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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 17 May 2024
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 17 May 2024:
-Social Engineering is the Biggest Cyber Threat as Study Finds Most Workers Have Clicked on a Suspicious Email Link
-Business Leaders are Stressing Out Over Pace of Technological Change, as Cyber Security Incidents Seen as Main Business Disruptor
-ICO Warns That Many UK Businesses Neglect Basic Cyber Security: More Ransomware and Cyber Attacks Last Year Than Ever Before
-Data Breaches are Getting Worse, Many are Employee Errors or Social Engineering Attacks
-Why Cyber Insurance isn’t a Substitute for Cyber Risk Management
-China Presents Defining Challenge to Global Cyber Security, Says GCHQ
-Botnet Sent Millions of Emails in LockBit Black Ransomware Campaign
-Global Financial Stability at Risk Due to Cyber Threats, IMF warns
-Ongoing Campaign Bombards Enterprises with Spam Emails and Phone Calls
-Santander Data Breach via Third-Party Provider Impacted Customers and Employees
-40% of Cyber Teams Have Held Back from Reporting Cyber Attacks Over Fear of Losing Jobs
-Digital Resilience – a Step Up from Cyber Security
-UK Lags Europe on Exploited Vulnerability Remediation
-Cyber Threats Demand More Focus Says Zurich, as UK Insurance And NCSC Join Forces to Fight Ransomware Payments
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
Social Engineering is the Biggest Cyber Threat, as Study Finds Most Workers Have Clicked on a Suspicious Email Link
According to a recent report, half of office workers have clicked on a link or attachment within a suspicious email sent to their work address within the last 12 months, and of those that interacted with the email, half of them claimed to be confident in their ability to identify phishing emails.
With 68% of breaches involving the human element, your organisation must be cognisant of its employees. Hackers know that no matter what your tech stack is, you will always have employees and where there is an employee, there is a way into your organisation. It is far cheaper to exploit an employee who already has the access you require, than to develop a new exploit. It only takes one human to make a mistake by granting access to an attacker.
When it came to training, only 41% of respondents said their employer had provided formal cyber security awareness training and 79% said their previous training is not sufficient to keep pace with modern cyber threats.
Source: [HackerNoon] [BusinessPlus]
Business Leaders are Stressing Out Over Pace of Technological Change, as Cyber Security Incidents Seen as Main Business Disruptor
A recent report commissioned by BT reveals that 86% of UK business leaders suffer from 'tech-related stress,' particularly concerning AI and cyber security, a phenomenon they have termed as 'Bytmares.' The report found that 59% of business leaders worry about the rapid and relentless pace of tech advancement, and whether appropriate controls are in place to protect it.
According to a different survey, 74% of business leaders view cyber security incidents as the main disruptive threat to their organisations either currently or over the next twelve months. This was followed by cloud computing, internet of things and artificial intelligence.
These findings highlight the critical importance of robust cyber security measures in today’s interconnected world. As organisations increasingly rely on digital infrastructure, safeguarding sensitive data and systems becomes paramount. Cyber threats can disrupt operations, compromise customer trust, and result in financial losses. Remember, cyber security is not just an IT concern; it is a strategic imperative for every organisation.
Sources: [Beta News] [Telecoms] [Verdict]
ICO Warns That Many UK Businesses Neglect Basic Cyber Security: More Ransomware and Cyber Attacks Last Year Than Ever Before
A recent update from the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has revealed that ransomware attacks in the UK have surpassed all previous years, up 52% from the previous year. The report found that finance, retail and education sectors are suffering the most incidents.
The leading causes of breaches include phishing, brute force attacks, errors and supply chain attacks. The ICO noted that many organisations still neglect basic cyber security measures and has called for enhanced efforts to combat the escalating threat, emphasising the importance of foundational controls.
Sources: [Tech Monitor] [Government Business] [The Record Media] [Tech Monitor]
Data Breaches are Getting Worse, Many are Employee Errors or Social Engineering Attacks
The latest Verizon Business Data Breach Investigations Report (DBIR) highlights that employee error is the leading cause of cyber security incidents in the EMEA region, accounting for 49% of cases. The top reasons for these incidents are “miscellaneous errors, system intrusion, and social engineering,” making up 87% of all breaches. Hackers primarily target personal information (64%), internal data (33%), and login credentials (20%). Despite zero-day vulnerabilities being a significant threat, with exploitation rising to 14% of breaches, the report emphasises the critical need for ongoing employee training and awareness to mitigate these risks.
Source: [TechRadar]
Why Cyber Insurance isn’t a Substitute for Cyber Risk Management
While cyber insurance can be beneficial in mitigating financial loss from cyber attacks, it is not a substitute for comprehensive cyber risk management. Many firms with cyber insurance have still fallen victim to attacks, highlighting that cyber insurance primarily transfers residual risk. Effective cyber risk management includes conducting proper risk assessments and implementing robust cyber security controls. Cyber insurance cannot resolve issues like business disruption, breach of client confidentiality, and compliance with legal obligations; this stresses the need for proactive measures and independent assurance to protect against cyber threats.
Source: [ Law Society of Scotland]
China Presents Defining Challenge to Global Cyber Security, Says GCHQ
A recent speech by the new director of the UK’s GCHQ highlighted China's growing cyber threat, describing it as an "epoch-defining challenge." She warned that China's destabilising actions undermine global internet security. The current head of the UKs’ NCSC echoed these concerns, pointing to the Chinese state-sponsored hacking group Volt Typhoon which has infiltrated critical sectors like energy and transportation. The National Cyber Director at the White House added that China’s cyber capabilities pose a significant threat to global infrastructure, particularly in crisis scenarios, as Chinese hackers increasingly use sophisticated techniques to pre-position within networks.
Source: [Infosecurity Magazine]
Botnet Sent Millions of Emails in LockBit Black Ransomware Campaign
Since April, millions of phishing emails have been sent through a botnet known as “Phorpiex” to conduct a large-scale LockBit Black ransomware campaign. In a warning from New Jersey’s Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Cell, it was explained that the attackers use ZIP attachments containing an executable that deploys the LockBit Black payload, which encrypts the recipients' systems if launched. The emails are sent from 1,500 unique IP addresses worldwide.
Sources: [Bleeping Computer]
Global Financial Stability at Risk Due to Cyber Threats, IMF warns
A new International Monetary Fund (IMF) report highlights the severe threat cyber attacks pose to global financial stability, revealing that nearly 20% of reported cyber incidents in the past two decades targeted the financial sector, causing $12 billion in direct losses. Since 2020, these attacks have led to an estimated $2.5 billion in direct losses. The report underscores that cyber incidents threaten financial institutions' operational resilience, potentially leading to funding challenges and reputational damage. The IMF calls for bolstered cyber security measures, including stress testing, information-sharing arrangements, and enhanced national cyber security strategies to mitigate these growing risks.
Source: [World Economic Forum]
Ongoing Campaign Bombards Enterprises with Spam Emails and Phone Calls
An ongoing social engineering campaign that is bombarding enterprises with spam calls and emails has been uncovered. The campaign involves a threat actor overwhelming a user’s email with junk, followed by a call offering to assist in removing the junk. From here, the threat actor aims to convince the victim to download remote monitoring and management software such as AnyDesk or Microsoft’s built in Quick Assist feature to allow the attacker remote access to the victim’s machine.
Source: [The Hacker News]
Santander Data Breach via Third-Party Provider Impacted Customers and Employees
A recent disclosure by the Spanish bank Santander revealed a data breach at a third-party provider affecting customers in Chile, Spain, and Uruguay. Unauthorised access to a database hosted by the provider compromised information on all current and some former employees, but did not include transactional data, online banking details, or passwords. Santander said they swiftly implemented measures to contain the incident, blocking access to the compromised database and enhancing fraud prevention controls. The bank assured that its operations and systems remain unaffected, allowing customers to continue transacting securely. The number of impacted individuals remains unspecified.
There is a continued trend in third party providers being used as the soft underbelly to attack larger and better defended organisations, requiring all organisations to consider the security controls of their third parties.
Source: [securityaffairs.com]
40% of Cyber Teams Have Held Back from Reporting Cyber Attacks Over Fear of Losing Jobs
Recent research has revealed that 40% of cyber teams have not reported a cyber attack due to the fear of losing their job. Unfortunately, this leaves businesses at risk of being non-compliant, without even knowing so. When it came to challenges faced by organisations, it was found that nearly 20% of companies say a lack of qualified talent is a key challenge to overcoming cyber attacks and 32% did not have the resources to hire new staff. This is not to say however, they are unable to outsource some of their cyber function to cyber specialists. This lack of allocated resources prevents the organisation from being confident that any incidents have been appropriately remediated.
Source: [Business Wire]
Digital Resilience – a Step Up from Cyber Security
In an increasingly digital world, many organisations are unaware of how truly reliant they are on digital technology, and the accompanying risks. As we move toward an even more digitally dependent future, the need for digital resilience is more critical than ever. Digital resilience refers to the ability to maintain, change, or recover technology-dependent operations. Organisations should begin with an internal audit to assess their digital resilience, involving all departments and ensuring senior management oversight, as board involvement is essential for effective cyber security programmes.
Digital resilience goes beyond cyber security to encompass change management, business resilience, and operational risk. Implementing digital resilience strategies requires continuous adaptation, cross-functional collaboration, and embedding resilience thinking throughout the organisation. Businesses must integrate digital resilience into their strategic planning to ensure ongoing competitiveness and adaptability in an ever-evolving digital landscape.
Sources: [CSO Online] [CSO Online]
UK Lags Europe on Exploited Vulnerability Remediation
A new report by Bitsight reveals that UK organisations lag behind their European counterparts in remediating software flaws listed in the US ‘Known Exploited Vulnerability’ (KEV) catalogue. UK organisations take an average of 225 days to address KEVs, compared to 220 days for European entities and just 21 days for German organisations. Non-KEV vulnerabilities are patched at an even slower rate, with UK entities taking over two years (736 days) to patch. Globally, the average time to resolve KEVs is around six months (180 days). Despite fewer KEVs detected in UK environments (30% versus 43% in Europe), the slow remediation poses significant risks, emphasising the need for faster and more proactive cyber security measures, specifically robust vulnerability scanning and patching.
Source: [Infosecurity Magazine]
Cyber Threats Demand More Focus Says Zurich, as UK Insurance And NCSC Join Forces to Fight Ransomware Payments
A recent discussion at the British Insurance Brokers' Association (BIBA) conference highlighted the increasing importance of cyber security for businesses, driven by the surge in cyber attacks and the use of AI by criminal gangs. Zurich Resilience Solutions UK noted that businesses face greater scrutiny from underwriters over their cyber exposures.
BIBA, together with the Association of British Insurers (ABI), and the International Underwriting Association (IUA), have united with the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) in a joint effort to tackle ransom payments. As a result of their collaboration, they have published new best practice guidance, which aims to reduce the number of payments being made by UK victims as well as the disruption businesses face.
Source: [Emerging Risks] [NCSC] [Infosecurity Magazine]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Business leaders consider cyber security main disruptor – Q1 2024 survey - Verdict
The Growing Cyber Security Disconnect Leaves Enterprises Exposed (forbes.com)
Cyber threats demand more focus – Zurich (emergingrisks.co.uk)
Digital resilience – a step up from cyber security | CSO Online
UK business leaders are stressing out over pace of technological change (telecoms.com)
Cyber attacks threaten global financial stability, IMF warns | World Economic Forum (weforum.org)
BISO: Enhancing cyber security in modern enterprises - SiliconANGLE
Dell Data Breach Underscores Cost of Cyber Security Complacency (pymnts.com)
Cyber and Financial Crime, Through the FBI Lens (govinfosecurity.com)
Maximizing cyber security ROI: A strategic approach | TechRadar
Many CISOs don't feel they get the right respect from their board | TechRadar
Cyber high on agenda at BIBA amid concerns over threats (emergingrisks.co.uk)
Are you meeting your cyber insurance requirements? - Help Net Security
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Botnet sent millions of emails in LockBit Black ransomware campaign (bleepingcomputer.com)
UK hit by more ransomware and cyber attacks last year than ever before (therecord.media)
The ups and downs (and ups again) of the ransomware risk - Digital Journal
Hackers Target Children of Corporate Executives in Ransomware Attacks (businessinsider.com)
CISA: Black Basta ransomware breached over 500 orgs worldwide (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber attacks leave significant financial impact on hacked organisations (kwch.com)
As the FBI Closes In, Scattered Spider Attacks Finance, Insurance Orgs (darkreading.com)
UK insurance industry begins to acknowledge role in tackling ransomware (therecord.media)
The UK may not have a choice on a ransomware payment ban | Computer Weekly
64% Jump in Ransomware Claims on Remote Access Tools, Report Shows (claimsjournal.com)
Organisations struggle to defend against ransomware - Help Net Security
Ransomware statistics that reveal alarming rate of cyber extortion - Help Net Security
Most ransomware-hit enterprises report to authorities, but level of support varies | ZDNET
Ransomware negotiator weighs in on the payment debate • The Register
OODA Loop - The Social Engineering Tactics of Ransomware-as-a-Service Operator Black Basta
INC ransomware source code selling on hacking forums for $300,000 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Defence Strategies: Never Trust a Criminal (inforisktoday.com)
Ransomware Victims
More than 470 legal actions against HSE over cyber attack (rte.ie)
Christie's Just Postponed the Rare Watches Auction Due to Cyber Attack (robbreport.com)
Singing River Health System: Data of 895,000 stolen in ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Repeat Offenders: Black Basta’s Latest Healthcare Cyber Attack (informationweek.com)
E-prescription provider MediSecure impacted by a ransomware attack (securityaffairs.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Most Workers Have Clicked on a Suspicious Email Link (businessplus.ie)
Botnet sent millions of emails in LockBit Black ransomware campaign (bleepingcomputer.com)
Stay In The Loop On Emerging And Evolving Email Threat Trends (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Collaboration tools are now at the frontline in the battle against phishing (securitybrief.co.nz)
5 Common Phishing Vectors and Examples - 2024 (cybersecuritynews.com)
BEC
Other Social Engineering
Low-tech tactics still top the IT security risk chart | CSO Online
Ongoing Campaign Bombards Enterprises with Spam Emails and Phone Calls (thehackernews.com)
What is vishing and quishing, and how do you protect yourself? | PCWorld
Beware of fake calls, ward off cyber criminals: Govt - The Statesman
OODA Loop - The Social Engineering Tactics of Ransomware-as-a-Service Operator Black Basta
Artificial Intelligence
UK agency releases tools to test AI model safety | TechCrunch
Security industry struggles to consolidate against AI threats - SiliconANGLE
Cyber Security Races to Unmask New Wave of AI Deepfakes (darkreading.com)
Only one-third of firms deploy safeguards against generative AI threats, report finds | CIO Dive
CISOs Reconsider Their Roles in Response to GenAI Integration - Security Boulevard
AI's rapid growth puts pressure on CISOs to adapt to new security risks - Help Net Security
AI-driven attacks seen as chief cloud security threat | TechTarget
The Cyber Security Survival Guide For Generative AI (forbes.com)
2FA/MFA
Malware
Malware was almost 50% of threat detections in Q1 2024 | Security Magazine
North Korean Hackers Deploy New Golang Malware 'Durian' Against Crypto Firms (thehackernews.com)
FIN7 Hacker Group Leverages Malicious Google Ads to Deliver NetSupport RAT (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft fixes Windows zero-day exploited in QakBot malware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ebury botnet malware infected 400,000 Linux servers since 2009 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Kimsuky hackers deploy new Linux backdoor via trojanized installers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
Malicious Android Apps Pose as Google, Instagram, WhatsApp to Steal Credentials (thehackernews.com)
Google Issues Critical Update For Millions Of Pixel Users (forbes.com)
Apple Patch Day: Code Execution Flaws in iPhones, iPads, macOS - Security Week
Threat actors may have exploited a zero-day in older iPhones, Apple warns (securityaffairs.com)
Apple warns of increased iPhone security risks – Computerworld
Unwanted Tracking Alerts Rolling Out to iOS, Android - Security Week
Apple blocked $7 billion in fraudulent App Store purchases in 4 years (bleepingcomputer.com)
Android boosting security with Theft Detection Lock, factory reset protection (9to5google.com)
Data Privacy: All the Ways Your Cellphone Carrier Tracks You and How to Stop It
Your Android phone could have stalkerware — here’s how to remove it | TechCrunch
Internet of Things – IoT
Attack makes autonomous vehicle tech ignore road signs • The Register
Millions of IoT Devices at Risk From Integrated Modem (darkreading.com)
Prison for cyber security expert selling private videos from inside 400,000 homes (bitdefender.com)
IoT Vulnerabilities and BotNet Infections: A Risk for Executives - Security Boulevard
Data Breaches/Leaks
Over 5.3 billion data records exposed in April 2024 | Computer Weekly
MoD contractor hacked by China failed to report breach for months | Hacking | The Guardian
Data breaches are getting worse - and many are coming from a familiar source | TechRadar
Notorious threat actor IntelBroker claims the hack of the Europol (securityaffairs.com)
Hacker claims another breach into Dell systems | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Dell Data Breach Underscores Cost of Cyber Security Complacency (pymnts.com)
Hacker claims to have stolen Dell customer data, twice. Here's how to protect yourself | ZDNET
Santander Data Breach Impacts Customers, Employees - Security Week
The legal sector's data breach conundrum: insights from ICO's latest report - Solicitors Journal
JPMorgan Fixes Security Flaw, Affects 450K Retirement Plans | Entrepreneur
Europol confirms incident after data break-in claims • The Register
Largest non-bank lender in Australia warns of a data breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Guernsey data breaches: More than 1,000 people affected - BBC News
Up to 120,000 affected by data breach at City of Helsinki (helsinkitimes.fi)
Camden Council cyber attack warning after NRS Healthcare cyber attack | Ham & High (hamhigh.co.uk)
Lessons learned from high-profile data breaches | TechTarget
Zscaler Confirms Only Isolated Test Server Was Hacked - Security Week
Nissan North America data breach impacts over 53,000 employees (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
FBI, DoJ Shut Down BreachForums, Launch Investigation (darkreading.com)
Cyber and Financial Crime, Through the FBI Lens (govinfosecurity.com)
FBI working towards nabbing Scattered Spider hackers, official says | Reuters
Low-tech tactics still top the IT security risk chart | CSO Online
Top 5 Most Dangerous Cyber Threats in 2024 (darkreading.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
North Korean Hackers Deploy New Golang Malware 'Durian' Against Crypto Firms (thehackernews.com)
Tornado Cash cryptomixer dev gets 64 months for laundering $2 billion (bleepingcomputer.com)
US brothers arrested for stealing $25m in crypto in just 12 seconds - BBC News
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Low-tech tactics still top the IT security risk chart | CSO Online
Data breaches are getting worse - and many are coming from a familiar source | TechRadar
The Human Element in Cyber Security: Safeguarding your organisation (thebusinessmagazine.co.uk)
CISOs call to ditch the 'stigma of blame' in cyber security (computing.co.uk)
Insurance
NCSC guide to help businesses facing ransomware demands (biba.org.uk)
UK insurance industry begins to acknowledge role in tackling ransomware (therecord.media)
Lloyd’s provides tighter guidance on cyber war wordings | Insurance Insider
Cyber high on agenda at BIBA amid concerns over threats (emergingrisks.co.uk)
Are you meeting your cyber insurance requirements? - Help Net Security
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Cloud/SaaS
How to create a cloud security policy, step by step | TechTarget
AI-driven attacks seen as chief cloud security threat | TechTarget
Singapore Cyber Security Update Puts Cloud Providers on Notice (darkreading.com)
Secrecy Concerns Mount Over Spy Powers Targeting US Data Centres | WIRED
Encryption
Linux and Open Source
Ebury botnet malware infected 400,000 Linux servers since 2009 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Kimsuky hackers deploy new Linux backdoor via trojanized installers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Establishing a security baseline for open source projects - Help Net Security
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Social Media
Training, Education and Awareness
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Singapore Cyber Security Update Puts Cloud Providers on Notice (darkreading.com)
Clock is ticking for companies to prepare for EU NIS2 Directive | CSO Online
Nigeria Halts Cyber Security Tax After Public Outrage (darkreading.com)
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
The cyber security skills shortage: A CISO perspective | CSO Online
Why cyber security staff burn out, and what to do about it (computing.co.uk)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
As the FBI Closes In, Scattered Spider Attacks Finance, Insurance Orgs (darkreading.com)
FBI, DoJ Shut Down BreachForums, Launch Investigation (darkreading.com)
Most ransomware-hit enterprises report to authorities, but level of support varies | ZDNET
Prison for cyber security expert selling private videos from inside 400,000 homes (bitdefender.com)
Tornado Cash cryptomixer dev gets 64 months for laundering $2 billion (bleepingcomputer.com)
US brothers arrested for stealing $25m in crypto in just 12 seconds - BBC News
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Nation State Actors
China
Cyber threat landscape permanently altered by Chinese operations, US officials say (therecord.media)
Tracking the Progression of Earth Hundun's Cyber espionage Campaign in 2024 | Trend Micro (US)
Can't blame all Chinese cyber attacks on the government - Asia Times
How the West has struggled to keep up with China’s spy threat - BBC News
Stifling Beijing in cyber space big focus for UK operatives • The Register
China focuses on non-military ways to take Taiwan, reports warn - Washington Times
It’s time to ban TikTok for the sake of our democracy and security (politicshome.com)
Asian Threat Actors Use New Techniques to Attack Familiar Targets (darkreading.com)
Chinese Crime Ring Uses Franchise Model to Grow Fake Online Shops (businessinsider.com)
Three men charged with aiding Hong Kong intelligence service, says Met | UK news | The Guardian
Russia
File Not Found: Russia Is Hacking Evidence of Its War Crimes - War on the Rocks
NATO Draws a Cyber Red Line in Tensions With Russia - Security Week
Pro-Russia hackers targeted Kosovo government websites (securityaffairs.com)
UK 'increasingly concerned' about Russian intelligence links to hacktivists (therecord.media)
To the Moon and back(doors): Lunar landing in diplomatic missions (welivesecurity.com)
New backdoors on a European government's network appear to be Russian (therecord.media)
'Russian' hackers deface potentially hundreds of local British news sites (therecord.media)
Investigation: How Russia's Warplanes Get Their 'Brain Power' From The West, Despite Sanctions
The Three Seas Initiative: A Vanguard in Digitization and Cyber Security | Warsaw Institute
Iran
North Korea
Vulnerability Management
Not Just MOVEit: 2023 Was a Banner Year for Zero-Days (inforisktoday.com)
(Cyber) Risk = Probability of Occurrence x Damage (thehackernews.com)
Critical vulnerabilities take 4.5 months on average to remediate - Help Net Security
The Fall of the National Vulnerability Database (darkreading.com)
Backlogs at National Vulnerability Database prompt action from NIST and CISA | CSO Online
Log4J shows no sign of fading, spotted in 30% of CVE exploits - Help Net Security
Heartbleed: When Is It Good to Name a Vulnerability? (darkreading.com)
Vulnerabilities
Google Chrome emergency update fixes 6th zero-day exploited in 2024 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google patches third exploited Chrome zero-day in a week (bleepingcomputer.com)
Threat actors may have exploited a zero-day in older iPhones, Apple warns (securityaffairs.com)
Microsoft Patches 61 Flaws, Including Two Actively Exploited Zero-Days (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft fixes Windows zero-day exploited in QakBot malware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Log4J shows no sign of fading, spotted in 30% of CVE exploits - Help Net Security
D-Link Routers Vulnerable to Takeover Via Exploit for Zero-Day (darkreading.com)
New Wi-Fi Vulnerability Enables Network Eavesdropping via Downgrade Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Intel Publishes 41 Security Advisories for Over 90 Vulnerabilities - Security Week
Google Issues Critical Update For Millions Of Pixel Users (forbes.com)
Apple Patch Day: Code Execution Flaws in iPhones, iPads, macOS - Security Week
CISA and FBI Issue Alert on Path Traversal Vulnerabilities - Security Boulevard
VMware Patches Severe Security Flaws in Workstation and Fusion Products (thehackernews.com)
Firefox 126: Telemetry, privacy feature, and security fixes - gHacks Tech News
SAP Patches Critical Vulnerabilities in CX Commerce, NetWeaver - Security Week
Adobe Patches Critical Flaws in Reader, Acrobat - Security Week
Cisco Releases Security Updates for Multiple Products | CISA
Microsoft shares temp fix for Outlook encrypted email reply issues (bleepingcomputer.com)
Tools and Controls
Digital resilience – a step up from cyber security | CSO Online
How To Implement Threat Modeling To Protect Your Business - Minutehack
How to create a cloud security policy, step by step | TechTarget
Hackers use DNS tunneling for network scanning, tracking victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
AWS CISO: In AI gold rush, folks forget application security • The Register
Maximizing cyber security ROI: A strategic approach | TechRadar
The Human Element in Cyber Security: Safeguarding your organisation (thebusinessmagazine.co.uk)
Addressing the Cyber Security Vendor Ecosystem Disconnect (darkreading.com)
How to Think About Foundation Models for Cyber Security | Andreessen Horowitz (a16z.com)
Other News
Microsoft president summoned to House over security blunders • The Register
National Cyber Security Centre: Tech market not working - The Business Magazine
Critical infrastructure security needs everyone's help • The Register
Your Hospital Is Under Cyber Attack. Now What? (newsweek.com)
BT, TalkTalk, Virgin Media and Vodafone on UK Router Security and Upgrades - ISPreview UK
Hackers use DNS tunnelling for network scanning, tracking victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
NCSC CTO: Broken market must be fixed to usher in new tech • The Register
Public Sector IT is Broken: Turning the System Back On - IT Security Guru
The Cyber Security Implications Of Gen Z’s Tech-Savvy Lifestyle (forbes.com)
Classes cancelled as 'sinister' school cyber attacks rise - BBC News
Irony abounds as UK NCSC’s simple door codes revealed • The Register
Candidates to get cyber security support amid general election interference fears (nation.cymru)
Too many ICS assets are exposed to the public internet - 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.
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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 02 September 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 02 September 2022
-79% Of Companies Only Invest in Cyber Security After Hacking Incidents
-Nearly Half of Breaches During First Half of 2022 Involved Stolen Credentials
-Outdated Infrastructure Not Up to Today’s Ransomware Challenges
-Ghost Data Increases Enterprise Business Risk
-Detected Cyber Threats Surge 52% in 1H 2022
-An Interview with Initial Access Broker Wazawaka: ‘There Is No Such Money Anywhere as There is in Ransomware’
-Cyber Crime Underground More Dangerous Than Organisations Realize
-New Ransomware Group BianLian Activity Exploding
-Can Your Passwords Withstand Threat Actors’ Dirty Tricks?
-Ransomware Gangs’ Favourite Targets
-Tentacles of ‘0ktapus’ Threat Group Victimize 130 Firms
-Organisations Are Spending Billions on Malware Defence That’s Easy to Bypass
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
79% Of Companies Only Invest in Cyber Security After Hacking Incidents
The British cyber security company Tanium published a survey on investments in digital protection in UK companies with alarming results: 79% of them only approve investments in cyber security after suffering a data breach; 92% experienced a data attack or breach, of which 74% occurred in 2021. Leadership reticence is also high, with 63% of leaders convinced cyber security is only a concern after an attack.
The complexity of the situation has grown with the digital transformation of work. If it streamlines many processes, it can also open up serious security gaps. A sensitive point is the “home office”: companies need effective solutions to eliminate gaps that may appear between employees’ computers (often shared devices) and the company’s internal network.
Putting in solutions is just the beginning of a necessary strategy and investment effort in virtual protection. Complex scams based on phishing, reverse engineering, and backdoor-type malicious programs (“planted” discreetly on a device and sometimes inactive for months) often combine real-world and virtual-world fraud.
The escalation of corporate data hijacking appears in this scenario. The most notorious case at a global level of such an incident, with a million-dollar ransom demand, was launched in 2021 on Colonial Pipeline. This US company paid $40 million to regain control over strategic data after fuel supplies through its pipelines to several states were threatened for days.
Nearly Half of Breaches During First Half of 2022 Involved Stolen Credentials
According to a new report by Acronis, a Switzerland-based cyber security company, nearly half of breaches during the first six months of 2022 involved stolen credentials.
The goal of stealing credentials is to launch ransomware attacks. According to the report, these “continue to be the number one threat to large and medium-sized businesses, including government organisations.”
Attackers usually use phishing techniques to extract these credentials. In the first half of the year, over 600 malicious email campaigns made their way across the internet, of which 58% were phishing attempts and 28% featured malware.
Acronis also added that “as reliance on the cloud increases, attackers have homed in on different entryways to cloud-based networks.”
Additionally, cyber criminals now also target unpatched or software vulnerabilities to extract data, with a recent increase on Linux operating systems and managed service providers (MSPs) and their network of SMB customers.
The third vector spotted by Acronis was “non-traditional entry avenues” such as cryptocurrencies and decentralised finance (DeFi) systems.
Outdated Infrastructure Not Up to Today’s Ransomware Challenges
A global research commissioned by Cohesity reveals that nearly half of respondents say their company depends on outdated, legacy backup and recovery infrastructure to manage and protect their data. In some cases, this technology is more than 20 years old and was designed long before today’s multicloud era and onslaught of sophisticated cyber attacks plaguing enterprises globally.
Challenges pertaining to outdated infrastructure could easily be compounded by the fact that many IT and security teams don’t seem to have a plan in place to mobilise if and when a cyber attack occurs. Nearly 60% of respondents expressed some level of concern that their IT and security teams would be able to mobilise efficiently to respond to the attack.
These are just some of the findings from an April 2022 survey, conducted by Censuswide, of more than 2,000 IT and SecOps professionals (split nearly 50/50 between the two groups) in the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. All respondents play a role in the decision-making process for IT or security within their organisations.
IT and security teams should raise the alarm bell if their organisation continues to use antiquated technology to manage and secure their most critical digital asset – their data.
Cyber criminals are actively preying on this outdated infrastructure as they know it was not built for today’s dispersed, multicloud environments, nor was it built to help companies protect and rapidly recover from sophisticated cyber attacks.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/08/30/outdated-infrastructure-manage-data/
Ghost Data Increases Enterprise Business Risk
IT has to get its hands around cloud data sprawl. Another area of focus should be on ghost data, as it expands the organisation's cloud attack surface.
Cloud sprawl is a big issue for organisations, with business teams spinning up cloud systems and services on their own, often without IT oversight. That leads to cloud data sprawl as data is scattered across different environments. If IT doesn’t know about the cloud systems and services, then IT is also not managing the data being collected, processed, and stored there.
We all know about shadow IT, the systems and network devices in the organisation’s environment that IT is not managing. Similarly, shadow data refers to unmanaged data store copies and snapshots or log data that are not part of IT’s backup and recovery strategy. Researchers at Cyera estimate that 60% of the data security posture issues that are present in cloud accounts stem from unsecured sensitive data.
Then there is the problem of ghost data. When data gets deleted from cloud systems, it isn’t fully gone. Copies linger in backups or snapshots of data stores. Ghost data refers to those copies left behind after the original has been deleted, and Cyera’s recent analysis show that enterprises have quite a lot of it.
After scanning the three major cloud providers (Amazon Web Services, Azure, and Google Cloud), Cyera researchers found that over 30% of scanned customer cloud data stores are ghost data and more than 58% contain sensitive, or very sensitive, data. For example, researchers found unsecured database snapshots in non-production environments that contained sensitive customer data where the original database had been destroyed. Researchers also uncovered sensitive personal and authentication data in plain text where the production data and application were no longer in use.
Ghost data usually has no business value - the data was deleted for a reason - and having it around unnecessarily increases business risk. Attackers don’t care if they get their hands on the original sensitive information or the copy because to them, all data has value, regardless of the form it takes.
https://www.darkreading.com/edge-threat-monitor/ghost-data-increases-enterprise-business-risk
Detected Cyber Threats Surge 52% in 1H 2022
A leading cyber security vendor blocked 63 billion threats in the first half of 2022 alone, over 50% more than the same period a year ago.
The findings come from the Trend Micro 2022 Midyear Cybersecurity Report and illustrate the scale of the challenge facing network defenders.
Trend Micro highlighted the persistent threat posed by ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) groups as one that will continue to cause major challenges for organisations in the years to come.
It said detections of prolific groups such as LockBit and Conti increased by 500% year-on-year in 1H 2022. Such groups will continue to adapt their tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs) in the race for profits.
The report warned of a surge in threats targeting Linux systems, for example. It said detections of attacks on Linux servers and embedded systems grew 75% year-on-year in the first half of 2022. Both SMBs and larger organisations are now a target, it claimed.
Many RaaS groups exploit vulnerabilities as a primary attack vector. Their job is getting easier as the number of published common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVEs) continues to grow strongly.
Trend Micro’s Zero Day Initiative published advisories on 944 vulnerabilities in the first half of 2021, a 23% year-on-year increase. The number of critical bug advisories it published soared by 400% over the same period.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/detected-cyberthreats-surge-52-in/
An Interview with Initial Access Broker Wazawaka: ‘There Is No Such Money Anywhere as There is in Ransomware’
Last April, a ransomware group threatened to expose police informants and other sensitive information if the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police Department did not pay a demand.
The brazen attack was the work of a gang known as Babuk, which in early 2021 gained a reputation for posting stolen databases on its website from victims that refused to pay a ransom. Just days after it tried to extort the Metropolitan Police Department, Babuk announced it was closing its ransomware affiliate program, and would focus on data theft and extortion instead.
Earlier this year, cyber security journalist Brian Krebs uncovered details about one man behind the operation named Mikhail Matveev, who was also connected to a number of other groups and identities, including the handle ‘Wazawaka.’ According to Krebs, Matveev had become more unhinged than usual, “publishing bizarre selfie videos” and creating a Twitter account to share exploit code.
Matveev talked to Recorded Future about his interaction with other hackers, details about ransomware attacks he’s been involved in, and how he settled on the name Babuk.
Click the link below for the full interview but the long and short is ransomware has created a criminal ecosystem the likes of which the world has never seen.
Cyber Crime Underground More Dangerous Than Organisations Realise
Kela, a cyber threat intelligence specialist, found in a new study of some 400 security pros in the US that organisations are more at risk from the “cyber crime underground” than they realise.
The Israel-based company surveyed security team members responsible for gathering cyber crime threat intelligence daily to better understand if they’re proactively scanning the dark web and other cyber crime sources, what tools they’re using and the gaps they see in their cyber crime threat intelligence approach. Nearly 60% of the respondents do not believe their current cyber crime prevention is effective, the results showed.
Here are the study’s key findings:
69% are concerned about threats from the cyber crime underground.
54% wouldn’t be surprised to find their organisation’s data on the cyber crime underground.
Only 38% believe that they’re very likely to detect it if it was released.
48% have no documented cyber crime threat intelligence policy in place.
Only 41% believe their current security program is very effective.
49% are not satisfied with the visibility they have of the cyber crime underground.
Of the 51% who were satisfied with their visibility into the cyber crime underground, 39% were still unable to prevent an attack.
Additional training and proficiency in cyber crime intelligence investigations is the most needed capability.
New Ransomware Group BianLian Activity Exploding
A new ransomware group operating under the name BianLian emerged in late 2021 and has become increasingly active since.
The threat actor already has twenty alleged victims across several industries (insurance, medicine, law and engineering), according to a research paper from US cyber security firm Redacted, published on September 1, 2022. The majority of the victim organisations have been based in Australia, North America and the UK.
The research team has given no attribution yet but believes the threat actor “represents a group of individuals who are very skilled in network penetration but are relatively new to the extortion/ransomware business.”
BianLian uses a custom toolkit, including homemade encryptors and encryption backdoors. Both, as well as the command-and-control (C&C) software the hackers use, are written in Go, an increasingly popular programming language among ransomware threat actors.
Troublingly, the Redacted team of researchers has found evidence that BianLian is likely now trying to up their game.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/new-ransomware-group-bianlian/
Can Your Passwords Withstand Threat Actors’ Dirty Tricks?
Password security hinges on the answer to that seemingly simple question. Unfortunately, you can’t know the answer until you’ve engaged a ruthless penetration tester to find out if your environment can stand up to the frighteningly good password cracking skills of today’s most nefarious hackers.
The whole purpose of hiring skilled penetration testers (“pentesters”) is to find out if your environment is truly impenetrable — and if it’s not, exactly how you should shore up your defences. Good pentesters and red teamers spend their time trying to simulate and emulate the real bad actors. After all, what’s the point of pressure-testing your IT infrastructure if you don’t use the same pressure that you’ll face in the real world?
You should “train like you fight.” Without sparring, how can you expect to jump into a boxing ring and go a few rounds with a skilled boxer? That’s the entire point of goal-based penetration testing and red/purple team engagements that simulate real-world threat actors.
Password cracking will continue to evolve – and so should your penetration testing tactics and plans. By the time you get to your fourth or fifth round with a quality pentesting consultancy, your risk mitigation will have dramatically improved — which means you’ll be able to move on to the next stage of security maturity.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/08/30/stand-up-to-password-cracking/
Ransomware Gangs’ Favourite Targets
Barracuda released its fourth-annual threat research report which looks at ransomware attack patterns that occurred between August 2021 and July 2022.
For the 106 highly publicised attacks our researchers analysed, the dominant targets are still five key industries: education (15%), municipalities (12%), healthcare (12%), infrastructure (8%), and financial (6%). The number of ransomware attacks increased year-over-year across each of these five industry verticals, and attacks against other industries more than doubled compared to last year’s report.
While attacks on municipalities increased only slightly, the analysis over the past 12 months showed that ransomware attacks on educational institutions more than doubled, and attacks on the healthcare and financial verticals tripled. Many choose not to disclose when they get hit.
This year, researchers dug in deeper on these highly publicised attacks to see which other industries are starting to be targeted. Service providers were hit the most, and ransomware attacks on automobile, hospitality, media, retail, software, and technology organisations all increased as well.
Most ransomware attacks don’t make headlines, though. Many victims choose not to disclose when they get hit, and the attacks are often sophisticated and extremely hard to handle for small businesses.
As ransomware and other cyber threats continue to evolve, the need for adequate security solutions has never been greater. Many cyber criminals target small businesses in an attempt to gain access to larger organisations. As a result, it is essential for security providers to create products that are easy to use and implement, regardless of a company’s size.
Additionally, sophisticated security technologies should be available as services, so that businesses of all sizes can protect themselves against these ever-changing threats. By making security solutions more accessible and user-friendly, the entire industry can help to better defend against ransomware and other cyber attacks.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/08/31/ransomware-attack-patterns/
Tentacles of ‘0ktapus’ Threat Group Victimise 130 Firms
Over 130 companies were tangled in sprawling phishing campaign that spoofed a multi-factor authentication system.
Targeted attacks on Twilio and Cloudflare employees are tied to a massive phishing campaign that resulted in 9,931 accounts at over 130 organisations being compromised. The campaigns are tied to focused abuse of identity and access management firm Okta, which gained the threat actors the 0ktapus moniker, by researchers.
The primary goal of the threat actors was to obtain Okta identity credentials and multi-factor authentication (MFA) codes from users of the targeted organisations. These users received text messages containing links to phishing sites that mimicked the Okta authentication page of their organisation.
114 US-based firms were impacted, with additional victims of sprinkled across 68 additional countries. The full scope of the attack is still unknown but the 0ktapus campaign has been incredibly effective, and the full scale of it may not be known for some time.
The 0ktapus attackers are believed to have begun their campaign by targeting telecommunications companies in hopes of winning access to potential targets’ phone numbers.
While unsure exactly how threat actors obtained a list of phone numbers used in MFA-related attacks, one theory researchers posit is that 0ktapus attackers began their campaign targeting telecommunications companies.
https://threatpost.com/0ktapus-victimize-130-firms/180487/
Organisations Are Spending Billions on Malware Defence That’s Easy to Bypass
Last year, organisations spent $2 billion on products that provide Endpoint Detection and Response, a relatively new type of security protection for detecting and blocking malware targeting network-connected devices. EDRs, as they're commonly called, represent a newer approach to malware detection. Static analysis, one of two more traditional methods, searches for suspicious signs in the DNA of a file itself. Dynamic analysis, the other more established method, runs untrusted code inside a secured "sandbox" to analyse what it does to confirm it's safe before allowing it to have full system access.
EDRs—which are forecasted to generate revenue of $18 billion by 2031 and are sold by dozens of security companies—take an entirely different approach. Rather than analyse the structure or execution of the code ahead of time, EDRs monitor the code's behaviour as it runs inside a machine or network. In theory, it can shut down a ransomware attack in progress by detecting that a process executed on hundreds of machines in the past 15 minutes is encrypting files en masse. Unlike static and dynamic analyses, EDR is akin to a security guard that uses machine learning to keep tabs in real time on the activities inside a machine or network.
Despite the buzz surrounding EDRs, new research suggests that the protection they provide isn't all that hard for skilled malware developers to circumvent. In fact, the researchers behind the study estimate EDR evasion adds only one additional week of development time to the typical infection of a large organisational network. That's because two fairly basic bypass techniques, particularly when combined, appear to work on most EDRs available in the industry.
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware Research: 10 Key Findings, Five Ways to Defend Against Hijackers - MSSP Alert
LockBit ransomware gang gets aggressive with triple-extortion tactic (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Golang-based 'Agenda Ransomware' Can Be Customized For Each Victim (thehackernews.com)
Chile and Montenegro Floored by Ransomware - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Researchers Detail Emerging Cross-Platform BianLian Ransomware Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Ragnar Locker Brags About TAP Air Portugal Breach (darkreading.com)
Police ‘negotiating with hackers’ who hit Paris hospital computer system | World | The Times
Advanced cyber-attack: NHS doctors' paperwork piles up - BBC News
Another Ransomware For Linux Likely In Development - Security Affairs
Montenegro hit by ransomware attack, hackers demand $10 million (bleepingcomputer.com)
Should ransomware payments be banned? A few considerations - Help Net Security
Researchers Spot Snowballing BianLian Ransomware Gang Activity (darkreading.com)
Ragnar Locker continues trend of ransomware targeting energy sector | CSO Online
BlackCat ransomware claims attack on Italian energy agency (bleepingcomputer.com)
Italian Oil Major Becomes Victim Of Ransomware Attack | OilPrice.com
Damart clothing store hit by Hive ransomware, $2 million demanded (bleepingcomputer.com)
Gloucester Council planning site still disrupted from cyber attack - BBC News
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Malware
Malicious Cookie Stuffing Chrome Extensions with 1.4 Million Users | McAfee Blog
A study on malicious plugins in WordPress Marketplaces - Security Affairs
BumbleBee a New Modular Backdoor Evolved From BookWorm (trendmicro.com)
Malicious Chrome Extensions Plague 1.4M Users (darkreading.com)
Mobile
Mobile banking apps put 300,000 digital fingerprints at risk • The Register
Researcher unveils smart lock hack for fingerprint theft (techtarget.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Skyrocketing IoT Bug Disclosures Put Pressure on Security Teams (darkreading.com)
Singapore clocks higher ransomware attacks, warns of IoT risks | ZDNET
ieGeek Vulnerabilities still prevalent in 2022 - Amazon Ft. IG20 (realinfosec.net)
Data Breaches/Leaks
Okta Says Customer Data Compromised in Twilio Hack | SecurityWeek.Com
Neopets says hackers had access to its systems for 18 months (bleepingcomputer.com)
Akasa Air Suffers Data Leak on First Day of Operation- IT Security Guru
Samsung says hackers obtained some customer data in newly disclosed breach | Engadget
Millions of student loan accounts exposed in data breach | TechRadar
Russian streaming platform confirms data breach affecting 7.5M users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
FBI: Crooks stole $1b+ in cryptocurrency already this year • The Register
Ukraine takes down cyber crime group hitting crypto fraud victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
FBI: Crooks are using these DeFi flaws to steal your money | ZDNET
Windows malware delays coinminer install by a month to evade detection (bleepingcomputer.com)
Crypto-Crooks Spread Trojanized Google Translate App in Watering-Hole Attack (darkreading.com)
Hackers Use ModernLoader to Infect Systems with Stealers and Cryptominers (thehackernews.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Insurance
Cyber insurance has been around for 25 years. It’s still a bit of a mess. (slate.com)
Travelers, Policyholder Agree to Void Current Cyber Policy (insurancejournal.com)
Cyber Frauds Skyrocket: Can Cyber Insurance Protect You in Real World? Experts Explain (news18.com)
Google Cloud, Microsoft and AWS dive into cyber insurance - Protocol
Cyber Insurance Price Hike Hits Local Governments Hard (insurancejournal.com)
Insurers must rethink handling of cyber attacks on states | Financial Times (ft.com)
Cyber insurance on rise as attacks surge | Mint (livemint.com)
Dark Web
German man charged for trying to hire fake contract killer on darkweb | Euronews
NATO Investigates Dark Web Leak of Data Stolen From Missile Vendor (darkreading.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
Cloud/SaaS
1 in 3 organisations don't know if their public cloud data was exfiltrated - Help Net Security
Real-World Cloud Attacks: The True Tasks of Cloud Ransomware Mitigation (darkreading.com)
Encryption
CISA: Prepare now for quantum computers, not when hackers use them (bleepingcomputer.com)
Homomorphic encryption: a holy grail for privacy, explained (fastcompany.com)
API
Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
LastPass source code breach – do we still recommend password managers? – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Social Media
Social media is ruining our lives and the public are finally waking up (telegraph.co.uk)
Thousands lured with blue badges in Instagram phishing attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Training, Education and Awareness
Privacy
Trident Royal Navy staff reveal sensitive data on fitness app | News | The Times
Cops wanted to keep mass surveillance app secret; privacy advocates refused | Ars Technica
US telcos admit to storing, handing over location data • The Register
Facebook moves to settle Cambridge Analytica lawsuit | TechCrunch
Homomorphic encryption: a holy grail for privacy, explained (fastcompany.com)
Nobody’s special to the WFH software spies | Comment | The Times
Travel
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Scammers Targeting Thousands Of Children As Young As Six, Figures Show (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Over a Third of Parents Do Not Know What Online Accounts Their Children Use - IT Security Guru
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Why Russia's cyber war in Ukraine hasn't played out as predicted (newatlas.com)
Ukraine's army of hackers failed to thwart Russia and quickly gave up | New Scientist
Moscow gridlock as hackers send dozens of taxis to Hotel Ukraine (telegraph.co.uk)
Finland To Offer Businesses Cybersec Vouchers In Wake Of Nato-related (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
China-linked APT40 used ScanBox Framework in a long-running espionage campaign - Security Affairs
Montenegro says Russian cyber attacks threaten key state functions (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google says it cut off Russian disinformation sites from its vast ad display network - CyberScoop
Ex-spies banned from arms exports for UAE hack-for-hire work • The Register
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
FBI deploys cyber team to Montenegro following massive cyber attack | The Hill
Montenegro Sent Back to Analog by Unprecedented Cyber Attacks | Balkan Insight
Nation State Actors – China
Chinese Hackers Target Energy Firms in South China Sea | SecurityWeek.Com
China-linked APT40 targets wind turbines, Aust. government • The Register
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerabilities
Apple Quietly Releases Another Patch for Zero-Day RCE Bug (darkreading.com)
Google Chrome emergency update fixes new zero-day used in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
URGENT! Apple slips out zero-day update for older iPhones and iPads – Naked Security (sophos.com)
WordPress 6.0.2 Patches Vulnerability That Could Impact Millions of Legacy Sites | SecurityWeek.Com
Critical hole in Atlassian Bitbucket needs patching now • The Register
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Former Cyber criminal: These Are the Biggest Threats on the Internet (businessinsider.com)
Stuxnet explained: The first known cyber weapon | CSO Online
Infra Used in Cisco Hack Also Targeted Workforce Management Solution (thehackernews.com)
Okta Impersonation Technique Could be Utilized by Attackers | SecurityWeek.Com
Remote Work Cyber Security: 12 Risks and How to Prevent Them (techtarget.com)
Does your cyber crime prevention program work? - Help Net Security
Does Blockchain really offer Better Digital Security? - IT Security Guru
IT and Employees Don’t Always See Eye to Eye on Cyber Security - IT Security Guru
New Cyber Security Regulations Are Coming. Here’s How to Prepare. (hbr.org)
Cyber security budget breakdown and best practices (techtarget.com)
How Just-in-Time privilege elevation prevents data breaches and lateral movement - 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.
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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.