Group Exploiting Apache ActiveMQ Vulnerability (thehackernews.com)
Ransomware Victims
Boeing Confirms Cyber Attack, System Compromise (darkreading.com)
CCleaner says hackers stole users’ personal data during MOVEit mass-hack | TechCrunch
Stanford University investigating security incident • The Register
Massive ransomware attack hinders services in 70 German municipalities (therecord.media)
Medical research exec hit in SIM-swap attack by Alphv gang • The Register
Caesars Hackers Accessed Customer Data; Costs to Be Determined (bloomberglaw.com)
Mortgage and loan giant Mr. Cooper blames cyber attack for ongoing outage | TechCrunch
Ransomware attack shuts down Central Florida radiology imager sites (wmfe.org)
British, Toronto Libraries Struggle After Cyber Incidents (darkreading.com)
Ace Hardware says 1,202 devices were hit during cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Artificial Intelligence
Email Phishing Attacks Up 1,265% Since ChatGPT Launched: SlashNext - Decrypt
AI poses new cyber threats with many businesses unprepared (emergingrisks.co.uk)
AI is making cyber attacks even smarter and more dangerous | TechRadar
Biden Issues Executive Order on Safe, Secure AI - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Enterprise AI applications are threatening security | TechRadar
What Lurks in the Dark: Taking Aim at Shadow AI (darkreading.com)
ChatGPT, Bard, lack effective defences against fraudsters, Which? warns | Computer Weekly
Huge Cyber security Industry Survey Reveals Concerns Over Cuts Amid New Threats - The Messenger
Malware
Over a million Windows and Linux systems infected by this tricky new malware | TechRadar
DUCKTAIL Malware employs LinkedIn messages Execute Attacks (gbhackers.com)
Daily malware activity doubled year over year for small businesses | Security Magazine
Iranian Group Tortoiseshell Launches New Wave of IMAPLoader Malware Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Malvertising via Dynamic Search Ads delivers malware bonanza (malwarebytes.com)
Windows PCs are being targeted with a nasty new malware - here's what you need to know | TechRadar
Pro-Hamas Hacktivists Targeting Israeli Entities with Wiper Malware (thehackernews.com)
These Seemingly Innocent Search Terms Could Lead Kids to Malware-Filled Websites (pcmag.com)
Malware 'Meal Kits' Serve Up No-Fuss RAT Attacks (darkreading.com)
Arid Viper Camouflages Malware in Knockoff Dating App (darkreading.com)
Ghostpulse Malware Targets Windows PCs With Fake App Installers (pcmag.com)
Latest RAT attack surge bypasses Microsoft's XLL block • The Register
Mozi malware botnet goes dark after mysterious use of kill-switch (bleepingcomputer.com)
Iranian Cyber Spies Use 'LionTail' Malware in Latest Attacks - SecurityWeek
Turla Updates Kazuar Backdoor with Advanced Anti-Analysis to Evade Detection (thehackernews.com)
Mobile
16 more infected Android apps you need to delete ASAP (bgr.com)
iOS 17.1 finally fixes a three-year-old Private Wi-Fi Address security hole | Macworld
Android 14’s user-profile data bug seems indistinguishable from ransomware | Ars Technica
New banking scams delivered instantly via WhatsApp - F-Secure Blog
Security Expert: Apple's Lockdown Mode Still Defeats Commercial Spyware | PCMag
Google One data breach: Dark web report at your hand - gHacks Tech News
SIM swapping crypto crook jailed, ordered to pay $945,833 • The Register
SIM Swappers Are Working Directly with Ransomware Gangs Now (404media.co)
Israel Calls In Hackers And Spyware Companies To Break Into Abductees’ Phones (forbes.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
DDoS attacks are getting bigger and more powerful, and that's a really bad thing | TechRadar
Why Does "Anonymous" Launch DDoS Cyber Attacks? (makeuseof.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
IoT's convenience comes with cyber security challenges - Help Net Security
RCE exploit for Wyze Cam v3 publicly released, patch now (bleepingcomputer.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
CCleaner says hackers stole users’ personal data during MOVEit mass-hack | TechCrunch
Okta discloses a data breach after a third-party vendor was hacked (securityaffairs.com)
ServiceNow Data Exposure: A Wake-Up Call for Companies (thehackernews.com)
LastPass breach linked to theft of $4.4 million in crypto (bleepingcomputer.com)
Public exposure of data breaches is becoming inevitable – Help Net Security
Browser extensions could capture passwords and sensitive info as plain text (techxplore.com)
Seiged Sec Breach Top Israeli Telecom, Leak Customers Data (dailydot.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
‘Prolific Puma’ Hacker Gives Cyber criminals Access to .us Domains (darkreading.com)
Two Russians indicted for hacking JFK taxi dispatch system • The Register
How cyber criminals adapt and thrive amidst changing consumer trends – Help Net Security
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Crypto thief steals $4.4M in a day as toll rises from LastPass breach (cointelegraph.com)
UK's National Crime Agency Establishes Crypto Investigative Team (mpost.io)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Insurance
Supply Chain and Third Parties
N. Korean Lazarus Group Targets Software Vendor Using Known Flaws (thehackernews.com)
North Korean Hackers Are Trying to Stage Another Supply Chain Hack (pcmag.com)
Okta discloses a data breach after a third-party vendor was hacked (securityaffairs.com)
Cloud/SaaS
Within 5 Minutes, Hackers Were Able to Get AWS Credentials From GitHub (cyber securitynews.com)
Cryptojackers steal AWS credentials from GitHub in 5 minutes • The Register
Microsoft is Getting Serious About Security. Again. - Thurrott.com
Microsoft is overhauling its software security after major Azure cloud attacks - The Verge
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Your end-users are reusing passwords – that’s a big problem (bleepingcomputer.com)
One in five executives have shared work passwords outside the company | Security Magazine
Within 5 Minutes, Hackers Were Able to Get AWS Credentials From GitHub (cybersecuritynews.com)
Browser extensions could capture passwords and sensitive info as plain text (techxplore.com)
Social Media
DUCKTAIL Malware employs LinkedIn messages Execute Attacks (gbhackers.com)
Russian hacking tool floods social networks with bots, researchers say (therecord.media)
Malvertising
Training, Education and Awareness
Finding the right approach to security awareness - Help Net Security
Why lack of training can put cyber security at risk [Q&A] (betanews.com)
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
FTC orders non-bank financial firms to report breaches in 30 days (bleepingcomputer.com)
SEC Charges SolarWinds and Its CISO With Fraud and Cyber security Failures - SecurityWeek
Why The SEC Cyber Security Disclosure Rules Will Improve Cybersecurity (forbes.com)
The UK Online Safety Bill Becomes Law, What Does It Mean? | Hackaday
Biden Issues Executive Order on Safe, Secure AI - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Setting the standard for cyber security across the EU | Business Post
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Top 12 IT security frameworks and standards explained | TechTarget
MITRE Releases ATT&CK v14 With Improvements to Detections, ICS, Mobile - SecurityWeek
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
UK cyber skills gap grows 29% despite record hiring (computing.co.uk)
Cyber workforce demand is outpacing supply, survey finds | CyberScoop
Cyber security workforce shortages: 67% report people deficits - Help Net Security
CISO Skills in a Changing Security Market: Are You Prepared? (darkreading.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Misc Nation State/Cyber Warfare/Cyber Espionage
Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Hacktivist Activity Related to Gaza Conflict Dwindles (darkreading.com)
New BiBi-Linux wiper malware targets Israeli orgs in destructive attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Israel Calls In Hackers And Spyware Companies To Break Into Abductees’ Phones (forbes.com)
China
Spies and Lies: China’s Cyber Espionage Is on an Unprecedented Level | Mind Matters
Microsoft upgrades security for signing keys in wake of Chinese breach | CyberScoop
Russia
Boeing. ‘Sensitive Data’ Reportedly Stolen by Ransomware Group Linked to Russia - The Messenger
Russian hacking tool floods social networks with bots, researchers say (therecord.media)
FSB arrests Russian hackers working for Ukrainian cyber forces (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russia to launch its own version of VirusTotal due to US snooping fears (therecord.media)
A Ukrainian Company Shares Lessons in Wartime Resilience (darkreading.com)
Two Russians indicted for hacking JFK taxi dispatch system • The Register
Iran
Iranian Group Tortoiseshell Launches New Wave of IMAPLoader Malware Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Iranian Cyber Spies Use 'LionTail' Malware in Latest Attacks - SecurityWeek
New Iranian state-sponsored hacking campaign uncovered - SiliconANGLE
FBI Director Warns of Increased Iranian Attacks (darkreading.com)
Iran's MuddyWater Targets Israel in New Spear-Phishing Cyber Campaign (thehackernews.com)
'Scarred Manticore' Unleashes the Most Advanced Iranian Cyber Espionage Yet (darkreading.com)
North Korea
Vulnerability Management
Lazarus Group Looking for Unpatched Software Vulnerabilities (databreachtoday.co.uk)
CVSS 4.0 keys-in on threat intelligence metrics and OT, ICS and IoT | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Vulnerability management metrics: How to measure success - Help Net Security
From Windows 9x to 11: Tracing Microsoft's security evolution - Help Net Security
It's Cheap to Exploit Software — and That's a Major Security Problem (darkreading.com)
Vulnerabilities
Exploit released for critical Cisco IOS XE flaw, many hosts still hacked (bleepingcomputer.com)
F5 fixes BIG-IP auth bypass allowing remote code execution attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers use Citrix Bleed flaw in attacks on govt networks worldwide (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cisco Patches 27 Vulnerabilities in Network Security Products - SecurityWeek
Atlassian warns users: patch critical Confluence flaw ASAP • The Register
Researchers Find 34 Windows Drivers Vulnerable to Full Device Takeover (thehackernews.com)
Urgent: New Security Flaws Discovered in NGINX Ingress Controller for Kubernetes (thehackernews.com)
D-LINK SQL Injection Vulnerability Let Attacker Escalate Privileges (gbhackers.com)
3,000 Apache ActiveMQ servers vulnerable to RCE attacks exposed online (bleepingcomputer.com)
More Than 100 Vulns in Microsoft 365 Tied to SketchUp 3D Library (darkreading.com)
No patches yet for Apple iLeakage side-channel attack | TechTarget
HelloKitty Ransomware Group Exploiting Apache ActiveMQ Vulnerability (thehackernews.com)
iOS 17.1 finally fixes a three-year-old Private Wi-Fi Address security hole | Macworld
Tools and Controls
Companies scramble to integrate immediate recovery into ransomware plans - Help Net Security
Vulnerability management metrics: How to measure success - Help Net Security
6 steps to accelerate cyber security incident response | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Ethical hackers are helping more and more business stay safe | TechRadar
Getting Smart With Cyber security: AI Can Help the Good Guys, Too (darkreading.com)
Massive cyber crime URL shortening service uncovered via DNS data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Huge Cyber security Industry Survey Reveals Concerns Over Cuts Amid New Threats - The Messenger
Defence in depth: Layering your security coverage (securityintelligence.com)
Finding the right approach to security awareness - Help Net Security
Mainframes are around to stay, it’s time to protect them - Help Net Security
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Four Under-The-Radar Security Risks That Can Endanger Your Business (forbes.com)
ING CISO says data sharing is key to financial cyber security (finextra.com)
Threat Prevention Begins With IT & Security Team Collaboration (darkreading.com)
F5 Labs Report Reveals Rise in Malicious Automation | The Fintech Times
Microsoft Vows to Revamp Security Products After Repeated Hacks - Bloomberg
Microsoft launches Secure Future Initiative to bolster security | TechTarget
The 5 Cs of effective cyber defence: Beyond traditional technical skills | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
9 Innovative Ways to Boost Security Hygiene for Cyber Awareness Month (darkreading.com)
How governments can keep data secure in a digital age - New Statesman
Cyber security insights for secure manufacturing - Aerospace Manufacturing and Design
Demystifying the top five OT security myths | Computer Weekly
20 scary cyber security facts and figures for a haunting Halloween (welivesecurity.com)
Construction among industries most at risk from cyber attacks, insurer warns | News | Building
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 13 October 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 13 October 2023:
-Small Businesses Hit by Frequent Cyber Attacks as 90% of CISOs Faced at least One Attack Last Year
-The Most Effective Cyber Attacks Never Touch Your Organisation's Firewall, HR’s Role in Defending the Organisation
-Ransomware Infection Times Fall from 5 Days to 5 Hours
-80% of Security Leaders See AI as the Biggest Threat to Business
-Is Your Board Cyber-Ready?
-Cyber Security Should Be a Business Priority for CEOs
-The Looming Threat of a Single Phishing Click to Your Business
-40% of Organisations Leave Ransomware to IT
-Auditors Growing Concern About Cyber Security
-The Cyber Villains Are Getting Bolder: Businesses Need to Up Their Game
-Preparing for the Unexpected: A Proactive Approach to Operational Resilience
-Staggering Losses to Social Media and Social Engineering Since 21, as Victims Take $2.7 Billion Hit in US Alone
-Organisations Grapple with Detection and Response Despite Rising Security Budgets
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Small Businesses Hit by Frequent Cyber Attacks, as 90% of CISOs of Larger Firms Faced at least One Attack Last Year
A survey by Payroll provider Sage found that nearly 48% of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) have experienced at least one cyber incident in the past year; of note, this is only based on SMEs self-reporting, and requires SMEs to have both the ability to detect an incident and to have actually identified an incident and then self-report it. The survey found that cyber security was a priority with 68% of respondents reporting that they would use a more expensive security control if it demonstrated better security.
In a separate report by Splunk, it was found that 90% of CISOs reported experiencing at least one disruptive attack in the past year. The difference in numbers could be because organisations who have a CISO are more likely to have tools in place to detect an incident.
Regardless, cyber criminals are showing that any size of organisation can be a victim of a cyber incident and in some cases, smaller organisations may not have the necessary budget and controls to prevent an attack.
Sources: [Security Magazine] [Insurance Times] [Infosecurity Magazine]
The Most Effective Cyber Attacks Never Touch Your Organisation’s Firewall, and HR’s Role in Defending the Organisation
In 2022, total spending on cyber security technologies increased to 71.1 billion USD, illustrating just how much effort goes into protecting companies, their data, and their customers. Regardless of all this spending, there remains a popular attack which can bypass this all: social engineering. Attackers know how much technology protection is placed in organisations, so they often try to bypass this and go straight through the employees.
Cyber security will never work if organisations do not go beyond IT; it is a business-wide issue and requires the engagement and input from across the business, including functions like Human Resources. Having effectively trained employees is a crucial part of creating a culture of security within an organisation, and this starts with HR. Employees will often have training as part of their onboarding and then regular training to ensure competencies; as part of HR’s role, this should include commissioning training on cyber security that is delivered by cyber security experts that understand what attackers are doing.
Source: [News Week] [Beta News]
Ransomware Infection Times Fall from 5 Days to 5 Hours
The amount of time it takes an attacker to infect a system with ransomware has fallen drastically over the last 12 months according to a recent report. The median dwell time (the time that an attacker spends in a victim’s network before being detected) was 5.5 days in 2021, reducing to 4.5 days in 2022, and this year it fell to less than 24 hours with, in 10% of cases, the time taken to deploy ransomware being within 5 hours. As threat actors continue to leverage Ransomware as a Service (RaaS) to execute attacks, dwell times will continue to decrease and the number of attacks will increase.
This coincides with a recent survey by Hornetsecurity that revealed that almost 60% of businesses are concerned about ransomware attacks. 92% of businesses are reported to be aware of ransomware’s potential negative impact, but just 54% of respondents say their leadership is actively involved in conversations and decision making to help prevent attacks.
The report highlights that ransomware is still at large, with the first half of 2023 seeing more ransomware victims than in the whole of 2022. Having good cyber security protection and hygiene is the key to ongoing success. Organisations cannot afford to become victims. Ongoing security awareness training and multi-layered ransomware protection are critical to help avoid insurmountable losses.
Sources: [Cision] [PC Mag] [Security Magazine]
80% of Security Leaders See AI as the Biggest Threat to Business
A report has found that a large majority of security leaders (80%) believe Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the biggest cyber threat to their business, and that the risks of AI outweigh the many advantages.
In a separate report, 58% agreed that AI is increasing the number of cyber attacks. The benefits of AI were also recognised however, with 73% reporting AI to be an increasingly important tool for security operations.
With AI finding itself both sides of the coin, it is important for organisations to effectively implement their AI solutions, so that they can improve their security whilst reducing the risk that AI presents to their organisation.
Sources: [Diginomica] [Infosecurity Magazine]
Is Your Board Cyber-Ready?
With the recent US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requirements entering effect, and the impending Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) requirements for Europe, there is yet another layer added to the complicated issues of managing cyber security risks. However, it is clear that strong corporate governance equips companies to address them efficiently and accurately.
Governance starts with the board, as it is responsible for the oversight of the organisation’s cyber security programs. For a board to do this effectively, the leadership team must be able to understand cyber security; yet despite this, a study found that only 12% of boards had a cyber expert. Black Arrow supports business leaders in organisations of all sizes to gain a strong practical understanding of the fundamentals of cyber security risk management, and to demonstrate governance in implementing their cyber security strategy by leveraging their existing internal and external resources.
Sources: [Harvard.edu] [JDSupra]
Cyber Security Should Be a Business Priority for CEOs
A recent report found that despite 96% of CEOs saying that cyber security is critical to organisational growth and stability, 74% of CEOs are concerned about their organisation’s ability to avert or minimise damage arising from a cyber attack. The report also highlighted that 60% of CEOs don’t incorporate cyber security into their business strategies, products or services from the beginning. 44% believe that cyber security requires episodic intervention rather than ongoing attention.
Adding to this reactive stance is the incorrect assumption by 54% of CEOs that the cost of implementing cyber security is higher than the cost of suffering a cyber attack, despite history showing otherwise. For instance, the report notes that a global shipping and logistics company breach resulted in a 20% drop in business volume, with losses hitting $300 million. In addition, despite 90% of CEOs saying cyber security is a differentiating factor for their products or services to help them build customer trust, only 15% have dedicated board meetings to discuss cyber security issues. This disconnect might be explained by the fact that 91% of CEOs said cyber security is a technical function that is the responsibility of the CIO or CISO.
Source: [HelpNet Security]
The Looming Threat of a Single Phishing Click to Your Business
A single click could be all it takes to get the ball rolling and allow an attacker entry into your organisation. From there, the possibilities are endless. Phishing impacts any employee within the organisation with an email account, phone number or access to the web.
Organisations can mitigate this risk however, by conducting training and awareness programmes, aimed at improving employees’ abilities to identify, report and avoid falling victim to phishing incidents. Such training should be held regularly to maintain their knowledge as well as adapting to the ever-changing landscape of cyber crime. Black Arrow supports organisations of all sizes in designing and delivering proportionate user education and awareness programmes, including in-person and online training as well as simulated phishing campaigns. Our programmes help secure employee engagement and build a cyber security culture to protect the organisation.
Source: [CMS-lawnow]
40% of Organisations Leave Ransomware to IT
A report found that 93% of respondents said they believe ransomware protection is “very” to “extremely” important in terms of IT priorities for their organisation, yet only 54% reported that the leadership were actively involved in conversations and decision-making around ransomware attacks, and 40% of total respondents were happy to leave the IT team to deal with ransomware attacks.
By only involving the IT team and excluding the leadership, organisations are at risk of not addressing regulatory requirements, or failing to manage such cyber incidents within a business context. This would also suggest a lack of an effective Incident Response Plan to ensure that considerations such as legal, communications, customers, employees and other stakeholders are not forgotten. Black Arrow works with organisations of all sizes and sectors to design and prepare for managing a cyber security incident; this can include an Incident Response Plan and an educational tabletop exercise for the leadership team that highlights the proportionate controls to help the organisation prevent and mitigate an incident.
Source: [MSSP Alert]
Auditors’ Growing Concern About Cyber Security
The majority of chief audit executives and information technology audit leaders consider cyber security to be a top risk over the next year. The survey found that found that nearly 75% of respondents, and an even higher percentage (82%) of technology audit leaders, consider cyber security to be a high-risk area over the next 12 months.
Source: [Accounting Today]
Preparing for the Unexpected: A Proactive Approach to Operational Resilience
Recent insights highlight a pressing need: ensuring operational resilience in financial firms. As the financial sector remains a prime target for cyber threats, the increasing interconnectedness presents evolving challenges. While cyber security aims to defend against attacks, operational resilience ensures the continuity of operations even when incidents occur.
Notably, the EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) stresses preparedness, providing a framework for the industry. Although business continuity practices exist, operational resilience offers a more proactive stance, ensuring system reliability that is crucial for global financial trust. Achieving this requires a comprehensive risk assessment, laying the groundwork for a resilient strategy tailored to a firm’s unique position in the financial landscape.
Source: [Dark Reading]
Staggering Losses to Social Media and Social Engineering Since 2021, as Victims Take $2.7 Billion Hit in US Alone
The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reports that Americans alone, have lost $2.7 billion to social media and social engineering scams since 2021. The losses were incurred through websites, phone calls and email.
It is important for organisations to consider that such scams could very well find themselves in the corporate environment. Already, there has been a significant rise in attacks on employees through LinkedIn. As such, it is important for organisations to provide education and awareness training to users.
Sources: [Bleeping Computer] [Infosecurity Magazine]
Organisations Grapple with Detection and Response Despite Rising Security Budgets
A study by EY found that only a fifth of cyber security leaders today are confident about their organisation’s cyber security approach, with only half trusting the training they provide in-house. CISO respondents reported an average annual spend of $35 million on cyber security, with the median cost of a breach jumping 12% to $2.5 million. The leaders said they anticipate the cost per breach to reach $4 million by the end of the year.
The report found that the biggest internal challenges to the organisation's cyber security approach were "too many potential attack surfaces" at 52%, and "difficulty balancing security and innovation speed" at 50%. The study also noted big discrepancies between the CISOs and other C-suite leaders when it came to their organisation's cyber security preparedness. While 60% of CISOs were confident about the C-suite integration of cyber security into key business decisions, only over half of other C-suite officers believed they were effective. There was also a significant gap (12%) between their satisfaction with the overall cyber security preparedness.
Source: [CSO Online]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Auditors more worried about cyber security than AI risks | Accounting Today
Cyber Security Survey: 40% of Orgs “Leave” Ransomware to IT | MSSP Alert
Cyber attacks are only getting worse for business, so what are CISOs doing about it? | TechRadar
Warning as more businesses fall victim to cyber attacks | Insurance Times
PwC survey reveals rising concerns over cyber security and generative AI in 2024 - Reinsurance News
The Role of HR in Engaging the Workforce for Holistic Cyber Security (newsweek.com)
90% firms experienced cyber attacks; 83% opted to pay attackers: Report (business-standard.com)
The world was already horrifying — technology is making it more so - The Hustle
Cyber security is a mindset, not just a set of tools and technologies. (techuk.org)
Cyber security should be a business priority for CEOs - Help Net Security
Organisations grapple with detection and response despite rising security budgets | CSO Online
The undeniable benefits of making cyber resiliency the new standard | CSO Online
Preparing for the Unexpected: A Proactive Approach to Operational Resilience (darkreading.com)
Cyber insurance costs pressure business budgets - Help Net Security
C-suite weighs in on generative AI and security (securityintelligence.com)
Cyber security overtakes cloud as top area of investment - The Recycler - 10/10/2023
New Wave of Cyber Threats Challenges In-House Legal Departments (bloomberglaw.com)
Should businesses follow Google’s footsteps in cyber security? | TechRadar
Cyber security is booming but it comes at a human cost (betanews.com)
A Primer on Cyber Risk Acceptance and What it Means to Your Business (bleepingcomputer.com)
A Cyber security Risk Assessment Guide for Leaders (trendmicro.com)
Addressing a Breach Starts With Getting Everyone on the Same Page (darkreading.com)
Uber's Ex-CISO Appeals Conviction Over 2016 Data Breach (darkreading.com)
6 steps to getting the board on board with your cyber security program (welivesecurity.com)
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
First half of 2023 sees more ransomware victims than all of 2022 | Security Magazine
Cyber security Survey: 40% of Orgs “Leave” Ransomware to IT | MSSP Alert
Cyber criminals can go from click to compromise in less than a day - Help Net Security
Ransomware Infection Times Fall From 5 Days to 5 Hours (pcmag.com)
Ransomwared health insurer wasn't using anti-virus software • The Register
Everest searching for corporate insiders amid rare pivot • The Register
HelloKitty ransomware source code leaked on hacking forum (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to Prevent Ransomware as a Service (RaaS) Attacks (trendmicro.com)
SEC Investigating Progress Software Over MOVEit Hack - Security Week
Ransomware attacks now target unpatched WS_FTP servers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Attack on Hospitals Highlights Need to Ensure Continuity of Patient Care (fdd.org)
Ransomware Victims
Cyber attack victim Estes making ‘steady progress’ - FreightWaves
Caesars Offers Two Years of IDX Services to Compromised Data Victims - GamblingNews
Ransomwared health insurer wasn't using anti-virus software • The Register
BianLian extortion group claims recent Air Canada breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
The looming threat of a single phishing click to your business (cms-lawnow.com)
What to do if you’ve clicked on a phishing link or talked to scammers | Kaspersky official blog
LinkedIn Smart Links attacks return to target Microsoft accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing, the campaigns that are affecting Italy (securityaffairs.com)
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Artificial Intelligence
PwC survey reveals rising concerns over cyber security and generative AI in 2024 - Reinsurance News
'Really frightening': IT leaders on cyber security in the age of AI (computing.co.uk)
Cyber security pros predict rise of malicious AI - Help Net Security
Why 80% of CISOs see AI as the biggest threat to their business (diginomica.com)
C-suite weighs in on generative AI and security (securityintelligence.com)
68 percent of IT decision makers are worried about the rise of deepfakes (betanews.com)
US Space Force Pauses Generative AI Based on Security Concerns (bloomberglaw.com)
Generative AI Security: Preventing Microsoft Copilot Data Exposure (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to Guard Your Data from Exposure in ChatGPT (thehackernews.com)
2FA/MFA
Malware
Mirai DDoS malware variant expands targets with 13 router exploits (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft to kill off VBScript in Windows to block malware delivery (bleepingcomputer.com)
How Keyloggers Have Evolved From the Cold War to Today (darkreading.com)
Endpoint malware attacks decline as campaigns spread wider - Help Net Security
Mobile
Beware - GoldDigger malware will drain your bank accounts without you even realizing | TechRadar
China-based Supply Chain Cyber Attacks Hit Thousands of Android Devices | MSSP Alert
Android devices shipped with backdoored firmware as part of the BADBOX network (securityaffairs.com)
Operation Behind Predator Mobile Spyware Is 'Industrial Scale' (darkreading.com)
Hacktivists send fake nuclear attack warning via Israeli Red Alert app (bitdefender.com)
5 quick tips to strengthen your Android phone security today | ZDNET
Botnets
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
HTTP/2 Zero-Day Vulnerability Results in Record-Breaking DDoS Attacks (cloudflare.com)
Google, Amazon Face Massive Denial-of-Service Attack | MSSP Alert
Internet of Things – IoT
Automotive cyber security: A decade of progress and challenges - Help Net Security
Android TV malware case worsens: Tens of millions of devices infected - FlatpanelsHD
Have You Changed the Default Passwords on Your IoT Devices? (makeuseof.com)
Android devices shipped with backdoored firmware as part of the BADBOX network (securityaffairs.com)
Mirai Variant IZ1H9 Adds 13 Exploits to Arsenal - Security Week
Exposed security cameras in Israel and Palestine pose significant risks (securityaffairs.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
3.81 billion records compromised by cyber security incidents in September 2023 (itsecuritywire.com)
23andMe Cyberbreach Exposes DNA Data, Potential Family Ties (darkreading.com)
DC Board of Elections confirms voter data stolen in site hack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Lyca Mobile says customer data was stolen during cyber attack | TechCrunch
Third Flagstar Bank data breach since 2021 affects 800,000 customers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Caesars Offers Two Years of IDX Services to Compromised Data Victims - GamblingNews
Air Europa customers urged to cancel cards following hack on payment system (therecord.media)
Dymocks breach happened while changing providers | Information Age | ACS
Shadow PC warns of data breach as hacker tries to sell gamers' info (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
The cyber villains are getting bolder. Businesses need to up their game - Raconteur
Protecting your business against the cyber criminal enterprise (techuk.org)
Cyber attackers are combining attacks to bypass detection (siliconrepublic.com)
Hackers 'don't break in anymore, they log in,' expert explains (yahoo.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
‘I felt powerless’: how a crypto scam cost a finance boss £300,000 | Scams | The Guardian
Inside FTX’s All-Night Race to Stop a $1 Billion Crypto Heist | WIRED
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Everest searching for corporate insiders amid rare pivot • The Register
Former US soldier accused of trying to pass secrets to China • The Register
Understanding the human factor of digital safety | TechRadar
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Fooled by cyber criminals: The humanitarian CEO scammed by hackers - GZERO Media
Global job scam to cause $100 mn in losses for over 1,000 companies: Report (odishatv.in)
FTC warns of ‘staggering’ losses to social media scams since 2021 (bleepingcomputer.com)
The dark side of solar panels – how crooks are exploiting net zero (telegraph.co.uk)
Chinese Criminals Backdoor Android Devices for Ad Fraud (govinfosecurity.com)
‘I felt powerless’: how a crypto scam cost a finance boss £300,000 | Scams | The Guardian
Inside FTX’s All-Night Race to Stop a $1 Billion Crypto Heist | WIRED
What to do if you’ve clicked on a phishing link or talked to scammers | Kaspersky official blog
Never click on bank-draining words if message pops up, expert warns (ladbible.com)
Boss of world’s largest cinema chain victim of catfish blackmail plot | Business | The Guardian
Deepfakes
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Insurance
Cyber insurance costs pressure business budgets - Help Net Security
Insurance industry faces growing concerns over cyber cat risk: Gallagher Re - Reinsurance News
Cyber Insurance Lessens the Sting of Corporate Cyber Attacks (bloomberglaw.com)
Keeping up with the demands of the cyber insurance market - Help Net Security
Insurance cover ‘sufficient’ for $100mn cyber attack hit: MGM (insuranceinsider.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Why open-source software supply chain attacks have tripled in a year | CSO Online
New One-Click Exploit Is a Supply Chain Risk for Linux OSes (darkreading.com)
Cloud/SaaS
The Need for Speed: When Cloud Attacks Take Only 10 Minutes (darkreading.com)
Microsoft and Cabinet Office issue government-wide security guidelines for M365 – PublicTechnology
Securely Moving Financial Services to the Cloud (darkreading.com)
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
New cryptographic protocol aims to bolster open-source software security | ZDNET
Linux Foundation Announces OpenPubkey Open Source Cryptographic Protocol - Security Week
API
Open Source and Linux
New cryptographic protocol aims to bolster open-source software security | ZDNET
Why open-source software supply chain attacks have tripled in a year | CSO Online
Linux Foundation Announces OpenPubkey Open Source Cryptographic Protocol - Security Week
Security Patch for Two New Flaws in Curl Library Arriving on October 11 (thehackernews.com)
Maintainers warn of vulnerability affecting foundational open-source tool (therecord.media)
New One-Click Exploit Is a Supply Chain Risk for Linux OSes (darkreading.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
CISA publishes top 10 most common security misconfigurations • The Register
Have You Changed the Default Passwords on Your IoT Devices? (makeuseof.com)
Social Media
FTC warns of ‘staggering’ losses to social media scams since 2021 (bleepingcomputer.com)
LinkedIn Smart Links attacks return to target Microsoft accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Brands Beware: X's New Badge System Is a Ripe Cyber-Target (darkreading.com)
What should you do if your Facebook is hacked? (pocket-lint.com)
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Data Protection
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Work-related stress “keeps cyber professionals up at night” | ITPro
Cyber security is booming but it comes at a human cost (betanews.com)
eBook: Cyber security career hacks for newcomers - Help Net Security
Turning military veterans into cyber security experts - Help Net Security
CISO Pay Increases Are Slowing – a Look Behind the Figures - Security Week
Skills-based Hiring Can Address Cyber Workforce Shortfalls (fdd.org)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
European Police Hackathon Hunts Down Traffickers - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Misc Nation State/Cyber Warfare
Hacking Groups, Including Some Tied to Russia, Are Attacking Israeli Websites (insurancejournal.com)
Cyber Metamorphosis: Ukraine Conflict's Impact on the Threat Landscape (govinfosecurity.com)
Hackers For Hire Hit Both Sides in Israel-Hamas Conflict (darkreading.com)
Beyond the Front Lines: How the Israel-Hamas War Impacts the Cyber security Industry - Security Week
Hamas 'using social engineering attacks' in conflict with Israel (techmonitor.ai)
Could Middle Eastern Cyberwarfare Spill Into Health Sector? (inforisktoday.com)
The Cyberwar Between the East and the West Goes Through Africa (darkreading.com)
Hamas 'using social engineering attacks' in conflict with Israel (techmonitor.ai)
Russia
Dark Horse Ukraine Proves Resistant to Onslaught of Russian Cyber Attacks (kyivpost.com)
Kremlin-Linked Hacker Group Launches Cyber-Attack Against Israel (kyivpost.com)
Russian hacker group "Killnet" declares cyberwar on Israel | Al Bawaba
Gaza-linked hackers and Pro-Russia groups are targeting Israel (securityaffairs.com)
Hacking Groups, Including Some Tied to Russia, Are Attacking Israeli Websites (insurancejournal.com)
Cyber Metamorphosis: Ukraine Conflict's Impact on the Threat Landscape (govinfosecurity.com)
China
A Frontline Report of Chinese Threat Actor Tactics and Techniques (darkreading.com)
Why One Of The Largest Cyber-Attacks Is Still A Mystery (slashgear.com)
Chinese Hackers Target Semiconductor Firms in East Asia with Cobalt Strike (thehackernews.com)
Chinese Criminals Backdoor Android Devices for Ad Fraud (govinfosecurity.com)
China-based Supply Chain Cyber Attacks Hit Thousands of Android Devices | MSSP Alert
Former US soldier accused of trying to pass secrets to China • The Register
Researchers Uncover Grayling APT's Ongoing Attack Campaign Across Industries (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft: China's Behind Atlassian Confluence Attacks; PoCs Available (darkreading.com)
Iran
Escalation In Iranian Cyber Operations: A Shift Toward Espionage | Iran International (iranintl.com)
North Korea
Vulnerability Management
Developers take as long as one month to patch security flaws, Synopsys finds (axios.com)
Vulnerability Behind “Largest Attack in Internet History” Found | MSSP Alert
Vulnerabilities
Patch Now: Massive RCE Campaign Wrangles Routers Into Botnet (darkreading.com)
Patch Tuesday: Code Execution Flaws in Adobe Commerce, Photoshop - Security Week
Google Chrome 118 is a massive security update - gHacks Tech News
Security Patch for Two New Flaws in Curl Library Arriving on October 11 (thehackernews.com)
Adobe Acrobat Reader Vuln Now Under Attack (darkreading.com)
Ransomware attacks now target unpatched WS_FTP servers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical Zero-Day Bug in Atlassian Confluence Under Active Exploit (informationweek.com)
WhatsApp exploits commanding multi-million prices (computing.co.uk)
High-Severity Vulnerabilities Discovered in WebM Project’s Libraries (paloaltonetworks.com)
Credential Harvesting Campaign Targets Unpatched NetScaler Instances - Security Week
Over 17,000 WordPress sites hacked in Balada Injector attacks last month (bleepingcomputer.com)
Thousands of WordPress sites have been hacked through tagDiv plugin vulnerability | Ars Technica
New WordPress backdoor creates rogue admin to hijack websites (bleepingcomputer.com)
libcue Library Flaw Opens GNOME Linux Systems Vulnerable to RCE Attacks (thehackernews.com)
D-Link WiFi range extender vulnerable to command injection attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Maintainers warn of vulnerability affecting foundational open-source tool (therecord.media)
Apple releases iOS 16.7.1 to plug critical security holes | Macworld
The SEC is said to be investigating a Twitter security flaw from the pre-Musk era (engadget.com)
Microsoft: China's Behind Atlassian Confluence Attacks; PoCs Available (darkreading.com)
35 Squid proxy bugs still unpatched after 2 years • The Register
Fortinet Releases Security Updates for Multiple Products | CISA
Tools and Controls
Organisations grapple with detection and response despite rising security budgets | CSO Online
Preparing for the Unexpected: A Proactive Approach to Operational Resilience (darkreading.com)
A Primer on Cyber Risk Acceptance and What it Means to Your Business (bleepingcomputer.com)
Reassessing the Impacts of Risk Management With NIST Framework 2.0 (darkreading.com)
16 Essential Factors To Cover In A Disaster Recovery Plan (forbes.com)
A Cyber Security Risk Assessment Guide for Leaders (trendmicro.com)
Addressing a Breach Starts With Getting Everyone on the Same Page (darkreading.com)
Google, Yahoo Push DMARC, Forcing Companies to Catch Up (darkreading.com)
You can't avoid APIs, so you need to secure them (betanews.com)
What is External Attack Surface Management (EASM)? | UpGuard
Why You Should Phish In Your Own (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Why zero trust delivers even more resilience than you think - Help Net Security
Unmasking the limitations of yearly penetration tests - Help Net Security
Keeping up with the demands of the cyber insurance market - Help Net Security
Cyber attackers are combining attacks to bypass detection (siliconrepublic.com)
Keep on keeping your organisation informed to stay cyber secure (techuk.org)
Why identity infrastructure is the new cyberattack surface (siliconrepublic.com)
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Cyber security is a mindset, not just a set of tools and technologies. (techuk.org)
Large law firms experiencing two 'cyber incidents' a month - Legal Futures
Small businesses growing target for cyber criminals (planetradio.co.uk)
The world was already horrifying — technology is making it more so - The Hustle
Legions of Critical Infrastructure Devices Subject to Cyber Targeting (darkreading.com)
Subsea cable business seeks to plug its security holes (lightreading.com)
Old-School Attacks Are Still a Danger, Despite Newer Techniques (darkreading.com)
Protect Critical Infrastructure With Same Rigor as Classified Networks (darkreading.com)
Drug dealers hijack NHS, police and Crimestoppers websites to sell coke in plain sight - Daily Star
Proactive not reactive: adjusting the approach to cyber crime in education
Magecart Campaign Hijacks 404 Pages to Steal Data (darkreading.com)
As biohacking evolves, how vulnerable are we to cyber threats? - Help Net Security
Electric Power System Cyber Security Vulnerabilities (trendmicro.com)
Securing the Food Pipeline from Cyber Attacks (newswise.com)
US construction giant reports cyber security incident • The Register
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 28th July 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 28 July 2023:
-Half of UK businesses Struggle to Fill Cyber Security Skills Gap as Companies Encounter Months-long Delays in Filling Critical Security Positions
-Deloitte Joins fellow Big Four MOVEit victims PWC, EY as MOVEit Victims Exceeds 500
-Why Cyber Security Should Be Part of Your ESG Strategy
-Lawyers Take Frontline Role in Business Response to Cyber Attacks
-Organisations Face Record $4.5M Per Data Breach Incident
-Cryptojacking Soars as Cyber Attacks Diversify
-Ransomware Attacks Skyrocket in 2023
-Blocking Access to ChatGPT is a Short-Term Solution to Mitigate AI Risk
-Protect Your Data Like Your Reputation Depends on It (Because it Does)
-Why CISOs Should Get Involved with Cyber Insurance Negotiation
-Companies Must Have Corporate Cyber Security Experts, SEC Says
-Over 400,000 Corporate Credentials Stolen by Info-stealing Malware
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Half of UK Businesses Struggle to Fill Cyber Security Skills Gap
Half of UK businesses have a cyber security skills gap that they are struggling to fill amid a challenging labour market, according to data published by the UK Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT), which found that there were more than 160,000 cyber security job postings in the last year – a 30% increase on the previous period. In all, the UK requires an additional 11,200 people with suitable cyber skills to meet the demands of the market, the report estimates.
In a separate report, it was found that a lack of executive understanding and an ever-widening talent gap is placing an unsustainable burden on security teams to prevent business-ending breaches. When asked how long it takes to fill a cyber security role, 82% of organisations report it takes three months or longer, with 34% reporting it takes seven months or more. These challenges have led one-third (33%) of organisations to believe they will never have a fully-staffed security team with the proper skills.
With such a gap, some organisations have turned to outsourcing cyber security roles, such as chief information security officers (CISOs), leading to a rise in virtual CISOs (vCISO). With outsourcing, organisations can ensure that they are easily able to pick up and use cyber security experts, greatly reducing the delay were they to hire. Black Arrow supports clients as their vCISO with specialist experience in cyber security risk management in a business context.
https://www.uktech.news/cybersecurity/uk-cybersecurity-skills-gap-20230725
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/07/26/security-teams-executive-burden/
Deloitte Joins Fellow Big Four MOVEit victims PWC, EY as Victims Exceed 500
The global auditing and accounting firm Deloitte appeared alongside a further 55 MOVEit victims that were recently named by the Cl0p ransomware gang, making them the third Big Four accounting firm to be affected and amongst over 500 organisations in total with that number expected to continue to increase.
Research by Kroll has also uncovered a new exfiltration method used by Cl0p in their the MOVEit attacks, highlighting constant efforts by the ransomware gang. Worryingly, it has been reported that Cl0p have made between $75-100 million from ransom payments and it is expected this, along with the victim count, will rise.
https://cybernews.com/security/deloitte-big-four-moveit-pwc-ey-clop/
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/clop-could-make-100m-moveit/
Why Cyber Security Should Be Part of Your ESG Strategy
Organisations need to consider cyber security risks in their overall environmental, social and governance (ESG) strategy amid growing cyber threats and regulatory scrutiny. The ESG programme is, in many ways, a form of risk management to mitigate the risks to businesses, societies and the environment, all of which can be impacted by cyber security. The investment community has been singling out cyber security as one of the major risks that ESG programmes will need to address due to the potential financial losses, reputational damage and business continuity risks posed by a growing number of cyber attacks and data breaches.
Various ESG reporting frameworks have emerged in recent years to provide organisations with guidelines on how they can operate ethically and sustainably, along with metrics that they can use to measure their progress. There are also specific IT security standards and frameworks, including ISO 27001 and government guidelines. Some regulators have gone as far as mandating the adoption of baseline security standards by critical infrastructure operators and firms in industries like financial services, but that does not mean organisations outside of regulated sectors are less pressured to shore up their cyber security posture.
https://www.computerweekly.com/news/366545432/Why-cyber-security-should-be-part-of-your-ESG-strategy
Lawyers Take Frontline Role in Business Response to Cyber Attacks
Cyber security risk has shot to the top of general counsels’ agendas as the sophistication and frequency of attacks has grown. According to security company Sophos’s State of Ransomware 2023 report, 44% of UK businesses surveyed said they had been hit with ransomware in the past year. Of those affected, 33% said their data was encrypted and stolen and a further 6% said that their data was not encrypted but they experienced extortion.
In-house lawyers have a key role around the boardroom table when dealing with a breach including war-gaming and discussing cases in which a company will pay a ransom. The advent of General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) legislation in Europe, and equivalents elsewhere, demands that businesses hit by a data breach notify a regulator, and the individuals whose data was stolen, or both, depending on certain factors. This has led to far greater exposure of cyber incidents which companies previously could have tried to deal with privately.
https://www.ft.com/content/2af44ae8-78fc-4393-88c3-0d784a850331
Organisations Face Record $4.5M Per Data Breach Incident
In a recent report conducted by IBM, the average cost per data breach for US business in 2023 jumped to $4.45 million, a 15% increase over three years. In the UK, the average cost was found to be £3.4 million, rising to £5.3 million for financial services. It is likely that the cost per breach will maintain a continual rise, with organisations struggling to crack down on cyber crime, something threat groups like Cl0p are taking advantage of.
https://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/orgs-record-4.5m-data-breach-incident
Cryptojacking Soars as Cyber Attacks Diversify
According to a recent report, a variety of attacks have increased globally, including cryptojacking (399%), IoT malware (37%) and encrypted threats (22%). This reflects the increase in actors who are changing their methods of attacks. The report found that we can expect more state-sponsored activity targeting a broader set of victims in 2023, including SMBs, government entities and enterprises.
Cryptojacking, sometimes referred to as malicious cryptomining, is where an attacker will use a victim’s device to mine cryptocurrency, giving the attacker free money at the expense of your device, network health and electricity.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/07/27/cryptojacking-attacks-rise/
Ransomware Attacks Skyrocket in 2023
Ransomware attacks surged by 74% in Q2 2023 compared to the first three months of the year, a new report has found. The significant increase in ransomware over April, May and June 2023 suggests that attackers are regrouping. In July 2023, the blockchain analysis firm Chainalysis found that in the first half of 2023, ransomware attackers extorted $176m more than the same period in 2022, reversing a brief downward trend in 2022.
The report also observed an uptick in “pure extortion attacks,” with cyber criminals increasingly relying on the threat of data leaks rather than encrypting data to extort victims. Such schemes may not trigger any ransomware detection capability but could potentially be picked up by a robust Data Loss Prevention (DLP) solution.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/ransomware-attacks-skyrocket-q2/
Blocking Access to ChatGPT is a Short-Term Solution to Mitigate AI Risk
Despite the mass adoption of generative AI, most companies don’t know how to assess its security, exposing them to risks and disadvantages if they don’t change their approach. A report found that for every 10,000 enterprise users, an enterprise organisation is experiencing approximately 183 incidents of sensitive data being posted to ChatGPT per month. Worryingly, despite the security issues, only 45% have an enterprise-wide strategy to ensure a secure, aligned deployment of AI across the entire organisation.
Blocking access to AI related content and AI applications is a short term solution to mitigate risk, but comes at the expense of the potential benefits that AI apps offer to supplement corporate innovation and employee productivity. The data shows that in financial services and healthcare nearly 1 in 5 organisations have implemented a blanket ban on employee use of ChatGPT, while in the technology sector, only 1 in 20 organisations have done likewise.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/07/28/chatgpt-exposure/
https://www.techradar.com/pro/lots-of-sensitive-data-is-still-being-posted-to-chatgpt
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/07/25/generative-ai-strategy/
Protect Your Data Like Your Reputation Depends on It (Because it Does)
Data breaches can be incredibly costly. Be it lawsuits, regulatory fines, or a fall in stock price, the financial consequences of a breach can bring even the largest organisation to its knees. However, in the face of economic damage, it’s too easy to overlook the vast reputational impacts that often do more harm to a business. After all, it’s relatively easy to recoup monetary losses, less so to regain customer trust.
It’s important to remember that reputational damage isn’t limited to consumer perceptions. Stakeholder, shareholder, and potential buyer perception is also something that needs to be considered. By having effective defence in depth controls including robust data loss prevention (DLP) solutions in place, organisations can reduce the risk of a breach from happening.
Why CISOs Should Get Involved with Cyber Insurance Negotiation
Generally negotiating cyber insurance policies falls to the general counsel, chief financial officer, or chief operations officer. Having the chief information security officer (CISO) at the table when negotiating with insurance brokers or carriers is a best practice for ensuring the insurers understand not only which security controls are in place, but why the controls are configured the way they are and the organisation's strategy. That said, often best practices are ignored for reasons of expediency and lack of acceptance by other C-suite executives.
Sometimes being the CISO can be a no-win position. According to a recent survey more than half of all CISOs report to a technical corporate officer rather than the business side of the organisation. This lack of recognition by the board can diminish the CISO's ability to deliver business-imperative insights and recommendations, leaving operations to have a more commanding influence on the board than cyber security. Too often the CISO gets the responsibility to protect the company without the authority and budget to accomplish their task.
Companies Must Have Corporate Cyber Security Experts, SEC Says
A recent report has found that only five Fortune 100 companies currently list a security professional in the executive leadership pages of their websites. This is largely unchanged from five of the Fortune 100 in 2018. One likely reason why a great many companies still don’t include their security leaders within their highest echelons is that these employees do not report directly to the company’s CEO, board of directors, or chief risk officer.
The chief security officer (CSO) or chief information security officer (CISO) position traditionally has reported to an executive in a technical role, such as the chief technology officer (CTO) or chief information officer (CIO). But workforce experts say placing the CISO/CSO on unequal footing with the organisation’s top leaders makes it more likely that cyber security and risk concerns will take a backseat to initiatives designed to increase productivity and generally grow the business.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has recently implemented new regulations necessitating publicly traded companies to report cyber attacks within four business days, once they're deemed material incidents. While the SEC is not presently advocating for the need to validate a board cyber security expert's credentials, it continues to insist that cyber security expertise within management be duly reported to them. The increased disclosure should help companies compare practices and may spur improvements in cyber defences, but meeting the new disclosure standards could be a bigger challenge for smaller companies with limited resources.
Over 400,000 Corporate Credentials Stolen by Info-stealing Malware
Information stealers are malware that steal data stored in applications such as web browsers, email clients, instant messengers, cryptocurrency wallets, file transfer protocol (FTP) clients, and gaming services. The stolen information is packaged into archives called 'logs,' which are then uploaded back to the threat actor for use in attacks or sold on cyber crime marketplaces. Worryingly, employees use personal devices for work or access personal stuff from work computers, and this may result in many info-stealer infections stealing business credentials and authentication cookies. A report has found there are over 400,000 corporate credentials stolen, from applications such as Salesforce, Google Cloud and AWS. Additionally, there was a significant increase in the number containing OpenAI credentials; this is alarming as where AI is used without governance, the credentials may leak things such as internal business strategies and source code.
With such an array of valuable information for an attacker, it is no wonder incidents involving info stealers doubled in Q1 2023. Organisations can best protect themselves by utilising password managers, enforcing multi-factor authentication and having strict usage controls. Additionally, user awareness training can help avoid common infection channels such as malicious websites and adverts.
https://www.scmagazine.com/news/infostealer-incidents-more-than-doubled-in-q1-2023
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Data Breaches Cost Businesses $4.5M on Average (darkreading.com)
Why CISOs Should Get Involved With Cyber Insurance Negotiation (darkreading.com)
SEC now requires companies to disclose cyber attacks in 4 days (bleepingcomputer.com)
Companies Must Have Corporate Cyber security Experts, SEC Says (darkreading.com)
Companies encounter months-long delays in filling critical security positions - Help Net Security
Enterprises should layer-up security to avoid legal repercussions - Help Net Security
Explaining risk maturity models and how they work | TechTarget
Why cyber security should be part of your ESG strategy | Computer Weekly
The old “trust but verify” adage should be the motto for every CISO | CSO Online
Companies are rushing into generative AI without a cohesive, secure strategy - Help Net Security
Few Fortune 100 Firms List Security Pros in Their Executive Ranks – Krebs on Security
The critical cyber security backup plan too many companies are ignoring (cnbc.com)
Protect Your Data Like Your Reputation Depends On It (Because It Does) (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Why Computer Security Advice Is More Confusing Than It Should Be (darkreading.com)
Why whistleblowers in cyber security are important and need support | CSO Online
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Clop now leaks data stolen in MOVEit attacks on clearweb sites (bleepingcomputer.com)
MOVEit Vulnerability Investigations Uncover Additional Exfiltration Method (kroll.com)
Clop Could Make $100m from MOVEit Campaign - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
The tail of the MOVEit hack may be longer than we realize | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Millions of people's healthcare files accessed by Clop gang • The Register
Ransomware Attacks Skyrocket in Q2 2023 - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Local Governments Targeted for Ransomware – How to Prevent Falling Victim (thehackernews.com)
New Nitrogen malware pushed via Google Ads for ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Dozens of Organisations Targeted by Akira Ransomware - SecurityWeek
The FBI's Cynthia Kaiser on how the bureau fights ransomware | CyberScoop
Risk & Repeat: Are data extortion attacks ransomware? | TechTarget
ALPHV ransomware adds data leak API in new extortion strategy (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware: Sophos says most universities pay | Times Higher Education (THE)
Ransomware Victims
PwC has data leaked on the clear web - Cyber Security Connect
Deloitte joins fellow Big Four MOVEit victims PWC, EY | Cybernews
DHL investigating MOVEit breach as number of victims surpasses 20 million (therecord.media)
Up to 11 Million People Hit by MOVEit Hack at Government Services Firm Maximus - SecurityWeek
Millions of people's healthcare files accessed by Clop gang • The Register
Tampa General Hospital Says Patient Information Stolen in Ransomware Attack - SecurityWeek
Yamaha confirms cyber attack after multiple ransomware gangs claim attacks (therecord.media)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Chinese Hackers Breached Ambassador’s Email - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
China’s Breach of Microsoft Cloud Email May Expose Deeper Problems | WIRED
Stolen Microsoft key may have opened up more than inboxes • The Register
The Email Threat Landscape, Q1 2023: Key Takeaways (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
How to avoid LinkedIn phishing attacks in the enterprise | TechTarget
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Artificial Intelligence
Blocking access to ChatGPT is a short term solution to mitigate risk - Help Net Security
UN Security Council to hold first talks on AI risks | Reuters
Companies are rushing into generative AI without a cohesive, secure strategy - Help Net Security
ChatGPT, Other Generative AI Apps Prone to Compromise, Manipulation (darkreading.com)
Lots of sensitive data is still being posted to ChatGPT | TechRadar
Dark Web Markets Offer New FraudGPT AI Tool - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Top FBI officials warn of 'unparalleled' threat from China and AI | CyberScoop
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly of Generative AI - SecurityWeek
OpenAI, Meta and other tech firms sign onto White House AI commitments | FedScoop
Intel's deepfake detector tested on real and fake videos - BBC News
How is the Dark Web Reacting to the AI Revolution? (bleepingcomputer.com)
Malware
Over 400,000 corporate credentials stolen by info-stealing malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Infostealer incidents more than doubled in Q1 2023 | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
The Alarming Rise of Infostealers: How to Detect this Silent Threat (thehackernews.com)
Decoy Dog: New Breed of Malware Posing Serious Threats to Enterprise Networks (thehackernews.com)
Rust-based malware used to hack both Windows and Linux servers - Neowin
Lazarus hackers hijack Microsoft IIS servers to spread malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
FIN8 is rewriting its backdoor malware to avoid detection | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
New Nitrogen malware pushed via Google Ads for ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
New P2PInfect worm malware targets Linux and Windows Redis servers (bleepingcomputer.com)
HotRat: New Variant of AsyncRAT Malware Spreading Through Pirated Software (thehackernews.com)
Who and What is Behind the Malware Proxy Service SocksEscort? – Krebs on Security
Mobile
Chinese-backed Hacking Group Launches Two Bugs Targeting Android Devices - MSSP Alert
Spyhide stalkerware is spying on tens of thousands of phones | TechCrunch
Botnets
Hackers Target Apache Tomcat Servers for Mirai Botnet and Crypto Mining (thehackernews.com)
Multiple DDoS Botnets Exploiting Recent Zyxel Vulnerability - SecurityWeek
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Critical UK Infrastructures in the crosshairs of DDoS attacks (link11.com)
Zyxel users still getting hacked by DDoS botnet emerge as public nuisance No. 1 | Ars Technica
Anonymous Sudan DDoS strikes dominate attacks by KillNet collective | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
BYOD
Internet of Things – IoT
Peloton Bugs Expose Enterprise Networks to IoT Attacks (darkreading.com)
Microsoft previews Defender for IoT firmware analysis service (bleepingcomputer.com)
Axis Door Controller Vulnerability Exposes Facilities to Physical, Cyber Threats - SecurityWeek
Data Breaches/Leaks
Capita breach class action nears 1,000 sign-ups • The Register
VirusTotal: We're sorry for mistake that exposed 5,000 users • The Register
Deloitte joins fellow Big Four MOVEit victims PWC, EY | Cybernews
NATO investigating apparent breach of unclassified information sharing platform | CyberScoop
BreachForums database and private chats for sale in hacker data breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nice Suzuki, sport: shame dealer left your data up for grabs - Security Affairs
Johns Hopkins hit with class action lawsuit connected to data breach - CBS Baltimore (cbsnews.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
The New Summer Vacation Necessity: Cyber Hygiene (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
BreachForums database and private chats for sale in hacker data breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Cryptojacking soars as cyber attacks increase, diversify - Help Net Security
Hackers Target Apache Tomcat Servers for Mirai Botnet and Crypto Mining (thehackernews.com)
Lazarus hackers linked to $60 million Alphapo cryptocurrency heist (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Realst macOS malware steals your cryptocurrency wallets (bleepingcomputer.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Dark Web Markets Offer New FraudGPT AI Tool - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Consumers demand more from businesses when it comes to security - Help Net Security
CISOs gear up to combat the rising threat of B2B fraud - Help Net Security
MPs launch inquiry into prosecution of Norton Motorcycles pension fraud | Crime | The Guardian
Insurance
Why CISOs Should Get Involved With Cyber Insurance Negotiation (darkreading.com)
Brave New World of Cyber Insurance Meets Old-World Contract Principles | New Jersey Law Journal
Dark Web
BreachForums database and private chats for sale in hacker data breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
How is the Dark Web Reacting to the AI Revolution? (bleepingcomputer.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Capita breach class action nears 1,000 sign-ups • The Register
DHL investigating MOVEit breach as number of victims surpasses 20 million (therecord.media)
The tail of the MOVEit hack may be longer than we realize | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Up to 11 Million People Hit by MOVEit Hack at Government Services Firm Maximus - SecurityWeek
Banking Sector Targeted in Open-Source Software Supply Chain Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Strengthening the weakest links in the digital supply chain - Help Net Security
JumpCloud hack linked to North Korea after OPSEC mistake (bleepingcomputer.com)
Supply Chain Attack Hits NHS Ambulance Trusts - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Software Supply Chain
Cloud/SaaS
China’s Breach of Microsoft Cloud Email May Expose Deeper Problems | WIRED
Microsoft 365 Breach Risk Widens to Millions of Azure AD Apps (darkreading.com)
JumpCloud hack linked to North Korea after OPSEC mistake (bleepingcomputer.com)
Wiz Says 62% of AWS Environments Exposed to Zenbleed Exploitation - SecurityWeek
The 4 Keys to Building Cloud Security Programs That Can Actually Shift Left (thehackernews.com)
Ubuntu Linux Cloud Workloads Face Rampant Root Take Takeovers (darkreading.com)
Shadow IT
Encryption
Hacking police radios: 30-year-old crypto flaws in the spotlight – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Researchers Find ‘Backdoor’ in Encrypted Police and Military Radios (vice.com)
API
Open Source
New OpenSSH Vulnerability Exposes Linux Systems to Remote Command Injection (thehackernews.com)
Rust-based malware used to hack both Windows and Linux servers - Neowin
Banking Sector Targeted in Open-Source Software Supply Chain Attacks (thehackernews.com)
New P2PInfect worm malware targets Linux and Windows Redis servers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ubuntu Linux Cloud Workloads Face Rampant Root Take Takeovers (darkreading.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Social Media
How to avoid LinkedIn phishing attacks in the enterprise | TechTarget
Stanford researchers find Mastodon has a massive child abuse material problem - The Verge
Training, Education and Awareness
Travel
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Amazon agrees to $25 million fine for Alexa children privacy violations (bleepingcomputer.com)
Stanford researchers find Mastodon has a massive child abuse material problem - The Verge
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
SEC now requires companies to disclose cyber attacks in 4 days (bleepingcomputer.com)
Companies Must Have Corporate Cyber security Experts, SEC Says (darkreading.com)
Amazon agrees to $25 million fine for Alexa children privacy violations (bleepingcomputer.com)
OpenAI, Meta and other tech firms sign onto White House AI commitments | FedScoop
Data Protection
More US States are ramping up data privacy laws in 2023 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Protect Your Data Like Your Reputation Depends On It (Because It Does) (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Companies encounter months-long delays in filling critical security positions - Help Net Security
Bridging the cyber security skills gap through cyber range training - Help Net Security
Overcoming the cyber security talent shortage with upskilling initiatives - Help Net Security
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
More US States are ramping up data privacy laws in 2023 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Amazon agrees to $25 million fine for Alexa children privacy violations (bleepingcomputer.com)
Companies Need to Prove They Can Be Trusted with Technology (hbr.org)
Ryanair Hit With Lawsuit Over Use of Facial Recognition Technology (darkreading.com)
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Russia
Anonymous Sudan DDoS strikes dominate attacks by KillNet collective | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Russian court jails cyber security executive for 14 years in treason case | Reuters
Russia ‘using disinformation’ to imply Sweden supported Qur’an burnings | Sweden | The Guardian
69% of Russian gamers are pirating after Ukraine invasion pushback | Ars Technica
China
Top FBI officials warn of 'unparalleled' threat from China and AI | CyberScoop
China’s Breach of Microsoft Cloud Email May Expose Deeper Problems | WIRED
Stolen Microsoft key may have opened up more than inboxes • The Register
Chinese Hackers Breached Ambassador’s Email - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
The Chinese groups accused of hacking the US and others | Reuters
Industrial Organisations in Eastern Europe Targeted by Chinese Cyber spies - SecurityWeek
Chinese-backed Hacking Group Launches Two Bugs Targeting Android Devices - MSSP Alert
China Propaganda Spreads via US News Sites, Freelancers, Times Square (darkreading.com)
China-backed hackers suspected in NetScaler RCE attacks | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
US Senator Wyden Accuses Microsoft of ‘Cyber security Negligence’ - SecurityWeek
North Korea
North Korean Cyber spies Target GitHub Developers (darkreading.com)
JumpCloud hack linked to North Korea after OPSEC mistake (bleepingcomputer.com)
GitHub warns of Lazarus hackers targeting devs with malicious projects (bleepingcomputer.com)
Lazarus hackers hijack Microsoft IIS servers to spread malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Lazarus hackers linked to $60 million Alphapo cryptocurrency heist (bleepingcomputer.com)
Misc/Other/Unknown
Vulnerability Management
Google: 41 zero-day vulnerabilities exploited in 2022 | TechTarget
CVSS 4.0 Is Here, But Prioritizing Patches Still a Hard Problem (darkreading.com)
Want to live dangerously? Try running Windows XP in 2023 • The Register
A step-by-step guide for patching software vulnerabilities - Help Net Security
Vulnerabilities
Over 20,000 Citrix Appliances Vulnerable to New Exploit - SecurityWeek
A flaw in OpenSSH forwarded ssh-agent allows remote code execution-Security Affairs
Apple fixes new zero-day used in attacks against iPhones, Macs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ivanti patches MobileIron zero-day bug exploited in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Zyxel users still getting hacked by DDoS botnet emerge as public nuisance No. 1 | Ars Technica
Apache OpenMeetings Wide Open to Account Takeover, Code Execution (darkreading.com)
Super Admin elevation bug puts 900,000 MikroTik devices at risk (bleepingcomputer.com)
Norwegian government IT systems hacked using zero-day flaw (bleepingcomputer.com)
VMware fixes bug exposing CF API admin credentials in audit logs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Major Security Flaw Discovered in Metabase BI Software – Urgent Update Required (thehackernews.com)
Cyber security Agencies Warn Against IDOR Bugs Exploited for Data Breaches (thehackernews.com)
Atlassian RCE Bugs Plague Confluence, Bamboo (darkreading.com)
Zenbleed attack leaks sensitive data from AMD Zen2 processors (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft shares fix for some Outlook hyperlinks not opening (bleepingcomputer.com)
China-backed hackers suspected in NetScaler RCE attacks | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Study reveals silent Python package security fixes • The Register
Windows 10 KB5028244 update released with 19 fixes, improved security (bleepingcomputer.com)
Wiz Says 62% of AWS Environments Exposed to Zenbleed Exploitation - SecurityWeek
Multiple DDoS Botnets Exploiting Recent Zyxel Vulnerability - SecurityWeek
Zimbra patches zero-day vulnerability exploited in XSS attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
WordPress Ninja Forms plugin flaw lets hackers steal submitted data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Two flaws in Linux Ubuntu affect 40% of Ubuntu users - Security Affairs
Tools and Controls
Why cyber security should be part of your ESG strategy | Computer Weekly
Lawyers take frontline role in business response to cyber attacks | Financial Times (ft.com)
Explaining risk maturity models and how they work | TechTarget
Microsoft enhances Windows 11 Phishing Protection with new features (bleepingcomputer.com)
Shadow Coding Is An Intoxicating Shortcut—And A Security Landmine (forbes.com)
Zero trust rated as highly effective by businesses worldwide - Help Net Security
50% of Zero Trust Programs Risk Failure According to PlainID Survey (darkreading.com)
Google Chrome to offer 'Link Previews' when hovering over links (bleepingcomputer.com)
Why are computer security guidelines so confusing? - Help Net Security
Threat Intelligence Is Growing — Here's How SOCs Can Keep Up (darkreading.com)
Designing a Security Strategy for Defending Multicloud Architectures (darkreading.com)
Converging networking and security with SASE - Help Net Security
Artificial Intelligence Continues To Revolutionize Cyber security (forbes.com)
Key factors for effective security automation - Help Net Security
Microsoft previews Defender for IoT firmware analysis service (bleepingcomputer.com)
The 4 Keys to Building Cloud Security Programs That Can Actually Shift Left (thehackernews.com)
CISOs consider zero trust a hot security ticket - Help Net Security
How a Cyber Security Platform Addresses the 3 “S” (trendmicro.com)
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Maritime Cyber attack Database Launched by Dutch University - SecurityWeek
Google’s new security pilot program will ban employee Internet access | Ars Technica
macOS Under Attack: Examining the Growing Threat and User Perspectives (thehackernews.com)
Why whistleblowers in cyber security are important and need support | CSO Online
World's most internetty firm tries life off the net • The Register
Exam board cyber attack investigation: Teenager arrested (schoolsweek.co.uk)
Companies Need to Prove They Can Be Trusted with Technology (hbr.org)
Heart monitor manufacturer hit by cyber attack, takes systems offline (bitdefender.com)
Cyber security Agencies Warn Against IDOR Bugs Exploited for Data Breaches (thehackernews.com)
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 17 February 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 17 February 2023:
-High Risk Users May be Few, but the Threat They Pose is Huge
-The Cost of Cyber Security Insurance is Soaring so Firms Need to Take Prevention More Seriously
-Cyber Attacks Worldwide Increased to an All-Time Record Breaking High
-Most Organisations Make Cyber Security Decisions Without Insights
-Ransomware Attackers Finding New Ways to Weaponise Old Vulnerabilities
-Are Executives Fluent in IT Security Speak? 5 Reasons Why the Communication Gap is Wider Than You Think
-Business Email Compromise Groups Target Firms with Multilingual Impersonation Attacks
-EU Countries Told to Step up Defence Against State Hackers
-Cyber Criminals Exploit Fear and Urgency to Trick Consumers
-How to Manage Third Party and Supply Chain Cyber Security Risks that are Too Costly to Ignore
-Russian Spear Phishing Campaign Escalates Efforts Towards Critical UK, US and European Targets
-5 Biggest Risks of Using Third Party Managed Service Providers
-Cyber Crime as a Service: A Subscription Based Model in the Wrong Hands
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
High Risk Users May be Few, but the Threat They Pose is Huge
High risk users represent approximately 10% of the worker population according to research provider, Elevate Security research. The research found that high risk users were responsible for 41% of all simulated phishing clicks, 30% of all real-world phishing clicks, 54% of all secure-browsing incidents and 42% of all malware events. This is worrying, considering the rise in sophisticated targeted phishing campaigns.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/02/16/high-risk-behavior/
The Cost of Cyber Security Insurance is Soaring so Firms Need to Take Prevention More Seriously
State-backed cyber attacks are on the rise, but they are not raising the level of alarm that they should in the corporate world. Unfortunately, this is not a productive way of thinking. Come the end of March, insurance provider Lloyds will no longer cover damage from cyber attacks carried out by state or state-backed groups. In the worst cases, this reduced insurance coverage could exacerbate the trend of companies taking a passive approach toward state-backed attacks as they feel there is now really nothing they can do to protect themselves. The uncertainty however, could be the motivation for companies to take the threat of state-backed attacks more seriously.
Cyber Attacks Worldwide Increased to an All-Time Record-Breaking High, Report Shows
According to a report by security provider Check Point, cyber attacks rose 38% in 2022 compared to the previous year. Some of the key trends in the report included an increase in the number of cloud-based networking attacks, with a 48% rise and non-state affiliated hacktivist groups becoming more organised and effective than ever before. Additionally, ransomware is becoming more difficult to attribute and track and extra focus should be placed on exfiltration detection.
Most Organisations Make Cyber Security Decisions Without Insights
A report by security provider Mandiant found some worrying results when it came to organisational understanding of threat actors. Some of the key findings include, 79% of respondents stating that most of their cyber security decisions are made without insight into the treat actors targeting them, 79% believing their organisation could focus more time and energy on identifying critical security trends, 67% believing senior leadership teams underestimate the cyber threats posed to their organisation and finally, 47% of respondents felt that they could not prove to senior leadership that their organisation has a highly effective cyber security program.
Ransomware Attackers Finding New Ways to Weaponise Old Vulnerabilities
Ransomware attackers are finding new ways to exploit organisations’ security weaknesses by weaponising old vulnerabilities. A report by security provider Cyber Security Works had found that 76% of the vulnerabilities currently being exploited were first discovered between 2010-2019.
Are Executives Fluent in IT Security Speak? 5 Reasons Why the Communication Gap is Wider Than You Think
Using data from two different reports conducted by security provider Kaspersky, the combined data showed some worrying results. Some of the results include 98% of respondents revealing they faced at least one IT security miscommunication that regularly leads to bad consequences, 62% of managers revealing miscommunication led to at least one cyber security incident, 42% of business leaders wanting their IT security team to better communicate and 34% of C-level executives struggle to speak about adopting new security solutions.
Business Email Compromise Groups Target Firms with Multilingual Impersonation Attacks
Security providers Abnormal Security have identified two Business Email Compromise (BEC) groups “Midnight Hedgehog” and “Mandarin Capybara” which are conducting impersonation attacks in at least 13 different languages. Like many payment fraud attacks, finance managers or other executives are often targeted. In a separate report by Abnormal Security, it was found that business email compromise (BEC) attacks increased by more than 81% during 2022.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/bec-groups-multilingual/
EU Countries Told to Step up Defence Against State Hackers
European states have raced to protect their energy infrastructure from physical attacks but the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) said more needed to be done against cyber warfare against financial institutions and the telecommunications networks and power grids they rely on. "The war in Ukraine, the broader geopolitical landscape and the increasing use of cyber attacks have significantly heightened the cyber threat environment," the ESRB said in a report. In addition, the ESRB highlight an increased risk of cyber attacks on the EU financial system, suggesting that stress tests and impact analyses should be carried out to identify weaknesses and measure resilience.
Cyber Criminals Exploit Fear and Urgency to Trick Consumers
Threats using social engineering to steal money, such as refund and invoice fraud and tech support scams, increased during Q4 of 2022 according to a report by software provider Avast. “At the end of 2022, we have seen an increase in human-centred threats, such as scams tricking people into thinking their computer is infected, or that they have been charged for goods they didn’t order. It’s human nature to react to urgency, fear and try to regain control of issues, and that’s where cyber criminals succeed” Avast commented.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/02/13/cybercriminals-exploit-fear-urgency-trick-consumers/
How to Manage Third Party and Supply Chain Cyber Security Risks that are Too Costly to Ignore
Many organisations have experienced that “after the breach” feeling — the moment they realise they have to tell customers their personal information may have been compromised because one of the organisations’ vendors had a data breach. Such situations involve spending significant amount of money and time to fix a problem caused by a third party. An organisation’s ability to handle third-party cyber risk proactively depends on its risk management strategies.
https://techcrunch.com/2023/02/10/why-third-party-cybersecurity-risks-are-too-costly-to-ignore/
Russian Spear Phishing Campaign Escalates Efforts Towards Critical UK, US and European Targets
Following the advisory from the NCSC, it is clear that Russian state-sponsored hackers have become increasingly sophisticated at launching phishing attacks against critical targets in the UK, US and Europe over the last 12 months. The attacks included the creation of fake personas, supported by social media accounts, fake profiles and academic papers, to lure targets into replying to sophisticated phishing emails. In some cases, the bad actor may never leverage the account to send emails from and only use it to make decisions based on intelligence collection.
5 Biggest Risks of Using Third Party Managed Service Providers
As business processes become more complex, companies are turning to third parties to boost their ability to provide critical services from cloud storage to data management to security. It’s often more efficient and less expensive to contract out work. But it does present risks. 5 of the biggest risks to be considered are: indirect cyber attacks, financial risks from incident costs, reputational damage, geopolitical risk and regulatory compliance risk.
Cyber Crime as a Service: A Subscription Based Model in the Wrong Hands
Arguably nothing in tech has changes the landscape more than ‘as a Service’ offerings, the subscription-based IT service delivery model, in fact, the ‘as a Service’ offering has made its way into the cyber crime landscape. And cyber crime, for its part, has evolved beyond a nefarious hobby; today it’s a means of earning for cyber criminals. Organised cyber crime services are available for hire, particularly to those lacking resources and hacking expertise but willing to buy their way into cyber criminal activities. Underground cyber crime markets have thus emerged, selling cyber attack tools and services ranging from malware injection to botnet tools, Denial of Service and targeted spyware services.
https://www.splunk.com/en_us/blog/learn/cybercrime-as-a-service.html
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Ransomware attackers finding new ways to weaponize old vulnerabilities | VentureBeat
US, UK slap sanctions on Russians linked to Conti and more • The Register
Clop ransomware claims it breached 130 orgs using GoAnywhere zero-day (bleepingcomputer.com)
Members of Russian cyber crime network unmasked by US and UK authorities - The Verge
Over 500 ESXiArgs Ransomware infections in one day in Europe-Security Affairs
New ESXi ransomware strain spreads, foils decryption tools | TechTarget
North Korea Using Healthcare Ransomware To Fund More Hacking (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Cisco Talos spots new MortalKombat ransomware attacks | TechTarget
Hackers Target Israel’s Technion Demanding Huge Sum In Bitcoin - I24NEWS
City of Oakland systems offline after ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
MTU cyber breach: Probe after ransomware attacks 'like a murder investigation' (irishexaminer.com)
MTU data appears on dark web after cyber attack – The Irish Times
Oakland City Services Struggle to Recover From Ransomware Attack (darkreading.com)
Ransomware gang uses new zero-day to steal data on 1 million patients | TechCrunch
City of Oakland issued state of emergency after ransomware attack-Security Affairs
Glasgow Arnold Clark customers at risk after major cyber attack | HeraldScotland
No relief in sight for ransomware attacks on hospitals | TechTarget
Burton Snowboards cancels online orders after 'cyber incident' (bleepingcomputer.com)
Dallas Central Appraisal District paid $170,000 to ransomware attackers (bitdefender.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
NameCheap's email hacked to send Metamask, DHL phishing emails (bleepingcomputer.com)
Spain, US dismantle phishing gang that stole $5 million in a year (bleepingcomputer.com)
BEC – Business Email Compromise
2FA/MFA
Malware
Experts Warn of Surge in Multipurpose Malware - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Microsoft OneNote Abuse for Malware Delivery Surges - Security Week
New TA886 group targets companies with Screenshotter malware-Security Affairs
Novel phishing campaign takes screenshots ahead of payload delivery | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Great, hackers are now using ChatGPT to generate malware | Digital Trends
Devs targeted by W4SP Stealer malware in malicious PyPi packages (bleepingcomputer.com)
Pepsi distributor blames info-stealing malware for breach • The Register
Malware that can do anything and everything is on the rise - Help Net Security
New stealthy 'Beep' malware focuses heavily on evading detection (bleepingcomputer.com)
Thousands of WordPress sites have been infected by a mystery malware | TechRadar
Beep: New Evasive Malware That Can Escape Under The Radar (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Hackers start using Havoc post-exploitation framework in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Malware authors leverage more attack techniques that enable lateral movement | CSO Online
Mobile
Botnets
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Cloudflare blocks record-breaking 71 million RPS DDoS attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
87% of largest DDoS attacks in Q4 targeted telecoms: Lumen (fiercetelecom.com)
The Tor network hit by wave of DDoS attacks for at least 7 months-Security Affairs
Internet of Things – IoT
Digital burglaries: The threat from your smart home devices | Fox News
Mirai V3G4 botnet exploits 13 flaws to target IoT devices-Security Affairs
New Mirai malware variant infects Linux devices to build DDoS botnet (bleepingcomputer.com)
Data Breaches
MP’s laptop and iPad stolen from pub in 'worrying' security breach | Metro News
Reddit was hit with a phishing attack. How it responded is a lesson for everyone | ZDNET
Reddit Hack Shows Limits of MFA, Strengths of Security Training (darkreading.com)
Highmark data breach affecting about 300,000 members exposed personal information to hackers – WPXI
Gulp! Pepsi hack sees personal information stolen by data-stealing malware (bitdefender.com)
Nearly 50 million Americans impacted by health data breaches in 2022 (chiefhealthcareexecutive.com)
My Password Manager was Hacked! How to Prevent a Catastrophe (bleepingcomputer.com)
After apparent hack, data from Australian tech giant Atlassian dumped online | CyberScoop
Atlassian: Leaked Data Stolen via Third-Party App (darkreading.com)
Health info for 1 million patients stolen using critical GoAnywhere vulnerability | Ars Technica
Scandinavian Airlines says cyber attack caused passenger data leak (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cyber crime as a Service: A Subscription-based Model in The Wrong Hands | Splunk
A Hacker’s Mind — how the elites exploit the system | Financial Times (ft.com)
Dark Web Revenue Down Dramatically After Hydra's Demise (darkreading.com)
Russian hacker convicted of $90 million hack-to-trade charges (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Enigma, Vector, and TgToxic: The New Threats to Cryptocurrency Users (thehackernews.com)
Lazarus hackers use new mixer to hide $100 million in stolen crypto (bleepingcomputer.com)
451 PyPI packages install Chrome extensions to steal crypto (bleepingcomputer.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Russian IT biz owner made $90M from stolen financial info • The Register
Refund and Invoice Scams Surge in Q4 - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Russian Hackers Disrupt NATO Earthquake Relief Operations (darkreading.com)
Romance scam targets security researcher, hilarity ensues • The Register
10 signs that scammers have you in their sights | WeLiveSecurity
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Insurance
Dark Web
Supply Chain and Third Parties
How to manage third-party cyber security risks that are too costly to ignore | TechCrunch
5 biggest risks of using third-party services providers | CSO Online
Cloud/SaaS
Cloud security: Where do CSP and client responsibilities begin and end? | VentureBeat
Application and cloud security is a shared responsibility - Help Net Security
Attack Surface Management
Open Source
Configuration Issues in SaltStack IT Tool Put Enterprises at Risk (darkreading.com)
Solving open-source security — from Alpha to Omega | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
New Mirai malware variant infects Linux devices to build DDoS botnet (bleepingcomputer.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Eek! You Can Steal Passwords From This Password Manager Using the Notepad App | PCMag
Eurostar forces 'password resets' — then fails and locks users out (bleepingcomputer.com)
My Password Manager was Hacked! How to Prevent a Catastrophe (bleepingcomputer.com)
Social Media
Metaverse Adds New Dimensions to Web 3.0 Cyber security | TechRepublic
Elon Musk Seems to Think His Own Employees Are Shadowbanning Him (gizmodo.com)
Malvertising
Training, Education and Awareness
High-risk users may be few, but the threat they pose is huge - Help Net Security
Reddit Hack Shows Limits of MFA, Strengths of Security Training (darkreading.com)
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
The Online Safety Bill: An attack on encryption (element.io)
As regulations skyrocket, is compliance even possible anymore? - Help Net Security
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Security buyers lack insight into threats, attackers, report finds | Computer Weekly
Cyber attacks Worldwide Increased to an All-Time High, Check Point Research Reveals - MSSP Alert
Actionable intelligence is the key to better security outcomes - Help Net Security
Build Cyber Resiliency With These Security Threat-Mitigation Considerations (darkreading.com)
Evolving cyber attacks, alert fatigue creating DFIR burnout, regulatory risk | CSO Online
As regulations skyrocket, is compliance even possible anymore? - Help Net Security
Storage security for compliance and cyberwar in 2023 • The Register
Backup and Recovery
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Get hired in cyber security: Expert tips for job seekers - Help Net Security
3 Ways CISOs Can Lead Effectively and Avoid Burnout (darkreading.com)
Cyber security Jobs Remain Secure Despite Recession Fears (darkreading.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Members of Russian cyber crime network unmasked by US and UK authorities - The Verge
Spain, US dismantle phishing gang that stole $5 million in a year (bleepingcomputer.com)
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Artificial Intelligence
Russian hackers are trying to break into ChatGPT, says Check Point | ZDNET
Cyber criminals Bypass ChatGPT Restrictions to Generate Malicious Content - Check Point Software
Great, hackers are now using ChatGPT to generate malware | Digital Trends
Eric Schmidt Is Building the Perfect AI War-Fighting Machine | WIRED
A.I. in the military could be a game changer in warfare | Fortune US issues declaration on responsible use of AI in the military | Reuters
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
EU countries told to step up defence against state hackers | Reuters
Britain must ‘wake up’ to China security challenges, ex-MI6 head says | The Independent
Hacks, leaks and wipers: Google analyses a year of Russian cyber attacks on Ukraine | Cyber scoop
Google: Russia continues to set cyber sights on NATO nations | TechTarget
US shoots down ‘high-altitude object’ above Alaska | Financial Times (ft.com)
Military Organizations in Pakistan Targeted With Sophisticated Espionage Tool - security Week
SpaceX curbed Ukraine's use of Starlink terminals - Militarnyi
US shoots down ‘octagonal’ flying object near military sites in Michigan | US news | The Guardian
Six companies join US entity list after Chinese spy balloon • The Register
How Alan Turing still casts his genius in the age of cyberwar | Metro News
US warns its citizens in Russia to get out immediately over security fears | Euronews
Russian Hackers Disrupt NATO Earthquake Relief Operations (darkreading.com)
Ukraine’s use of SpaceX satellites risks starting World War Three, says Elon Musk (telegraph.co.uk)
Eric Schmidt Is Building the Perfect AI War-Fighting Machine | WIRED
Albanian gangs set up hundreds of spy cameras to keep ahead of police | Financial Times (ft.com)
A.I. in the military could be a game changer in warfare | Fortune
Chinese cameras leave British police vulnerable to spying, says watchdog | Espionage | The Guardian
China-based cyber espionage actor seen targeting South America | CSO Online
The Lessons From Cyberwar, Cyber-in-War and Ukraine - security Week
Storage security for compliance and cyberwar in 2023 • The Register
Nation State Actors
EU countries told to step up defence against state hackers | Reuters
Britain must ‘wake up’ to China security challenges, ex-MI6 head says | The Independent
Hacks, leaks and wipers: Google analyses a year of Russian cyber attacks on Ukraine | CyberScoop
Google: Russia continues to set cyber sights on NATO nations | TechTarget
Military Organizations in Pakistan Targeted With Sophisticated Espionage Tool - Security Week
MagicWeb Mystery Highlights Nobelium Attacker's Sophistication (darkreading.com)
Russian hackers are trying to break into ChatGPT, says Check Point | ZDNET
Six companies join US entity list after Chinese spy balloon • The Register
Lazarus hackers use new mixer to hide $100 million in stolen crypto (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russian Hackers Disrupt NATO Earthquake Relief Operations (darkreading.com)
Chinese Hackers Targeting South American Diplomatic Entities with ShadowPad (thehackernews.com)
Ukraine’s use of SpaceX satellites risks starting World War Three, says Elon Musk (telegraph.co.uk)
Chinese cameras leave British police vulnerable to spying, says watchdog | Espionage | The Guardian
China-based cyber espionage actor seen targeting South America | CSO Online
UK Policing Riddled with Chinese CCTV Cameras - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
A new operating system has been released in Russia! (gizchina.com)
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
Microsoft Patch Tuesday: 36 RCE bugs, 3 zero-days, 75 CVEs – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Citrix Patches High-Severity Vulnerabilities in Windows, Linux Apps - Security Week
Adobe Plugs Critical Security Holes in Illustrator, After Effects Software - Security Week
Apple releases new fix for iPhone zero-day exploited by hackers | TechCrunch
Firefox Updates Patch 10 High-Severity Vulnerabilities - Security Week
Critical RCE Vulnerability Discovered in ClamAV Open-Source Antivirus Software (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft says Intel driver bug crashes apps on Windows PCs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Serious Security: GnuTLS follows OpenSSL, fixes timing attack bug – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Splunk Enterprise Updates Patch High-Severity Vulnerabilities - Security Week
Dozens of Vulnerabilities Patched in Intel Products - Security Week
High-severity DLP flaw impacts Trellix for Windows | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Critical Vulnerability Patched in Cisco Security Products - Security Week
Health info for 1 million patients stolen using critical GoAnywhere vulnerability | Ars Technica
Tools and Controls
A CISOs Practical Guide to Storage and Backup Ransomware Resiliency (thehackernews.com)
Combining identity and security strategies to mitigate risks - Help Net Security
Defending against attacks on Azure AD: Goodbye firewall, hello identity protection | CSO Online
Regular Pen Testing Is Key to Resolving Conflict Between SecOps and DevOps (thehackernews.com)
Attack surface management (ASM) is not limited to the surface - Help Net Security
How to filter Security log events for signs of trouble | TechTarget
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 16 December 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 16 December 2022:
-Executives Take More Cyber Security Risks Than Office Workers
-CISO Role is Diversifying from Technology to Leadership & Communication Skills
-How Emerging AIs, Like ChatGPT, Can Turn Anyone into a Ransomware and Malware Threat Actor
-Cyber Security Drives Improvements in Business Goals
-Incoming FCA Chair Says Crypto Firms Facilitate Money Laundering
-Managing Cyber Risk in 2023: The People Element
-What We Can't See Can Hurt Us
-Uber Suffers New Data Breach After Attack on Vendor, Info Leaked Online
-When Companies Compensate the Hackers, We All Foot the Bill
-HSE Cyber-Attack Costs Ireland $83m So Far
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Executives Take More Cyber Security Risks Than Office Workers
IT software company Ivanti worked with cyber security experts and surveyed 6,500 executive leaders, cybersecurity professionals, and office workers to understand the perception of today’s cybersecurity threats and to find out how companies are preparing for yet-unknown future threats.
The report revealed that despite 97% of leaders and security professionals reporting their organisation is as prepared, or more prepared, to defend against cybersecurity attacks than they were a year ago, one in five wouldn’t bet a chocolate bar that they could prevent a damaging breach.
In fact, the study finds that organisations are racing to fortify against cyber attacks, but the industry still struggles with a reactive, checklist mentality. This is most pronounced in how security teams are prioritising patches. While 92% of security professionals reported they have a method to prioritise patches, they also indicated that all types of patches rank high – meaning none do.
“Patching is not nearly as simple as it sounds,” said Ivanti. “Even well-staffed, well-funded IT and security teams experience prioritisation challenges amidst other pressing demands. To reduce risk without increasing workload, organisations must implement a risk-based patch management solution and leverage automation to identify, prioritise, and even address vulnerabilities without excess manual intervention”.
Cyber security insiders view phishing, ransomware, and software vulnerabilities as top industry-level threats for 2023. Approximately half of respondents indicated they are “very prepared” to meet the growing threat landscape including ransomware, poor encryption, and malicious employees, but the expected safeguards such as deprovisioning credentials is ignored a third of a time and nearly half of those surveyed say they suspect a former employee or contractor still has active access to company systems and files.
The report also revealed that leaders engage in more dangerous behaviour and are four times more likely to be victims of phishing compared to office workers.
Additionally:
More than 1 in 3 leaders have clicked on a phishing link
Nearly 1 in 4 use easy-to-remember birthdays as part of their password
They are much more likely to hang on to passwords for years
And they are 5x more likely to share their password with people outside the company.
One survey taker shared, “We’ve experienced a few advanced phishing attempts and the employees were totally unaware they were being targeted. These types of attacks have become so much more sophisticated over the last two years – even our most experienced staff are falling prey to it.”
To cope with a rapidly expanding threat landscape, organisations must move beyond a reactive, rules-based approach.
CISO Role is Diversifying from Technology to Leadership & Communication Skills
The role of chief information security officer (CISO), a relatively new executive position, is undergoing some significant changes and an archetype has yet to emerge, a new global report from Marlin Hawk, an executive recruiting and leadership consultant, said.
CISOs are still more likely to serve on advisory boards or industry bodies than on the board of directors. Only 13% of the global CISOs analysed are women; approximately 20% are non-white. Each diversity dimension analysed is down one percentage point year-on-year.
According to James Larkin, managing partner at Marlin Hawk, “Today’s CISOs are taking up the mantle of responsibilities that have traditionally fallen solely to the chief information officer (CIO), which is to act as the primary gateway from the tech department into the wider business and the outside marketplace. This widening scope requires CISOs to be adept communicators to the board, the broader business, as well as the marketplace of shareholders and customers. By thriving in the ‘softer’ skill sets of communication, leadership, and strategy, CISOs are now setting the new industry standards of today and, I predict, will be progressing into the board directors of tomorrow.”
The job does not come without its downsides. For one, according to the search firm, many CISOs change roles and leave their jobs. Their skillset may not be adequate or new leaders get appointed to the job, they lack the necessary internal support, or their company may not have the required commitment to cyber security to make the job effective.
Key findings from the report include:
45% of global CISOs have been in their current role for two years or less, down from 53% in 2021, with 18% turnover year-on-year. While there is still a lot of movement in the CISO seat, there is potentially some stabilisation emerging.
Approximately 62% of global CISOs were hired from another company, indicating a slight increase in the number of CISOs hired internally (38% were hired internally compared to 36% in 2021) but a large gap remains in appropriate successors.
36% of CISOs analysed with a graduate degree received a higher degree in business administration or management. This is down 10% from last year (46% in 2021). Conversely, there has been an increase to 61% of CISOs receiving a higher degree in STEM subjects (up from 46% in 2021).
How Emerging AIs, Like ChatGPT, Can Turn Anyone into a Ransomware and Malware Threat Actor
Ever since OpenAI launched ChatGPT at the end of November, commentators on all sides have been concerned about the impact AI-driven content-creation will have, particularly in the realm of cybersecurity. In fact, many researchers are concerned that generative AI solutions will democratise cyber crime.
With ChatGPT, any user can enter a query and generate malicious code and convincing phishing emails without any technical expertise or coding knowledge.
While security teams can also leverage ChatGPT for defensive purposes such as testing code, by lowering the barrier for entry for cyber attacks, the solution has complicated the threat landscape significantly. From a cyber security perspective, the central challenge created by OpenAI’s creation is that anyone, regardless of technical expertise, can create code to generate malware and ransomware on-demand.
Whilst it can be used for good to assist developers in writing code for good, it can (and already has) been used for malicious purposes. Examples including asking the bot to create convincing phishing emails or assist in reverse engineering code to find zero-day exploits that could be used maliciously instead of reporting them to a vendor.
ChatGPT does have inbuilt guardrails designed to prevent the solution from being used for criminal activity. For instance, it will decline to create shell code or provide specific instructions on how to create shellcode or establish a reverse shell and flag malicious keywords like phishing to block the requests.
The problem with these protections is that they’re reliant on the AI recognising that the user is attempting to write malicious code (which users can obfuscate by rephrasing queries), while there’s no immediate consequences for violating OpenAI’s content policy.
https://venturebeat.com/security/chatgpt-ransomware-malware/
Cyber Security Drives Improvements in Business Goals
Cyber threats should no longer be viewed as just an IT problem, but also a business problem, Deloitte said in its latest Future of Cyber study. Operational disruption, loss of revenue, and loss of customer trust are the top three significant impacts of cyber incidents. More than half, or 56%, of respondents told Deloitte they suffered related consequences to a moderate or large extent.
In 2021, the top three negative consequences from cyber incidents and breaches were operational disruption, which includes supply chain and the partner ecosystem, intellectual property theft, and a drop in share price. While operational disruption remained the top concern in 2022, loss of revenue and loss of customer trust and negative brand impact moved up in importance. Intellectual property theft and drop in share price dropped to eighth and ninth (out of ten) in ranking. Losing funding for a strategic initiative, loss of confidence in the integrity of the technology, and impact on employee recruitment and retention moved up in ranking in 2022. Respondents were also asked to mark two consequences they felt would be most important in 2023: Operational disruption and loss of revenue topped the list.
"Today, cyber means business, and it is difficult to overstate the importance of cyber as a foundational and integral business imperative," Deloitte noted in its report. "It [cyber] should be included in every functional area, as an essential ingredient for success—to drive continuous business value, not simply mitigate risks to IT."
Deloitte categorised organisations' cyber security maturity based on their adoption of cyber planning, risk management, and board engagement. Risk management included activities such as industry benchmarking, incident response, scenario planning, and qualitative and quantitative risk assessment.
Whether or not the organisation adopted any of these three practices hinged on stakeholders recognising the importance of cyber responsibility and engagement across the whole organisation, Deloitte said in its report. Examples included having a governing body that comprises IT and senior business leaders to oversee the cyber program, conducting incident-response scenario planning and simulation at the organisational and/or board level, regularly providing cyber updates to the board to secure funding, and conducting regular cyber awareness training for all employees.
https://www.darkreading.com/edge-threat-monitor/cybersecurity-drives-improvements-in-business-goals
Incoming FCA Chair Says Crypto Firms Facilitate Money Laundering
The man who will lead UK efforts to regulate cryptocurrency firms issued a stark condemnation of the sector on Wednesday, telling MPs that in his experience crypto platforms were “deliberately evasive”, facilitated money laundering at scale and created “massively untoward risk”.
The comments from Ashley Alder, the incoming chair of the Financial Conduct Authority, suggest that crypto firms hoping to build businesses in the UK will face an uphill battle when the FCA assumes new powers to regulate broad swaths of the sector.
They also put Alder, who will become FCA chair in February, on a potential collision course with the government’s aspiration to create a high quality crypto hub that fosters innovation, a vision ministers have remained loyal to even as the global crypto market lurches from crisis to crisis, epitomised by the collapse of FTX. The FCA declined to comment on whether their incoming chair’s views were at odds with those of the government.
Alder comments came during a sometimes terse appointment hearing with the cross-party Treasury select committee, where he faced sustained criticism for appearing virtually from Hong Kong and for his lack of familiarity with some parts of the UK market place and its accountability structures.
https://www.ft.com/content/7bf0a760-5fb5-4146-b757-1acc5fc1dee5
Managing Cyber Risk in 2023: The People Element
2022 has had many challenges from cyber war between Russia and Ukraine, continuing ransomware attacks, and a number of high-profile vulnerabilities and zero day attacks. With the attack surface constantly expanding, CISOs and security leaders are acutely aware of the need to minimise risk across people, processes, and technology.
Top infrastructure risk: people
It’s common knowledge that it’s not if, but when, your organisation will be the target of a cyber attack. CISOs and security leaders seem to share the same opinion—according to Trend Micro’s latest Cyber Risk Index (CRI) (1H’2022), 85% of 4,100 respondents across four global regions said its somewhat to very likely they will experience a cyber attack in the next 12 months. More concerning was 90% of respondents had at least one successful cyber attack in the past 12 months.
The CRI (1H’2022) also found that CISOs, IT practitioners, and managers identified that most organisations’ IT security objectives are not aligned with the business objectives, which could cause challenges when trying to implement a sound cyber security strategy.
It’s important to note that while ideal, avoiding a cyber attack isn’t the main goal—companies need to address critical challenges across their growing digital attack surface to enable faster detection and response, therefore minimising cyber risk.
While it's commonly assumed that security efforts should be largely focused on protecting critical servers and infrastructure, the human attack vector shouldn’t be so quickly forgotten.
https://www.trendmicro.com/en_us/ciso/22/e/managing-cyber-risk.html
What We Can't See Can Hurt Us
In speaking with security and fraud professionals, visibility remains a top priority. This is no surprise, since visibility into the network, application, and user layers is one of the fundamental building blocks of both successful security programs and successful fraud programs. This visibility is required across all environments — whether on-premises, private cloud, public cloud, multicloud, hybrid, or otherwise.
Given this, it is perhaps a bit surprising that visibility in the cloud has lagged behind the move to those environments. This occurred partially because few options for decent visibility were available to businesses as they moved to the cloud. But it also partially happened because higher priority was placed on deploying to the cloud than on protecting those deployments from security and fraud threats.
This is unfortunate, since what we can't see can hurt us. That being said, cloud visibility is becoming a top priority for many businesses. There are a few areas where many businesses are looking for visibility to play a key role, including Compliance, Monitoring, Investigation, Response, API Discovery, Application Breaches, and Malicious User Detection.
Organisation have been a bit behind in terms of ensuring the requisite visibility into cloud environments. Whilst time has been lost, it does seem that gaining visibility into the network, application, and user layers is now a priority for many businesses. This is a positive development, as it enables those businesses to better mitigate the risks that operating blindly creates.
https://www.darkreading.com/edge-articles/what-we-can-t-see-can-hurt-us
Uber Suffers New Data Breach After Attack on Vendor, Info Leaked Online
Uber has suffered a new data breach after a threat actor leaked employee email addresses, corporate reports, and IT asset information stolen from a third-party vendor in a cyber security incident.
On Saturday last week, a threat actor named 'UberLeaks' began leaking data they claimed was stolen from Uber and Uber Eats on a hacking forum known for publishing data breaches. The leaked data includes numerous archives claiming to be source code associated with mobile device management platforms (MDM) used by Uber and Uber Eats and third-party vendor services.
The threat actor created four separate topics, allegedly for Uber MDM at uberhub.uberinternal.com and Uber Eats MDM, and the third-party Teqtivity MDM and TripActions MDM platforms. Each post refers to a member of the Lapsus$ hacking group who is believed to be responsible for numerous high-profile attacks, including a September cyber attack on Uber where threat actors gained access to the internal network and the company's Slack server.
News outlet BleepingComputer has been told that the newly leaked data consists of source code, IT asset management reports, data destruction reports, Windows domain login names and email addresses, and other corporate information. One of the documents seen by BleepingComputer includes email addresses and Windows Active Directory information for over 77,000 Uber employees.
While BleepingComputer initially thought this data was stolen during the September attack, Uber told BleepingComputer it believes it is related to a security breach on a third-party vendor.
When Companies Compensate the Hackers, We All Foot the Bill
Companies are always absorbing costs that are seen as par for the course of budget planning: maintenance, upgrades, office supplies, wastage, shrinkage, etc. These costs ratchet up the price of a company's products and are then passed on to the consumer. Breaches in cyber security and paying out ransoms to hackers should be outside of this remit, and yet more than half of all companies admit to transferring the costs of data breaches on to consumers. Careless or ill-informed employees and other weaknesses in a company's protections lead to catastrophic losses to businesses of around $1,797,945 per minute — and the consumers are paying it off.
If a company estimates the recovery costs from a ransomware attack to exceed the requested payment from the hacker, then it feels like a no-brainer — they're better off just cutting their losses and giving in to the cyber criminal's demands. The issue is that this creates an unvirtuous circle of paying the hacker, which enforces nefarious behaviour and empowers hackers to increase the number and volume of ransoms.
When it comes to ransomware, 32% of companies pay off hackers, and, of that percentage, the average company only retrieves about 65% of its data. Giving in to hackers is counterintuitive. On an even more disturbing note, one study found that 80% of companies that paid a ransom were targeted a second time, with about 40% paying again and a majority of that 40% paying a higher ransom the second time round. This is ludicrous. With 33% of companies suspending operations following an attack, and nearly 40% resorting to laying off staff, it comes as no surprise that the downstream costs are picked up to some extent by the consumer.
As for smaller companies, about 50% of US small businesses don't have a cyber security plan in place, despite the fact that small businesses are three times more likely to be targeted by cyber criminals than larger companies. An average breach costs these companies around $200,000 and has put many out of business. It isn't simply the cost passed on to consumers, it's also the intangible assets, such as brand reputation.
When data is leaked and a site goes down, customers become rightly anxious when their information is sold to the highest bidder on the Dark Web. To safeguard against this, companies of all sizes should exploit automated solutions while training every single member of staff to recognise and report online threats. Paying a ransom does not guarantee the return of data, and for a smaller business, losing valuable customer information could cause long-term damage way beyond the initial attack.
Cyber security professionals, governments, and law enforcement agencies all advise companies to avoid paying the hackers' ransoms. This strategy is affirmed by the success businesses have had in retrieving the stolen data and turning the lights back on — 78% of organisations who say they did not pay a ransom were able to fully restore systems and data without the decryption key. This evidently is not enough to reassure companies who, at the click of a dangerous email being opened, have lost sensitive information and access to their systems and are desperate to get back online. There are many preventative techniques businesses can take advantage of before it even gets to that stage.
HSE Cyber-Attack Costs Ireland $83m So Far
The cost of the cyber-attack that hit the Irish Health Service Executive (HSE) last year has officially reached €80m ($83.75m).
The figures come from a letter from HSE’s chief information officer, seen by The Irish Times. This comes months after the Department of Health suggested in February the attack could end up costing up to €100m ($104m). The letter confirmed that the costs reached €42m ($43.97m) in 2021 and almost €39m ($40.83m) until October of this year.
Ireland has a very capable national cyber security centre and a well-oiled CSIRT team that engages the public/private sector. If the cost does continue to escalate to €100m, that is the equivalent to everyone in the Republic of Ireland having been defrauded by €20. According to The Irish Times, the costs were said to be “enormous,” and the government has been asked to complete a comprehensive assessment of the impact caused by the breach.
The cyber-attack, believed to have been conducted by Russia-based state actors, was reportedly caused by a malicious Microsoft Excel file delivered via a phishing email. According to a December 2021 report, the file was opened at an HSE workstation in March 2021. The malware would have been latent for two months before the breach, which was reportedly discovered in May, two months later. A total of roughly 100,000 people had their personal data stolen during the cyber-attack.
Healthcare continues to be a target of attacks given their enormous attack surface across critical applications, cloud environments and IoT devices.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/hse-cyber-attack-ireland-dollar83m/
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
HSE Cyber-Attack Costs Ireland $83m So Far - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Ransomware-hit Rackspace email outage enters 12th day • The Register
The Dark Web is Getting Darker - Ransomware Thrives on Illegal Markets (bleepingcomputer.com)
Rash of New Ransomware Variants Springs Up in the Wild (darkreading.com)
Patch Tuesday: Microsoft Plugs Windows Hole Exploited in Ransomware Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Preventing a ransomware attack with intelligence: Strategies for CISOs - Help Net Security
LockBit ransomware crew claims attack on California Department of Finance - CyberScoop
When Companies Compensate the Hackers, We All Foot the Bill (darkreading.com)
Clop ransomware uses TrueBot malware for access to networks (bleepingcomputer.com)
TrueBot infections were observed in Clop ransomware attacks - Security Affairs
Play ransomware claims attack on Belgium city of Antwerp (bleepingcomputer.com)
Brooklyn hospital network victim of cyber hack crash (msn.com)
Cyber security Experts Uncover Inner Workings of Destructive Azov Ransomware (thehackernews.com)
Cybereason warns of rapid increase in Royal ransomware | TechTarget
New Royal ransomware group evades detection with partial encryption | CSO Online
How ChatGPT can turn anyone into a ransomware and malware threat actor | VentureBeat
Check Point classifies Azov as wiper, not ransomware | TechTarget
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Open-source repositories flooded by 144,000 phishing packages (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing attack uses Facebook posts to evade email security (bleepingcomputer.com)
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
Microsoft digital certificates have once again been abused to sign malware | Ars Technica
Hackers target Japanese politicians with new MirrorStealer malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Zscaler: Nearly 90% of Cyber attacks Now Use Encrypted Channels, Malware Tops - MSSP Alert
Crooks use HTML smuggling to spread QBot malware via SVG files - Security Affairs
A clever trick turns antivirus software into unstoppable data wiping scourges | TechSpot
How ChatGPT can turn anyone into a ransomware and malware threat actor | VentureBeat
Mobile
Android Malware Campaign Leverages Money-Lending Apps to Blackmail Victims (thehackernews.com)
Why You Should Enable Apple’s New iOS 16.2 Security Feature | Reviews by Wirecutter (nytimes.com)
Xnspy stalkerware spied on thousands of iPhones and Android devices | TechCrunch
Internet of Things – IoT
3.5m IP cameras exposed, with US in the lead - Security Affairs
Are robots too insecure for lethal use by law enforcement? | CSO Online
10 Ways Doorbell Cameras Pose a Threat to Privacy and Security - Listverse
Data Breaches/Leaks
Uber suffers new data breach after attack on vendor, info leaked online (bleepingcomputer.com)
Twitter confirms recent user data leak is from 2021 breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
HR platform Sequoia says hackers accessed customer SSNs and COVID-19 data | TechCrunch
Australia's Telstra suffers privacy breach, 132,000 customers impacted | Reuters
Unauthorised server access caused AirAsia data leak: Fahmi | Malaysia | The Vibes
FBI's InfraGard Cyber security Program Breached by Hackers (gizmodo.com)
Aussie Data Breaches Surge 489% in Q4 2022 - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Uber staff information leaks after IT supply chain attack • The Register
TPG Telecom joins list of hacked Australian companies, shares slide | Reuters
How companies can avoid costly data breaches - Help Net Security
Hackers leak personal info allegedly stolen from 5.7M Gemini users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Incoming FCA chair says crypto firms facilitate money laundering | Financial Times (ft.com)
Britons lose life savings to ‘Ali Baba and the cryptocurrency scammers’ | News | The Times
DOJ divided over charging Binance for alleged crypto crimes, report says | Ars Technica
Facebook Asks Lawmakers Not to Regulate Crypto Too Harshly Just Because of All the Fraud (vice.com)
The amateur sleuths who helped to bring down Sam Bankman-Fried - New Statesman
Hackers leak personal info allegedly stolen from 5.7M Gemini users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Executives take more cyber security risks than office workers - Help Net Security
Managing Cyber Risk in 2023: The People Element (trendmicro.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Britons lose life savings to ‘Ali Baba and the cryptocurrency scammers’ | News | The Times
Restaurant closes after fraudsters posing as officials steal thousands | News | The Times
Woman gets 66 months in prison for role in $3.3 million ID fraud op (bleepingcomputer.com)
Patrick Giblin conned women all over the US. Now he's going to prison for 5 years | CNN
UK arrests five for selling dodgy point of sale software • The Register
The amateur sleuths who helped to bring down Sam Bankman-Fried - New Statesman
8 charged with conspiracy to commit securities fraud • The Register
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Insurance
Dark Web
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Uber staff information leaks after IT supply chain attack • The Register
Report highlights serious cyber security issues with US defence contractors | CSO Online
Software Supply Chain
How Naming Can Change the Game in Software Supply Chain Security (darkreading.com)
Microsoft digital certificates have once again been abused to sign malware | Ars Technica
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
FBI Charges 6, Seizes 48 Domains Linked to DDoS-for-Hire Service Platforms (thehackernews.com)
Prosecutors charge 6 people for allegedly waging massive DDoS attacks | Ars Technica
‘Booter’ sites taken down in global cyber crime bust (gbnews.uk)
Microsoft discovers Windows/Linux botnet used in DDoS attacks | Ars Technica
Cloud/SaaS
Microsoft launches EU 'data boundary' from next year • The Register
HR platform Sequoia says hackers accessed customer SSNs and COVID-19 data | TechCrunch
Lego fixes dangerous API vulnerability in BrickLink service | TechTarget (computerweekly.com)
Data Destruction Policies in the Age of Cloud Computing (darkreading.com)
Hybrid/Remote Working
Encryption
Zscaler: Nearly 90% of Cyber attacks Now Use Encrypted Channels, Malware Tops - MSSP Alert
The FBI Says Apple’s New Encryption Is “Deeply Concerning” (futurism.com)
Over 85% of Attacks Hide in Encrypted Channels - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Privacy advocates are aghast at UK’s anti-encryption plans (thenextweb.com)
API
Open Source
Google Launches OSV-Scanner Tool to Identify Open Source Vulnerabilities (thehackernews.com)
Open-source repositories flooded by 144,000 phishing packages (bleepingcomputer.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Social Media
TikTok may push potentially harmful content to teens within minutes, study finds | CNN Business
Meta warns spyware still being used to target people on social media | Meta | The Guardian
Elon Musk Bans Journalists From Twitter After Reinstating Nazis (gizmodo.com)
Russian disinformation rampant on far-right social media platforms - CyberScoop
HowTo: Fight Cyber-Threats in the Metaverse - Infosecurity Magazine
US politicians propose TikTok ban over China security concerns (telegraph.co.uk)
Training, Education and Awareness
Keep Your Grinch at Bay: Here's How to Stay Safe Online this Holiday Season (thehackernews.com)
Remote Work Cyber security Requires a Change in Mindset (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Parental Controls and Child Safety
TikTok may push potentially harmful content to teens within minutes, study finds | CNN Business
Microsoft Teams is a vector for child sexual abuse material • The Register
Cyber Bullying, Cyber Stalking and Sextortion
Xnspy stalkerware spied on thousands of iPhones and Android devices | TechCrunch
Proposed law offers support to tech-enabled abuse survivors • The Register
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Privacy concerns are limiting data usage abilities - Help Net Security
European Commission takes step toward approving EU-US data privacy pact | Computerworld
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Managing Cyber Risk in 2023: The People Element (trendmicro.com)
Executives take more cyber security risks than office workers - Help Net Security
Cyber security Drives Improvements in Business Goals (darkreading.com)
Compliance Is Not Enough: How to Manage Your Customer Data (darkreading.com)
5 tips for building a culture of cyber security accountability - Help Net Security
Data Destruction Policies in the Age of Cloud Computing (darkreading.com)
What CISOs consider when building up security resilience - Help Net Security
CISO Role is Diversifying From Technology to Leadership & Communication Skills - MSSP Alert
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Why PCI DSS 4.0 Should Be on Your Radar in 2023 (thehackernews.com)
PCI Secure Software Standard version 1.2 sets out new payment security requirements | CSO Online
Backup and Recovery
Why Your MSSP Should Offer Backup-as-a-Service (BaaS) - MSSP Alert
CISA Warns Veeam Backup & Replication Vulnerabilities Exploited in Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Data Protection
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
FBI Charges 6, Seizes 48 Domains Linked to DDoS-for-Hire Service Platforms (thehackernews.com)
Prosecutors charge 6 people for allegedly waging massive DDoS attacks | Ars Technica
8 charged with conspiracy to commit securities fraud • The Register
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Privacy advocates are aghast at UK’s anti-encryption plans (thenextweb.com)
Apple should pay €6m for tracking users – French official • The Register
European Commission takes step toward approving EU-US data privacy pact | Computerworld
Privacy concerns are limiting data usage abilities - Help Net Security
Artificial Intelligence
Are robots too insecure for lethal use by law enforcement? | CSO Online
How ChatGPT can turn anyone into a ransomware and malware threat actor | VentureBeat
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Trojanized Windows 10 Operating System Installers Targeted Ukrainian Government | Mandiant
Reassessing cyberwarfare. Lessons learned in 2022 | Securelist
As Wiretap Claims Rattle Government, Greece Bans Spyware | SecurityWeek.Com
Ex-Twitter Worker Gets Prison Time in Saudi 'Spy' Case | SecurityWeek.Com
Reassessing cyberwarfare. Lessons learned in 2022 | Securelist
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Seven accused of smuggling out US military tech for Moscow • The Register
Neo-Nazi Russian militia appeals for intelligence on Nato member states | Ukraine | The Guardian
NSA cyber director warns of Russian digital assaults on global energy sector - CyberScoop
Russian disinformation rampant on far-right social media platforms - CyberScoop
Nation State Actors – China
NSA Outs Chinese Hackers Exploiting Citrix Zero-Day | SecurityWeek.Com
US politicians propose TikTok ban over China security concerns (telegraph.co.uk)
Hackers target Japanese politicians with new MirrorStealer malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
US to add Chinese chipmaker to trade blacklist | Financial Times (ft.com)
AIIMS cyber attack suspected to have originated in China, Hong Kong - Rediff.com India News
Spies and Lies by Alex Joske — inside China’s intelligence operation | Financial Times (ft.com)
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Vulnerability Management
Transitive Dependencies Account for 95% of Bugs - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
24% of technology applications contain high-risk security flaws - Help Net Security
Vulnerabilities
Hackers exploit critical Citrix ADC and Gateway zero day, patch now (bleepingcomputer.com)
CISA Warns Veeam Backup & Replication Vulnerabilities Exploited in Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Adobe Patches 38 Flaws in Enterprise Software Products | SecurityWeek.Com
VMware fixed critical VM Escape bug demonstrated at Geekpwn hacking contest - Security Affairs
Samba Issues Security Updates to Patch Multiple High-Severity Vulnerabilities (thehackernews.com)
Fortinet says SSL-VPN pre-auth RCE bug is exploited in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Transitive Dependencies Account for 95% of Bugs - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Citrix Releases Security Updates for Citrix ADC, Citrix Gateway | CISA
Security Flaw in Atlassian Products Affecting Multiple Companies (darkreading.com)
Patch Tuesday: 0-days, RCE bugs, and a curious tale of signed malware – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Patch Tuesday: Microsoft Plugs Windows Hole Exploited in Ransomware Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
New Actively Exploited Zero-Day Vulnerability Discovered in Apple Products (thehackernews.com)
Apple patches everything, finally reveals mystery of iOS 16.1.2 – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Apple fixed the tenth actively exploited zero-day this year - Security Affairs
High-Severity Memory Safety Bugs Patched With Latest Chrome 108 Update | SecurityWeek.Com
Top 5 Web App Vulnerabilities and How to Find Them (thehackernews.com)
Severe vulnerabilities found in most industrial controllers - The Washington Post
Akamai WAF bypassed via Spring Boot to trigger RCE | The Daily Swig (portswigger.net)
Tools and Controls
CISA Warns Veeam Backup & Replication Vulnerabilities Exploited in Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Why Your MSSP Should Offer Backup-as-a-Service (BaaS) - MSSP Alert
Data Destruction Policies in the Age of Cloud Computing (darkreading.com)
Other News
Cyber Threats Loom as 5B People Prepare to Watch World Cup Final (darkreading.com)
Tech companies must start sharing intelligence to avert global conflicts | Financial Times (ft.com)
Microsoft Defender, Avast, AVG turned against Windows to permanently delete files - Neowin
Analysis Shows Attackers Favour PowerShell, File Obfuscation (darkreading.com)
Automated Cyber campaign Creates Masses of Bogus Software Building Blocks (darkreading.com)
12 types of wireless network attacks and how to prevent them | TechTarget
FuboTV says World Cup streaming outage caused by a cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
MTTR “not a viable metric” for complex software system reliability and security | CSO Online
Low-code/no-code security risks climb as tools gain traction | TechTarget
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 18 November 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 18 November 2022:
-Amid Legal Fallout, Cyber Insurers Redefine State-Sponsored Attacks as Act of War
-Supply Chains Need Shoring Up Against Cyber Attacks, C-Suite Executives Say
-Is Your Board Prepared for New Cyber Security Regulations?
-Unwanted Emails Steadily Creeping into Inboxes
-People Are Still Using the Dumbest Passwords Available
-Zero-Trust Initiatives Stall, as Cyber Attack Costs Rocket to $1M per Incident
-44% of Financial Institutions Believe Their Own IT Teams Are the Main Risk to Cloud Security
-MFA Fatigue Attacks Are Putting Your Organisation at Risk
-Cyber Security Training Boosts Risk Posture, Research Finds
-MI5 Chief: UK will have to tackle Russian Aggression ‘for Years to Come’
-Offboarding Processes Pose Security Risks as Job Turnover Increases: Report
-Do Companies Need Cyber Insurance?
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Amid Legal Fallout, Cyber Insurers Redefine State-Sponsored Attacks as Act of War
As carriers rewrite their act-of-war exclusions following the NotPetya settlement between Mondelez and Zurich, organisations should read their cyber insurance policies carefully to see what is still covered.
The consequences from NotPetya, which the US government said was caused by a Russian cyber attack on Ukraine in 2017, continue to be felt as cyber insurers modify coverage exclusions, expanding the definition of an "act of war." Indeed, the 5-year-old cyber attack appears to be turning the cyber insurance market on its head.
Mondelez International, parent of such popular brands as Cadbury, Oreo, Ritz, and Triscuit, was hit hard by NotPetya, with factories and production disrupted. It took days for the company's staff to regain control of its computer systems. The company filed a claim with its property and casualty insurer, Zurich American, for $100 million in losses. After initially approving a fraction of the claim — $10 million — Zurich declined to pay, stating the attack was an act of war and thus excluded from the coverage. Mondelez filed a lawsuit.
Late last month Mondelez and Zurich American reportedly agreed to the original $100 million claim, but that wasn't until after Merck won its $1.4 billion lawsuit against Ace American Insurance Company in January 2022 for its NotPetya-related losses. Merck's claims also were against its property and casualty policy, not a cyber insurance policy.
Back in 2017, cyber insurance policies were still nascent, and so many large corporations filed claims for damages related to NotPetya — the scourge that caused an estimated $10 billion in damage worldwide — against corporate property and casualty policies.
What's Changed? The significance of these settlements illustrates an ongoing maturation of the cyber insurance market, says Forrester Research.
Until 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic, cyber insurance policies were sold in a fashion akin to traditional home or auto policies, with little concern for a company's cyber security profile, the tools it had in place to defend its networks and data, or its general cyber hygiene.
Once a large number of ransomware attacks occurred that built off of the lax cyber security many organisations demonstrated, insurance carriers began tightening the requirements for obtaining such policies.
Is Your Board Prepared For New Cyber Security Regulations?
Boards are now paying attention to the need to participate in cyber security oversight. Not only are the consequences sparking concern, but the new regulations are upping the ante and changing the game.
Boards have a particularly important role to ensure appropriate management of cyber risk as part of their fiduciary and oversight role. As cyber threats increase and companies worldwide bolster their cyber security budgets, the regulatory community, including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), is advancing new requirements that companies will need to know about as they reinforce their cyber strategy.
Most organisations focus on cyber protection rather than cyber resilience, and that could be a mistake. Resiliency is more than just protection; it’s a plan for recovery and business continuation. Being resilient means that you’ve done as much as you can to protect and detect a cyber incident, and you have also done as much as you can to make sure you can continue to operate when an incident occurs. A company who invests only in protection is not managing the risk associated with getting up and running again in the event of a cyber incident.
Research indicates that most board members believe it is not a matter of if, but when, their company will experience a cyber event. The ultimate goal of a cyber-resilient organisation would be zero disruption from a cyber breach. That makes the focus on resilience more important.
In March 2022, the SEC issued a proposed rule titled Cybersecurity Risk Management, Strategy, Governance, and Incident Disclosure. In it, the SEC describes its intention to require public companies to disclose whether their boards have members with cyber security expertise: “Cyber security is already among the top priorities of many boards of directors and cyber security incidents and other risks are considered one of the largest threats to companies. Accordingly, investors may find disclosure of whether any board members have cyber security expertise to be important as they consider their investment in the registrant as well as their votes on the election of directors of the registrant.”
The SEC will soon require companies to disclose their cyber security governance capabilities, including the board’s oversight of cyber risk, a description of management’s role in assessing and managing cyber risks, the relevant expertise of such management, and management’s role in implementing the registrant’s cyber security policies, procedures, and strategies. Specifically, where pertinent to board oversight, registrants will be required to disclose:
whether the entire board, a specific board member, or a board committee is responsible for the oversight of cyber risks,
the processes by which the board is informed about cyber risks, and the frequency of its discussions on this topic,
whether and how the board or specified board committee considers cyber risks as part of its business strategy, risk management, and financial oversight.
https://hbr.org/2022/11/is-your-board-prepared-for-new-cybersecurity-regulations
Unwanted Emails Steadily Creeping into Inboxes
A research from cloud security provider Hornetsecurity has revealed that 40.5% of work emails are unwanted. The Cyber Security Report 2023, which analysed more than 25 billion work emails, also reveals significant changes to the nature of cyber attacks in 2022 – indicating the constant, growing threats to email security, and need for caution in digital workplace communications.
Phishing remains the most common style of email attack, representing 39.6% of detected threats. Threat actors used the following file types sent via email to deliver payloads: Archive files (Zip, 7z, etc.) sent via email make up 28% of threats, down slightly from last year’s 33.6%, with HTML files increasing from 15.3% to 21%, and DOC(X) from 4.8% to 12.7%.
This year’s cyber security report shows the steady creep of threats into inboxes around the world. The rise in unwanted emails, now found to be nearly 41%, is putting email users and businesses at significant risk.
HornetSecurity’s analysis identified both the enduring risk and changing landscape of ransomware attacks – highlighting the need for businesses and their employees to be more vigilant than ever.
New cyber security trends and techniques for organisations to watch out for were also tracked. Since Microsoft disabled macros settings in Office 365, there has been a significant increase in HTML smuggling attacks using embedded LNK or ZIP files to deliver malware. Microsoft 365 makes it easy to share documents, and end users often overlook the ramifications of how files are shared, as well as the security implications. Hornetsecurity found 25% of respondents were either unsure or assumed that Microsoft 365 was immune to ransomware threats.
For these attackers, every industry is a target. Companies must therefore ensure comprehensive security awareness training while implementing next-generation preventative measures to ward off threats.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/11/14/email-security-threats/
People Are Still Using the Dumbest Passwords Available
If you were thinking that most people would have learned by now not to use “password” as the password for their sensitive systems, then you would be giving too much credit to the general scrolling public.
Cyber security researchers from Cybernews and password manager company NordPass both independently reported this week on data surrounding the most commonly-used passwords. Trying to discern the frequently used words, phrases, and numbers among the general public wouldn’t be simple if it weren’t for the troves of leaked passwords being sold on the dark web.
Cybernews said it based its data on a list of 56 million breached or leaked passwords in 2022 found via databases in darknet and clearnet hacker forums. Some of the most-used passwords were exactly what you expect, easy-to-remember junk passwords for company accounts, including “123456,” “root,” and “guest” all looking pretty in the top three.
NordPass, on the other hand, listed its top passwords by country and the supposed gender of the user. In their case, “password” sat in the number one spot for most-used password throughout the globe. Some countries had very specific passwords that were commonly used, such as “liverpool” being the number 4 most-used password in the UK despite it being 197 in the world. The number 2 most-used password for Brazil accounts is “Brasil” while in Germany, number 5 is “hallo.”
NordPass said the list of passwords was built by a team of independent researchers who compiled 3TB of data from listings on the dark web, including some data that was leaked in data breaches that occurred in 2022. The company noted that some data might be from late 2021, though the passwords were listed on the dark web in the new year.
https://gizmodo.com/passwords-hacker-best-passwords-cybersecurity-1849792818
Zero-Trust Initiatives Stall, as Cyber Attack Costs Rocket to $1M per Incident
Researchers find current data protection strategies are failing to get the job done, and IT leaders are concerned, while a lack of qualified IT security talent hampers cyber-defence initiatives.
Organisations are struggling with mounting data losses, increased downtime, and rising recovery costs due to cyber attacks — to the tune of $1.06 million in costs per incident. Meanwhile, IT security teams are stalled on getting defences up to speed.
That's according to the 2022 Dell Global Data Protection Index (GDPI) survey of 1,000 IT decision-makers across 15 countries and 14 industries, which found that organisations that experienced disruption have also suffered an average of 2TB data loss and 19 hours of downtime.
Most respondents (67%) said they lack confidence that their existing data protection measures are sufficient to cope with malware and ransomware threats. A full 63% said they are not very confident that all business-critical data can be reliably recovered in the event of a destructive cyber attack.
Their fears seem founded: Nearly half of respondents (48%) experienced a cyber attack in the past 12 months that prevented access to their data (a 23% increase from 2021) — and that's a trend that will likely continue.
The growth and increased distribution of data across edge, core data centre and multiple public cloud environments are making it exceedingly difficult for IT admins to protect their data.
On the protection front, most organisations are falling behind; for instance, 91% are aware of or planning to deploy a zero-trust architecture, but only 12% are fully deployed.
And it's not just advanced defence that's lacking: Keegan points out that 69% of respondents stated they simply cannot meet their backup windows to be prepared for a ransomware attack.
https://www.darkreading.com/endpoint/zero-trust-initiatives-stall-cyberattack-costs-1m-per-incident
44% of Financial Institutions Believe Their Own IT Teams Are the Main Risk to Cloud Security
Netwrix, a cyber security vendor, today announced additional findings for the financial and banking sector from its global 2022 Cloud Security Report.
Compared to other industries surveyed, financial institutions are much more concerned about users who have legitimate access to their cloud infrastructure. Indeed, 44% of respondents in this sector say their own IT staff poses the biggest risk to data security in the cloud and 47% worry about contractors and partners, compared to 30% and 36% respectively in other verticals surveyed.
Financial organisations experience accidental data leakage more often than companies in other verticals: 32% of them reported this type of security incident within the last 12 months, compared to the average of 25%. This is a good reason for them to be concerned about users who might unintentionally expose sensitive information. To address this threat, organisations need to implement a zero-standing privilege approach in which elevated access rights are granted only when they are needed and only for as long as needed. Cloud misconfigurations are another common reason for accidental data leakage. Therefore, security teams must continually monitor the integrity of their cloud configurations, ideally with a dedicated solution that automates the process.
All sectors say phishing is the most common type of attack they experience. However, 91% of financial institutions say they can spot phishing within minutes or hours, compared to 82% of respondents in other verticals.
Even though mature financial organisations detect phishing quickly, it is still crucial for them to keep educating their personnel on this threat because attacks are becoming more sophisticated. To increase the likelihood of a user clicking a malicious link, attackers are crafting custom spear phishing messages that are directed at the person responsible for a certain task in the organisation and that appear to come from an authority figure. Regular staff training, along with continuous activity monitoring, will help reduce the risk of infiltration.
MFA Fatigue Attacks Are Putting Your Organisation at Risk
The rapid advancement of technology in all industries has led to the threat of ever-increasing cyber attacks that target businesses, governments, and individuals alike. A common threat targeting businesses is MFA Fatigue attacks—a technique where a cyber criminal attempts to gain access to a corporate network by bombarding a user with MFA prompts until they finally accept one.
MFA refers to multi-factor authentication, a layered end-user verification strategy to secure data and applications. For a user to log in, an MFA system needs them to submit various combinations of two or more credentials.
Using MFA Fatigue attacks, cyber criminals bombard their victims with repeated 2FA (two-factor authentication) push notifications to trick them into authenticating their login attempts, to increase their chances of gaining access to sensitive information. This attempt can be successful, especially when the target victim is distracted or overwhelmed by the notifications or misinterprets them as legitimate authentication requests.
One major MFA Fatigue attack, also known as MFA bombing, targeted the ride-sharing giant Uber in September 2022. Uber attributed the attack to Lapsus$, a hacking group that started by compromising an external contractor’s credentials.
Cyber criminals increasingly use social engineering attacks to access their targets’ sensitive credentials. Social engineering is a manipulative technique used by hackers to exploit human error to gain private information.
MFA Fatigue is a technique that has gained popularity among hackers in recent years as part of their social engineering attacks. This is a simple yet effective technique with destructive consequences as the hackers are banking on their targets’ lack of training and understanding of attack vectors. Since many MFA users are unfamiliar with this style of attack, they would not understand that they are approving a fraudulent notification.
Cyber Security Training Boosts Risk Posture, Research Finds
Business executives worldwide see the economic advantages of continuing professional cyber security education and the steep downside from a workforce of under-trained individuals, Cybrary, a training platform provider, said in a new report.
The survey of 275 executives, directors and security professionals in North America and the UK who either procure or influence professional cyber security training, was conducted by consultancy Omdia. The results showed that the benefits of professional training boost an employee’s impact on the organisation, the overall risk posture of the organisation, and in the costs associated with finding and retaining highly skilled employees, the analyst said.
The study’s key findings include:
73% of respondents said their team’s cyber security performance was more efficient because of ongoing professional cyber security training.
62% of respondents said that training improved their organisation’s cyber security effectiveness (which encompasses decreases in the number of breach attempts and overall security events).
79% of respondents ranked professional cyber security training at the top or near the top of importance for the organisation’s ability to prevent and rapidly remediate breaches and ensuing consequences such as reputational damage.
70% of companies reported a relationship between an incident and training, and two-thirds of respondents reported increased investments in ongoing cyber security training after a security incident.
Large enterprises are the least likely to delay upskilling until after an incident, indicating that companies with larger cyber security teams firmly understand the importance of ongoing professional training.
67% of surveyed SMBs invested in cyber security training after a security incident, which served as a call to action.
53% invested in professional cyber security training due to a cyber security insurance audit.
48% of organisations said that cyber security training drives retention and decreases the likelihood that a cyber security professional will leave the organisation that trains them.
41% said that ongoing cyber security training has no significant impact on if a cyber security professional leaves.
Cybrary said the research shows the rewards that organisations enjoy by investing in training and upskilling their security professionals. The data “codifies the fiscal and reputational paybacks in proactively improving cyber security defences versus responding to attacks. It also codifies an often-underrecognised benefit of cyber security upskilling: helping the organisation retain invaluable security talent despite market and organisational uncertainty”.
MI5 Chief: UK Will Have to Tackle Russian Aggression ‘for Years to Come’
Britain will have to tackle Russian aggression for years to come, said the MI5’s chief on Wednesday, adding that his agency had blocked more than 100 attempts by the Kremlin to insert suspected spies into the UK since the Salisbury poisonings.
Ken McCallum, giving an annual threat update, said state-based threats were increasing and said the UK also faced a heightened direct threat from Iran, which had threatened “to kidnap or even kill” 10 people based in Britain in the past year.
The spy chief said Russia had suffered a “strategic blow” after 400 spies were expelled from around Europe following the start of the war in Ukraine, but he said the Kremlin was actively trying to rebuild its espionage network.
Britain had expelled 23 Russian spies posing as diplomats after the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury in 2018, yet since then “over 100 Russian diplomatic visa applications” had been rejected on national security grounds.
McCallum accused Russia of making “silly claims” about British activities without evidence, such as that UK was involved in attacking the Nord Stream gas pipelines. But the head of MI5 said “the serious point” was that “the UK must be ready for Russian aggression for years to come”.
Iran’s “aggressive intelligence services” were actively targeting Britain and had made “at least 10” attempts to “kidnap or even kill” British or UK-based individuals since January as the regime felt greater pressure than ever before.
Offboarding Processes Pose Security Risks as Job Turnover Increases: Report
Research from YouGov finds that poor offboarding practices across industries including healthcare and tech are putting companies at risk, including for loss of end-user devices and unauthorised SaaS application use.
Organisations across multiple industries are struggling to mitigate potential risks, including loss of end-user and storage devices as well as unauthorised use of SaaS applications, during their offboarding process, according to new research conducted by YouGov in partnership with Enterprise Technology Management (ETM) firm Oomnitza.
Over the last 18 months, employee turnover has increased, with the US Department of Labor estimating that by the end of 2021, a total of 69 million people, more than 20% of Americans, had either lost or changed their job. Although these figures could initially be attributed to the so-called Great Resignation, this figure is likely to increase due to the numerous job cuts that are now being reported, including layoffs at major technology companies, as organisations look to reduce operational costs.
Although the circumstances of an employee’s departure can sometimes make the offboarding process more complex, ultimately offboarding should aim to prevent disruption and mitigate any potential risks.
However, in YouGov’s 2022 State of Corporate Offboarding Process Automation report, the research found that although implementing a secure offboarding processes is now seen as a business imperative for enterprises, 48% of the survey’s respondents expressed deficiencies in or lack of automated workflows across departments and IT tools to facilitate the secure offboarding of employees.
Supply Chains Need Shoring Up Against Cyber Attacks, C-Suite Executives Say
Nearly every organisation (98%) in a new survey of some 2,100 C-suite executives has been hit by a supply chain cyber attack in the last year, security provider BlueVoyant said in a newly released study.
The study gleaned data from interviews with chief technology officers (CTOs), chief security officers (CSOs), chief operating officers (COOs), chief information officers (CIOs), chief information security officers (CISOs), and chief procurement officers (CPOs) responsible for supply chain and cyber risk management in organisations of more than 1,000 employees across business services, financial services, healthcare and pharmaceutical, manufacturing, utilities and energy, and defence industries.
While the number of companies experiencing digital supply chain attacks has stayed relatively static year-over-year, the attention paid by organisations to that attack vector has increased, BlueVoyant said. Still, the New York-based cyber defender said, there’s a lot of room for organisations to better monitor suppliers and “work with them to remediate issues to reduce their supply chain risks.”
Here are some macro highlights from the survey:
40% of respondents rely on the third-party vendor or supplier to ensure adequate security.
In 2021, 53% of companies said they audited or reported on supplier security more than twice per year. That number has improved to 67% in 2022. These numbers include enterprises monitoring in real time.
Budgets for supply chain defence are increasing, with 84% of respondents saying their budget has increased in the past 12 months.
The top pain points reported are internal understanding across the enterprise that suppliers are part of their cyber security posture, meeting regulatory requirements, and working with suppliers to improve their security.
Do Companies Need Cyber Insurance?
Companies are increasingly seeking to transfer risk with cyber insurance. This trend has been influenced by a greater severity in cyber attacks and the resulting skyrocketing costs of incident response, business disruption and recovery.
Companies struggle to afford the high prices of cyber insurance, however. One market index reported the price of cyber insurance increased 79% in the second quarter of 2022. Without it, however, companies risk shouldering the full cost of any resulting harm. Furthermore, insurance companies that lack traditional decades of actuarial data must consider whether to provide cyber insurance to clients unable or unwilling to show their cyber security maturity through independent risk analysis.
This combination of circumstances leaves businesses vulnerable, financially drained and facing potential reputational damage. But does it have to be this way? And is cyber insurance truly necessary? For the majority of organisations, the answer is that cyber insurance is a worthwhile investment as part of their overall risk treatment plans. There are a number of activities, however, that should be undertaken to optimise the benefits and reduce the costs of cyber-risk insurance.
A rise in high-profile attacks, in tandem with increased regulation and compliance surrounding cyber security and privacy, has shifted the conversation around digital safety. No longer is cyber security an optional aspect of the business model with a fixed, stagnant cost. Businesses today have become too digitally dependent to ignore cyber security, with classified, internal information stored online; communication largely conducted via email or another platform; and the workforce transitioned to hybrid and remote work environments. Effective cyber security and privacy, as well as mitigating financial and operational risks, can be strategic enablers to modern digital business.
Cyber insurance is not a solution -- it's a piece of the puzzle. Regardless of industry or company size, all businesses should conduct an independent cyber audit prior to committing to cyber insurance. In doing so, organisations can determine the need for cyber insurance and better understand their organisations' risk posture and weak points.
Even if insurance is needed, the audit further adds value as it lets insurance companies support the company specific to its digital landscape and help it become more digitally strong. Additionally, the existence of an independent audit and risk review may indeed enable the insurance company to offer higher levels of coverage without the need for excessive premiums.
https://www.techtarget.com/searchsecurity/post/Do-companies-need-cyber-insurance
Threats
Ransomware and Extortion
Ransomware is a global problem that needs a global solution | TechCrunch
FBI: Hive ransomware extorted $100M from over 1,300 victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
The psychological fallout of a ransomware crisis - Help Net Security
New extortion scam threatens to damage sites’ reputation, leak data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Thales Denies Getting Hacked as Ransomware Gang Releases Gigabytes of Data | SecurityWeek.Com
Microsoft Warns of Cyber crime Group Delivering Royal Ransomware, Other Malware | SecurityWeek.Com
Hive Ransomware Has Made $100m to Date - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
LockBit Remains Most Prolific Ransomware in Q3 - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
DEV-0569 finds new ways to deliver Royal ransomware, various payloads - Microsoft Security Blog
Transportation sector targeted by both ransomware and APTs - Help Net Security
Ukraine says Russian hacktivists use new Somnia ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware on Healthcare Organisations cost Global Economy $92 bn - IT Security Guru
Russian hacktivists hit Ukrainian orgs with ransomware - but no ransom demands - Help Net Security
Australia to ‘stand up and punch back’ against cyber crims • The Register
LockBit ransomware activity nose-dived in October (techtarget.com)
How to deal with the trauma of the Medibank cyber breach | Andrea Szasz | The Guardian
Researchers secretly helped decrypt Zeppelin ransomware for 2 years (bleepingcomputer.com)
Vanuatu: Hackers strand Pacific island government for over a week - BBC News
Canadian Supermarket Chain Sobeys Hit by Ransomware Attack | SecurityWeek.Com
Two public schools in Michigan hit by a ransomware attack - Security Affairs
Ukraine says Russian hacktivists use new Somnia ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Top enterprise email threats and how to counter them - Help Net Security
China-Based Sophisticated Phishing Campaign Uses 42,000 Domains - Information Security Buzz
Mass Email Extortion Campaign Claims Server Hack - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Netflix Phishing Emails Surge 78% - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Earth Preta Spear-Phishing Governments Worldwide (trendmicro.com)
Email Security Best Practices for Phishing Prevention (trendmicro.com)
Malware
Wipermania: Malware Remains a Potent Threat, 10 Years Since 'Shamoon' (darkreading.com)
QBot phishing abuses Windows Control Panel EXE to infect devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
Researchers Sound Alarm on Dangerous BatLoader Malware Dropper (darkreading.com)
Study: Almost 50% of macOS malware only comes from one app - Neowin
Notorious Emotet botnet returns after a few months off • The Register
Chinese hackers use Google Drive to drop malware on govt networks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft Warns of Cyber crime Group Delivering Royal Ransomware, Other Malware | SecurityWeek.Com
LodaRAT Malware Resurfaces with New Variants Employing Updated Functionalities (thehackernews.com)
New attacks use Windows security bypass zero-day to drop malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Updated RapperBot malware targets game servers in DDoS attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google Wins Lawsuit Against Glupteba Botnet Operators | SecurityWeek.Com
Mobile
Internet of Things – IoT
Shocker: EV charging infrastructure is seriously insecure • The Register
Aiphone Intercom System Vulnerability Allows Hackers to Open Doors | SecurityWeek.Com
Data Breaches/Leaks
Police published sexual assault victims' names and addresses on its website (bitdefender.com)
Whoosh confirms data breach after hackers sell 7.2M user records (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Long-Standing Chinese Cyber crime Campaign Spoofs Over 400 Brands | SecurityWeek.Com
Suspected Zeus cyber crime ring leader ‘Tank’ arrested by Swiss police (bleepingcomputer.com)
Australia's Hack-Back Plan Against Cyber attackers Raises Familiar Concerns (darkreading.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Banks ban crypto to fight fraudsters | Money | The Sunday Times (thetimes.co.uk)
'Three quarters' of retail Bitcoin investors are in the red • The Register
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Massive adware campaign spoofs top brands to trick users | TechRadar
Police Celebrate Arrest of 59 Suspected Scammers - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Cyber Monday Will Be the Most Fraudulent Day of the Season, Says SEON (darkreading.com)
UK Shoppers Lost £15m+ to Scammers Last Winter - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
How scammers are now exploiting cashless parking (telegraph.co.uk)
Experts Advice On International Fraud Awareness Week - Information Security Buzz
Banks ban crypto to fight fraudsters | Money | The Sunday Times (thetimes.co.uk)
Impersonation Attacks
42,000 sites used to trap users in brand impersonation scheme (bleepingcomputer.com)
Instagram Impersonators Target Thousands, Slipping by Microsoft's Cyber security (darkreading.com)
Dark Web
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
2022 holiday DDoS protection guide - Microsoft Security Blog
Updated RapperBot malware targets game servers in DDoS attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cloud/SaaS
Cloud data protection trends you need to be aware of - Help Net Security
Cyber security implications of using public cloud platforms - Help Net Security
Evolving Security for Government Multiclouds (darkreading.com)
Encryption
Why companies can no longer hide keys under the doormat - Help Net Security
Quantum Cryptography Apocalypse: A Timeline and Action Plan (darkreading.com)
Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Social Media
Advertising giant warns clients to stay off Twitter (telegraph.co.uk)
Meta keeps booting small-business owners for being hacked on Facebook | Ars Technica
Guinness, Cadbury’s and Nissan told to avoid ‘toxic’ and ‘dangerous’ Twitter (telegraph.co.uk)
FBI director says he's 'extremely concerned' about China's ability to weaponize TikTok - CyberScoop
Instagram Impersonators Target Thousands, Slipping by Microsoft's Cyber security (darkreading.com)
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Electronics repair technicians snoop on your data - Help Net Security
Google to Pay $391 Million Privacy Fine for Secretly Tracking Users' Location (thehackernews.com)
Security firms hijack New York trees to monitor workers • The Register
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Cyber security jobs: Five ways to help you build your career | ZDNET
Google cloud wants CISOs to do more about diversity • The Register
Amazon poaches top National Cyber Security Centre exec Levy | Business News | Sky News
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Zeus Botnet Suspected Leader Arrested in Geneva - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Police Celebrate Arrest of 59 Suspected Scammers - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Suspected Zeus cyber crime ring leader ‘Tank’ arrested by Swiss police (bleepingcomputer.com)
Police dismantle pirated TV streaming network with 500,000 users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Chinese hackers target government agencies and defence orgs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russian hacktivists hit Ukrainian orgs with ransomware - but no ransom demands - Help Net Security
COP27 Delegates Given Burner Phones To Combat Spying - Information Security Buzz
Avast details Worok espionage group's compromise chain - Security Affairs
Biden set to approve expansive authorities for Pentagon to carry out cyber operations - CyberScoop
Ukraine says Russian hacktivists use new Somnia ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Europe’s spyware scandal is a global wakeup call. (slate.com)
Koch-funded group sues US state over mobile 'spyware' • The Register
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
UK Banks Bolstering Defences As Russian Cyber Threat Rises - Information Security Buzz
EXCLUSIVE Russian software disguised as American finds its way into U.S. Army, CDC apps | Reuters
Pro-Russian hackers claim cyber attack on FBI website: Report | Fox News
Ukraine says Russian hacktivists use new Somnia ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nation State Actors – China
China playing ‘long game’ as it co-opts UK assets, warns MI5 chief | Financial Times (ft.com)
FBI director says he's 'extremely concerned' about China's ability to weaponize TikTok - CyberScoop
Chinese Cyber espionage Group 'Billbug' Targets Certificate Authority | SecurityWeek.Com
Previously undetected Earth Longzhi APT is a subgroup of APT41 - Security Affairs
Rishi Sunak to hold surprise meeting with Chinese president at G20 | Financial Times (ft.com)
Chinese hackers use Google Drive to drop malware on govt networks (bleepingcomputer.com)
State-sponsored hackers in China compromise certificate authority | Ars Technica
Chinese 'Mustang Panda' Hackers Actively Targeting Governments Worldwide (thehackernews.com)
Reports of Chinese police stations in US worry FBI - BBC News
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
US govt: Iranian hackers breached federal agency using Log4Shell exploit (bleepingcomputer.com)
CISA: Iranian APT actors compromised federal network (techtarget.com)
US Gov Warning: Start Hunting for Iranian APTs That Exploited Log4j | SecurityWeek.Com
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
Microsoft Office lets hackers execute arbitrary code, update now | TechRadar
Unpatched Zimbra Platforms Are Probably Compromised, CISA Says (darkreading.com)
Exploit released for actively abused ProxyNotShell Exchange bug (bleepingcomputer.com)
F5 fixes two remote code execution flaws in BIG-IP, BIG-IQ (bleepingcomputer.com)
Samba Patches Vulnerability That Can Lead to DoS, Remote Code Execution | SecurityWeek.Com
Firefox 107 Patches High-Impact Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Windows Kerberos authentication breaks after November updates (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nasty SQL Injection Bug in Zendesk Endangers Sensitive Customer Data (darkreading.com)
Mastodon users vulnerable to password-stealing attacks | The Daily Swig (portswigger.net)
High Severity Vulnerabilities Reported in F5 BIG-IP and BIG-IQ Devices (thehackernews.com)
Tools and Controls
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Cyber Resilience: The New Strategy to Cope With Increased Threats | SecurityWeek.Com
The 4 horsemen of the cyber security apocalypse | Security Magazine
The Top Five Cyber security Trends of 2023: KnowBe4 Makes Its Predictions - MSSP Alert
Build a mature approach for better cyber security vendor evaluation | CSO Online
Almost half of customers have left a vendor due to poor digital trust: Report | CSO Online
Global 2000 companies failing to adopt key domain security measures | CSO Online
Research: Most North American SMBs Outsource Cyber security Management to Third Parties - MSSP Alert
Repair technicians caught snooping on customer data • The Register
Research: Most North American SMBs Outsource Cyber security Management to Third Parties - MSSP Alert
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 28 October 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 28 October 2022:
-‘Biggest Cyber Risk Is Complacency, Not Hackers’ - UK Information Commissioner Issues Warning as Construction Company Fined £4.4 Million
-Ransomware Threat Shifts from US to EMEA and APAC
-Phishing Attacks Increase by Over 31% In Third Quarter
-UK Urged to Watch for Fraud as People Aim to Make Extra Cash in Cost of Living Crisis
-HR Departments Play a Key Role in Cyber Security
-The Long-Term Psychological Effects of Ransomware Attacks
-7 Hidden Social Media Cyber Risks for Enterprises
-54% of Staff Would Reconsider Working for a Firm That Had Experienced a Cyber Breach, Research Finds
-Evolve as Fast as the Cyber Criminals: Protect Your Business Now, Before it’s Too Late
-Enterprise Ransomware Preparedness Improving but Still Lacking
-Why Are There So Many Data Breaches? A Growing Industry of Criminals is Brokering in Stolen Data
-How The "pizza123" Password Could Take Down an Organisation
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
‘Biggest Cyber Risk Is Complacency, Not Hackers’ - UK Information Commissioner Issues Warning as Construction Company Fined £4.4 Million
The UK Information Commissioner has warned that companies are leaving themselves open to cyber attack by ignoring crucial measures like updating software and training staff.
The warning comes as the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) issued a fine of £4,400,000 to Interserve Group Ltd, a Berkshire based construction company, for failing to keep personal information of its staff secure. This is a breach of data protection law.
The ICO found that the company failed to put appropriate security measures in place to prevent a cyber attack, which enabled hackers to access the personal data of up to 113,000 employees through a phishing email.
The compromised data included personal information such as contact details, national insurance numbers, and bank account details, as well as special category data including ethnic origin, religion, details of any disabilities, sexual orientation, and health information.
John Edwards, UK Information Commissioner, said:
“The biggest cyber risk businesses face is not from hackers outside of their company, but from complacency within their company. If your business doesn't regularly monitor for suspicious activity in its systems and fails to act on warnings, or doesn't update software and fails to provide training to staff, you can expect a similar fine from my office.
“Leaving the door open to cyber attackers is never acceptable, especially when dealing with people’s most sensitive information. This data breach had the potential to cause real harm to Interserve’s staff, as it left them vulnerable to the possibility of identity theft and financial fraud.
“Cyber attacks are a global concern, and businesses around the world need to take steps to guard against complacency. The ICO and NCSC already work together to offer advice and support to businesses, and this week I will be meeting with regulators from around the world, to work towards consistent international cyber guidance so that people’s data is protected wherever a company is based.”
Ransomware Threat Shifts from US to EMEA and APAC
The volume of ransomware detections in Q3 2022 was the lowest in two years, but certain geographical regions have become bigger targets as attacks on US organisations wane, according to SonicWall. The security vendor used its own threat detection network, including over one million security sensors in more than 200 countries, to reveal the current landscape.
The good news is that global malware volumes have remained flat for the past three quarters, amounting to a total of over four billion detections in the year to date. Of these, ransomware is also trending down after a record-breaking 2021. Even so, SonicWall detected 338 million compromise attempts in the first three quarters of the year.
Year-to-date ransomware attempts in 2022 have already exceeded the full-year totals from four of the past five years, the vendor claimed. While attacks on US organisations dipped by 51% year-on-year during the period, they increased significantly in the UK (20%), EMEA (38%) and APAC (56%).
The cyber-warfare battlefront continues to shift, posing dangerous threats to organisations of all sizes. With expanding attack surfaces, growing numbers of threats and the current geopolitical landscape, it should be no surprise that even the most seasoned IT professional can feel overwhelmed.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/ransomware-threat-shifts-from-us/
Phishing Attacks Increase by Over 31% In Third Quarter
Email security and threat detection company Vade has found that phishing emails in the third quarter this year increased by more than 31% quarter on quarter, with the number of emails containing malware in the first three quarters surpassing the 2021 level by 55.8 million.
Malware emails in the third quarter of 2022 alone increased by 217% compared to same period in 2021. Malware email volume peaked in July, reaching 19.2 million, before month-over-month declines in August and September, with numbers dropping to 16.8 million and 16.5 million respectively.
According to the report, email is the preferred attack vector for phishing and malware, as it gives hackers a direct channel to users, the weakest link in an organisation’s attack surface. The report analyses phishing and malware data captured by Vade, which does business internationally.
As attacks become more sophisticated, Vade said, they also become increasingly capable of evading the basic security offered by email providers, which almost eight in 10 businesses still rely on, according to Vade’s research.
While the activity of threat actors fluctuates, Vade’s research found that impersonating trusted and established brands remains the most popular strategy for hackers. In the third quarter of 2022, Facebook was the most impersonated brand for the second consecutive quarter, followed by Google, MTB, PayPal, and Microsoft.
The financial services sector remains the most impersonated industry, representing 32% of phishing emails detected by Vade, followed by cloud at 25%, social media at 22%, and internet/telco at 13%.
As phishing attacks increase, the techniques used by threat actors continue to evolve. While phishing campaigns were traditionally large scale and random, more recent campaigns seen by Vade suggest that hackers have pivoted to using more targeted campaigns.
UK Urged to Watch for Fraud as People Aim to Make Extra Cash in Cost of Living Crisis
Brits have been warned to “stay alert for fraud” as more people are out to make extra cash as the cost of living rises across the country.
UK Finance said that more than half (56%) of people admitted that they are likely to look for opportunities to make extra money in the coming months, which could leave some people more susceptible to fraud.
According to the trade association’s Take Five To Stop Fraud campaign, one in six, or 16%, of people said the rising cost of living means they are more likely to respond to an unprompted approach from someone offering an investment opportunity or a loan.
Young people were more likely to be at risk, the data suggested, which surveyed 2,000 people across the UK. More than a third (34%) of 18 to 34-year-olds said they are more likely to respond to an unprompted approach from someone, with three in 10 (30%) also more likely to provide their personal or financial details to secure the arrangement.
Overall, three in five people (60%) said they are concerned about falling victim to financial fraud or a scam. It comes as recent figures from UK Finance showed that £609.8m was lost due to fraud and scams in the first half of this year.
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/uk-watch-for-fraud-extra-cash-cost-of-living-crisis-230154352.html
HR Departments Play a Key Role in Cyber Security
A common shortcoming of human resources (HR) departments is that — despite being an operation designed to put humans at the centre of how an organisation is run — they often fail to adequately align with their IT counterparts and the core technology systems that define how a business is run and protected from cyber-risk.
Insufficient coordination between HR and IT processes and procedures remains common and gives rise to security gaps that can represent some of the most dangerous vulnerabilities on a company's attack surface. Let's examine the scope of the challenge and some key cyber-asset management priorities that can close the schism for a more robust cyber security posture.
Gone are the days when HR's role in securing the enterprise relied on basic tutorials for employees about protecting passwords on company equipment. Today's threat environment intersects with the workforce in more ways than ever — from bring-your-own-device (BYOD) and authentication gaps to user vulnerabilities that make spear-phishing seem quaint. Traditional social engineering attacks are now being augmented by zero-click exploits that compromise employee devices without the user ever having to click a link or take any action at all.
Beyond malicious threats, even routine HR processes can introduce risk to the organisation when they're not adequately aligned with the IT processes in an organisation. As just one example, when an employee leaves a company, the offboarding goes far beyond just the exit interview to also include removing access to multiple enterprise systems, accounts, and devices — all of which require close coordination between HR and IT personnel and systems.
To better secure the enterprise, it's mission-critical to get HR and IT more united in a common and advanced understanding of cyber hygiene and risk mitigation. This relies on enhanced awareness of the impact that HR processes have on cyber assets in other parts of the organisation, as well as the HR role in access management for employees and contractors. This requires asset visibility that must be ongoing and in real time, since our roles, devices, and access to data and systems may change multiple times over the course of our employment.
https://www.darkreading.com/vulnerabilities-threats/hr-departments-play-a-key-role-in-cybersecurity
The Long-Term Psychological Effects of Ransomware Attacks
Northwave has conducted scientific research into the psychological effects of a ransomware crisis on both organisations and individuals. The findings reveal the deep marks that a ransomware crisis leaves on all those affected. It also shows how their IT and security teams can turn in disarray long after the crisis itself has passed.
The research reveals how the psychological impact of ransomware attacks can persist on people in affected organisations for a very long time. It shows that crisis team members may develop serious symptoms far later. Top management and HR need to take measures against this, in fact right from the very beginning of the crisis. They are the ones bearing responsibility for the well-being of their staff.
They also discovered how teams have fallen apart some time after the crisis, with members leaving or staying home on sick-leave. The study reveals that effects can linger throughout the organisation. All in all the investigation shows that this invisible impact of a cyber crisis is an issue for the general business management, and certainly also for HR.
Northwave regards the response to a cyber attack as occurring in three phases. First comes the actual crisis situation, which evolves into an incident phase after about a week. A plan of action is then in place, and recovery measures are launched. The fire has been largely extinguished after a month or so, with the first (basic) functionalities available again.
Full recovery can take one to two years. Each phase has its specific effects on the minds and bodies of those involved, and by extension, on the organisation or parts of it. “On average a company is down for three weeks following a malware attack,” notes Van der Beijl. “But it surprised us that the impact persists for so long afterwards. Psychological issues are still surfacing a year after the actual crisis.”
One of every seven employees involved in the attack, either directly or indirectly, exhibits severe enough symptoms several months later, at a level considered to be above the clinical threshold at which professional trauma treatment help is needed. One in five employees say they would actually have needed more professional help subsequently in coming to terms with the attack. One in three liked to have more knowledge and concrete tools to deal with the psychological effects of the attack.
A ransomware attack has enduring psychological effects on the way employees view the world. Two-thirds of employees, including those not actually involved in the attack, now believe the world is less safe. As one IT manager pointed out, “I’ve become far more suspicious. The outside world is a dangerous place.”
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/25/psychological-effects-ransomware/
7 Hidden Social Media Cyber Risks for Enterprises
Whether they use it to amplify the brand, recruit new employees, advertise new products, or even sell directly to consumers, corporate brands love social media.
According to recent figures, brand advertising on social media is up by 53% in the last year, and that's not accounting for further investments that brands are making in developing and distributing content. They're pushing viral videos, funny memes, podcasts, written material, and more to increase engagement with their customers.
And brands are doing it across not only the old reliable social networks like Facebook and Twitter, but also emerging platforms like TikTok. In fact, according to another recent study, in 2022 marketers are expanding their horizons, with their increased content investments focused on areas like live streaming, long-form and short-form video content, virtual reality and augmented reality content, experimental content, and live audio chat rooms. The top platforms they're focused on most for increasing spending are now TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and LinkedIn.
With the broadening of these social-media marketing strategies comes more risk. Whether an organisation uses social media to amplify its brand, or its executives and employees leverage social channels to bolster their professional and personal brands, these marketing platforms are a breeding ground for a wide range of cyber attacks and scams, including in the areas of artificial intelligence, deepfakes, and biometrics.
Cyber criminals, fraudsters, spies, and activists work around the clock to take advantage of emerging attack surfaces that arise from enterprise use of social media. The article below presents just a few avenues that organisations may overlook when they double-down on their social media investments.
https://www.darkreading.com/application-security/7-hidden-social-media-cyber-risks-enterprises
54% of Staff Would Reconsider Working for a Firm That Had Experienced a Cyber Breach, Research Finds
Over half (54%) of office workers would reconsider working for a company that had recently experienced a cyber breach. That's according to a new study by cyber security technology provider, Encore.
An independent study of 100 C-level executives, 100 Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) and 500 office workers in the US and the UK, conducted by Censuswide, sought to uncover the gap that remains between boards and security teams when it comes to addressing cyber demands.
Only a third (33%) of staff said they would be "completely unphased" if their employer suffered a cyber break-in. The majority (57%) of C-level executives polled said they have been breached in the last 12 months alone. Most office workers, however, were unaware, with only 39% believing their organisation had been the victim of a successful attack.
The immediate financial cost of a cyber-attack remains the number one concern for businesses, but security teams are learning that there is a long tail to these breaches, with employees at risk of losing faith in their company, its ethics and values and its overarching responsibilities to the general public. In a competitive market, this is a stark warning to businesses across the world. Keeping your staff in the dark about cyber risk is a fundamental error, not to mention the additional impact of delayed disclosure to customers.
41% of C-level executives polled named reputational damage as one of the biggest costs to their business following a cyber-attack, with 34% agreeing that loss of clientele or their trust was a significant cost.
Despite many admitting to suffering a cyber breach in the last year, the overwhelming majority (92%) of CISOs and C-level executives polled believe their business is secure at any given moment. Encore believes that a mindset shift is needed at an organisational level, treating cyber incidents and the security of employee and customer data as a fundamental part of normal business operations, not a function that sits on the outside, looking in.
Evolve as Fast as the Cyber Criminals: Protect Your Business Now, Before It’s Too Late
According to the 2022 Cyber Threat Report, 2021 saw a global average increase of 105% in the number of ransomware attacks. Proofpoint's 2022 State of the Phish report said that a staggering 82% of UK businesses that experienced a ransomware attack sent payment to the cyber criminals – believing this was the cheapest and easiest way to regain access to their data. However, in many cases criminals simply took the payment without restoring access and the organisation finds itself on criminal target lists as it has demonstrated that attacks pay off. Even when decryption keys are handed over it can take an extended period of time to restore data.
One attack, on a hospital in Dusseldorf, Germany, was implicated in the death of a patient who had to be diverted to an alternative site as the A&E department had been forced to close due to the loss of core computer systems. It appears that the attack had been misdirected, and the hackers – who were quickly apprehended by the police – handed over the encryption keys immediately when they realised what had happened. Nevertheless, the decryption process was slow. It began in the early hours of September 11 and by September 20 the hospital was still unable to add or retrieve information, or even send emails. 30 servers had been corrupted.
The methods and techniques required to conduct a cyber-attack have never been more accessible. Whether it is on the darknet or through open-source content, the ability to purchase material that allows a malicious user to conduct a cyber-attack is readily available. Conducting a ransomware attack and using it to extort money from companies and government services alike, is now viewed as a viable business model by organised criminals.
Enterprise Ransomware Preparedness Improving but Still Lacking
The majority of organisations have made ransomware preparedness a top-five business priority, yet only half believe their preparedness is stronger than it was two years ago. That is according to a recent survey, "The Long Road Ahead to Ransomware Preparedness" by Enterprise Strategy Group, a division of TechTarget.
Despite warnings and available preparedness resources, ransomware continues to distress companies. Seventy-nine percent of survey respondents said they suffered a successful attack within the last year, and 73% reported they had one or more attacks that caused negative financial impact or disrupted business operations in the same time period.
The good news is the board and the C-suite are finally getting the message that more needs to be done to address impending ransomware attempts. In fact, 79% of respondents said business leaders made ransomware preparedness a top business priority, and 82% of organisations plan to invest more in ransomware preparedness over the next 12 to 18 months.
With preparedness investments expected to grow, the survey asked how organisations currently tackle ransomware. Respondents said the most important prevention tactics involve efforts in the following:
network security (43%)
backup infrastructure security (40%)
endpoint security (39%)
email security (36%)
data encryption (36%)
Ongoing activities cited included data recovery testing, employee security awareness training, response readiness assessments, incident response functional exercises, penetration testing, incident planning and playbook development, phishing simulation programs, tabletop exercises, and blue/red/purple team engagements.
Why Are There So Many Data Breaches? A Growing Industry of Criminals is Brokering in Stolen Data
New details have emerged on the severity of the Australian Medibank hack, which has now affected all users. Optus, Medibank, Woolworths, and, last Friday, electricity provider Energy Australia are all now among the Australian household names that have fallen victim to a data breach.
If it seems like barely a week goes by without news of another incident like this, you would be right. Cyber crime is on the rise – seven major Australian businesses were affected by data breaches in the past month alone.
But why now? And who is responsible for this latest wave of cyber attacks?
In large part, the increasing number of data breaches is being driven by the growth of a global illicit industry that trades in your data. In particular, hackers known as “initial access brokers” specialise in illegally gaining access to victim networks and then selling this access to other cyber criminals.
Hackers and initial access brokers are just one part of a complex and diversifying cyber crime ecosystem. This ecosystem contains various cyber criminal groups who increasingly specialise in one particular aspect of online crime and then work together to carry out the attacks.
Ransomware attacks are complex, involving up to nine different stages. These include gaining access to a victim’s network, stealing data, encrypting a victim’s network, and issuing a ransom demand. Increasingly, these attacks are carried out not by lone cyber criminal groups, but rather by networks of different cyber crime groups, each of which specialises in a different stage of the attack.
Initial access brokers will often carry out the first stage of a ransomware attack. Described by Google’s Threat Analysis Group as “the opportunistic locksmiths of the security world”, it’s their job to gain access to a victim’s network.
How The "pizza123" Password Could Take Down an Organisation
Criminal hackers took responsibility for a recent FastCompany breach, saying they exploited an easily guessed default password, "pizza123." The business magazine reused the weak password across a dozen WordPress accounts, according to the hackers, who described the attack in their own article on FastCompany.com before the publication took the site down.
The breach, the bitter taste of pizza123, and the plight of malicious push notifications, demand caution when selecting and managing passwords.
The hackers claimed to have used the vulnerable password pizza123 to access authentication tokens, Apple News API keys, and Amazon Simple Email Service (SES) tokens. Then they sent offensive push notifications to the home screens of subscribers of the FastCompany channel on the Apple News service.
After decades of investment in sculpting the organisation's brand image, a business can watch its reputation flounder in the face of an obscene push notification. The sentiment of millions of faithful customers can turn sour in an instant. By the time organisations block the messages and make public apologies, the harm is done.
Customers can swap to a competitor, or even sue for the offence when they have entrusted a publisher to provide safe content. Regulatory bodies can fine organisations. The company can spend time and money defending itself in court and restoring its image. But malicious push notifications can do a lot worse than offend customers—criminal hackers can load messages with malware and infect consumer devices, leading to privacy violations and consumer financial fraud.
People often build passwords using the first word that comes to mind and a brief series of numbers. Pizza123 is a perfect example of an easy-to-guess password. Employees will create passwords already appearing on breached password lists. Criminal hackers use brute force attacks to confirm working passwords from the same lists.
Nearly two-thirds of employees reuse their passwords. The more they reuse them across business and personal accounts, the more likely criminal hackers will breach them and test them on the organisation. Hackers know to try the same passwords on different companies they hack because of password reuse.
Robust password management enables fine-grained password policies and policy customisation. With a custom password policy, organisations can increase complexity requirements, like length and previous-password change minimums. A custom password policy with increased complexity requirements will block 95% of weak and breached passwords.
Password length is a particularly critical component of strong passwords. Ninety-three percent of the passwords used in brute force attacks include eight or more characters. A custom password policy can require a minimum password length, decreasing password entropy.
Threats
Ransomware and Extortion
SonicWall: Ransomware down this year, but there’s a catch • The Register
Health insurer Medibank's infosec diagnosis is getting worse • The Register
Microsoft links Raspberry Robin worm to Clop ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to detect Windows worm that now distributes ransomware • The Register
Ransomware Barrage Aimed at US Healthcare Sector, Feds Warn (darkreading.com)
BlackByte ransomware affiliate also steals victims' data • The Register
Cuba ransomware affiliate targets Ukraine, CERT-UA warns - Security Affairs
OldGremlin Ransomware Fierce Comeback Against Russian Targets (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
CISA warns of ransomware attacks on healthcare providers (techtarget.com)
Ransom Cartel - REvil Rebrand? (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Addressing Ransomware in Hospitals & Medical Devices (trendmicro.com)
Australian Clinical Labs says patient data stolen in ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Vice Society Hackers Confess To Education Sector Ransomware Attacks (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Why Ransomware in Education on the Rise and What That Means for 2023 (thehackernews.com)
Largest EU copper producer Aurubis suffers cyber attack, IT outage (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hive Ransomware Hackers Begin Leaking Data Stolen from Tata Power Energy Company (thehackernews.com)
Ransomware Gangs Ramp Up Industrial Attacks in US (darkreading.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Social engineering attacks anybody could fall victim to - Help Net Security
Twilio Says Employees Targeted in Separate Smishing, Vishing Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Malware
Threat Groups Repurpose Banking Trojans into Backdoors (darkreading.com)
Types of cloud malware and how to defend against them (techtarget.com)
Chrome extensions with 1 million installs hijack targets’ browsers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers use Microsoft IIS web server logs to control malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
Internet of Things – IoT
IoT Fingerprinting Helps Authenticate and Secure All Those Devices (darkreading.com)
IoT security strategy from enterprises using connected devices | Network World
Your CCTV devices can be hacked and weaponized - Help Net Security
Data Breaches/Leaks
Thomson Reuters leaked at least 3TB of sensitive data | Cybernews
See Tickets discloses 2.5 years-long credit card theft breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Twilio discloses another hack from June, blames voice phishing (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Ukrainian charged for operating Raccoon Stealer malware service (bleepingcomputer.com)
Interpol says metaverse opens up new world of cyber crime | Reuters
From Bounty to Exploit Observations About Cyber criminal Contests (trendmicro.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Purpleurchin: Cryptocurrency miners scour GitHub, Heroku • The Register
Cryptomining campaign abused free GitHub account trials (techtarget.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Dealers Report Dramatic Increase in Identity Fraud: Most Lack Effective Protection (darkreading.com)
LinkedIn Releases New Security Features To Combat Fraud (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Beware Of SCAMS As Cost Of Living Bites Finances, Expert Comments (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Insurance
Health insurer Medibank's infosec diagnosis is getting worse • The Register
Cyber Insurance Market 2022: FAQs & Updates with iBynd (trendmicro.com)
Dark Web
Notorious ‘BestBuy’ hacker arraigned for running dark web market (bleepingcomputer.com)
Student arrested for running one of Germany’s largest dark web markets (bleepingcomputer.com)
British hacker arraigned for running The Real Deal dark web marketplace - Security Affairs
Software Supply Chain
How the Software Supply Chain Security is Threatened by Hackers (thehackernews.com)
Open Source Is Just the Tip of the Iceberg in Software Supply Chain Security (darkreading.com)
Consumer behaviours are the root of open source risk - Help Net Security
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
Key observations on DDoS attacks in H1 2022 - Help Net Security
Meet the Windows servers that have been fuelling massive DDoSes for months | Ars Technica
Cloud/SaaS
Everything you Need to Know about Cloud Hacking and its Methodologies (analyticsinsight.net)
Top Cloud Security Challenges & How to Beat Them (trendmicro.com)
Atlassian Vulnerabilities Highlight Criticality of Cloud Services (darkreading.com)
Threat Actors Target AWS EC2 Workloads to Steal Credentials (trendmicro.com)
Cloud and Hybrid Working Security Concerns Surge - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
4 Reasons Open Source Matters for Cloud Security (darkreading.com)
Cloud Providers Throw Their Weight Behind Confidential Computing (darkreading.com)
Hybrid Working
Balancing remote work privacy vs. productivity monitoring (techtarget.com)
Cloud and Hybrid Working Security Concerns Surge - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Attack Surface Management
Attack Surface Management 2022 Midyear Review Part 2 (trendmicro.com)
Asset risk management: Getting the basics right - Help Net Security
Encryption
New Critical Vuln In Component That Allow Encryption Across Internet - (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
API
Open Source
Open Source Is Just the Tip of the Iceberg in Software Supply Chain Security (darkreading.com)
4 Reasons Open Source Matters for Cloud Security (darkreading.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Why it's time to expire mandatory password expiration policies (techtarget.com)
Feds say Ukrainian man running malware service amassed 50M unique credentials | Ars Technica
Biometrics
Social Media
LinkedIn Phishing Spoof Bypasses Google Workspace Security (darkreading.com)
LinkedIn's new security features combat fake profiles, threat actors (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber security event cancelled after scammers disrupt LinkedIn live chat (bitdefender.com)
Expert Opinion: What Does Musk's Takeover Mean For Cyber security? (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Cyber attackers Target Instagram Users With Threats of Copyright Infringement (darkreading.com)
Cyber Bullying, Cyber Stalking and Sextortion
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Data Protection
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Ukraine: Russian cyber attacks aimless and opportunistic (techtarget.com)
Unknown Actors are Deploying RomCom RAT to Target Ukrainian Military (thehackernews.com)
Slovak, Polish Parliaments Hit by Cyber attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Cuba ransomware affiliate targets Ukraine, CERT-UA warns - Security Affairs
Ukraine Warns of Cuba Ransomware Attacks - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Russia says Starlink satellites could become military target • The Register
Calls for inquiry mount after reports that Truss’s phone was hacked | Financial Times
OldGremlin Ransomware Fierce Comeback Against Russian Targets (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Nation State Actors – China
Chinese Connected Cyber Crew Unleashes Disinformation Campaign Ahead of US Elections - MSSP Alert
Federal bans don't stop US states from buying Chinese kit • The Register
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Vulnerabilities
OpenSSL to fix the second critical flaw ever - Security Affairs
Urgent: Google Issues Emergency Patch for Chrome Zero-Day (darkreading.com)
ConnectWise fixes RCE bug exposing thousands of servers to attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Apple megaupdate: Ventura out, iOS and iPad kernel zero-day – act now! – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Windows Mark of the Web Zero-Days Remain Patchless, Under Exploit (darkreading.com)
22-Year-Old Vulnerability Reported in Widely Used SQLite Database Library (thehackernews.com)
Cisco warns admins to patch AnyConnect flaws exploited in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Exploit released for critical VMware RCE vulnerability, patch now (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cisco Confirms In-the-Wild Exploitation of Two VPN Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Incoming OpenSSL critical fix: Organisations, users, get ready! - Help Net Security
Cisco Users Informed of Vulnerabilities in Identity Services Engine | SecurityWeek.Com
VMware fixes critical RCE in VMware Cloud Foundation - Security Affairs
VMware Patches Critical Vulnerability in End-of-Life Product | SecurityWeek.Com
Multiple vulnerabilities affect the Juniper Junos OS - Security Affairs
Other News
Cyber Security Risks & Stats This Spooky Season (darkreading.com)
Cyber Certification Skills Are For Life, Not Just For Linkedin (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Implementing Defence in Depth to Prevent and Mitigate Cyber Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Cyber security’s importance and impact reaches all levels of the tech workforce - Help Net Security
Stress Is Driving Cyber Security Professionals to Rethink Roles (darkreading.com)
Equifax's Lessons Are Still Relevant, 5 Years Later (darkreading.com)
Why dark data is a growing danger for corporations - Help Net Security
Know the dangers you're facing: 4 notable TTPs used by cyber criminals worldwide - Help Net Security
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 07 October 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 07 October 2022:
-Russian Sanctions Instigator Lloyd's Possibly Hit by Cyber Attack
-Former Uber Security Chief Convicted of Covering Up Data Breach
-First 72 Hours of Incident Response Critical to Taming Cyber Attack Chaos
-Email Defences Under Siege: Phishing Attacks Dramatically Improve
-Remote Services Are Becoming an Attractive Target for Ransomware
-Growing Reliance on Cloud Brings New Security Challenges
-Many IT Pros Don’t Think a Ransomware Attack Can Impact Microsoft 365 Data
-Ransomware Group Bypasses "Enormous" Range of EDR Tools
-MS Exchange Zero-Days: The Calm Before the Storm?
-Average Company with Data in the Cloud Faces $28 Million in Data-Breach Risk
-Secureworks Finds Network Intruders See Little Resistance
-Regulations, Laws and Accountability are Changing the Cyber Security Landscape
-This Year’s Biggest Cyber Threats
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Russian Sanctions Instigator Lloyd's Possibly Hit by Cyber Attack
Lloyd’s of London, the London-based insurance market heavily involved in implementing sanctions against Russia, may have been hit by a cyber-attack. On Wednesday, October 5, 2022, the British insurance market revealed it had detected “unusual activity” on its systems and has turned off all external connectivity “as a precautionary measure.”
“We have informed market participants and relevant parties, and we will provide more information once our investigations have concluded,” said a Lloyd’s spokesperson.
The company did not comment on whether or not it has been contacted by hackers, if a ransom demand has been issued, or on the possible source of the attack.
However, the insurance market has been closely involved with the design and implementation of sanctions imposed on Russia in response to its invasion of Ukraine – a potential motive for the attack. Lloyd’s itself has confirmed it was working closely with British and international governments to implement such sanctions.
Around 100 insurance syndicates operate at Lloyd's.
Earlier in 2022, Lloyd’s instructed its 76 insurance syndicates to remove “nation-state-backed cyber attacks” from insurance policies by March 2023, as well as losses “arising from a war.”
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/lloyds-possibly-hit-by-cyberattack/
Former Uber Security Chief Convicted of Covering Up Data Breach
Uber’s former head of security has been convicted of covering up a 2016 data breach at the rideshare giant, hiding details from US regulators and paying off a pair of hackers in return for their discretion.
The trial, closely watched in cyber security circles, is believed to be the first criminal prosecution of a company executive over the handling of a data breach.
Joe Sullivan, who was fired in 2017 over the incident, was found guilty by a San Francisco jury of obstructing an investigation by the Federal Trade Commission. At the time of the 2016 breach, the regulator had been investigating the car-booking service over a different cyber security lapse that had occurred two years earlier.
Jurors also convicted Sullivan of a second count related to having knowledge of but failing to report the 2016 breach to the appropriate government authorities. The incident eventually became public in 2017 when Dara Khosrowshahi, who had just taken over as chief executive, disclosed details of the attack.
Prosecutors said Sullivan had taken steps to make sure data compromised in the attack would not be revealed. According to court documents, two hackers approached Sullivan’s team to notify Uber of a security flaw that exposed the personal information of almost 60mn drivers and riders on the platform.
https://www.ft.com/content/051af6a1-41d1-4a6c-9e5a-d23d46b2a9c9
First 72 Hours of Incident Response Critical to Taming Cyber Attack Chaos
Cyber security professionals tasked with responding to attacks experience stress, burnout, and mental health issues that are exacerbated by a lack of breach preparedness and sufficient incident response practice in their organisations.
A new IBM Security-sponsored survey published this week found that two-thirds (67%) of incident responders suffer stress and anxiety during at least some of their engagements, while 44% have sacrificed the well-being of their relationships, and 42% have suffered burnout, according to the survey conducted by Morning Consult. In addition, 68% of incidents responders often have to work on two or more incidents at the same time, increasing their stress, according to the survey's results.
Companies that plan and practice responding to a variety of incidents can lower the stress levels of their incident responders, employees, and executives, says John Dwyer, head of research for IBM Security's X-Force response team.
"Organisations are not effectively establishing their response strategies with the responders in mind — it does not need to be as stressful as it is," he says. "There is a lot of time when the responders are managing organisations during an incident, because those organisations were not prepared for the crisis that occurs. These attacks happen every day."
The IBM Security-funded study underscores why the cyber security community has focused increasingly on the mental health of its members. About half (51%) of cyber security defenders have suffered burnout or extreme stress in the past year, according to a VMware survey released in August 2021. Cyber security executives have also spotlighted the issue as one that affects the community and companies' ability to retain skilled workers.
Email Defences Under Siege: Phishing Attacks Dramatically Improve
This week's report that cyber attackers are laser-focused on crafting attacks specialised to bypass Microsoft's default security showcases an alarming evolution in phishing tactics, security experts said this week.
Threat actors are getting better at slipping phishing attacks through the weak spots in platform email defences, using a variety of techniques, such as zero-point font obfuscation, hiding behind cloud-messaging services, and delaying payload activation, for instance. They're also doing more targeting and research on victims.
As a result, nearly 1 in 5 phishing emails (18.8%) bypassed Microsoft's platform defences and landed in workers' inboxes in 2022, a rate that increased 74% compared to 2020, according to research published by cyber security firm Check Point Software. Attackers increasingly used techniques to pass security checks, such as Sender Policy Framework (SPF), and obfuscate functional components of an e-mail, such as using zero-size fonts or hiding malicious URLs from analysis.
The increasing capabilities of attackers is due to the better understanding of current defences, says Avanan, an email security firm acquired by Check Point in August 2021.
"It is a family of 10 to 20 techniques, but they all lead to the objective of deceiving a company's security layers," he says. "The end result is always an email that looks genuine to the recipient but looks different to the algorithm that analyses the content."
Microsoft declined to comment on the research. However, the company has warned of advanced techniques, such as adversary-in-the-middle phishing (AiTM), which uses a custom URL to place a proxy server between a victim and their desired site, allowing the attacker to capture sensitive data, such as usernames and passwords. In July, the company warned that more than 10,000 organisations had been targeted during one AiTM campaign.
Remote Services Are Becoming an Attractive Target for Ransomware
Stolen credentials are no longer the number one initial access vector for ransomware operators looking to infect a target network and its endpoints - instead, they’ve become more interested in exploiting vulnerabilities found in internet-facing systems.
A report from Secureworks claims ransomware-as-a-service developers are quick to add newly discovered vulnerabilities into their arsenals, allowing even less competent hackers to exploit them swiftly, and with relative ease.
In fact, the company's annual State of the Threat Report reveals that flaw exploitation in remote services accounted for 52% of all ransomware incidents the company analysed over the last 12 months.
Besides remote services, Secureworks also spotted a 150% increase in the use of infostealers, which became a “key precursor” to ransomware. Both these factors, the report stresses, kept ransomware as the number one threat for businesses of all sizes, “who must fight to stay abreast of the demands of new vulnerability prioritisation and patching”.
All things considered, ransomware is still the biggest threat for businesses. It takes up almost a quarter of all attacks that were reported in the last 12 months, Secureworks says, and despite law enforcement being actively involved, operators remained highly active.
https://www.techradar.com/news/remote-services-are-becoming-an-attractive-target-for-ransomware
Growing Reliance on Cloud Brings New Security Challenges
There was a time when cloud was just a small subset of IT infrastructure, and cloud security referred to a very specific set of tasks. The current reality is very different, organisations are heavily dependent on cloud technologies and cloud security has become a much more complex endeavour.
Organisations increasingly rely on the cloud to deliver new applications, reduce costs, and support business operations. One in every four organisations already have majority workloads in the cloud, and 44% of workloads currently run in some form of public cloud, says Omdia, a research and advisory group.
Practically every midsize and large organisation now operates in some kind of a hybrid cloud environment, with a mix of cloud and on-premises systems. For most organisations, software-as-a-service constitute the bulk (80%) of their cloud environments, followed by infrastructure-as-a-service and platform-as-a-service deployments.
In the past, cloud security conversations tended to focus on making sure cloud environments are being configured properly, but cloud security nowadays goes far beyond just configuration management. The sprawling cloud environment means security management has to be centralised, Omdia said. Security functions also need to be integrated into existing application deployment workflows.
On top of all of this, multicloud is becoming more common among organisations as they shift their workloads to avoid being dependent on a single platform. The three major cloud providers – Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform – account for 65% of the cloud market.
https://www.darkreading.com/dr-tech/growing-reliance-on-cloud-brings-new-security-challenges
Many IT Pros Don’t Think a Ransomware Attack Can Impact Microsoft 365 Data
The 2022 Ransomware Report, which surveyed over 2,000 IT leaders, revealed that 24% have been victims of a ransomware attack, with 20% of attacks happening in the last year.
Cyber attacks are happening more frequently. Last year’s ransomware survey revealed that 21% of companies experienced an attack. This year it rose by three percent to 24%.
“Attacks on businesses are increasing, and there is a shocking lack of awareness and preparation by IT pros. Our survey shows that many in the IT community have a false sense of security. As bad actors develop new techniques, companies like ours have to do what it takes to come out ahead and protect businesses around the world,” said Hornetsecurity.
The report highlighted a lack of knowledge on the security available to businesses. 25% of IT professionals either don’t know or don’t think that Microsoft 365 data can be impacted by a ransomware attack.
Just as worryingly, 40% of IT professionals that use Microsoft 365 in their organisation admitted they do not have a recovery plan in case their Microsoft 365 data was compromised by a ransomware attack.
“Microsoft 365 is vulnerable to phishing attacks and ransomware attacks, but with the help of third-party tools, IT admins can backup their Microsoft 365 data securely and protect themselves from such attacks,” said Hofmann.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/03/ransomware-attack-impact-microsoft-365-data/
Ransomware Group Bypasses "Enormous" Range of EDR Tools
A notorious ransomware group has been spotted leveraging sophisticated techniques to bypass endpoint detection and response (EDR) tools.
BlackByte, which the US government has said poses a serious threat to critical infrastructure, used a “Bring Your Own Driver” technique to circumvent over 1000 drivers used by commercially available EDR products, according to Sophos. The UK cyber security vendor explained in a new report that the group had exploited a known vulnerability, CVE-2019-16098, in Windows graphics utility driver RTCorec6.sys. This enabled it to communicate directly with a victim system’s kernel and issue commands to disable callback routines used by EDR tools.
The group also used EDR bypass techniques borrowed from open source tool EDRSandblast to deactivate the Microsoft-Windows-Threat-Intelligence ETW (Event Tracing for Windows) provider. This is a Windows feature “that provides logs about the use of commonly maliciously abused API calls such as NtReadVirtualMemory to inject into another process’s memory,” explained Sophos. Neutralising it in this way renders any security tool relying on the feature also useless, the firm argued.
“If you think of computers as a fortress, for many EDR providers, ETW is the guard at the front gate,” said Sophos. “If the guard goes down, then that leaves the rest of the system extremely vulnerable. And, because ETW is used by so many different providers, BlackByte’s pool of potential targets for deploying this EDR bypass is enormous.”
BlackByte is not the only ransomware group using these advanced techniques to get around existing detection tools, illustrating the continued arms race between attackers and defenders. AvosLocker used a similar method in May, Sophos said. “Anecdotally, from what we’re seeing in the field, it does appear that EDR bypass is becoming a more popular technique for ransomware threat groups,” the firm confirmed. “This is not surprising. Threat actors often leverage tools and techniques developed by the ‘offensive security’ industry to launch attacks faster and with minimal effort.”
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/ransomware-bypasses-enormous-range/
MS Exchange Zero-Days: The Calm Before the Storm?
Two exploited MS Exchange zero-days that still have no official fix, have been added to CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog.
But mitigating the risk of exploitation until patches are ready will require patience and doggedness, as Microsoft is still revising its advice to admins and network defenders, and still working on the patches.
The two vulnerabilities were publicly documented last Wednesday, by researchers with Vietnamese company GTSC, and Microsoft soon after sprung into (discernible) action by offering customer guidance, followed by an analysis of the attacks exploiting the two vulnerabilities. Several changes have been made to the documents since then, after the company found and other researchers pointed out several shortcomings.
Microsoft says its threat analysts observed “activity related to a single activity group in August 2022 that achieved initial access and compromised Exchange servers by chaining CVE-2022-41040 and CVE-2022-41082 in a small number of targeted attacks,” and that the attackers breached fewer than 10 organisations globally. “MSTIC assesses with medium confidence that the single activity group is likely to be a state-sponsored organisation,” they added.
The other good news is there are still no public exploits for the two vulnerabilities. But, Microsoft says, “Prior Exchange vulnerabilities that require authentication have been adopted into the toolkits of attackers who deploy ransomware, and these vulnerabilities are likely to be included in similar attacks due to the highly privileged access Exchange systems confer onto an attacker.”
Enterprise defenders should expect trouble via this attack path in the near future, it seems, so keeping abreast of the changing situation and springing into action as quickly as possible once the patches are made available is advised. Scammers have since started impersonating security researchers and offering non-existing PoC exploits for CVE-2022-41082 for sale via GitHub
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/03/ms-exchange-cve-2022-41040-cve-2022-41082/
Average Company with Data in the Cloud Faces $28 Million in Data-Breach Risk
Hard-to-control collaboration, complex SaaS permissions, and risky misconfigurations — such as admin accounts without multi-factor authentication (MFA) — have left a dangerous amount of cloud data exposed to insider threats and cyber attacks, according to Varonis.
For the report, researchers analysed nearly 10 billion cloud objects (more than 15 petabytes of data) across a random sample of data risk assessments performed at more than 700 companies worldwide. In the average company, 157,000 sensitive records are exposed to everyone on the internet by SaaS sharing features, representing $28 million in data-breach risk, Varonis researchers have found.
One out of every 10 records in the cloud is exposed to all employees — creating an impossibly large internal blast radius, which maximises damage during a ransomware attack. The average company has 4,468 user accounts without MFA enabled, making it easier for attackers to compromise internally exposed data.
Out of 33 super admin accounts in the average organisation, more than half did not have MFA enabled. This makes it easier for attackers to compromise these powerful accounts, steal more data, and create backdoors. Companies have more than 40 million unique permissions across SaaS applications, creating a nightmare for IT and security teams responsible for managing and reducing cloud data risk.
“Cloud security shouldn’t be taken for granted. When security teams lack critical visibility to manage and protect SaaS and IaaS apps and services, it’s nearly impossible to ensure your data isn’t walking out the door,” said Varonis. “This report is a true-to-life picture of over 700 real-world risk assessments of production SaaS environments. The results underscore the urgent need for CISOs to uncover and remediate their cloud risk as quickly as possible.”
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/05/company-data-breach-risk/
Secureworks Finds Network Intruders See Little Resistance
Attackers who break into networks only need to take a few basic measures in order to avoid detection.
Security vendor Secureworks said in its annual State of the Threat report that it observed several data breaches between June 2021 and June 2022 and found that, by and large, once network intruders gained a foothold on the targets' environment, they had to do relatively little to stay concealed.
"One thing that is notable about them is that none of these techniques are particularly sophisticated," the vendor said. "That is because threat actors do not need them to be; the adversary will only innovate enough to achieve their objectives. So there is a direct relationship between the maturity of the controls in a target environment and the techniques they employ to bypass those controls."
Among the more basic measures taken by the attackers was coding their tools in newer languages such as Go or Rust. This tweak created enough of a difference in the software to evade signature-checking tools, according to Secureworks' report. In other cases, the network intruders hid their activity by packing their malware within a trusted Windows installer or by sneaking it into the Authenticode signature of a trusted DLL. In another case, a malware infection was seen moving data out of the victim's network via TOR nodes. While effective, Secureworks said the techniques are hardly innovative. Rather, they indicate that threat actors find themselves only needing to do the bare minimum to conceal themselves from detection.
Regulations, Laws and Accountability are Changing the Cyber Security Landscape
As cyber criminals continue to develop new ways to wreak havoc, regulators have been working to catch up. They aim to protect data and consumers while avoiding nation-state attacks that are a risk to national and economic security. But some of these regulations may provide an opportunity for MSSPs.
Some of these regulations are a response to what’s generally been a hands-off approach to telling organisations what to do. Unfortunately, cyber security isn’t always prioritised when budgets and resources are allocated. The result is a steadily rising tide of breaches and exploits that have held organisations hostage and made private information available on the dark web.
The new regulations are coming from all directions: at the state and federal levels in the US and around the world. While many of these regulations aren’t yet final, there’s no reason not to start aligning with where trends will ease the impact of changing rules. At the same time, many organisations want to hold the government responsible for some kinds of attacks. It will be interesting to see how regulating works, as most politicians and bureaucrats aren’t known for their technological savvy.
In the US, for example, new regulations are in development in the Federal Trade Commission, Food and Drug Administration, Department of Homeland Security, Department of Transportation, Department of Energy, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. Thirty-six states have enacted cyber security legislation, and the count increases as other countries join.
One of the motivating factors for all these new regulations is that most cyber attacks aren’t reported. Lawmakers realise cyber security threats continue to be one of the top national security and economic risks. In the last year and a half (2020-2022), there have been attacks on America’s gas supply, meat supply, and various other companies, courts, and government agencies. One FBI cyber security official estimated the government only learns about 20% to 25% of intrusions at US business and academic institutions.
In March, Congress passed legislation requiring critical infrastructure operators to report significant cyber attacks to CISA within 72 hours of learning about the attack. It also required them to report a ransomware payment within 24 hours. These regulations will also consider reporting “near misses” so that this data can also be studied and tracked. The problem is, how does one define a “near miss”?
This Year’s Biggest Cyber Threats
OpenText announced the Nastiest Malware of 2022, a ranking of the year’s biggest cyber threats. For the fifth year running, experts combed through the data, analysed different behaviours, and determined which malicious payloads are the nastiest.
Emotet regained its place at the top, reminding the world that while affiliates may be taken down, the masterminds are resilient. LockBit evolved its tactics into something never seen before: triple extortion. Analysis also revealed an almost 1100% increase in phishing during the first four months of 2022 compared to the same period in 2021, indicating a possible end to the “hacker holiday,” a hacker rest period following the busy holiday season.
“The key takeaway from this year’s findings is that malware remains centre stage in the threats posed towards individuals, businesses, and governments,” said OpenText.
“Cyber criminals continue to evolve their tactics, leaving the infosec community in a constant state of catch-up. With the mainstream adoption of ransomware payloads and cryptocurrency facilitating payments, the battle will continue. No person, no business—regardless of size—is immune to these threats.”
While this year’s list may designate payloads into different categories of malware, it’s important to note many of these bad actor groups contract work from others. This allows each group to specialise in their respective payload and perfect it.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/06/2022-nastiest-malware/
Threats
Ransomware and Extortion
Ransomware Attacks On The Rise, Secureworks Reveals in its State of the Threat Report - MSSP Alert
Ransomware: This is how half of attacks begin, and this is how you can stop them | ZDNET
Fake adult sites push data wipers disguised as ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
BlackByte ransomware abuses legit driver to disable security products (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware attacks ravage schools, municipal governments (techtarget.com)
More and more ransomware is just data theft, no encryption • The Register
Netwalker ransomware affiliate sentenced to 20 years in prison (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cheerscrypt ransomware is linked to Chinese DEV-0401 APT group - Security Affairs
ADATA denies RansomHouse cyber attack, says leaked data from 2021 breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Avast releases a free decryptor for some Hades ransomware variants - Security Affairs
Cyber criminals Leak LA School Data After It Refuses to Ransom (vice.com)
How Ransomware Is Causing Chaos in American Schools (vice.com)
Ransomware hunters: the self-taught tech geniuses fighting cyber crime | Cyber crime | The Guardian
BEC – Business Email Compromise
BEC fraudster and romance scammer sent to prison for 25 years – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Hackers Target Homebuyers’ Life Savings in Real Estate Scam - Bloomberg
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Callback phishing attacks evolve their social engineering tactics (bleepingcomputer.com)
3 ways enterprises can mitigate social engineering risks - Help Net Security
Malware
OpenText Releases List Of The Year’s “Nastiest” Malware - MSSP Alert
This devious malware is able to disable your antivirus | TechRadar
Bumblebee Malware Loader's Payloads Significantly Vary by Victim System (darkreading.com)
Live support service hacked to spread malware in supply chain attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
NullMixer Dropper Delivers a Multimalware Code Bomb (darkreading.com)
Maggie malware already infected over 250 Microsoft SQL servers - Security Affairs
Mobile
Internet of Things – IoT
7 IoT Devices That Make Security Pros Cringe (darkreading.com)
Ikea Smart Light System Flaw Lets Attackers Turn Bulbs on Full Blast (darkreading.com)
Acronis founder is afraid of his own vacuum cleaner • The Register
Data Breaches/Leaks
“Egypt Leaks” – Hacktivists are Leaking Financial Data - Security Affairs
No Shangri-La for you: Top hotel chain confirms data leak • The Register
NSA: Someone hacked military contractor and stole data • The Register
City of Tucson discloses data breach affecting over 123,000 people (bleepingcomputer.com)
Optus Says ID Numbers of 2.1 Million Compromised in Data Breach | SecurityWeek.Com
Aussie Telco Telstra Breached, Reportedly Exposing 30,000 Employees' Data (darkreading.com)
2K warns users their info has been stolen following breach of its help desk | Ars Technica
Russian retail chain 'DNS' confirms hack after data leaked online (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Breaking: Scams Linked To Crypto Soared By 335% (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Hacker steals $566 million worth of crypto from Binance Bridge (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers are breaching scam sites to hijack crypto transactions (bleepingcomputer.com)
Binance Says $100 Million Stolen in Latest Crypto Hack (gizmodo.com)
Hackers are breaching scam sites to hijack crypto transactions (bleepingcomputer.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Meta sues app dev for stealing over 1 million WhatsApp accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft publishes report on holistic insider risk management - Microsoft Security Blog
Unearth offboarding risks before your employees say goodbye - Help Net Security
Splunk alleges source code theft by former employee • The Register
Ex-NSA Employee Arrested for Trying to Sell U.S. Secrets to a Foreign Government (thehackernews.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Consumers Feel Hopeless in Protecting Themselves Against Cyber crime, ISACA Reports - MSSP Alert
BEC fraudster and romance scammer sent to prison for 25 years – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Hackers Target Homebuyers’ Life Savings in Real Estate Scam - Bloomberg
Russians dodging mobilization behind flourishing scam market (bleepingcomputer.com)
Scammers and rogue callers – can anything ever stop them? – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Online romance scam boss netted $9.5m, jailed for 25 years • The Register
Deepfakes
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Live support service hacked to spread malware in supply chain attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Supply Chain Attack Targets Customer Engagement Firm Comm100 | SecurityWeek.Com
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
Cloud/SaaS
Encryption
API
More Than 30% of All Malicious Attacks Target Shadow APIs (darkreading.com)
APIs are quickly becoming the most popular attack vector - Help Net Security
The Problem of API Security and How To Fix It (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
API authentication failures demonstrate the need for zero trust - Help Net Security
Shadow APIs hit with 5 billion malicious requests - Help Net Security
Open Source
When transparency is also obscurity: The conundrum that is open-source security - Help Net Security
How Secure is Using Open Source Components? - IT Security Guru
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Microsoft warns Basic Auth users over password spray attacks • The Register
Is mandatory password expiration helping or hurting your password security? - Help Net Security
Detecting and preventing LSASS credential dumping attacks - Microsoft Security Blog
Meta Says It Has Busted More Than 400 Login-Stealing Apps This Year | WIRED
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Secure Disposal
Backup and Recovery
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Relentless Russian Cyber attacks on Ukraine Raise Important Policy Questions (darkreading.com)
Finnish intelligence warns of Russia's cyber espionage activities - Security Affairs
Kazakhstan Pins Wave Of Cyber attacks On Foreign Actors | OilPrice.com
Albania weighed invoking NATO’s Article 5 over Iranian cyber attack - POLITICO
We breached Russian satellite network, say pro-Ukraine partisans | Cybernews
Ukrainian forces report Starlink outages during push against Russia | Financial Times (ft.com)
Report: Mexico Continued to Use Spyware Against Activists | SecurityWeek.Com
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – China
US authorities name China's 20 favourite vulns to exploit • The Register
Cheerscrypt ransomware is linked to Chinese DEV-0401 APT group - Security Affairs
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Vulnerabilities
Fortinet warns admins to patch critical auth bypass bug immediately (bleepingcomputer.com)
Atlassian, Microsoft bugs make CISA’s must-patch list • The Register
US authorities name China's 20 favourite vulns to exploit • The Register
October 2022 Patch Tuesday forecast: Looking for treats, not more tricks - Help Net Security
Fake Microsoft Exchange ProxyNotShell exploits for sale on GitHub (bleepingcomputer.com)
CISA Warns of Attacks Exploiting Recent Atlassian Bitbucket Vulnerability | SecurityWeek.Com
No fix in sight for mile-wide loophole plaguing a key Windows defence for years | Ars Technica
Hackers Exploiting Unpatched RCE Flaw in Zimbra Collaboration Suite (thehackernews.com)
Lazarus employed an exploit in a Dell firmware driver in recent attacks - Security Affairs
Unpatched Zimbra flaw under attack is letting hackers backdoor servers | Ars Technica
macOS Archive Utility Bug Lets Malicious Apps Bypass Security Checks (darkreading.com)
Fortinet Warns of New Auth Bypass Flaw Affecting FortiGate and FortiProxy (thehackernews.com)
VMware fixed a high-severity bug in vCenter Server - Security Affairs
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Guilty verdict in the Uber breach case makes personal liability real for CISOs | CSO Online
Cyber attackers view smaller organisations as easier targets - Help Net Security
Moody's turns up the heat on 'riskiest' sectors for attacks • The Register
5 reasons why security operations are getting harder | CSO Online
Former NSA Employee Faces Death Penalty for Selling Secrets (darkreading.com)
Fast Company Is Back From the Dead After Being Hacked (gizmodo.com)
Ready Or Not, Web 3 Is Coming And With It Comes Cybersquatting 2.0 (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Cyber Hygiene: 5 Best Practices for Company Buy-In (trendmicro.com)
School Is in Session: 5 Lessons for Future Cyber Security Pros (darkreading.com)
Want More Secure Software? Start Recognizing Security-Skilled Developers (thehackernews.com)
Incident responders increasingly seek out mental health assistance - Help Net Security
You Are Not Alone If You're Unclear About Extended Detection and Response (XDR) - MSSP Alert
Why digital trust is the bedrock of business relationships - Help Net Security
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 23 September 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 23 September 2022:
-Cyber Insurers Clamp Down on Clients' Self-Attestation of Security Controls
-Survey Shows CISOs Losing Confidence in Ability to Stop Ransomware Attacks
-MFA Fatigue: Hackers’ New Favourite Tactic In High-Profile Breaches
-Credential Stuffing Accounts For One-third Of Global Login Attempts, Okta Finds
-Ransomware Operators Might Be Dropping File Encryption In Favour Of Corrupting Files
-Revolut Hack Exposes Data Of 50,000 Users, Fuels New Phishing Wave
-Researchers Say Insider Threats Play A Larger Role In Security Incidents
-SMBs vs. Large Enterprises: Not All Compromises Are Created Equal
-Cyber Attack Costs for Businesses up by 80%
-Morgan Stanley Fined $35m By SEC For Data Security Lapse, Sold Devices Full of Customer PII
-Eyeglass Reflections Can Leak Information During Video Calls
-Uber Says It Was Likely Hacked by Teenage Hacker Gang LAPSUS$
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Cyber Insurers Clamp Down on Clients' Self-Attestation of Security Controls
After one company suffered a breach that could have been headed off by the MFA it claimed to have, insurers are looking to confirm claimed cyber security measures.
A voided lawsuit from a cyber insurance carrier claiming its customer misled it on its insurance application could potentially pave the way to change how underwriters evaluate self-attestation claims on insurance applications.
The case — Travelers Property Casualty Company of America v. International Control Services Inc. (ICS) — hinged on ICS claiming it had multifactor authentication (MFA) in place when the electronics manufacturer applied for a policy. In May the company experienced a ransomware attack. Forensics investigators determined there was no MFA in place, so Travelers asserted it should not be liable for the claim. The case was filed in the US District Court for the Central District of Illinois on July 6 and at the end of August, the litigants agreed to void the contract, ending ICS's efforts to have its insurer cover its losses.
This case was unusual in that Travelers maintained the misrepresentation "materially affected the acceptance of the risk and/or the hazard assumed by Travelers" in the court filing. Taking a client to court is a departure from other similar cases where an insurance company simply denied the claim.
Sean O'Brien of Yale Law School notes that security should be proactive, stopping possible breaches before they occur rather than simply responding to each successful attack. The insurance industry is likely to become more and more pernickety as cyber security claims rise, defending their bottom line and avoiding reimbursement wherever possible. This has always been the role of insurance adjusters, of course, and their business is in many ways adversarial to your organisation's interests after the dust settles from a cyber attack.
That said, organisations should not expect a payout for poor cyber security policies and practices, he notes.
Survey Shows CISOs Losing Confidence in Ability to Stop Ransomware Attacks
Despite an 86% surge in budget resources to defend against ransomware, 90% of organisations were impacted by attacks last year, a survey reveals.
An annual survey of CISOs from Canada, the UK, and US reveals that security teams are starting to lose hope that they can defend against the next ransomware attack. The survey was conducted by SpyCloud, and it showed that although budgets to protect against cyber attacks have swelled by 86%, a full 90% of organisations surveyed said they had been impacted by a ransomware over the past year.
More organisations have implemented 'Plan B' measures this year, from opening cryptocurrency accounts to purchasing ransomware insurance. These findings suggest that organisations realise threats are slipping through their defences and a ransomware attack is inevitable.
The survey did show some bright spots on the cyber security front — nearly three-quarters of those organisations surveyed are using multifactor authentication (MFA), with an increase from 44% to 73% year-over-year. The report added that respondents said they are focused on stopping credential-stealing malware, particularly on unmanaged network devices.
MFA Fatigue: Hackers’ New Favourite Tactic in High-Profile Breaches
Hackers are more frequently using social engineering attacks to gain access to corporate credentials and breach large networks. One component of these attacks that is becoming more popular with the rise of multi-factor authentication is a technique called MFA Fatigue.
When breaching corporate networks, hackers commonly use stolen employee login credentials to access VPNs and the internal network. The reality is that obtaining corporate credentials is far from difficult for threat actors, who can use various methods, including phishing attacks, malware, leaked credentials from data breaches, or purchasing them on dark web marketplaces.
To counter this, enterprises have increasingly adopted multi-factor authentication to prevent users from logging into a network without first entering an additional form of verification. This additional information can be a one-time passcode, a prompt asking you to verify the login attempt, or the use of hardware security keys.
While threat actors can use numerous methods to bypass multi-factor authentication, most revolve around stealing cookies through malware or man-in-the-middle phishing attack frameworks. However, a social engineering technique called 'MFA Fatigue' is growing more popular with threat actors as it does not require malware or phishing infrastructure and has proven to be successful in attacks.
An MFA Fatigue attack is when a threat actor runs a script that attempts to log in with stolen credentials over and over, causing what feels like an endless stream of MFA push requests to be sent to the account's owner's mobile device. The goal is to keep this up, day and night, to break down the target's cyber security posture and inflict a sense of "fatigue" regarding these MFA prompts.
Credential Stuffing Accounts for One-third Of Global Login Attempts
Okta’s global State of Secure Identity Report has found that credential stuffing is the top threat against customer accounts, outpacing legitimate login traffic in some countries. The report presents trends, examples and observations unearthed from the billions of authentications on Okta’s Auth0 platform.
Credential stuffing is when attacks take advantage of the practice of password reuse. It begins with a stolen login or password pair, then threat actors use these credentials across other common sites, using automated tooling used to “stuff” credential pairs into login forms. When an account holder reuses the same (or similar) passwords on multiple sites, it creates a domino effect in which a single credential pair can be used to breach multiple applications.
Across all industries globally, Okta found there were almost 10 billion credential stuffing attempts in the first 90 days of 2022, which amounts to 34% of authentication traffic.
Ransomware Operators Might Be Dropping File Encryption in Favour of Corrupting Files
Corrupting files is faster, cheaper, and less likely to be stopped by endpoint protection tools than encrypting them.
A recent attack that involved a threat actor believed to be an affiliate of the BlackCat/ALPHV ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) operation was found to use a data exfiltration tool dubbed Exmatter. Exmatter is a tool that allows attackers to scan the victim computer's drives for files with certain extensions and then upload them to an attacker-controlled server in a unique directory created for every victim. The tool supports several exfiltration methods including FTP, SFTP, and webDAV.
The way the Eraser function works is that it loads two random files from the list into memory and then copies a random chunk from the second file to the beginning of the first file overwriting its original contents. This doesn't technically erase the file but rather corrupts it. The researchers believe this feature is still being developed because the command that calls the Eraser function is not yet fully implemented and the function’s code still has some inefficiencies. Since the selected data chunk is random, it can sometimes be very small, which makes some files more recoverable than others.
Why destroy files by overwriting them with random data instead of deploying ransomware to encrypt them? At a first glance these seem like similar file manipulation operations. Encrypting a file involves overwriting it, one block at a time, with random-looking data (the ciphertext). However, there are ways to detect these encryption operations when done in great succession and many endpoint security programs can now detect when a process exhibits this behaviour and can stop it. Meanwhile, the kind of file overwriting that Exmatter does is much more subtle.
The act of using legitimate file data from the victim machine to corrupt other files may be a technique to avoid heuristic-based detection for ransomware and wipers, as copying file data from one file to another is much more plausibly benign functionality compared to sequentially overwriting files with random data or encrypting them.
Another reason is that encrypting files is a more intensive task that takes a longer time. It's also much harder and costly to implement file encryption programs, which ransomware essentially are, without bugs or flaws that researchers could exploit to reverse the encryption. There have been many cases over the years where researchers found weaknesses in ransomware encryption implementations and were able to release decryptors. This has happened to BlackMatter, the Ransomwware-as-a-Service (RaaS) operation with which the Exmatter tool has been originally associated.
With data exfiltration now the norm among threat actors, developing stable, secure, and fast ransomware to encrypt files is a redundant and costly endeavour compared to corrupting files and using the exfiltrated copies as the means of data recovery.
It remains to be seen if this is the start of a trend where ransomware affiliates switch to data destruction instead of encryption, ensuring the only copy is in their possession, or if it's just an isolated incident where BlackMatter/BlackCat affiliates want to avoid mistakes of the past. However, data theft and extortion attacks that involve destruction are not new and have been widespread in the cloud database space. Attackers have hit unprotected S3 buckets, MongoDB databases, Redis instances, and ElasticSearch indexes for years, deleting their contents and leaving behind ransom notes so it wouldn't be a surprise to see this move to on-premises systems as well.
Revolut Hack Exposes Data Of 50,000 Users, Fuels New Phishing Wave
Revolut has suffered a cyber attack that gave an unauthorised third party access to personal information of tens of thousands of clients. The incident occurred over a week ago, on Sunday night, and has been described as "highly targeted."
Founded in 2015, Revolut is a financial technology company that has seen a rapid growth, now offering banking, money management, and investment services to customers all over the world. In a statement a company spokesperson said that an unauthorised party had access "for a short period of time" to details of only a 0.16% of its customers.
"We immediately identified and isolated the attack to effectively limit its impact and have contacted those customers affected. Customers who have not received an email have not been impacted" , Revolut said.
According to the breach disclosure to the State Data Protection Inspectorate in Lithuania, where Revolut has a banking license, 50,150 customers have been impacted. Based on the information from Revolut, the agency said that the number of affected customers in the European Economic Area is 20,687, and just 379 Lithuanian citizens are potentially impacted by this incident.
Details on how the threat actor gained access to the database have not been disclosed but it appears that the attacker relied on social engineering. The Lithuanian data protection agency notes that the likely exposed information includes:
Email addresses
Full names
Postal addresses
Phone numbers
Limited payment card data
Account data
However, in a message to an affected customer, Revolut says that the type of compromised personal data varies for different customers. Card details, PINs, or passwords were not accessed.
Researchers Say Insider Threats Play a Larger Role In Security Incidents
Insider threats are becoming an increasingly common part of the attack chain, with malicious insiders and unwitting assets playing critical roles in incidents over the past year, according to Cisco Talos research.
In a blog post, Cisco Talos researchers said organisations can mitigate these types of risks via education, user-access control, and ensuring proper processes and procedures are in place when and if employees leave the organisation.
There are a variety of reasons a user may choose to become a malicious insider, and unfortunately many of them are occurring today. The most obvious being financial distress, where a user has a lot of debt and selling the ability to infect their employer can be a tempting avenue. There have been examples of users trying to sell access into employer networks for more than a decade, having spotted them on dark web forums. The current climate, with the economy tilting toward recession, is ripe for this type of abuse.
The cyber crime underground remains a hot spot for insider threat recruitment efforts because of the relative anonymity, accessibility, and low barrier of entry it affords. Malicious actors use forums and instant messaging platforms to advertise their insider services or, vice versa, to recruit accomplices for specific schemes that require insider access or knowledge.
By far, the most popular motivation for insider threats is financial gain. There are plenty of examples of financially-motivated threat actors seeking employees at companies to provide data and access to sell in the underground or leverage against the organisation or its customers. There have also been instances where individuals turn to underground forums and instant messaging platforms claiming to be employees at notable organisations to sell company information.
SMBs vs. Large Enterprises: Not All Compromises Are Created Equal
Attackers view smaller organisations as having fewer security protocols in place, therefore requiring less effort to compromise. Lumu has found that compromise is significantly different for small businesses than for medium-sized and large enterprises.
There is no silver bullet for organisations to protect themselves from compromise, but there are critical steps to take to understand your potential exposure and make sure that your cyber security protocols are aligned accordingly.
Compromise often stay undetected for long periods of time – 201 days on average with compromise detection and containment taking approximately 271 days. It’s critical for smaller businesses to know they are more susceptible and to get ahead of the curve with safeguards.
Results from the Lumu Ransomware Assessment show a few reasons why attacks continue to stay undetected for such long periods of time:
· 58% of organisations aren’t monitoring roaming devices, which is concerning with a workforce that has embraced remote working
· 72% of organisations either don’t or only partially monitor the use of network resources and traffic, which is problematic given that most compromises tend to originate from within the network
· Crypto-mining doesn’t appear to be a concern for the majority of organisations as 76% either do not know or only partially know how to identify it; however, this is a commonly used technique for cyber criminals
Additionally, threat data unveils attack techniques used and how they vary based on the size of the organisation.
Small businesses are primarily targeted by malware attacks (60%) and are also at greater risk of Malware, Command and Control, and Crypto-Mining. Medium-sized businesses and large enterprises don’t see as much malware and are more susceptible to Domain Generated Algorithms (DGA). This type of attack allows adversaries to dynamically identify a destination domain for command and control traffic rather than relying on a list of static IP addresses or domains.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/09/22/smaller-organizations-security-protocols/
Cyber Attack Costs for Businesses up by 80%
In seven out of eight countries, cyber attacks are now seen as the biggest risk to business — outranking COVID-19, economic turmoil, skills shortages, and other issues. The "Hiscox Cyber Readiness Report 2022," which assesses how prepared businesses are to fight back against cyber incidents and breaches, polled more than 5,000 corporate cyber security professionals in the US, UK, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Spain, and the Netherlands. These experts had some enlightening things to say.
According to the report, IT pros are more worried about cyber attacks (46%) than the pandemic (43%) or skills shortages (38%). And the data prove it. The survey indicates that in the past 12 months, US businesses weathered a 7% increase in cyber attacks. Approximately half of all US businesses (47%) suffered an attack in the past year.
Remote work has caused many smaller organisations to use cloud solutions instead of utilizing in-house IT services. However, with more cloud applications and APIs in use, the attack surface has broadened, too, making these organisations more vulnerable to cyber crime.
Although the proportion of staff working remotely almost halved in the past year — from 62% of the workforce in 2021 to 39% in 2022 — overall IT expenditures doubled, from $11.5 million in 2021 to $24.2 million this year. "Despite 61% of survey respondents now being back in the office, businesses are still experiencing a hangover from the pandemic," Hiscox said in a statement. "Remote working provided a year-long Christmas for cyber criminals, and we can see the results of their cyber-feast in the increased frequency and cost of attacks. As we move into a new era of hybrid working, we all have an increased responsibility to continue learning, and managing our own cyber security."
It may come as no surprise that as more organisations evolve and scale their digital business models, the median cost of an attack has surged — from $10,000 last year to $18,000 in 2022. The US is bearing the brunt of generally higher cyber attack costs, with 40% of attack victims incurring costs of $25,000 or higher. The most common vulnerability — i.e., the entry point for cyber criminals — was a cloud-based corporate server.
However, in terms of attack costs, the report reveals major regional disparities. While one organisation in the UK suffered total attack costs of $6.7 million, the hardest-hit firms in Germany, Ireland, and the Netherlands paid out more than $5 million. In turn, Belgium, France, Germany, and Spain all experienced stable or lower median costs.
https://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/cyberattack-costs-for-us-businesses-up-by-80-
Morgan Stanley Fined $35m By SEC For Data Security Lapse, Sold Devices Full of Customer PII
American financial services giant Morgan Stanley agreed to pay the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) a $35m penalty on Tuesday over data security lapses.
According to the SEC's complaint, the firm would have allowed roughly 1000 unencrypted hard drives (HDDs) and about 8000 backup tapes from decommissioned data centres to be resold on auction sites without first being wiped.
The improper disposal of the devices reportedly started in 2016 and per the SEC complaint, was part of an "extensive failure" that exposed 15 million customers' data.
In fact, instead of destroying the hard drives or employing an internal IT team to erase them, Morgan Stanley would have contracted an unnamed third–party moving company with allegedly no experience in decommissioning storage media to take care of the hardware.
The moving company initially subcontracted an IT firm to wipe the drives, but their business relationship went sour, so the mover started selling the storage devices to another firm that auctioned them online without erasing them.
"This is an astonishing security mistake by one of the world's most prestigious banks, who would be expected to have well–established procedures in system life cycle management," Jordan Schroeder, managing CISO at Barrier Networks, told Infosecurity Magazine.
"Not only does the situation mean that the bank put customer data at risk, but it also demonstrates the organisation was not following an expected policy which explained the secure disposing of IT equipment."
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/morgan-stanley-pay-dollar35m-sec/
Eyeglass Reflections Can Leak Information During Video Calls
A group of academic researchers have devised a method of reconstructing text exposed via participants’ eyeglasses and other reflective objects during video conferences.
Zoom and other video conferencing tools, which have been widely adopted over the past couple of years as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, may be used by attackers to leak information unintentionally reflected in objects such as eyeglasses, the researchers say.
Using mathematical modelling and human subjects experiments, this research explores the extent to which emerging webcams might leak recognizable textual and graphical information gleaming from eyeglass reflections captured by webcams.
Dubbed ‘webcam peeking attack’, a threat model devised by academics shows that it is possible to obtain an accuracy of over 75% when reconstructing and recognizing text with heights as small as 10 mm, captured by a 720p webcam.
According to the academics, attackers can also rely on webcam peeking to identify the websites that the victims are using. Moreover, they believe that 4k webcams will allow attackers to easily reconstruct most header texts on popular websites.
To mitigate the risk posed by webcam peeking attacks, the researchers propose both near- and long-term mitigations, including the use of software that can blur the eyeglass areas of the video stream. Some video conferencing solutions already offer blurring capabilities, albeit not fine-tuned.
https://www.securityweek.com/eyeglass-reflections-can-leak-information-during-video-calls
Uber Says It Was Likely Hacked by Teenage Hacker Gang LAPSUS$
Uber has published additional information about how it was hacked, claiming that it was targeted by LAPSUS$, a cyber criminal gang with a hefty track record that is thought to be composed largely of teenagers.
Last week, someone broke into Uber’s network and used the access to cause all sorts of chaos. The culprit, who claims to be 18 years old, managed to spam company staff with vulgar Slack messages, post a picture of a penis on the company’s internal websites, and leak images of Uber’s internal environment to the web. Now, the ride-share giant has released a statement providing details on its ordeal.
In its update, the company has clarified how it was hacked, largely confirming an account made by the hacker themself. Uber says that the hacker exploited the login credentials of a company contractor to initially gain access to the network. The hacker may have originally bought access to those credentials via the dark web, Uber says. The hacker then used them to make multiple login attempts to the contractor’s account. The login attempts prompted a slew of multi-factor authentication requests for the contractor, who ultimately authenticated one of them. The hacker has previously claimed that it conducted a social engineering scheme to convince the contractor to authenticate the login attempt.
Security experts have called this an “MFA fatigue” attack. This increasingly common intrusion tactic seeks to overwhelm a victim with authentication push requests until they validate the hacker’s illegitimate login attempt.
Most interestingly, Uber has also claimed that whoever was behind this hacking episode is affiliated with the cyber crime gang “LAPSUS$.” It’s not totally clear how Uber knows that.
https://gizmodo.com/uber-says-it-was-hacked-by-teenage-hacker-gang-lapsus-1849554679
Threats
Ransomware and Extortion
Microsoft SQL servers hacked in TargetCompany ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
BlackCat ransomware’s data exfiltration tool gets an upgrade (bleepingcomputer.com)
SpyCloud Report: 90% of Companies Affected by Ransomware in 2022 - MSSP Alert
Netflix-style Ransomware Makes Your Organisation’s Data The Prize In A (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
LockBit ransomware builder leaked online by “angry developer” (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to Prevent Ransomware as a Service (RaaS) Attacks (trendmicro.com)
The Risk of Ransomware Supply Chain Attacks (trendmicro.com)
Europol and Bitdefender Release Free Decryptor for LockerGoga Ransomware (thehackernews.com)
Vice Society Demands Ransom From LAUSD Two Weeks After Hack (gizmodo.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Microsoft: Exchange servers hacked via OAuth apps for phishing (bleepingcomputer.com)
LinkedIn Smart Links abused in evasive email phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
BBC Warns Of Cost-of-living Phishing, Expert Weighs In (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Microsoft 365 phishing attacks impersonate US govt agencies (bleepingcomputer.com)
How DKIM records reduce email spoofing, phishing and spam (techtarget.com)
Security alert: new phishing campaign targets GitHub users | The GitHub Blog
American Airlines learned it was breached from phishing targets (bleepingcomputer.com)
Email-based threats: A pain point for organisations - Help Net Security
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
IT giants warn of ongoing Chromeloader malware campaigns - Security Affairs
Fake sites fool Zoom users into downloading deadly code • The Register
Malicious NPM package discovered in supply chain attack (techtarget.com)
How botnet attacks work and how to defend against them (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
This dangerous Android spyware could affect millions of devices | TechRadar
Banking Users Faced With Rewards Phishing Scam - IT Security Guru
Malicious Apps With Millions of Downloads Found in Apple App Store, Google Play (darkreading.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
Cyber Attack Steals Passenger Data From Portuguese Airline | SecurityWeek.Com
American Airlines discloses data breach after employee email compromise (bleepingcomputer.com)
Significant cyber attack hits Australian telco Optus • The Register
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
London Police Arrested 17-Year-Old Hacker Suspected of Uber and GTA 6 Breaches (thehackernews.com)
Ukraine dismantles hacker gang that stole 30 million accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cambodian authorities crack down on cyber slavery • The Register
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Cryptocurrency world's Wintermute loses $160m in cyber-heist • The Register
South Korean prosecutors ask Interpol to issue red notice for Do Kwon | Financial Times (ft.com)
"Fake crypto millionaire" charged with alleged $1.7M cryptomining scam (bitdefender.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Multi-million dollar credit card fraud operation uncovered (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft Warns of Large-Scale Click Fraud Campaign Targeting Gamers (thehackernews.com)
Cyber crime cost American seniors $3 billion last year, a 62% jump (usatoday.com)
Insurance
Cyber Security Insurance Trends: Key Takeaways for MSPs - MSSP Alert
D&O insurance not yet a priority despite criminal trial of Uber’s former CISO | CSO Online
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
DDoS and bot attacks in 2022: Business sectors at risk and how to defend (bleepingcomputer.com)
Record DDoS Attack with 25.3 Billion Requests Abused HTTP/2 Multiplexing (thehackernews.com)
Imperva mitigated long-lasting, 25.3 billion request DDoS attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cloud/SaaS
Encryption
API
Open Source
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Pressure mounts against Europol over data privacy • The Register
San Francisco cops can use private cameras for surveillance • The Register
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
5 Data Privacy Laws That Could Affect Your Business (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
France and Germany fall foul of EU data retention rules • The Register
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Russia Makes Veiled Threat to Destroy SpaceX's Starlink (pcmag.com)
Researchers Uncover New Metador APT Targeting Telcos, ISPs, and Universities (thehackernews.com)
Russian Sandworm hackers pose as Ukrainian telcos to drop malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Anonymous claims hacked website of Russian Ministry of Defence - Security Affairs
Pro-Ukraine Hacktivists Claim to Have Hacked Notorious Russian Mercenary Group (vice.com)
European Spyware Investigators Criticize Israel and Poland | SecurityWeek.Com
Hackathon finds dozens of Ukrainian refugees trafficked online | Ars Technica
Researchers Uncover Mysterious 'Metador' Cyber-Espionage Group (darkreading.com)
This dangerous Android spyware could affect millions of devices | TechRadar
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Inside Russia’s Vast Surveillance State: ‘They Are Watching’ - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
Russian Cyberspies Targeting Ukraine Pose as Telecoms Providers | SecurityWeek.Com
Nation State Actors – China
Nation State Actors – Iran
FBI: Iranian hackers lurked in Albania’s govt network for 14 months (bleepingcomputer.com)
NATO's Team in Albania to Help on Iran-Alleged Cyber Attack | SecurityWeek.Com
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
Hackers Actively Exploiting New Sophos Firewall RCE Vulnerability (thehackernews.com)
CISA adds Zoho ManageEngine flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalogue - Security Affairs
AttachMe: a critical flaw affects Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) - Security Affairs
BIND Updates Patch High-Severity Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
15-year-old Python flaw found in 'over 350,000' projects • The Register
CISA warns of critical ManageEngine RCE bug used in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical Magento vulnerability targeted in new surge of attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Why Even Big Tech Companies Keep Getting Hacked—and What They Plan to Do About It - WSJ
20/20 visibility is paramount to network security - Help Net Security
Domain shadowing becoming more popular among cyber criminals (bleepingcomputer.com)
Multi-factor authentication fatigue attacks are on the rise: How to defend against them | CSO Online
What's behind the different names for cyber hacker groups (axios.com)
IT services group Wipro fires 300 employees moonlighting for competitors | TechCrunch
How can organisations benefit from full-stack observability? - Help Net Security
Firing Your Entire Cyber Security Team? Are You Sure? (thehackernews.com)
Cyber criminals launching more MFA bypass attacks (techtarget.com)
Microsoft (MSFT) Says Managers Shouldn’t Spy on Staff to Ensure They’re Working - Bloomberg
A third of enterprises globally don’t prioritize digital trust: ISACA | CSO Online
How Malware Hides in Images and What You Can Do About It (gizmodo.com)
International cooperation is key to fighting threat actors and cyber crime | CSO Online
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 05 August 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 05 August 2022
-Average Cost of Data Breaches Hits Record High of $4.35 Million: IBM
-Researchers Warns of Large-Scale Adversary-in-the-Middle (AiTM) Attacks Targeting Enterprise Users
-UK NHS Suffers Outage After Cyber Attack on Managed Service Provider
-A Third of Organisations Experience a Ransomware Attack Once a Week
-Ransomware Products, Services Ads on Dark Web Show Clues to Danger
-Wolf In Sheep’s Clothing, How Malware Tricks Users and Antivirus
-Microsoft Accounts Targeted with New MFA-Bypassing Phishing Kit
-Cyber Attack Prevention Is Cost-Effective, So Why Aren’t Businesses Investing to Protect?
-Securing Your Move to the Hybrid Cloud
-Lessons from the Russian Cyber Warfare Attacks
-Four Sneaky Attacker Evasion Techniques You Should Know About
-Zero-Day Defence: Tips for Defusing the Threat
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Average Cost of Data Breaches Hits Record High of $4.35 Million: IBM
The global average cost of data breaches reached an all-time high of $4.35 million in 2022 compared with $4.24 million in 2021, according to a new IBM Security report. About 60% of the breached organisations raised product and services prices due to the breaches.
The annual report, conducted by Ponemon Institute and analysed and sponsored by IBM Security, is based on the analysis of real-world data breaches experienced by 550 organisations globally between March 2021 and March 2022.
According to the report, about 83% of the organisations have experienced more than one breach in their lifetime, with nearly half of the costs reported to be incurred more than a year after the breach.
The report revealed that ransomware and destructive attacks represented 28% of breaches among the critical infrastructure organisations studied, indicating that threat actors are specifically targeting the sector to disrupt global supply chains. The critical infrastructure sector includes financial services, industrial, transportation, and healthcare companies.
Researchers Warns of Large-Scale Adversary-in-the-Middle (AiTM) Attacks Targeting Enterprise Users
A new, large-scale phishing campaign has been observed using adversary-in-the-middle (AitM) techniques to get around security protections and compromise enterprise email accounts.
It uses a technique capable of bypassing multi-factor authentication. The campaign is specifically designed to reach end users in enterprises that use Microsoft's email services.
Prominent targets include fintech, lending, insurance, energy, manufacturing, and federal credit union verticals located in the US, UK, New Zealand, and Australia.
This is not the first time such a phishing attack has come to light. Last month, Microsoft disclosed that over 10,000 organisations had been targeted since September 2021 by means of AitM techniques to breach accounts secured with multi-factor authentication (MFA).
The ongoing campaign, effective June 2022, commences with an invoice-themed email sent to targets containing an HTML attachment, which includes a phishing URL embedded within it.
https://thehackernews.com/2022/08/researchers-warns-of-large-scale-aitm.html
UK NHS Suffers Outage After Cyber Attack on Managed Service Provider
The UK National Health Service (NHS) 111 emergency services were affected by a significant and ongoing outage triggered by a cyber attack that hit the systems of British managed service provider (MSP) Advanced.
Advanced's Adastra client patient management solution, which is used by 85% of NHS 111 services, was hit by a major outage together with several other services provided by the MSP, according to a status page.
"There was a major outage of a computer system that is used to refer patients from NHS 111 Wales to out-of-hours GP providers," the Welsh Ambulance Services said. "This system is used by Local Health Boards to coordinate these services for patients. The ongoing outage is significant and has been far-reaching, impacting each of the four nations in the UK."
The UK public was advised to access the NHS 111 emergency services using the online platform until the incident is resolved.
While no details were provided regarding the nature of the cyber attack, based on the wording, it is likely that this was a ransomware or data extortion attack.
A Third of Organisations Experience a Ransomware Attack Once a Week
Ransomware attacks show no sign of slowing. According to new research published by Menlo Security, a third of organisations experience a ransomware attack at least once a week, with one in 10 experiencing them more than once a day.
The research, conducted among 500+ IT security decision makers at US and UK organisations with more than 1,000 employees, highlights the impact this is having on security professionals’ own wellbeing. When asked what keeps them awake at night, 41% of respondents say they worry about ransomware attacks evolving beyond their team’s knowledge and skillset, while 39% worry about them evolving beyond their company’s security capabilities.
Their biggest concern, however, is the risk of employees ignoring corporate security advice and clicking on links or attachments containing malware (46%). Respondents worry more about this than they do their own job security, with just a quarter (26%) of respondents worried about losing their job.
According to the report, around half of organisations (61% US and 44% UK) have been the victim of a successful ransomware attack in the last 18 months, with customers and prospects the most likely entry point for an attack.
Partners/suppliers and employees/contractors are also seen as serious security risks, although one in 10 admit they are unable to identify how the attacks got in. The top three ransomware attack vectors are email (54%), web browsers via a desktop or laptop (49%) and mobile devices (39%).
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/08/04/organizations-experience-ransomware-attack/
Ransomware Products and Services Ads on Dark Web Show Clues to Danger
Why is ransomware’s destructive potential so daunting? Some clues are in the “for sale” ads. In an examination of some 35 million dark web URLs, a provider of machine identity management and a forensic specialist found some 475 web pages peddling sophisticated ransomware products and services with a number of high profile crews hawking ransomware-as-a-service.
The work is a joint effort between the Salt Lake City-based Venafi and Forensic Pathways, which took place between November 2021 and March 2022. Researchers used Forensic’s Dark Search Engine to carry out the investigation.
Here are some of the research findings:
87% of the ransomware found on the dark web has been delivered via malicious macros to infect targeted systems.
30 different “brands” of ransomware were identified within marketplace listings and forum discussions.
Many strains of ransomware being sold — such as Babuk, GoldenEye, Darkside/BlackCat, Egregor, HiddenTear and WannaCry — have been successfully used in high-profile attacks.
Ransomware strains used in high-profile attacks command a higher price for associated services. For example, the most expensive listing was $1,262 for a customised version of Darkside ransomware, which was used in the Colonial Pipeline ransomware attack.
Source code listings for well-known ransomware generally command higher price points. For example, Babuk source code is listed for $950 and Paradise source code is selling for $593.
Ransomware Sold for as Little as $1: In addition to a variety of ransomware at various price points, a wide range of services and tools that help make it easier for attackers with minimal technical skills to launch ransomware attacks are for sale on the dark web, Venafi said. Services with the greatest number of listings include those offering source code, build services, custom development services and ransomware packages that include step-by-step tutorials.
Wolf In Sheep’s Clothing: How Malware Tricks Users and Antivirus
One of the primary methods used by malware distributors to infect devices is by deceiving people into downloading and running malicious files, and to achieve this deception, malware authors are using a variety of tricks.
Some of these tricks include masquerading malware executables as legitimate applications, signing them with valid certificates, or compromising trustworthy sites to use them as distribution points.
According to VirusTotal, a security platform for scanning uploaded files for malware, some of these tricks are happening on a much larger scale than initially thought.
The platform has compiled a report presenting stats from January 2021 until July 2022, based on the submission of two million files daily, illustrating trends in how malware is distributed.
Abusing legitimate domains: Distributing malware through legitimate, popular, and high-ranking websites allows threat actors to evade IP-based blocklists, enjoy high availability, and provide a greater level of trust.
Using stolen code-signing certificates: Signing malware samples with valid certificates stolen from companies is a reliable way to evade AV detection and security warnings on the host. Of all the malicious samples uploaded to VirusTotal between January 2021 and April 2022, over a million were signed, and 87% used a valid certificate.
Disguised as popular software: Masquerading a malware executable as a legitimate, popular application has seen an upward trend in 2022. Victims download these files thinking they’re getting the applications they need, but upon running the installers, they infect their systems with malware. The most mimicked applications are Skype, Adobe Acrobat, VLC, and 7zip.
Lacing legitimate installers - Finally, there’s the trick of hiding malware inside legitimate application installers and running the infection process in the background while the real apps execute in the foreground. Based on VirusTotal stats, this practice also appears to be on the rise this year, using Google Chrome, Malwarebytes, Windows Updates, Zoom, Brave, Firefox, ProtonVPN, and Telegram as lures.
Microsoft Accounts Targeted with New MFA-Bypassing Phishing Kit
A new large-scale phishing campaign targeting credentials for Microsoft email services use a custom proxy-based phishing kit to bypass multi-factor authentication.
Researchers believe the campaign's goal is to breach corporate accounts to conduct BEC (business email compromise) attacks, diverting payments to bank accounts under their control using falsified documents.
The phishing campaign's targets include fin-tech, lending, accounting, insurance, and Federal Credit Union organisations in the US, UK, New Zealand, and Australia.
The campaign was discovered by Zscaler's ThreatLabz researchers, who report that the operation is still ongoing, and the phishing actors register new phishing domains almost daily.
Starting in June 2022, Zscaler's analysts noticed a spike in sophisticated phishing attempts against specific sectors and users of Microsoft email services.
Some of the newly registered domains used in the campaign are typo-squatted versions of legitimate domains.
Notably, many phishing emails originated from the accounts of executives working in these organisations, whom the threat actors most likely compromised earlier.
Cyber Attack Prevention Is Cost-Effective, So Why Aren’t Businesses Investing to Protect?
Cyber attacks like ransomware, BEC scams and data breaches are some of the key issues businesses are facing today, but despite the number of high-profile incidents, many boardrooms are reluctant to free up budget to invest in the cyber security measures necessary to avoid becoming the next victim.
In a Help Net Security interview, Former Pentagon Chief Strategy Officer Jonathan Reiber, VP Cyber security Strategy and Policy, AttackIQ, discusses how now, more than ever, companies need to protect themselves from cyber threat actors. He offers insight for CISOs, from talking to the Board to proper budget allocation.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/08/01/cyberattack-prevention-investing/
Securing Your Move to the Hybrid Cloud
The combination of private and public cloud infrastructure, which most organisations are already using, poses unique security challenges. There are many reasons why organisations adopt the public cloud, from enabling rapid growth without the burden of capacity planning to leveraging flexibility and agility in delivering customer-centric services. However, this use can leave companies open to threats.
Since regulatory requirements or other preferences dictate that certain applications remain on private (on-prem) infrastructure, many organisations choose to maintain a mix of private and public infrastructure. Additionally, organisations typically use multiple cloud providers simultaneously or preserve the option to move between providers. However, this hybrid approach presents unique and diverse security challenges. Different cloud providers and private cloud platforms may offer similar capabilities but different ways of implementing security controls, along with disparate management tools.
The question then becomes: How can an organisation maintain consistent governance, policy enforcement and controls across different clouds? And how can it ensure that it maintains its security posture when moving between them? Fortunately, there are steps professionals can take to ensure that applications are continuously secure, starting from the early stages of development and extending throughout the lifecycle.
https://threatpost.com/secure-move-cloud/180335/
Lessons from the Russian Cyber Warfare Attacks
Cyber warfare tactics may not involve tanks and bombs, but they often go hand-in-hand with real combat.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine is a prime example. Before Russian troops crossed the border, Russian hackers had already taken down Ukrainian government websites. And after the conflict started, the hacktivist group Anonymous turned the tables by hacking Russian media to shut down propaganda about the war.
In these unprecedented times of targeted attacks against governments and financial institutions, every organisation should be on heightened alert about protecting their critical infrastructure and digital attack surface.
With the Russia-Ukraine conflict as a backdrop, two Trend Micro security experts recently discussed cyber warfare techniques and how they’re an important reminder for every business to proactively manage cyber risk.
https://www.trendmicro.com/en_us/ciso/22/h/russian-cyber-warfare-attacks.html
Four Sneaky Attacker Evasion Techniques You Should Know About
Remember those portrayals of hackers in the 80s and 90s where you just knew when you got pwned? A blue screen of death, a scary message, a back-and-forth text exchange with a hacker—if you got pwned in a movie in the 80s and 90s, you knew it right off the bat.
What a shame that today’s hackers have learned to be quiet when infiltrating an environment. Sure, “loud” attacks like ransomware still exist, but threat actors have learned that if they keep themselves hidden, they can usually do far more damage. For hackers, a little stealth can go a long way. Some attack tactics are inherently quiet, making them arguably more dangerous as they can be harder to detect. Here are four of these attack tactics you should know about.
Trusted Application Abuse: Attackers know that many people have applications that they inherently trust, making those trusted applications the perfect launchpad for cyber attacks. Threat actors know that defenders and the tools they use are often on the hunt for new malware presenting itself in environments. What isn’t so easy to detect is when the malware masquerades under legitimate applications.
Trusted Infrastructure Abuse: Much like trusted application abuse, trusted infrastructure abuse is the act of using legitimate, publicly hosted services and toolsets (such as Dropbox or Google Drive) as part of the attack infrastructure. Threat actors know that people tend to trust Dropbox and Google Drive. As a result, this makes these tools a prime means for threat actors to carry out malicious activity. Threat actors often find trusted infrastructure abuse easy because these services aren’t usually blocked at an enterprise’s gateway. In turn, outbound communications can hide in plain sight.
Obfuscation: Although cyber security has more than its fair share of tedious acronyms, the good news is that many terms can be broken down by their generic dictionary definitions. According to dictionary.com, this is what obfuscate means: “To make something unclear, obscure or difficult to understand.” And that’s exactly what it means in cyber security: finding ways to conceal malicious behaviour. In turn, this makes it more difficult for analysts and the tools they use to flag suspicious or malicious activity.
Persistence: Imagine writing up documentation using your computer, something you may well do in your role. You’ve spent a ton of time doing the research required, finding the right sources and compiling all your information into a document. Now, imagine not hitting save on that document and losing it as soon as you reboot your computer. Sound like a nightmare—or perhaps a real anxiety-inducing experience you’ve been through before? Threat actors agree. And that’s why they establish persistence. They don’t want all of their hard work to get into your systems in the first place to be in vain just because you restart your computer. They establish persistence to make sure they can still hang around even after you reboot.
Zero-Day Defence: Tips for Defusing the Threat
Because they leave so little time to patch and defuse, zero-day threats require a proactive, multi-layered approach based on zero trust.
The recent Atlassian Confluence remote code execution bug is just the latest example of zero-day threats targeting critical vulnerabilities within major infrastructure providers. The specific threat, an Object-Graph Navigation Language (OGNL) injection, has been around for years but took on new significance given the scope of the Atlassian exploit. And OGNL attacks are on the rise.
Once bad actors find such a vulnerability, proof-of-concept exploits start knocking at the door, seeking unauthenticated access to create new admin accounts, execute remote commands, and take over servers. In the Atlassian case, Akamai's threat research team identified that the number of unique IP addresses attempting these exploits grew to more than 200 within just 24 hours.
Defending against these exploits becomes a race against time worthy of a 007 movie. The clock is ticking and you don't have much time to implement a patch and "defuse" the threat before it's too late. But first you need to know that an exploit is underway. That requires a proactive, multi-layered approach to online security based on zero trust.
What do these layers look like? There are a number of different practices that security teams — and their third-party Web application and infrastructure partners — should be aware of.
https://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/zero-day-defense-tips-for-defusing-the-threat
Threats
Ransomware
Reported ransomware attacks are just the tip of the iceberg. That's a problem for everyone | ZDNet
Initial Access Brokers - Key to Rise In Ransomware Attacks (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Ransomware gangs are hitting roadblocks, but aren't stopping (yet) - Help Net Security
LockBit Ransomware Abuses Windows Defender for Payload Loading | SecurityWeek.Com
German Chambers of Industry and Commerce hit by 'massive' cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Task Force releases SMB blueprint for defence and mitigation (scmagazine.com)
German semiconductor giant Semikron says hackers encrypted its network | TechCrunch
Ransomware Hit on European Pipeline & Energy Supplier Encevo Linked to BlackCat (darkreading.com)
Luxembourg Energy Company Hit by Ransomware | SecurityWeek.Com
Spanish research agency still recovering after ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Countdown Clock Puts Pressure on Phishing Targets - Infosecurity Magazine
The most impersonated brand in phishing attacks? Microsoft - Help Net Security
Open Redirect Flaw Snags Amex, Snapchat User Data | Threatpost
A new malware threat is spying on users' Gmail inbox — do this before you're next | Laptop Mag
Massive New Phishing Campaign Targets Microsoft Email Service Users (darkreading.com)
North Korean Hackers Use Browser Extension to Spy on Gmail and AOL Accounts - Infosecurity Magazine
Other Social Engineering; SMishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
VirusTotal Reveals Most Impersonated Software in Malware Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Gootkit Loader Resurfaces with Updated Tactic to Compromise Targeted Computers (thehackernews.com)
Woody RAT: A new feature-rich malware spotted in the wild | Malwarebytes Labs
New IoT RapperBot Malware Targeting Linux Servers via SSH Brute-Forcing Attack (thehackernews.com)
New Linux malware brute-forces SSH servers to breach networks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Attackers cause Discord discord with malicious npm packages • The Register
Gootkit AaaS malware is still active and uses updated tactics - Security Affairs
Mobile
Facebook finds new Android malware used by APT hackers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google Patches Critical Android Bluetooth Flaw in August Security Bulletin - Infosecurity Magazine
Banking trojan finds new routes to accounts by infiltrating Google Play Store (scmagazine.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Nearly $200 Million Stolen from Cryptocurrency Bridge Nomad | SecurityWeek.Com
Crypto firm that promised security loses $200 million in 'frenzied free-for-all' hack | PC Gamer
Nomad to crooks: Keep 10% as a bounty, return the rest • The Register
Cyber attackers Drain Nearly $6M From Solana Crypto Wallets (darkreading.com)
Man robbed of $800,000 in cryptocurrency sues Google • The Register
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
UK Branded Europe’s “Capital of Card Fraud” - Infosecurity Magazine
Huge network of 11,000 fake investment sites targets Europe (bleepingcomputer.com)
Online payment fraud losses accelerate at an alarming rate - Help Net Security
COMMENT: 'Hi Mum, Hi Dad' Scams On The Rise - Britons Already (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Increase in Fake Tickets Being Sold by Cyber criminals on Social Media - IT Security Guru
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Dark Web
A Ransomware Explosion Fosters Thriving Dark Web Ecosystem (darkreading.com)
The popularity of Dark Utilities 'C2-as-a-Service' rapidly increases - Security Affairs
Software Supply Chain
Cloud/SaaS
Cyber attackers Increasingly Target Cloud IAM as a Weak Link (darkreading.com)
What Worries Security Teams About the Cloud? (darkreading.com)
Who Has Control: The SaaS App Admin Paradox (thehackernews.com)
Enterprises face a multitude of barriers to securing diverse cloud environments - Help Net Security
Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Hackers stole passwords for accessing 140,000 payment terminals | TechCrunch
Credential Canaries Create Minefield for Attackers (darkreading.com)
5 reasons why businesses should never use consumer-grade password managers | TechRadar
Social Media
Hackers Exploit Twitter Vulnerability to Exposes 5.4 Million Accounts (thehackernews.com)
Parliament shuts down TikTok account over China data security concerns (telegraph.co.uk)
Over 3,200 Apps Leak Twitter API Keys, Some Allowing Account Hijacks (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Increase in Fake Tickets Being Sold by Cyber criminals on Social Media - IT Security Guru
Privacy
Cyber Bullying and Cyber Stalking
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Most companies are unprepared for CCPA and GDPR compliance - Help Net Security
Data privacy: Collect what you need, protect what you collect | CSO Online
India scraps data protection law, promises better successor • The Register
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Ukraine takes down 1,000,000 bots used for disinformation (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nancy Pelosi ties Chinese cyber-attacks to Taiwan visit • The Register
Spanish Research Center Suffers Cyber attack Linked to Russia | SecurityWeek.Com
Russian organisations attacked with new Woody RAT malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Greek intelligence spied on journalist with a surveillance spyware - Security Affairs
Rare Pegasus screenshots depict NSO Group's spyware capabilities | AppleInsider
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Nation State Actors – China
Chinese hackers use new Cobalt Strike-like attack framework (bleepingcomputer.com)
Massive China-Linked Disinformation Campaign Taps PR Firm for Help (darkreading.com)
Parliament shuts down TikTok account over China data security concerns (telegraph.co.uk)
Global network of fake news sites push Chinese propaganda, researchers find - CyberScoop
Taiwanese military reports DDoS in wake of US Speaker visit • The Register
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Nation State Actors – Misc APT
Vulnerabilities
VMware urges admins to patch critical auth bypass bug immediately (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical RCE Bug in DrayTek Routers Opens SMBs to Zero-Click Attacks (darkreading.com)
Cisco fixes critical remote code execution bug in VPN routers (bleepingcomputer.com)
F5 Fixes 21 Vulnerabilities With Quarterly Security Patches | SecurityWeek.Com
High-Severity Bug in Kaspersky VPN Client Opens Door to PC Takeover (darkreading.com)
Slack Resets Passwords After a Bug Exposed Hashed Passwords for Some Users (thehackernews.com)
VMware Releases Patches for Several New Flaws Affecting Multiple Products (thehackernews.com)
Hackers are actively exploiting password-stealing flaw in Zimbra (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google fixed Critical Remote Code Execution flaw in Android - Security Affairs
CISA adds Zimbra bug to Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalogue - Security Affairs
Warning! Critical flaws found in US Emergency Alert System • The Register
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
Other News
APIs attacked in 94% of companies in past year - IT Security Guru
Over 60% of Organisations Expose SSH to the Internet - Infosecurity Magazine
How IT and security teams can work together to improve endpoint security - Microsoft Security Blog
Burnout and attrition impact tech teams sustaining modern digital systems - Help Net Security
Machine learning creates a new attack surface requiring specialized defences - Help Net Security
Cyber security lessons learned from COVID-19 pandemic (techtarget.com)
10 enterprise database security best practices (techtarget.com)
Resolving Availability vs. Security, a Constant Conflict in IT (thehackernews.com)
Tips to prevent RDP and other remote attacks on Microsoft networks | CSO Online
The Myth of Protection Online — and What Comes Next (darkreading.com)
The Importance of Data Security in the Enterprise (techtarget.com)
How IT Teams Can Use 'Harm Reduction' for Better Cyber security Outcomes (darkreading.com)
Businesses lack visibility into run-time threats against mobile apps and APIs - Help Net Security
Browser synchronization abuse: Bookmarks as a covert data exfiltration channel - Help Net Security
Threats emanating from digital ecosystems can be a blind spot for businesses - Help Net Security
Busting the Myths of Hardware Based Security - Security Affairs
New Traffic Light Protocol standard released after five years (bleepingcomputer.com)
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 22 July 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 22 July 2022
-Insurer Refuses to Pay Out After Victim Misrepresented Their Cyber Controls
-5 Cyber Security Questions CFOs Should Ask CISOs
-The Biggest Cyber Attacks in 2022 So Far — and it’s Just the Tip of the Iceberg
-Malware-as-a-Service Creating New Cyber Crime Ecosystem
-The Rise and Continuing Popularity of LinkedIn-Themed Phishing
-Microsoft Teams Default Settings Leave Organisations Open to Cyber Attacks
-Top 10 Cyber Security Attacks of Last Decade Show What is to Come
-Software Supply Chain Concerns Reach C-Suite
-EU Warns of Russian Cyber Attack Spillover, Escalation Risks
-Critical Flaws in GPS Tracker Enable “Disastrous” and “Life-Threatening” Hacks
-Russian Hackers Behind Solarwinds Breach Continue to Scour US And European Organisations for Intel, Researchers Say
-The Next Big Security Threat Is Staring Us in The Face. Tackling It Is Going to Be Tough
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Insurer Refuses to Pay Out After Victim Misrepresented Their Cyber Controls
In what may be one of the first court filings of its kind, insurer Travelers is asking a district court for a ruling to rescind a policy because the insured allegedly misrepresented its use of multifactor authentication (MFA) – a condition to get cyber coverage.
According to a July filing, Travelers said it would not have issued a cyber insurance policy in April to electronics manufacturing services company International Control Services (ICS) if the insurer knew the company was not using MFA as it said. Additionally, Travelers wants no part of any losses, costs, or claims from ICS – including from a May ransomware attack ICS suffered.
Travelers alleged ICS submitted a cyber policy application signed by its CEO and “a person responsible for the applicant’s network and information security” that the company used MFA for administrative or privileged access. However, following the May ransomware event, Travelers first learned during an investigation that the insured was not using the security control to protect its server and “only used MFA to protect its firewall, and did not use MFA to protect any other digital assets.”
Therefore, statements ICS made in the application were “misrepresentations, omissions, concealment of facts, and incorrect statements” – all of which “materially affected the acceptance of the risk and/or the hazard assumed by Travelers,” the insurer alleged in the filing.
ICS also was the victim of a ransomware attack in December 2020 when hackers gained access using the username and password of an ICS administrator, Travelers said. ICS told the insurer of the attack during the application process and said it improved the company’s cyber security.
Travelers said it wants the court to declare the insurance contract null and void, rescind the policy, and declare it has no duty to indemnify or defend ICS for any claim.
https://www.insurancejournal.com/news/national/2022/07/12/675516.htm#
5 Cyber Security Questions CFOs Should Ask CISOs
Armed with the answers, chief financial officers can play an essential role in reducing cyber risk.
Even in a shrinking economy, organisations are likely to maintain their level of cyber security spend. But that doesn’t mean in the current economic climate of burgeoning costs and a possible recession they won’t take a magnifying glass to how they are spending the money budgeted to defend systems and data. Indeed, at many companies, cyber security spending isn’t targeting the most significant dangers, according to experts — as evidenced by the large number of successful ransomware attacks and data breaches.
Without a comprehensive understanding of the security landscape and what the organisation needs to do to protect itself, how can CFOs make the right decisions when it comes to investments in cyber security technology and other resources? They can’t.
So, CFOs need to ensure they have a timely grasp of the security issues their organisation faces. That requires turning to the most knowledgeable people in the organisation: chief information security officers (CISOs) and other security leaders on the IT front lines.
Here are five questions CFOs should be asking their CISOs about the security of their companies.
How secure are we as an organisation?
What are the main security threats or risks in our industry?
How do we ensure that the cyber security team and the CISO are involved in business development?
What are the risks and potential costs of not implementing a cyber control?
Do employees understand information security and are they implementing security protocols successfully?
The Biggest Cyber Attacks in 2022 So Far — and it’s Just the Tip of the Iceberg
For those in the cyber resilience realm, it’s no surprise that there’s a continued uptick in cyber attacks. Hackers are hacking, thieves are thieving and ransomers are — you guessed it — ransoming. In other words, cyber crime is absolutely a growth industry.
As we cross into the second half of this year, let’s look at some of the most significant attacks so far:
Blockchain schmockchain. Cryptocurrency exchange Crypto.com’s two-factor-identification (2FA) system was compromised as thieves made off with approximately $30 million.
Still the one they run to. Microsoft’s ubiquity makes it a constant target. Earlier this year, the hacking collective Lapsus$ compromised Cortana and Bing, among other Microsoft products, posting source code online.
Not necessarily the news. News Corp. journalist emails and documents were accessed at properties including the Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones and the New York Post in a hack tied to China.
Uncharitable ways. The Red Cross was the target of an attack earlier this year, with more than half a million “highly vulnerable” records of Red Cross assistance recipients compromised.
Victim of success. North Korea’s Lazarus Group made off with $600 million in cryptocurrencies after blockchain gaming platform Ronin relaxed some of its security protocols so its servers could better handle its growing popularity.
We can hear you now. State-sponsored hackers in China have breached global telecom powerhouses worldwide this year, according to the U.S. Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency.
Politics, the art of the possible. Christian crowdfunding site GiveSendGo was breached twice this year as hacktivists exposed the records of donors to Canada’s Freedom Convoy.
Disgruntled revenge. Businesspeople everywhere were reminded of the risks associated with departing personnel when fintech powerhouse Block announced that a former employee accessed sensitive customer information, impacting eight million customers.
Unhealthy habits. Two million sensitive customer records were exposed when hackers breached Shields Health Care’s network.
They even stole the rewards points. General Motors revealed that hackers used a credentials stuffing attack to access personal information on an undisclosed number of car owners. They even stole gift-card-redeemable customer reward points.
For every breach or attack that generates headlines, millions of others that we never hear about put businesses at risk regularly. The Anti-Phishing Working Group just released data for the first quarter of this year, and the trend isn’t good. Recorded phishing attacks are at an all-time high (more than a million in just the first quarter) and were accelerating as the quarter closed, with March 2022 setting a new record for single-month attacks.
Malware-as-a-Service Creating New Cyber Crime Ecosystem
This week HP released their report The Evolution of Cybercrime: Why the Dark Web is Supercharging the Threat Landscape and How to Fight Back, exploring how cyber-criminals are increasingly operating in a quasi-professional manner, with malware and ransomware attacks being offered on a ‘software-as-a-service’ basis.
The report’s findings showed how cyber crime is being supercharged through “plug and play” malware kits that are easier than ever to launch attacks. Additionally, cyber syndicates are now collaborating with amateur attackers to target businesses, putting the online world and its users at risk.
The report’s methodology saw HP’s Wolf Security threat team work in tandem with dark-web investigation firm Forensic Pathways to scrape and analyse over 35 million cyber criminal marketplaces and forum posts between February and March 2022, with the investigation helping to gain a deeper understanding of how cyber criminals operate, gain trust, and build reputation. Its key findings include:
Malware is cheap and readily available: Over three-quarters (76%) of malware advertisements listed, and 91% of exploits (i.e. code that gives attackers control over systems by taking advantage of software bugs), retail for under $10.
Trust and reputation are ironically essential parts of cyber-criminal commerce: Over three-quarters (77%) of cyber criminal marketplaces analysed require a vendor bond – a license to sell – which can cost up to $3000. Of these, 92% have a third-party dispute resolution service.
Popular software is giving cyber criminals a foot in the door: Kits that exploit vulnerabilities in niche systems command the highest prices (typically ranging from $1,000-$4,000), while zero day vulnerabilities are retailing at 10s of thousands of pounds on dark web markets.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/malware-service-cybercrime/
The Rise and Continuing Popularity of LinkedIn-Themed Phishing
Phishing emails impersonating LinkedIn continue to make the bulk of all brand phishing attempts. According to Check Point, 45% of all email phishing attempts in Q2 2022 imitated the style of communication of the professional social media platform, with the goal of directing targets to a spoofed LinkedIn login page and collecting their account credentials.
The phishers are generally trying to pique the targets’ interest with fake messages claiming that they “have appeared in X searches this week”, that a new message is waiting for them, or that another user would like to do business with them, and are obviously taking advantage of the fact that a record number of individuals are switching or are considering quitting their job and are looking for a new one.
To compare: In Q4 2021, LinkedIn-themed phishing attempts were just 8 percent of the total brand phishing attacks flagged by Check Point. Also, according to Vade Secure, in 2021 the number of LinkedIn-themed phishing pages linked from unique phishing emails was considerably lower than those impersonating other social networks (Facebook, WhatsApp).
Other brands that phishers loved to impersonate during Q2 2022 are (unsurprisingly) Microsoft (13%), DHL (12%) and Amazon (9%).
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/07/21/linkedin-phishing/
Microsoft Teams Default Settings Leave Organisations Open to Cyber Attacks
Relying on default settings on Microsoft Teams leaves organisations and users open to threats from external domains, and misconfigurations can prove perilous to high-value targets.
Microsoft Teams has over 270 million active monthly users, with government institutions using the software in the US, UK, Netherlands, Germany, Lithuania, and other countries at varying levels.
Cyber security researchers have discovered that relying on default MS Teams settings can leave firms and high-value users vulnerable to social engineering attacks. Attackers could create group chats, masquerade as seniors within the target organisation and observe whether users are online.
Attackers could, rather convincingly, impersonate high-ranking officials and possibly strike up conversations, fooling victims into believing they’re discussing sensitive topics with a superior. Skilled attackers could do a lot of harm with this capability.
https://cybernews.com/security/microsoft-teams-settings-leave-govt-officials-open-to-cyberattacks/
Top 10 Cyber Security Attacks of Last Decade Show What is to Come
Past is prologue, wrote William Shakespeare in his play “The Tempest,” meaning that the present can often be determined by what has come before. So it is with cyber security, serving as the basis of which is Trustwave’s “Decade Retrospective: The State of Vulnerabilities” over the last 10 years.
Threat actors frequently revisit well-known and previously patched vulnerabilities to take advantage of continuing poor cyber security hygiene. “If one does not know what has recently taken place it leaves you vulnerable to another attack,” Trustwave said in its report that identifies and examines the “watershed moments” that shaped cyber security between 2011 and 2021.
With a backdrop of the number of security incidents and vulnerabilities increasing in volume and sophistication, here are Trustwave’s top 10 network vulnerabilities in no particular order that defined the decade and “won’t be forgotten.”
SolarWinds hack and FireEye breach, Detected: December 8, 2020 (FireEye)
EternalBlue Exploit, Detected: April 14, 2017
Heartbleed, Detected: March 21, 2014
Shellshock, Remote Code Execution in BASH, Detected: September 12, 2014
Apache Struts Remote Command Injection & Equifax Breach, Detected: March 6, 2017
Chipocalypse, Speculative Execution Vulnerabilities Meltdown & Spectre
BlueKeep, Remote Desktop as an Access Vector, Detected: January, 2018
Drupalgeddon Series, CMS Vulnerabilities, Detected: January, 2018
Microsoft Windows OLE Vulnerability, Sandworm Exploit, Detected: September 3, 2014
Ripple20 Vulnerabilities, Growing IoT landscape, Detected: June 16, 2020
Software Supply Chain Concerns Reach C-Suite
Major supply chain attacks have had a significant impact on software security awareness and decision-making, with more investment planned for monitoring attack surfaces.
Organisations are waking up to the need to establish better software supply chain risk management policies and are taking action to address the escalating threats and vulnerabilities targeting this expanding attack surface.
These were among the findings of a CyberRisk Alliance-conducted survey of 300 respondents from both software-buying and software-producing companies.
Most survey respondents (52%) said they are "very" or "extremely" concerned about software supply chain risks, and 84% of respondents said their organisation is likely to allocate at least 5% of their AppSec budgets to manage software supply chain risk.
Software buyers are planning to invest in procurement program metrics and reporting, application pen-testing, and software build of materials (SBOM) design and implementation, according to the findings.
Meanwhile, software developers said they plan to invest in secure code review as well as SBOM design and implementation.
https://www.darkreading.com/application-security/software-supply-chain-concerns-reach-c-suite
EU Warns of Russian Cyber Attack Spillover, Escalation Risks
The Council of the European Union (EU) said that Russian hackers and hacker groups increasingly attacking "essential" organisations worldwide could lead to spillover risks and potential escalation.
"This increase in malicious cyber activities, in the context of the war against Ukraine, creates unacceptable risks of spillover effects, misinterpretation and possible escalation," the High Representative on behalf of the EU said.
"The latest distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against several EU Member States and partners claimed by pro-Russian hacker groups are yet another example of the heightened and tense cyber threat landscape that EU and its Member States have observed."
In this context, the EU reminded Russia that all United Nations member states must adhere to the UN's Framework of responsible state behaviour in cyberspace to ensure international security and peace.
The EU urged all states to take any actions required to stop malicious cyber activities conducted from their territory.
The EU's statement follows a February joint warning from CISA and the FBI that wiper malware attacks targeting Ukraine could spill over to targets from other countries.
Google's Threat Analysis Group (TAG) said in late March that it observed phishing attacks orchestrated by the Russian COLDRIVER hacking group against NATO and European military entities.
In May, the US, UK, and EU accused Russia of coordinating a massive cyber attack that hit the KA-SAT consumer-oriented satellite broadband service in Ukraine on February 24 with AcidRain data destroying malware, approximately one hour before Russia invaded Ukraine.
A Microsoft report from June also confirms the EU's observation of an increase in Russian malicious cyber activities. The company's president said that threat groups linked to Russian intelligence agencies (including the GRU, SVR, and FSB) stepped up cyber attacks against government entities in countries allied with Ukraine after Russia's invasion.
In related news, in July 2021, President Joe Biden warned that cyber attacks leading to severe security breaches could lead to a "real shooting war," a statement issued a month after NATO said that cyber attacks could be compared to "armed attacks" in some circumstances.
Critical Flaws in GPS Tracker Enable “Disastrous” and “Life-Threatening” Hacks
A security firm and the US government are advising the public to immediately stop using a popular GPS tracking device or to at least minimise exposure to it, citing a host of vulnerabilities that make it possible for hackers to remotely disable cars while they’re moving, track location histories, disarm alarms, and cut off fuel.
An assessment from security firm BitSight found six vulnerabilities in the Micodus MV720, a GPS tracker that sells for about $20 and is widely available. The researchers who performed the assessment believe the same critical vulnerabilities are present in other Micodus tracker models. The China-based manufacturer says 1.5 million of its tracking devices are deployed across 420,000 customers. BitSight found the device in use in 169 countries, with customers including governments, militaries, law enforcement agencies, and aerospace, shipping, and manufacturing companies.
BitSight discovered what it said were six “severe” vulnerabilities in the device that allow for a host of possible attacks. One flaw is the use of unencrypted HTTP communications that makes it possible for remote hackers to conduct adversary-in-the-middle attacks that intercept or change requests sent between the mobile application and supporting servers. Other vulnerabilities include a flawed authentication mechanism in the mobile app that can allow attackers to access the hardcoded key for locking down the trackers and the ability to use a custom IP address that makes it possible for hackers to monitor and control all communications to and from the device.
Russian Hackers Behind Solarwinds Breach Continue to Scour US And European Organisations for Intel, Researchers Say
The Russian hackers behind a sweeping 2020 breach of US government networks have in recent months continued to hack US organisations to collect intelligence while also targeting an unnamed European government that is a NATO member.
The new findings show how relentless the hacking group — which US officials have linked with Russia's foreign intelligence service — is in its pursuit of intelligence held by the US and its allies, and how adept the hackers are at targeting widely used cloud-computing technologies.
The hacking efforts come as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues to fray US-Russia relations and drive intelligence collection efforts from both governments.
In recent months, the hacking group has compromised the networks of US-based organisations that have data of interest to the Russian government.
In separate activity revealed Tuesday, US cyber security firm Palo Alto Networks said that the Russian hacking group had been using popular services like Dropbox and Google Drive to try to deliver malicious software to the embassies of an unnamed European government in Portugal and Brazil in May and June.
https://edition.cnn.com/2022/07/19/politics/russia-solarwinds-hackers/index.html
The Next Big Security Threat Is Staring Us in The Face. Tackling It Is Going to Be Tough
If the ongoing fight against ransomware wasn't keeping security teams busy, along with the challenges of securing the ever-expanding galaxy of Internet of Things devices, or cloud computing, then there's a new challenge on the horizon – protecting against the coming wave of digital imposters or deepfakes.
A deepfake video uses artificial intelligence and deep-learning techniques to produce fake images of people or events.
One recent example is when the mayor of Berlin thought he was having an online meeting with former boxing champion and current mayor of Kyiv, Vitali Klitschko. But the mayor of Berlin grew suspicious when 'Klitschko' started saying some very out of character things relating to the invasion of Ukraine, and when the call was interrupted the mayor's office contacted the Ukrainian ambassador to Berlin – to discover that, whoever they were talking to, it wasn't the real Klitschko.
It's a sign that deepfakes are getting more advanced and quickly. Previous instances of deepfake videos that have gone viral often have tell-tale signs that something isn't real, such as unconvincing edits or odd movements, but the developments in deepfake technology mean it isn't difficult to imagine it being exploited by cyber criminals, particularly when it comes to stealing money.
While ransomware might generate more headlines, business email compromise (BEC) is the costliest form of cyber crime today. The FBI estimates that it costs businesses billions of dollars every year. The most common form of BEC attack involves cyber criminals exploiting emails, hacking into accounts belonging to bosses – or cleverly spoofing their email accounts – and asking staff to authorise large financial transactions, which can often amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The emails claim that the money needs to be sent urgently, maybe as part of a secret business deal that can't be disclosed to anyone. It's a classic social-engineering trick designed to force the victim into transferring money quickly and without asking for confirmation from anyone else who could reveal it's a fake request. By the time anyone might be suspicious, the cyber criminals have taken the money, likely closed the bank account they used for the transfer – and run.
BEC attacks are successful, but many people might remain suspicious of an email from their boss that comes out the blue and they could avoid falling victim by speaking to someone to confirm that it's not real. But if cyber criminals could use a deepfake to make the request, it could be much more difficult for victims to deny the request, because they believe they're actually speaking to their boss on camera.
Many companies publicly list their board of directors and senior management on their website. Often, these high-level business executives will have spoken at events or in the media, so it's possible to find footage of them speaking. By using AI-powered deep-learning techniques, cyber criminals could exploit this public information to create a deepfake of a senior-level executive, exploit email vulnerabilities to request a video call with an employee, and then ask them to make the transaction. If the victim believes they're speaking to their CEO or boss, they're unlikely to deny the request.
Threats
Ransomware
Post-Breakup, Conti Ransomware Members Remain Dangerous (darkreading.com)
The Kronos Ransomware Attack: What You Need to Know So Your Business Isn't Next (darkreading.com)
New Luna ransomware encrypts Windows, Linux, and ESXi systems (bleepingcomputer.com)
Digital security giant Entrust breached by ransomware gang (bleepingcomputer.com)
Protecting Against Kubernetes-Borne Ransomware (darkreading.com)
Knauf cyber attack: Black Basta ransomware gang claims responsibility (techmonitor.ai)
New Redeemer ransomware version promoted on hacker forums (bleepingcomputer.com)
Kaspersky report on Luna and Black Basta ransomware | Securelist
New Cross-Platform 'Luna' Ransomware Only Offered to Russian Affiliates | SecurityWeek.Com
Conti’s Reign of Chaos: Costa Rica in the Crosshairs | Threatpost
Researchers uncover potential ransomware network with U.S. connections - CyberScoop
How Conti ransomware hacked and encrypted the Costa Rican government (bleepingcomputer.com)
A small Canadian town is being extorted by a global ransomware gang - The Verge
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Phishing Bonanza: Social-Engineering Savvy Skyrockets as Malicious Actors Cash In (darkreading.com)
Outlook users report suspicious activity from Microsoft IPs • The Register
PayPal Used to Send Malicious “Double Spear” Invoices - Infosecurity Magazine
LinkedIn remains the most impersonated brand in phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google Calendar provides new way to block invitation phishing (bleepingcomputer.com)
Other Social Engineering
Malware
Hacking group '8220' grows cloud botnet to more than 30,000 hosts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Buy ‘plug-n-play’ malware for the price of a pint of beer (computerweekly.com)
New ‘Lightning Framework’ Linux malware installs rootkits, backdoors (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
Google pulls malware-infected apps, 3 million users at risk • The Register
Roaming Mantis hits Android and iOS users in malware, phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
BYOD
Data Breaches/Leaks
Neopets data breach exposes personal data of 69 million members (bleepingcomputer.com)
Verified Twitter Vulnerability Exposes Data from 5.4 Million Accounts | RestorePrivacy
Mixed Messages as Neopets Scrambles to Respond to Mega Breach - Infosecurity Magazine
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cyber crime escalates as barriers to entry crumble | CSO Online
Understanding the Evolution of Cyber Crime to Predict its Future | SecurityWeek.Com
The growth in targeted, sophisticated cyber attacks troubles top FBI cyber official - CyberScoop
'AIG' Threat Group Launches with Unique Business Model (darkreading.com)
US DOJ report warns of escalating cyber crime, 'blended' threats (techtarget.com)
Chaotic LAPSUS$ Group Goes Quiet, but Threat Likely Persists (darkreading.com)
Last member of Gozi malware troika arrives in US for criminal trial – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Romanian hacker faces US trial over virus-for-hire service - The Verge
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
This Cloud Botnet Has Hijacked 30,000 Systems to Mine Cryptocurrencies (thehackernews.com)
Hackers Use Evilnum Malware to Target Cryptocurrency and Commodities Platforms (thehackernews.com)
Singapore distances itself from local crypto companies • The Register
FBI Warns Fake Crypto Apps are Bilking Investors of Millions | Threatpost
Ex-Coinbase manager charged in crypto insider trading case • The Register
FBI Warns of Fake Cryptocurrency Apps Stealing Millions from Investors (thehackernews.com)
My Big Coin founder guilty of $6m crypto-fraud • The Register
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
AML/CFT/Sanctions
UK Regulator Issues Record Fines as Financial Crime Surges - Infosecurity Magazine
Broker Fined £2m for Financial Crime Control Failings - Infosecurity Magazine
Insurance
82% of global insurers expect the rise in cyber insurance premiums to continue - Help Net Security
Will Your Cyber Insurance Premiums Protect You in Times of War? (darkreading.com)
Dark Web
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Improving Software Supply Chain Cyber Security (trendmicro.com)
Why SBOMs aren't the silver bullet they're portrayed as - Help Net Security
Breaking down CIS's new software supply chain security guidance | CSO Online
Cloud/SaaS
60% of IT leaders are not confident about their secure cloud access - Help Net Security
Public Cloud Customers Admit Security Challenges - Infosecurity Magazine
The New Weak Link in SaaS Security: Devices (thehackernews.com)
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
Open Source
Open source security needs automation as usage climbs amongst organisations | ZDNet
New ‘Lightning Framework’ Linux malware installs rootkits, backdoors (bleepingcomputer.com)
The US military wants to understand the most important software on earth | MIT Technology Review
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
The importance of secure passwords can't be emphasized enough - Help Net Security
3rd Party Services Are Falling Short on Password Security (bleepingcomputer.com)
Okta Exposes Passwords in Clear Text for Possible Theft (darkreading.com)
Enforcing Password History in Your Windows AD to Curb Password Reuse (bleepingcomputer.com)
Social Media
LinkedIn remains the most impersonated brand in phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hacker selling Twitter account data of 5.4 million users for $30k (bleepingcomputer.com)
TikTok Engaging in Excessive Data Collection - Infosecurity Magazine
Privacy
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
UK Regulator Issues Record Fines as Financial Crime Surges - Infosecurity Magazine
Legal Experts Concerned Over New UK Digital Reform Bill - Infosecurity Magazine
Understanding Proposed SEC Rules Through an ESG Lens (darkreading.com)
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
EU warns of risks of spillover effects associated with ongoing war - Security Affairs
US Cyber Command IDs new malware strains targeting Ukraine • The Register
Russian hackers use fake DDoS app to infect pro-Ukrainian activists (bleepingcomputer.com)
Experts Uncover New CloudMensis Spyware Targeting Apple macOS Users (thehackernews.com)
Hackers attempt to infiltrate Ukrainian tech company with backdoor malware, Talos says - CyberScoop
Will Your Cyber-Insurance Premiums Protect You in Times of War? (darkreading.com)
Hackers Target Ukrainian Software Company Using GoMet Backdoor (thehackernews.com)
Copycat DoS App Created by Russian Hackers to Target Ukraine - IT Security Guru
Albanian government websites go dark after cyber attack • The Register
Mysterious, Cloud-Enabled macOS Spyware Blows Onto the Scene (darkreading.com)
Belgium claims China-linked APT groups hit its ministries - Security Affairs
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Google, EU Warn of Malicious Russian Cyber Activity | SecurityWeek.Com
Google warns Kremlin-backed goons pose as pro-Ukraine app • The Register
Russia Released a Ukrainian App for Hacking Russia That Was Actually Malware (vice.com)
Cloaked Ursa (APT29) Hackers Use Trusted Online Storage Services (paloaltonetworks.com)
Russian SVR hackers use Google Drive, Dropbox to evade detection (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russia, Iran discuss broad tech collaboration • The Register
Half of Russian spies in Europe expelled since Ukraine invasion, says MI6 chief | MI6 | The Guardian
Nation State Actors – China
Belgium says Chinese APT gangs attacked its government • The Register
Government blocks Chinese tech deal on national security grounds | Business News | Sky News
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Nation State Actors – Misc APT
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
Chrome 103 Update Patches High-Severity Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Critical Bugs Threaten to Crack Atlassian Confluence Workspaces Wide Open (darkreading.com)
WordPress Page Builder Plug-in Under Attack, Can't Be Patched (darkreading.com)
SonicWall: Patch critical SQL injection bug immediately (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cisco fixes bug that lets attackers execute commands as root (bleepingcomputer.com)
Atlassian reveals critical flaws across its product line • The Register
Netwrix Auditor Vulnerability Can Facilitate Attacks on Enterprises | SecurityWeek.Com
Azure's Security Vulnerabilities Are Out of Control - Last Week in AWS Blog
Oracle Releases 349 New Security Patches With July 2022 CPU | SecurityWeek.Com
0-day used to infect Chrome users could pose threat to Edge and Safari users, too | Ars Technica
Juniper Networks Patches Over 200 Third-Party Component Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Google Chrome Zero-Day Weaponized to Spy on Journalists (darkreading.com)
Apple Ships Urgent Security Patches for macOS, iOS | SecurityWeek.Com
Juniper Releases Patches for Critical Flaws in Junos OS and Contrail Networking (thehackernews.com)
Code Execution and Other Vulnerabilities Patched in Drupal | SecurityWeek.Com
Atlassian Rolls Out Security Patch for Critical Confluence Vulnerability (thehackernews.com)
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
Other News
Hackers for Hire: Adversaries Employ 'Cyber Mercenaries' | Threatpost
Companies around the globe still not implementing MFA - Help Net Security
Global Firms Fear the Worst Over Risk Management Failures - Infosecurity Magazine
Humans are becoming the primary security risk for organisations around the world - Help Net Security
What threats and challenges are CISOs and CROs most focused on? - Help Net Security
What InfoSec Pros Can Teach the Organisation About ESG (darkreading.com)
SATAn Turns Hard Drive Cable Into Antenna To Defeat Air-Gapped Security | Hackaday
Lack of staff and resources drives smaller teams to outsource security - Help Net Security
Office macro security: on-again-off-again feature now BACK ON AGAIN! – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Removing the blind spots that allow lateral movement - Help Net Security
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 17 June 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 17 June 2022
-How Organisations Can Protect Themselves in The Emerging Risk Landscape
-Phishing Reaches All-Time High in Early 2022
-Ransomware Attacks Are Surging, with More Dangerous Hybrid Attacks to Come. Is Your Cyber Security Up to Date?
-The Challenges of Managing Increased Complexity As Hybrid IT Accelerates
-72% Of Middle Market Companies Expect to Experience a Cyber Attack
-Malware's Destruction Trajectory and How to Defeat It
-Which Stolen Data Are Ransomware Gangs Most Likely to Disclose?
-Threat Actors Becoming More Creative Exploiting the Human Factor
-66% Of Organisations Store 21%-60% Of Their Sensitive Data in The Cloud
-Travel-related Cyber Crime Takes Off as Industry Rebounds
-How Should You Think About Security When Considering Digital Transformation Projects?
-Internet Explorer Now Retired but Still an Attacker Target
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
How Organisations Can Protect Themselves in The Emerging Risk Landscape
ThoughtLab’s 2022 cyber security benchmarking study ‘Cyber Security Solutions for a Riskier World’ revealed that the pandemic has brought cyber security to a critical inflection point. The number of material breaches that respondents suffered rose 20.5% from 2020 to 2021, and cyber security budgets as a percentage of firms’ total revenue jumped 51%, from 0.53% to 0.80%.
During that time, cyber security has become a strategic business imperative, requiring CEOs and their management teams to work together to meet the higher expectations of regulators, shareholders, and the board.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/13/cybersecurity-strategic-business-imperative-video/
Phishing Reaches All-Time High in Early 2022
The Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) Phishing Activity Trends Report reveals that in the first quarter of 2022 there were 1,025,968 total phishing attacks—the worst quarter for phishing observed to date. This quarter was the first time the three-month total has exceeded one million. There were 384,291 attacks in March 2022, which was a record monthly total.
In the first quarter of 2022, OpSec Security reported that phishing attacks against the financial sector, which includes banks, remained the largest set of attacks, accounting for 23.6 percent of all phishing. Attacks against webmail and software-as-a-service (SaaS) providers remained prevalent as well, while attacks against retail/ecommerce sites fell from 17.3 to 14.6 percent after the holiday shopping season.
Phishing against social media services rose markedly, from 8.5 percent of all attacks in 4Q2021 to 12.5 percent in 1Q2022. Phishing against cryptocurrency targets—such as cryptocurrency exchanges and wallet providers—inched up from 6.5 in the previous quarter to 6.6 percent of attacks.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/15/2022-total-phishing-attacks/
Ransomware Attacks Are Surging, with More Dangerous Hybrid Attacks to Come. Is Your Cyber Security Up to Date?
Time to reassess your cyber security strategies. Again.
Ransomware attacks on businesses have increased by one-third in the past year, according to a recent report by the Boston-based cyber security company Cybereason.
Most (73 percent of businesses) were hit by at least one ransomware attack in the past year, and 68 percent of businesses that paid a ransom were hit again in less than a month for a higher ransom, according to the survey, which polled 1,456 cyber security professionals at global companies with 700 or more employees.
These attacks have big implications: Thirty-seven percent of companies were forced to lay off employees after paying ransoms, and 33 percent were forced to temporarily suspend business.
Since the invasion of Ukraine, cyber security experts have insisted businesses improve their lines of defence to protect against an increased risk of ransomware attacks from Russia. Ransomware attacks have also increased since the start of the pandemic--the rise of remote work increased vulnerability for many businesses, which hackers have taken advantage of, a 2020 FBI memo noted. So, enterprises of all sizes are at risk from many more points of attack.
https://www.inc.com/rebecca-deczynski/ransomware-attacks-increasing-cyber-security-advice.html
The Challenges of Managing Increased Complexity as Hybrid IT Accelerates
SolarWinds released the findings of its ninth annual IT Trends Report which examines the acceleration of digital transformation efforts and its impact on IT departments. The report found the acceleration of hybrid IT has increased network complexity for most organisations and caused several worrisome challenges for IT professionals.
Hybrid and remote work have amplified the impact of distributed and complex IT environments. Running workloads and applications across both cloud and on-premises infrastructure can be challenging, and many organisations are increasingly experiencing—and ultimately hindered by—these pain points.
As more and more mission-critical workloads move to connected cloud architectures that span public, private, hybrid, and multi-cloud environments, enterprises recognise they need to invest in the tools that will help them ensure consistent policies and performance across all platforms and end users. However, they simultaneously face challenges such as budget, time constraints, and barriers to implementing observability as a strategy to keep pace with hybrid IT realities.
However professionals feel less confident in their organisation’s ability to manage IT. While 54% of respondents state they leverage monitoring strategies to manage this complexity, 49% revealed they lack visibility into the majority of their organisation’s apps and infrastructure. This lack of visibility impacts their ability to conduct anomaly detection, easy root-cause analysis, and other critical processes to ensure the availability, performance, and security of business-critical applications.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/16/hybrid-it-acceleration-challenges/
72% Of Middle Market Companies Expect to Experience a Cyber Attack
Middle market companies face an increasingly volatile cyber security environment, with threats coming from more directions than ever before and more skilled criminals targeting the segment, according to an RSM US and US Chamber of Commerce report.
However, there is good news as the number of breaches reported in the last year among middle market companies slightly decreased with protections becoming more available and executives understanding the consequences related to potential incidents. Twenty-two percent of middle market leaders claimed that their company experienced a data breach in the last year, representing a drop from 28% in last year’s survey, suggesting that even with enhanced protections in place and the decrease in attacks, companies cannot afford to let their guard down.
The middle market encountered a roller coaster of risks in the last year, from lingering threats related to the COVID-19 pandemic to geopolitical conflicts and economic uncertainty.
The small drop in reported breaches is encouraging, and largely attributed to middle market companies beginning to implement better identity and access management controls. Yet, even with the decline in reported attacks, companies recognise the risks posed by the current dynamic threat environment, with 72% of executives anticipating that unauthorised users will attempt to access data or systems in 2022, a sharp rise from 64% last year and the highest number since RSM began tracking data in 2015.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/16/middle-market-companies-cybersecurity/
Malware's Destruction Trajectory and How to Defeat It
Malware and targeted attacks on operating systems and firmware have become increasingly destructive in nature, and these more nefarious attack methods are rising in prevalence. And just to add insult to injury, there are more of them. Today’s attacks are hitting more often, and they are hitting harder.
In the first three decades of its existence, malware was primarily restricted to mischief and attempts by virus creators to discover if their creations would work. But now the threat landscape has changed from simple vandalism to lucrative cyber crime and state-sponsored attacks.
Wiper malware, in particular, has gained traction in recent months. The FortiGuard Labs research team has seen at least seven different malware attacks targeting Ukrainian infrastructure or Ukrainian companies so far this year. The primary reason for using Wiper malware is its sheer destructiveness – the intent is to cripple infrastructure. What does the increased presence of Wiper malware strains indicate? And what do security leaders need to know and do to keep their organisation safe? Read more…
https://www.securityweek.com/malwares-destruction-trajectory-and-how-defeat-it
Which Stolen Data Are Ransomware Gangs Most Likely to Disclose?
If your organisation gets hit by a ransomware gang that has also managed to steal company data before hitting the “encrypt” button, which types of data are more likely to end up being disclosed as you debate internally on whether you should pay the ransomware gang off?
Rapid7 analysed 161 data disclosures performed by ransomware gangs using the double extortion approach between April 2020 and February 2022, and found that:
The most commonly leaked data is financial (63%), followed by customer/patient data (48%)
Files containing intellectual property (e.g., trade secrets, research data, etc.) are rarely disclosed (12%) by ransomware gangs, but if the organisation is part of the pharmaceutical industry, the risk of IP data being disclosed is considerably higher (43%), “likely due to the high value placed on research and development within this industry.”
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/17/ransomware-data-disclosed/
Threat Actors Becoming More Creative Exploiting the Human Factor
Threat actors exhibited "ceaseless creativity" last year when attacking the Achilles heel of every organisation—its human capital—according to Proofpoint's annual The Human Factor 2022 report. The report, released June 2, draws on a multi-trillion datapoint graph created from the company's deployments to identify the latest attack trends by malicious players.
"Last year, attackers demonstrated just how unscrupulous they really are, making protecting people from cyber threats an ongoing—and often eye-opening—challenge for organisations,” Proofpoint said in a statement.
The combination of remote work and the blurring of work and personal life on smartphones have influenced attacker techniques, the report notes. During the year, SMS phishing, or smishing, attempts more than doubled in the United States, while in the UK, 50% of phishing lures focused on delivery notifications. An expectation that more people were likely working from home even drove good, old-fashioned voice scams, with more than 100,000 telephone attacks a day being launched by cyber criminals.
66% Of Organisations Store 21%-60% Of Their Sensitive Data in The Cloud
A Thales report, conducted by 451 Research, reveals that 45% of businesses have experienced a cloud-based data breach or failed audit in the past 12 months, up 5% from the previous year, raising even greater concerns regarding the protection of sensitive data from cyber criminals.
Globally, cloud adoption and notably multicloud adoption, remains on the rise. In 2021, organisations worldwide were using an average amount of 110 software as a service (SaaS) applications, compared with just eight in 2015, showcasing a startlingly rapid increase.
With increasing complexity of multicloud environments comes an even greater need for robust cyber security. When asked what percentage of their sensitive data is stored in the cloud, 66% said between 21-60%. However, only 25% said they could fully classify all data.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/16/cloud-based-data-breach-video/
Travel-related Cyber Crime Takes Off as Industry Rebounds
An upsurge in the tourism industry after the COVID-19 pandemic grabs the attention of cyber criminals to scam the tourists.
Researchers are warning a post-COVID upsurge in travel has painted a bullseye on the travel industry and has spurred related cyber crimes.
Criminal activity includes an uptick in adversaries targeting the theft of airline mileage reward points, website credentials for travel websites and travel-related databases breaches, according to a report by Intel 471.
The impact of the attacks are hacked accounts stripped of value. But also, researchers say the consequences of recent attacks can also include flight delays and cancelations as airlines grapple with mitigating hacks.
https://threatpost.com/travel-related-cybercrime-takes-off/179962/
How Should You Think About Security When Considering Digital Transformation Projects?
Digital transformation helps businesses keep operating and stay competitive. Here are the ways to think about security so that businesses reap the benefits without taking on associated risks.
Multiple factors contribute to the sheer number of digital transformation projects underway today: the proliferation of the Internet of Things (IoT), expanding artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities, the sudden shift to a remote workforce prompted by the global COVID-19 pandemic, and the rapid rate of cloud migration. Digital transformation is no longer a nice-to-have; it’s a must-have in order to survive and thrive in today’s business world.
CISOs and their security teams need to think about security in the digital age from both an internal and an external perspective. For the former, security teams should introduce and adopt digital enablers to transform the information security organisation. Digital enablers include the cloud, IoT, AI/machine learning (ML), and automation to transform the information security organisation.
For the latter, they should address potential risks as new digital enablers are introduced by the business to drive growth.
Here are five specific areas security teams should prioritise to achieve security-first digital transformation:
Security operations modernisation
Developer-centric security
Cloud strategy and execution
Connected devices
Big data and analytics
As important as it is to keep the business operating and competitive, organisations must transform securely. Keeping security at the forefront gives the business the benefits of digital transformation without the associated risks.
Internet Explorer Now Retired but Still an Attacker Target
Microsoft's official end-of-support for the Internet Explorer 11 desktop application on June 15 relegated to history a browser that's been around for almost 27 years. Even so, IE still likely will provide a juicy target for attackers.
That's because some organisations are still using Internet Explorer (IE) despite Microsoft's long-known plans to deprecate the technology. Microsoft meanwhile has retained the MSHTML (aka Trident) IE browser engine as part of Windows 11 until 2029, allowing organisations to run in IE mode while they transition to the Microsoft Edge browser. In other words, IE isn't dead just yet, nor are threats to it.
Though IE has a negligible share of the browser market worldwide these days (0.52%), many enterprises still run it or have legacy applications tied to IE. This appears to be the case in countries such as Japan and Korea. Stories in Nikkei Asia and Japan Times this week quoted a survey by Keyman's Net showing that nearly 49% of 350 Japanese companies surveyed are still using IE. Another report in South Korea's MBN pointed to several large organisations still running IE.
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware attacks are increasing with more dangerous hybrids ahead | CSO Online
Why do organisations need to prioritize ransomware preparedness? - Help Net Security
Ransomware and Phishing Remain IT's Biggest Concerns (darkreading.com)
The attacker’s toolkit: Ransomware-as-a-service | VentureBeat
Ransomware gang publishes stolen victim data on the public Internet - Help Net Security
Researchers Discover Way to Attack SharePoint and OneDrive Files with Ransomware | SecurityWeek.Com
ALPHV/BlackCat ransomware gang starts publishing victims' data on the clear web - Security Affairs
Ransomware gang creates site for employees to search for their stolen data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft: Exchange servers hacked to deploy BlackCat ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Conti's Attack Against Costa Rica Sparks a New Ransomware Era | WIRED UK
Hello XD ransomware now drops a backdoor while encrypting (bleepingcomputer.com)
Alphv ransomware gang ups pressure with new extortion scheme (techtarget.com)
Costa Rica Chaos a Warning That Ransomware Threat Remains | SecurityWeek.Com
DeadBolt ransomware takes another shot at QNAP storage • The Register
The many lives of BlackCat ransomware - Microsoft Security Blog
Atlassian Confluence Flaw Being Used to Deploy Ransomware and Crypto Miners (thehackernews.com)
BlackCat Ransomware affiliates target unpatched Microsoft Exchange servers - Security Affairs
Ransomware gangs target Japan as a feeding ground | Financial Times (ft.com)
Africa's biggest supermarket hit by ransomware attacks | TechRadar
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
NakedPages Phishing Toolkit is Now Available on Cyber crime Forums - Infosecurity Magazine
New phishing attack infects devices with Cobalt Strike (bleepingcomputer.com)
Other Social Engineering
How social engineering attacks are evolving beyond email - Help Net Security
2,000 People Arrested Worldwide for Social Engineering Schemes | SecurityWeek.Com
Heineken giving away free beer for Father's Day? It's a WhatsApp scam (bitdefender.com)
Malware
Businesses are leaving bot attacks unchallenged for almost four months - Help Net Security
New Syslogk Linux rootkit uses magic packets to trigger backdoor (bleepingcomputer.com)
Linux Malware Deemed ‘Nearly Impossible’ to Detect | Threatpost
Authorities Shut Down Russian RSOCKS Botnet That Hacked Millions of Devices (thehackernews.com)
Akamai Warns Of "Panchan" Linux Botnet That Leverages Golang Concurrency, Systemd - Phoronix
Websites Hosting Fake Cracks Spread Updated CopperStealer Malware (trendmicro.com)
Mobile
Over a billion Google Play Store app downloads could be infected by malware | TechRadar
Android malware on the Google Play Store gets 2 million downloads (bleepingcomputer.com)
MaliBot: A New Android Banking Trojan Spotted in the Wild (thehackernews.com)
Chinese Hackers Distribute Backdoored Web3 Wallets for iOS and Android Users (thehackernews.com)
Android Spyware 'Hermit' Discovered in Targeted Attacks (darkreading.com)
Internet of Things - IoT
Anker Eufy smart home hubs exposed to RCE attacks by critical flaw (bleepingcomputer.com)
Researcher Shows How Tesla Key Card Feature Can Be Abused to Steal Cars | SecurityWeek.Com
Data Breaches/Leaks
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cyber Criminals Smuggle Ukrainian Men Across Border - Infosecurity Magazine
iCloud hacker gets 9 years in prison for stealing nude photos (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
INTERPOL raids hundreds of scammy call centers in sweep - CyberScoop
Fraud trends and scam tactics consumers should be aware of - Help Net Security
Dark Web
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
A tiny botnet launched the largest DDoS attack on record | ZDNet
DDoS Subscription Service Operator Gets 2 Years in Prison (darkreading.com)
Cloud/SaaS
Increased cloud complexity needs stronger cyber security - Help Net Security
Beware the 'Secret Agent' Cloud Middleware (darkreading.com)
SaaS security: How to avoid “death by 1000 apps” - Help Net Security
Quantifying the SaaS Supply Chain and Its Risks (darkreading.com)
83% of IT pros are using either hybrid or multi-cloud - Help Net Security
Privacy
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
24+ Billion Credentials Circulating on the Dark Web in 2022 — So Far (darkreading.com)
Strong passwords still a priority strategy for enterprises - Help Net Security
The future is passwordless. What's slowing it down? - Help Net Security
Brute-Force Attacks: How to Defend Against Them - MSSP Alert
Staffing Firm Robert Half Says Hackers Targeted Over 1,000 Customer Accounts | SecurityWeek.Com
Travel
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Privacy Watchdog Set to Keep Millions in Fines for Legal Costs - Infosecurity Magazine
Canada wants companies to report cyber attacks and hacking incidents | Reuters
A closer look at the US SEC Cyber Security Disclosure rule - Help Net Security
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Sophisticated Android Spyware 'Hermit' Used by Governments | SecurityWeek.Com
Chinese 'Gallium' Hackers Using New PingPull Malware in Cyberespionage Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Vladimir Putin forced by cyber attack in Russia to delay keynote speech | The Independent
Iranian hacking campaign that included former US ambassador exposed - CyberScoop
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Russian hackers start targeting Ukraine with Follina exploits (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mixed results for Russia's aggressive Ukraine information war, experts say - CyberScoop
Nation State Actors – China
Nation State Actors – Iran
Vulnerabilities
Microsoft fixes Follina and 55 other CVEs - Help Net Security
Details of Twice-Patched Windows RDP Vulnerability Disclosed | SecurityWeek.Com
New Hertzbleed side-channel attack affects Intel, AMD CPUs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Time to throw out those older, vulnerable Cisco SMB routers • The Register
Critical Citrix Bugs Impact All ADM Servers, Agents (darkreading.com)
Time to update: Google patches seven Chrome browser bugs, four rated 'high' risk | ZDNet
Why Log4j Is Still The Problem When The Patch Is Released 6 Months Ago? – Information Security Buzz
Atlassian Confluence Flaw Being Used to Deploy Ransomware and Crypto Miners (thehackernews.com)
Sophos Firewall zero-day bug exploited weeks before fix (bleepingcomputer.com)
Researchers Disclose Rooting Backdoor in Mitel IP Phones for Businesses (thehackernews.com)
How to mitigate Active Directory attacks that use the KrbRelayUp toolset | CSO Online
Hertzbleed disclosure raises questions for Intel (techtarget.com)
Critical Atlassian Confluence flaw remains under attack (techtarget.com)
Hackers exploit three-year-old Telerik flaws to deploy Cobalt Strike (bleepingcomputer.com)
Zimbra bug allows stealing email logins with no user interaction (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft takes months to fix critical Azure Synapse bug (techtarget.com)
PACMAN, a new attack technique against Apple M1 CPUs - Security Affairs
Critical Code Execution Vulnerability Patched in Splunk Enterprise | SecurityWeek.Com
High-Severity RCE Vulnerability Reported in Popular Fastjson Library (thehackernews.com)
This Security Exploit Could Have Major PS5 And PS4 Implications (slashgear.com)
Sector Specific
Financial Services Sector
Telecoms
Government
Health/Medical/Pharma Sector
Ransomware Risk in Healthcare Endangers Patients | Threatpost
Kaiser Permanente Says Data Breach Hit 69,000 Patients (gizmodo.com)
Transport and Aviation
CNI, OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Tackling 5 Challenges Facing Critical National Infrastructure Today (darkreading.com)
State of OT Security in 2022: Big Survey Key Insights (trendmicro.com)
Over a Dozen Flaws Found in Siemens' Industrial Network Management System (thehackernews.com)
Eight ICS Zero Days Could Open Doors for Hackers - Infosecurity Magazine
Web3
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Why We Need Security Knowledge and Not Just Threat Intel (darkreading.com)
Once is never enough: The need for continuous penetration testing - Help Net Security
CISOs Gain False Confidence in the Calm After the Storm of the Pandemic (darkreading.com)
9 ways hackers will use machine learning to launch attacks | CSO Online
API security warrants its own specific solution - Help Net Security
Cyber Security Courses Ramp Up Amid Shortage of Professionals | SecurityWeek.Com
How Russian sanctions may be helping US cyber security (techtarget.com)
UK Security Practitioners Lack The Confidence To Stop Attacks – Information Security Buzz
How Can Security Partnerships Help to Mitigate the Increasing Cyber Threat? (darkreading.com)
45% of cyber security pros are considering quitting the industry due to stress - Help Net Security
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.