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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 03 June 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 03 June 2022
-Turbulent Cyber Insurance Market Sees Rising Prices and Sinking Coverage
-Ransomware Attacks Still The #1 Threat to Businesses and Organisations
-Third of UK Firms Have Experienced a Security Breach Since 2020
-There Is No Good Digital Transformation Without Cyber Security
-Ransomware Gang Now Hacks Corporate Websites to Show Ransom Notes
-Attackers Are Leveraging Follina, a Critical Microsoft Windows Vulnerability Affecting Nearly All Versions of Windows and Windows Server. What Can You Do?
-Ransomware Attacks Need Less Than Four Days to Encrypt Systems
-57% Of All Digital Crimes In 2021 Were Scams
-Intelligence Is Key to Strategic Business Decisions
-How Cyber Criminals Are Targeting Executives at Home and Their Families
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
Turbulent Cyber Insurance Market Sees Rising Prices And Sinking Coverage
As insurers and brokers reckon with unexpected losses, they're charging more for policies and setting higher requirements.
Chaos reigns in the cyber insurance market. Brokers and cyber insurance carriers — the companies that actually offer the policies — are tightening requirements on what applicants need to do to obtain policies due to losses the insurers have suffered from ransomware coverage. During the past year, premiums grew 18% in the first quarter of 2021 and were up 34% in the fourth quarter of 2021, according to Jess Burn, senior analyst at Forrester.
Organisations often find they cannot obtain cyber insurance, are not being renewed for coverage they already have, or are faced with soaring prices and shrinking coverage. Despite the value many organisations put on cyber insurance — in some cases, they're required to carry it to comply with regulations — obtaining such policies is getting more difficult.
While raising premiums, some insurers are reducing coverage. If an organisation bought $10 million worth of coverage for a given price in 2021, for example, renewing that policy in 2022 might see the coverage amount fall to $3 million and the premiums for that lower coverage rise. This phenomenon is due, in part, to insurers trying to strike the right balance of customers' risk profile versus their risk-mitigation efforts.
Ransomware Attacks Still The #1 Threat To Businesses And Organisations
In 2021, ransomware attacks continued to be one of the most prominent threats targeting businesses and organisations worldwide.
High-profile attacks disrupted operations of companies in various sectors.
For example, the Colonial Pipeline attack interrupted critical infrastructure, the JBS Foods attack influenced food processing, and the CNA breach disrupted the insurance industry.
Following the attacks, pressure of law enforcement on ransomware gangs intensified, though simultaneously these threat actors continued to evolve.
They are not only becoming more technologically sophisticated but are also extensively leveraging the growing cyber crime ecosystem looking to find new partners, services and tools for their operations.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/05/30/ransomware-trends-video/
Third Of UK Firms Have Experienced A Security Breach Since 2020
Cyber threats are behind soaring fraud and economic crime in the UK, where rates are now second only globally to South Africa, according to PwC.
The consulting giant’s latest Global Economic Crime Survey revealed that nearly two-thirds (64%) of UK businesses experienced fraud, corruption or other economic/financial crime during the past 24 months, a significant increase on the 56% recorded in 2020, and 50% in 2018.
It’s also much higher than the 2022 global average of 46%, PwC said.
Cyber crime was the most commonly reported fraud type, although figures here dropped from 42% in 2020 to 32% in 2022. Included for the first time in the report, supply chain incidents accounted for 19%.
Most (51%) reported fraud cases in the UK were traced back to external parties, versus just 43% globally. The top three culprits were cited as customers, hackers and vendors/suppliers.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/third-uk-security-breach-2020/
There Is No Good Digital Transformation Without Cyber Security
Network engineers and CIOs agree that cyber security issues represent the biggest risk for organisations that fail to put networks at the heart of digital transformation plans. According to research commissioned by Opengear, 53% of network engineers and 52% of CIOs polled in the US, UK, France, Germany, and Australia rank cyber security among the list of their biggest risks.
The concerns are fuelled by an escalating number of cyber attacks. In fact, 61% of CIOs report an increase in cyber security attacks/breaches from 2020-21 compared to the preceding two years. For digital transformation of networking, 70% of network engineers say security is the most important focus area, and 31% say network security is their biggest networking priority.
Digital transformation is a priority, but cyber security risk remains. CIOs also understand the importance of the issues. 51% of network engineers say their CIOs have consulted them on investments to deliver digital transformation plans, the highest priority in the survey.
What’s more, 41% of CIOs rank cyber security among their organisation’s most important investment priorities over the next year, with 35% stating it is among the biggest over the next five years. In both cases, cyber security ranks higher than any other factor.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/05/31/digital-transformation-cybersecurity-risk/
Ransomware Gang Now Hacks Corporate Websites To Show Ransom Notes
A ransomware gang is taking extortion to a new level by publicly hacking corporate websites to publicly display ransom notes.
This new extortion strategy is being conducted by Industrial Spy, a data extortion gang that recently began using ransomware. As part of their attacks, Industrial Spy will breach networks, steal data, and deploy ransomware on devices. The threat actors then threaten to sell the stolen data on their Tor marketplace if a ransom is not paid.
When ransomware gangs extort a victim, they typically give them a short window, usually a few weeks, to negotiate and pay a ransom before they start leaking data.
During this negotiation process, the threat actors promise to keep the attack secret, provide a decryption key, and delete all data if a ransom is paid.
After this period, the threat actors will use various methods to increase pressure, including DDoS attacks on corporate websites, emailing customers and business partners, and calling executives with threats.
These tactics are all done privately or with minimal exposure on their data leak sites, which are usually only visited by cyber security researchers and the media.
However, this is the first time we have seen a ransomware gang defacing a website to very publicly display a ransom note.
Attackers Are Leveraging Follina, A Critical Microsoft Windows Vulnerability Affecting Nearly All Versions of Windows and Windows Server. What Can You Do?
As the world is waiting for Microsoft to push out a patch for CVE-2022-30190, aka “Follina”, attackers around the world are exploiting the vulnerability in a variety of campaigns.
Microsoft has described CVE-2022-30190 as a Microsoft Windows Support Diagnostic Tool (MSDT) remote code execution vulnerability, confirmed it affects an overwhelming majority of Windows and Windows Server versions, and advised on a workaround to be implemented until a patch is ready.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/03/patch-cve-2022-30190/
Ransomware Attacks Need Less Than Four Days To Encrypt Systems
The duration of ransomware attacks in 2021 averaged 92.5 hours, measured from initial network access to payload deployment. In 2020, ransomware actors spent an average of 230 hours to complete their attacks and 1637.6 hours in 2019.
This change reflects a more streamlined approach that developed gradually over the years to make large-scale operations more profitable.
At the same time, improvements in incident response and threat detection have forced threat actors to move quicker, to leave defenders with a smaller reaction margin.
The data was collected by researchers at IBM's X-Force team from incidents analysed in 2021. They also noticed a closer collaboration between initial access brokers and ransomware operators.
Previously, network access brokers might wait for multiple days or even weeks before they found a buyer for their network access.
In addition, some ransomware gangs now have direct control over the initial infection vector, an example being Conti taking over the TrickBot malware operation.
Malware that breaches corporate networks is quickly leveraged to enable post-exploitation stages of the attack, sometimes completing its objectives in mere minutes.
57% Of All Digital Crimes In 2021Were Scams
Group-IB shares its analysis of the landscape of the most widespread cyber threat in the world: scams. Accounting for 57% of all financially motivated cyber crime, the scam industry is becoming more structured and involves more and more parties divided into hierarchical groups.
The number of such groups jumped to a record high of 390, which is 3.5 times more than last year, when the maximum number of active groups was close to 110. Due to SaaS (Scam-as-a-Service), in 2021 the number of cyber criminals in one scam gang increased 10 times compared to 2020 and now reaches 100.
Traffic has become the circulatory system of scam projects: researchers emphasise that the number of websites used for purchasing and providing “grey” and illegal traffic and that lure victims into fraudulent schemes has increased by 1.5 times. Scammers are going into 2022 on a new level of scam attack automation: no more non-targeted users. Scammers are now attracting specific groups of victims to increase conversion rates. Social media are more often becoming the first point of contact between scammers and their potential victims.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/05/31/scams-widespread-cyber-threat/
Intelligence Is Key To Strategic Business Decisions
Businesses have a growing need for greater relevance in the intelligence they use to inform critical decision-making. Currently just 18% of professionals responsible for security, risk, or compliance in their organisation feel that the intelligence they receive is “very specific and focused on their business”, a S-RM research reveals.
6 in 10 respondents also say the intelligence they receive takes too much time to analyse, meaning it does not always result in better informed decision making. This was the top reason behind dissatisfaction with external intelligence, identified by over 200 professionals working at companies with revenues of over $250 million.
The second most likely reason was that information was not tailored to business needs (47%), followed by too much information (35%).
Growing demand for the use of strategic intelligence has been prompted by increasing cyber (51%) and regulatory concerns (50%). And while these two factors have been climbing the boardroom agenda for years, geopolitical uncertainty has made the need to respond to these developments more acute. In particular, the Russia-Ukraine conflict has created a complex sanctions regime for businesses to operate.
Additionally, navigating the complexities of the COVID-19 pandemic has been a key challenge for businesses in the past three years, with 40% citing this as a catalyst in driving a growing need for strategic intelligence.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/03/intelligence-decision-making/
How Cyber Criminals Are Targeting Executives At Home And Their Families
Top executives and their families are increasingly being targeted on their personal devices and home networks, as sophisticated threat actors look for new ways to bypass corporate security and get direct access to highly sensitive data.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/06/01/cybercriminals-targeting-executives-video/
Threats
Ransomware
Cyber criminals Expand Attack Radius and Ransomware Pain Points | Threatpost
FBI, CISA warn: Don't get caught in Karakurt's web • The Register
Conti ransomware targeted Intel firmware for stealthy attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
YourCyanide Ransomware Propagates With PasteBin, Discord, Microsoft Links (darkreading.com)
Conti Leaks Reveal Ransomware Gang's Interest in Firmware-based Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Evil Corp switches to LockBit ransomware to evade sanctions (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware attack sends New Jersey county back to 1977 • The Register
Ransomware roundup: System-locking malware dominates headlines | CSO Online
What if ransomware evolved to hit IoT in the enterprise? • The Register
How Costa Rica found itself at war over ransomware | CSO Online
Experts warn of ransomware attacks on government orgs of small states - Security Affairs
Foxconn confirms ransomware attack disrupted production in Mexico (bleepingcomputer.com)
Why Ransomware Timeline Shrinks By 94%? – Information Security Buzz
Hundreds of Elasticsearch databases targeted in ransom attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Watch out for phishing emails that inject spyware trio • The Register
Telegram’s blogging platform abused in phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Other Social Engineering
Vishing attacks: What they are and how organisations can protect themselves - Help Net Security
Beware the Smish! Home delivery scams with a professional feel… – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Malware
New XLoader Botnet Version Using Probability Theory to Hide its C&C Servers (thehackernews.com)
LuoYu APT delivers WinDealer malware via man-on-the-side attacks - Security Affairs
EnemyBot malware adds enterprise flaws to exploit arsenal • The Register
Researchers Uncover Malware Controlling Thousands of Sites in Parrot TDS Network (thehackernews.com)
Logic bombs explained: Definition, examples, and prevention | CSO Online
Mobile
Top 10 Android banking trojans target apps with 1 billion downloads (bleepingcomputer.com)
WhatsApp accounts hijacked by call forwarding | Malwarebytes Labs
SideWinder Hackers Use Fake Android VPN Apps to Target Pakistani Entities (thehackernews.com)
SMSFactory Android malware sneakily subscribes to premium services (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishers Having a Field Day on WhatsApp, Telegraph (darkreading.com)
Apple blocked 1.6 millions apps from defrauding users in 2021 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
FBI warns of Ukrainian charities impersonated to steal donations (bleepingcomputer.com)
Euro Cops Bust $47m Money Laundering Operation - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Three Nigerian Users of Agent Tesla RAT Arrested | SecurityWeek.Com
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs
Americans report losing over $1 billion to cryptocurrency scams (bleepingcomputer.com)
Clipminer malware gang stole $1.7M by hijacking crypto payments (bleepingcomputer.com)
Bored Ape Yacht Club, Otherside NFTs stolen in Discord server hack (bleepingcomputer.com)
WatchDog hacking group launches new Docker cryptojacking campaign (bleepingcomputer.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
$39.5 billion lost to phone scams in last year - Help Net Security
Britain's biggest bank issues 'urgent warning' over new scam (telegraph.co.uk)
Scams account for most of all financially motivated cyber crime - Help Net Security
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
Open Source
Linux malware is on the rise—6 types of attacks to look for | CSO Online
The Open Source Software Security Mobilization Plan: Takeaways for security leaders | CSO Online
Privacy
Vodafone plans carrier-level user tracking for targeted ads (bleepingcomputer.com)
Europe's hope to scan devices for unlawful files criticized • The Register
Passwords & Credential Stuffing
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Spyware, Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
NSA general confirms US offensive cyber ops in Ukraine war • The Register
Deadly Secret: Electronic Warfare Shapes Russia-Ukraine War | SecurityWeek.Com
Anonymous: Operation Russia after 100 days of war - Security Affairs
Chinese LuoYu hackers deploy cyber-espionage malware via app updates (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Nation State Actors – China
China-linked TA413 group actively exploits Microsoft Follina Zero-Day flawSecurity Affairs
Chinese state media propaganda found in 88% of Google, Bing news searches - CyberScoop
Chinese LuoYu Hackers Using Man-on-the-Side Attacks to Deploy WinDealer Backdoor (thehackernews.com)
How Beijing’s surveillance cameras crept into Britain’s corridors of power (telegraph.co.uk)
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Nation State Actors – Misc APT
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
CISA adds 75 vulnerabilities to catalogue in 3 days- IT Security Guru
Fighting Follina: Application Vulnerabilities and Detection Possibilities (darkreading.com)
Yet another zero-day (sort of) in Windows “search URL” handling – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Actively Exploited Atlassian Zero-Day Bug Allows Full System Takeover (darkreading.com)
Microsoft Azure vulnerabilities pose new cloud security risk - Protocol
GitLab Issues Security Patch for Critical Account Takeover Vulnerability (thehackernews.com)
New Unpatched Horde Webmail Bug Lets Hackers Take Over Server by Sending Email (thehackernews.com)
Sector Specific
Financial Services Sector
Government
Health/Medical/Pharma Sector
Twice as Many Healthcare Organisations Now Pay Ransom - Infosecurity Magazine
Novartis says no sensitive data was compromised in cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Costa Rica’s public health agency hit by Hive ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Transport and Aviation
CNI, OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Food and Agriculture
Web3
Other News
How Failing to Prioritize Cyber Security can Hurt Your Company (analyticsinsight.net)
Bad news: The cyber security skills crisis is about to get even worse | ZDNet
Nearly Three-Quarters of Firms Suffer Downtime from DNS Attacks - Infosecurity Magazine
CIOs and network engineers rank cyber security among the biggest risks - Help Net Security
How USB Drives Can Be a Danger to Your Computer (howtogeek.com)
Australian digital driver's licenses hackable in minutes • The Register
Over 3.6 million MySQL servers found exposed on the Internet (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 29 April 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 29 April 2022
-Ransomware Attacks Surged to New Highs in 2021
-NCSC and Allies Publish Advisory on The Most Commonly Exploited Vulnerabilities In 2021
-Network Attacks Increased to a 3-Year High
-World War Three Is Far More Likely Than Anyone Is Prepared to Admit
-The Ransomware Crisis Deepens, While Data Recovery Stalls
-Ransoms Only Make Up 15% of Ransomware Costs
-Defending Your Business Against Russian Cyber Warfare
-5-Year Vulnerability Trends Are Both Surprising and Sadly Predictable
-Cisco Talos Observes 'Novel Increase' in APT Activity in Q1
-Deepfakes Set to Be Used in Organised Crime
-Smart Contract Developers Not Really Focused on Security. Who Knew?
-Tractor-Trailer Brake Controllers Vulnerable to Remote Hacker 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
Ransomware Attacks Surged to New Highs in 2021
Ransomware attacks are getting more frequent, more successful and more expensive.
Sixty-six percent of the organisations surveyed by Sophos for its annual State of Ransomware report admitted that they were hit with a ransomware attack last year, up from 37% in 2020. And 65 percent of those attacks were successful in encrypting their victims' data, up from 54 percent the year before.
On top of that, the average ransom paid by organisations for their most significant ransomware attack grew by nearly five times, to just over $800,000, while the number of organisations that paid ransoms of $1 million or more tripled to 11%, the UK-based cybersecurity company said. For its annual report, Sophos surveyed 5,600 organisations from 31 countries. A total of 965 of those polled shared details of their ransomware attacks.
The numbers aren't a huge surprise after a year of epic ransomware attacks that shut down everything from a major oil pipeline to one of the largest meat processors in the US. While both Colonial Pipeline and JBS US Holdings paid millions in ransom, the attacks paused their operations long enough to spark panic buying and drive prices up for consumers.
NCSC and Allies Publish Advisory on The Most Commonly Exploited Vulnerabilities In 2021
The UK and international partners have published an advisory for public and private sector organisations on the 15 most commonly exploited vulnerabilities in 2021.
The National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), a part of GCHQ, has jointly published an advisory with agencies in the US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand, showing that malicious cyber actors aggressively targeted newly disclosed critical software vulnerabilities across the public and private sectors worldwide.
Threat actors often geared their efforts towards targeting internet-facing systems, such as email and virtual private network (VPN) servers.
It also indicates that, to a lesser extent, actors continue to exploit publicly known – and often dated – vulnerabilities, some of which were routinely exploited in 2020 or earlier.
The advisory directs organisations to follow specific mitigation advice to protect against exploitation, which includes applying timely patches, using a centralised patch management system and replacing any software no longer supported by the vendor.
Network Attacks Increased to a 3-Year High
WatchGuard Technologies’ Internet Security Report for Q4 2021 revealed all threats were up, whether they’re network attacks or malware.
When the pandemic started, their research team saw a big drop in malware being detected by network security devices. In this period, tech based jobs moved to remote work, which meant a lot of users were no longer browsing the internet and encountering bad things through the network security control at the office. That’s probably why network detection for malware dropped quite a bit at the beginning of the pandemic.
Meanwhile, network attacks continued to rise even through the pandemic, since the servers still lived at the offices and the cloud, and network security still protected those.
The big takeaway in Q4 2021 is that malware rose significantly, returning to normal levels. The reason might be the holiday season, but it’s most probably the fact that, at the end of last year, a lot of tech-based offices started reopening and offering employees to come back in, and thus there’s a bigger chance for network security controls to catch malware.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/04/25/network-attacks-q4-2021-video/
World War Three Is Far More Likely Than Anyone Is Prepared to Admit
A Telegraph article looks at the Russia-Ukraine conflict and considers risks posed by new weapons and how the West’s failure to understand our enemies are raising the chances of a horrific conflict.
The fact is the world is becoming more, rather than less, dangerous: there are plenty of other wannabe Putins, and they are better equipped to sow death and destruction. Not only traditional and nuclear threats but bioterrorism is a growing worry and a major cyber attack or assault on transatlantic cables could be so devastating to an internet-based economy as to be seen as a declaration of war.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/04/27/world-war-three-far-likely-anyone-prepared-admit/
The Ransomware Crisis Deepens, While Data Recovery Stalls
Higher probabilities of attack, soaring ransoms, and less chance of getting data back — the ransomware plague gets worse, and cyber insurance fails to be a panacea.
When it comes to ransomware, more companies are seeing attacks and have had data encrypted, according to research out this week. And even though more companies are backing up or paying ransom demands, less data was recovered in 2021 compared with the previous year.
For instance, in its "State of Ransomware 2022" report, cybersecurity firm Sophos found that 66% of surveyed companies had encountered ransomware in 2021, with two-thirds of those firms — or 43% overall — suffering from an actual attack that encrypted data. In its previous report covering 2020, the frequency of successful attacks was much smaller, with about 20% overall resulting in encryption.
The deteriorating cyberthreat landscape is largely due to the evolution of ransomware groups and their techniques, says Sean Gallagher, senior threat researcher with Sophos.
"Over the past couple of years, there has been a massive transition from ransomware to ransomware-as-a-service," he says. "There are very well-established [groups] that are doing these attacks, and as a result, the number of attacks companies are seeing has gone up."
Ransomware continues to plague companies with business-disrupting attacks and defy efforts by cybersecurity experts to rein in the operators behind the criminals’ campaigns. Not only did the portion of companies affected by ransomware more than double last year, but the mean ransomware payment more than quadrupled to $812,000, according to the Sophos report.
https://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/ransomware-crisis-deepens-data-recovery-stalls
Ransoms Only Make Up 15% of Ransomware Costs
New research suggests that paying ransoms is only the tip of the cost iceberg when it comes to ransomware attacks.
Researchers at Check Point have revealed that the collateral damage of ransomware attacks make up costs roughly seven times higher than the ransom demanded by threat actors.
The costs include financial implications caused by incident response efforts, system restoration, legal fees, monitoring costs and the overall impact of business disruption.
Ransomware attacks are an increasingly popular attack method, typically involving stealing data from the victim, encrypting data and forcing them to pay for decryption and avoiding a data leak.
Check Point said in the report:
“Most other losses, including response and restoration costs, legal fees, monitoring costs, etc., are applied whether the extortion demand was paid or not. The year 2020 showed that the average total cost of a ransomware attack was more than seven times higher than the average ransom paid.”
https://www.itsecurityguru.org/2022/04/28/ransoms-only-make-up-15-of-ransomware-costs/
Defending Your Business Against Russian Cyber Warfare
We are likely to see Russian state sponsored attacks escalate as the West continues to increase sanctions and support Ukraine.
The eyes of the world are focused on the war in Ukraine. As expected, Russia has targeted Ukraine with cyber attacks first, and much of the West is wondering when Russia will also retaliate against countries supporting Ukraine. Most agree that some attacks are already in progress, and the attacks against western entities are sure to escalate as the war continues and more sanctions are put in place.
The first wave of companies targeted by the Russian state, and threat actors it supports, will be those that suspend Russian operations or take direct action to support Ukraine. Information operations and subversion against these companies will likely ensue. In the event of Russian cyberwarfare, reviewing the industries, styles, and objectives of their attacks can help organisations to prepare and implement more robust defences. These defences include actions both inside and outside an enterprise's perimeter.
https://www.securityweek.com/defending-your-business-against-russian-cyberwarfare
5-Year Vulnerability Trends Are Both Surprising and Sadly Predictable
What 5,800+ pentests show us: Companies have been struggling with the same known and preventable security bugs year over year. Bandwidth stands at the heart of the problem.
Cyber crime can cause major disruption when it comes to the sustainability and long-term success of companies. Teams want to have robust security but often struggle to meet that objective. It's crucial for security professionals to leverage insights into emerging trends in cybersecurity to pinpoint which vulnerabilities put organisations at the greatest risk, and Cobalt's "State of Pentesting" reports explore how to achieve efficiency to strengthen security.
The "State of Pentesting 2022" surveyed 602 cybersecurity and software development professionals and analysed data from 2,380 pentests conducted over the course of 2021 to pull key insights that are relevant to security and development teams when it comes to fixing vulnerabilities.
As a result of the data collected, the top five most common vulnerability categories outlined in this year's "State of Pentesting" report include:
· Server Security Misconfigurations
· Cross-Site Scripting (XSS)
· Broken Access Control
· Sensitive Data Exposure
· Authentication and Sessions
Surprisingly — yet predictably — these vulnerability categories have stayed at the top of the list for at least the last five years in a row. They're also recognisable to those who are familiar with OWASP Top 10 list for Web Application Security Risks.
The majority of these findings are connected to missing configurations, outdated software, and a lack of access management controls — all common and easily preventable security flaws. So, what's holding companies back from preventing well-known security flaws? Why does this come as a surprise?
Cisco Talos Observes 'Novel Increase' in APT Activity in Q1
Advanced persistent threat actors have been busy over the past few months, according to Cisco Talos.
The security vendor released its Quarterly Trends report, which examined incident response trends from engagements in the first quarter of 2022. While ransomware remained the top threat, as it has for the past two years now, Cisco observed a new trend of increased APT activity. The Cisco Talos Incident Response (CTIR) team attributed some of the increase to groups like Iranian state-sponsored Muddywater and China-based Mustang Panda.
One suspected Chinese APT, dubbed "Deep Panda," was connected to exploitation of the Log4j flaw that was discovered last year in the widely used Java logging tool. Log4j exploitation was the second most common threat for Q1 behind ransomware, indicating the bug is a growing threat despite a patch being available.
Deepfakes Set to Be Used in Organised Crime
New research from Europol suggests that deepfakes will be used extensively in organised crime operations.
Europol has warned of a projected rise in the use of deepfake technology by organised crime organisations.
Deepfakes involve the use of artificial intelligence to create realistic audio and audio-visual content “that convincingly shows people saying or doing things they never did, or create personas that never existed in the first place.”
Law enforcement and the challenge of deepfakes is the first published analysis of the Europol Innovation Lab’s Observatory function, warning that law enforcement agencies must rapidly improve skills and technologies utilised by officers in order to keep up with criminal deepfake use.
The analysis report highlighted how deepfakes are used primarily in disinformation, non-consensual pornography and document fraud campaigns, which will grow more realistic in years to come.
https://www.itsecurityguru.org/2022/04/29/deepfakes-set-to-be-used-in-organised-crime/
Smart Contract Developers Not Really Focused on Security. Who Knew?
"Smart contracts," which consist of self-executing code on a blockchain, are not nearly as smart as the label suggests.
They are at least as error-prone as any other software, where historically the error rate has been about one bug per hundred lines of code.
And they may be shoddier still due to disinterest in security among smart contract developers, and perhaps inadequate technical resources.
Multi-million dollar losses attributed to smart contract bugs – around $31m stolen from MonoX via smart contract exploit and ~$34m locked into a contract forever due to bad increment math, to name a few – illustrate the consequences.
https://www.theregister.com/2022/04/26/smart_contract_losses/
Tractor-Trailer Brake Controllers Vulnerable to Remote Hacker Attacks
We’ve been predicting this for a while now and the move to more and more connected systems, autonomous and semi-autonomous vehicles, how long until someone is subject to threats to disconnect a vehicle’s brakes as they are driving along a motorway? Who wouldn’t pay the ransom demand in that scenario?
A report this week is related to articulated lorries but this is something that will be affecting all vehicles unless safeguards are put in place.
Researchers have analysed the cyber security of heavy vehicles and discovered that the brake controllers found on many tractor-trailers in North America are susceptible to remote hacker attacks.
The research was conducted by the US National Motor Freight Traffic Association (NMFTA), which is a non-profit organisation that represents roughly 500 motor freight carriers, in collaboration with Assured Information Security, Inc.
NMFTA has been analysing the cyber security of heavy vehicles since 2015 and it has periodically disclosed its findings. The latest report from the organisation came in early March, when the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) also issued an advisory to describe two vulnerabilities affecting trailer brake controllers.
The flaws described in the CISA advisory are related to the power line communications (PLC) between tractors and trailers, specifically the PLC4TRUCKS technology, which uses a standard named J2497 for bidirectional communications between the tractor and trailer without adding new wires.
https://www.securityweek.com/tractor-trailer-brake-controllers-vulnerable-remote-hacker-attacks
Threats
Ransomware
Prevent HEAT Attacks to Foil Ransomware Incidents - Help Net Security
Conti Ransomware Operations Surge Despite Recent Leak - Security Affairs
Beware: Onyx Ransomware Destroys Files Instead of Encrypting Them (bleepingcomputer.com)
FBI says BlackCat Rust-Based Ransomware Scratched 60+ Orgs • The Register
REvil Ransomware Attacks Resume, But Operators Are Unknown (techtarget.com)
Fake Windows 10 Updates Infect You with Magniber Ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Black Basta Ransomware Springs into Action with A Dozen Breaches (bleepingcomputer.com)
Companies Can't Get Enough of Good Ol' Tape Storage For Ransomware Resistance | PC Gamer
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Phishing Goes KISS: Don’t Let Plain and Simple Messages Catch You Out! – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Phishing Attacks Benefiting from Shady SEO Practices (techtarget.com)
Malware
Emotet Malware Now Installs Via Powershell in Windows Shortcut Files (bleepingcomputer.com)
New RIG Exploit Kit Campaign Infecting Victims' PCs with RedLine Stealer (thehackernews.com)
Emotet Tests New Attack Techniques: Sign of Things to Come? | CSO Online
Cyber Criminals Using New Malware Loader 'Bumblebee' in the Wild (thehackernews.com)
New Powerful Prynt Stealer Malware Sells for Just $100 Per Month (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs
Scammers Are Copying News Sites To Push Elon Musk-themed Crypto Scams - Information Security Buzz
Why Did Hackers Target DeFi L1, L2 Solutions for a $1.2 Billion Theft in 2022? (watcher.guru)
Intuit Sued Over Phishing Attack Targeting Trezor Crypto Wallet Users - Decrypt
Crypto Trading Fund Partners Accused of Fraud - Infosecurity Magazine
LemonDuck Botnet Evades Detection in Cryptomining Attacks (techtarget.com)
Bored Ape Yacht Club Instagram Hacked, NFTs Worth Millions Stolen (vice.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
AML/CFT
Two More Indicted Over North Korean Sanctions Evasion Plot - Infosecurity Magazine
FCA: Challenger Banks Failing to Spot Money Launderers - Infosecurity Magazine
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
Cloudflare Stomps On 15.3 Million Requests Per Second DDoS • The Register
How a New Generation of IoT Botnets Is Amplifying DDoS Attacks | CSO Online
DDoS Attacks Target Healthcare, Education Markets, Research Finds - MSSP Alert
Cloud
Is Cloud Critical Infrastructure? Prep Now for Provider Outages (techtarget.com)
Shadow IT Is A Top Concern Related To SaaS Adoption - Help Net Security
Travel
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Spyware, Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Data-Wiper Malware Strains Surge Amid Ukraine Invasion • The Register
Chinese Hackers Targeting Russian Military Personnel with Updated PlugX Malware (thehackernews.com)
Cyber Attacks Rage in Ukraine, Support Military Operations | Threatpost
Ongoing DDoS Attacks from Compromised Sites Hit Ukraine - Security Affairs
Anonymous Hacked Russian PSCB Commercial Bank and Energy Firms - Security Affairs
Russia-Linked Threat Actors Launched Hundreds of Cyber Attacks on Ukraine - Security Affairs
Russian Hacktivists Launch DDoS Attacks on Romanian Govt Sites (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber Espionage APT Now Identified as Three Separate Actors | Threatpost
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Microsoft Documents Over 200 Cyber Attacks by Russia Against Ukraine (thehackernews.com)
Russian Govt Impersonators Target Telcos in Phishing Attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
The Subject of Trusting ‘Russian’ Applications - Information Security Buzz
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerabilities
CISA Adds 7 Vulnerabilities to List Of Bugs Exploited In Attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cisco Patches 11 High-Severity Vulnerabilities in Security Products | SecurityWeek.Com
Update Now! Critical Patches for Chrome and Edge | Malwarebytes Labs
Microsoft Patches Pair of Dangerous Vulnerabilities in Azure PostgreSQL (darkreading.com)
Microsoft Discovers New Privilege Escalation Flaws in Linux Operating System (thehackernews.com)
Millions of Java Apps Remain Vulnerable to Log4Shell | Threatpost
Organisations Warned of Attacks Exploiting WSO2 Vulnerability | SecurityWeek.Com
Vulnerability Found in WordPress Anti-Malware Firewall (searchenginejournal.com)
Sector Specific
Financial Services Sector
Government
Governments Under Attack Must Think Defensively - Help Net Security
Data Breach Disrupts UK Army Recruitment - Infosecurity Magazine
Health/Medical/Pharma Sector
French Hospital Group Disconnects Internet After Hackers Steal Data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Medical Software Firm Fined €1.5M for Leaking Data of 490k Patients (bleepingcomputer.com)
DDoS Attacks Target Healthcare, Education Markets, Research Finds - MSSP Alert
Smile Brands Breach Impacts 2.5 Million Individuals - Infosecurity Magazine
CNI, OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Education and Academia
Gaming/Gambling
Other News
SolarWinds Breach Lawsuits: 6 Takeaways for CISOs | CSO Online
41% Of Businesses Had an API Security Incident Last Year - Help Net Security
Security Leaders Relying More Heavily on MSPs Amid Talent Crunch - Help Net Security
2022 Security Priorities: Staffing and Remote Work (darkreading.com)
GitHub: How Stolen OAuth Tokens Helped Breach Dozens of Orgs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Why Companies Should Focus on Preventing Privilege Escalation (techtarget.com)
German Wind Turbine Firm Hit by 'Targeted, Professional Cyber Attack' | SecurityWeek.Com
308,000 Exposed Databases Discovered, Proper Management Is Key - Help Net Security
Lapsus$ targeting SharePoint, VPNs and virtual machines (techtarget.com)
Top Five Post-Pandemic Priorities for Cyber Security Leaders - Help Net Security
Security Spending Set to Hit $198bn by 2025 - Infosecurity Magazine
Companies Poorly Prepared to Meet CCPA, CPRA and GDPR Compliance Requirements - 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.
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