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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 26 April 2024
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 26 April 2024:
-Coalition Finds More Than Half of Cyber Insurance Claims Originate in the Email Inbox
-Unmasking the True Cost of Cyber Attacks: Beyond Ransom and Recovery
-Why Cyber Security Should Be Driving Your Enterprise Risk Management Strategy
-Ransomware Double-Dip - Re-Victimisation in Cyber Extortion
-AI is a Major Threat and Many Financial Organisations Are Not Doing Enough to Fight the Threat
-6 out of 10 Businesses Struggle to Manage Cyber Risk
-'Junk Gun' Ransomware: New Low-Cost Cyber Threat Targets SMBs
-Penetration Testing Infrequency Leaves Security Gaps
-Bank Prohibited from Opening New Accounts After Regulators Lose Patience With Poor Cyber Security Governance
-The Psychological Impact of Phishing Attacks on Your Employees
-Where Hackers Find Your Weak Spots
-The Role of Threat Intelligence in Financial Data Protection
-Government Cannot Protect Business and Services from Cyber Attack, Decision Makers Say
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
Coalition Finds More Than Half of Cyber Insurance Claims Originate in the Email Inbox
The 2024 Cyber Claims Report by insurer Coalition reveals critical vulnerabilities and trends affecting cyber insurance policyholders. Notably, over half of the claims in 2023 stemmed from funds transfer fraud (FTF) and business email compromise (BEC), underlining the critical role of email security in cyber risk management. The report also indicated heightened risks associated with boundary devices like firewalls and VPNs, particularly if they are exposed online and have known vulnerabilities. Additionally, the overall claims frequency and severity rose by 13% and 10% respectively, pushing the average loss to $100,000. These insights emphasise the necessity of proactive cyber security measures and the valuable role of cyber insurance in mitigating financial losses from cyber incidents.
Sources: [IT Security Guru] [Emerging Risks]
Unmasking the True Cost of Cyber Attacks: Beyond Ransom and Recovery
The global cost of cyber crime is expected to soar to $10.5 trillion annually by 2025, a steep rise from $3 trillion in 2015, underscoring a significant improvement in the methods of cyber criminals, according to Cybersecurity Ventures. Beyond direct financial losses like ransomware payments, the hidden costs of cyber attacks for businesses include severe operational disruptions, lost revenue, damaged reputations, strained customer relationships, and regulatory fines. These incidents, further exacerbated by increased insurance premiums, collectively contribute to substantial long-term financial burdens. The report indicates that 88% of data breaches are attributable to human error, underscoring the importance of comprehensive employee training alongside technological defences. To combat these evolving cyber threats effectively, organisations must adopt a multi-pronged strategy that includes advanced security technologies, regular system updates, employee education, and comprehensive security audits.
According to another report from SiliconAngle, cyber insurance claims increased 13% year-over-year in 2023, with the 10% rise in overall claims severity attributed to mounting ransomware attack claims.
Sources: [The Hacker News] [Huntress] [SC Media]
Why Cyber Security Should Be Driving Your Enterprise Risk Management Strategy
Cyber security has transformed from a secondary concern into the cornerstone of corporate risk management. The historical view of cyber security as merely a component of broader risk strategies is outdated; it now demands a central role in safeguarding against operational, financial, and reputational threats. Many businesses, recognising the vital role of technology in all operations, have begun elevating the position of Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) to integrate cyber security into their overall enterprise risk frameworks. This shift not only enhances visibility and strategic alignment at the highest organisational levels but also fosters more robust defences against cyber threats. As such, adopting a cyber security-centric approach is crucial for compliance and long-term resilience in the face of growing digital threats.
Source: [Forbes]
Ransomware Double-Dip: Re-Victimisation in Cyber Extortion
A recent cyber security study reveals a troubling trend of re-victimisation among organisations hit by cyber extortion or ransomware attacks. Analysis of over 11,000 affected organisations shows recurring victimisation due to repeated attacks, data reuse among criminal affiliates, or cross-affiliate data sharing. Notably, cyber extortion incidents have surged by 51% year-on-year. Additionally, a separate study reports payments exceeding $1 billion and a 20% increase in ransomware attack victims since early 2023. These findings underscore the increasing sophistication and persistence of cyber criminals. Despite law enforcement efforts, adaptable cyber crime groups swiftly resume operations, complicating effective threat mitigation. Organisations must enhance their cyber security measures to avoid becoming repeated targets.
Sources: [Security Magazine] [The Hacker News] [SC Media]
AI is a Major Threat and Many Financial Organisations Are Not Doing Enough
Artificial intelligence (AI) is a major concern for organisations, especially for the financial services sector due to the information they hold. Recent reports have found that AI has driven phishing up by 60% and AI tools have been linked to data exposure in 1 in 5 UK organisations. But it is not just attackers utilising AI: a separate report found that 20% of employees have exposed data via AI.
Currently, many financial organisations are not doing enough to secure themselves to fight AI. In a recent survey, 69% of fraud-management decision makers, AML professionals, and risk and compliance leaders reported that criminals are more advanced at using AI for financial crime than firms are in defending against it.
Sources: [Verdict] [Beta News] [Infosecurity Magazine] [TechRadar] [Security Brief]
6 out of 10 Businesses Struggle to Manage Cyber Risk
A report has found that 6 in 10 businesses are struggling to manage their cyber risk and just 43% have confidence in their ability to address cyber risk. Further, 35% of total respondents worry that senior management does not see cyber attacks as a significant risk; the same percentage also reported a struggle in hiring skilled professionals. When it came to implementing their security policy, half of respondents found difficulty, and when it came to securing the supply chain, a third reported worries.
Given the inevitability of a cyber attack, organisations need to prepare themselves. Those that struggle to manage their cyber risk and/or hire skilled professions will benefit from outsourcing to skilled, reputable cyber security organisations who can guide them through the process.
Sources: [PR Newswire] [Beta News]
'Junk Gun' Ransomware: New Low-Cost Cyber Threat Targets SMBs
Sophos’ research reveals a concerning trend: ‘junk gun’ ransomware variants are now traded on the dark web. Rather than going the traditional route of selling or buying ransomware to or as an affiliate, attackers have now begun creating and selling unsophisticated ransomware variants for a one-time cost. Priced at a median of $375, they attract lower-skilled attackers, especially those targeting small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs). As major ransomware players fade, these variants pose significant threats, accounting for over 75% of cyber incidents affecting SMBs in 2023.
Source: [Security Brief] [Tripwire]
Penetration Testing Infrequency Leaves Security Gaps
Many organisations are struggling to maintain the balance between penetration testing and IT changes within the organisation, leaving security gaps according to a recent report. The report found that 73% of organisations reported changes to their IT environments at least quarterly, however only 40% performed penetration testing at the same frequency.
The issue arises where there is a significant duration during which changes have been implemented without undergoing assessment, leaving organisations open to risk for extended periods of time. Consider the situation in which an organisation moves their infrastructure from on-premise to the cloud: they now have a different IT environment, and with that, new risks.
Black Arrow always recommends that a robust penetration test should be conducted whenever changes to internet facing infrastructure have been made, and at least annually.
Source: [MSSP Alert]
Bank Prohibited from Opening New Accounts After Regulators Lose Patience with Poor Cyber Security Governance
A bank in India has been banned from signing up new customers, and instructed to focus on improving its cyber security after “serious deficiencies and non-compliances” were found within their IT environment. The compliances provided by the bank were described as “inadequate, incorrect or not sustained”. The bank is now subject to an external audit, which if passed, will consider the lifting of the restrictions placed upon them.
Source: [The Register]
The Psychological Impact of Phishing Attacks on Your Employees
Phishing remains one of the most prevalent attack vectors for bad actors, and its psychological impact on employees can be severe, with many employees facing a loss in confidence and job satisfaction as well as an increase in anxiety. In a study by Egress, it was found that 74% of employees were disciplined, dismissed or left voluntarily after suffering a phishing incident, which can cause hesitation when it comes to reporting phishing.
Phishing incidents and simulations where employees have clicked should be seen as an opportunity to learn, not to blame, and to understand why a phish was successful and what can be done in future to prevent it. Organisations should perform security education and awareness training to help employees lessen their chance of falling victim, as well as knowing the reporting procedures.
Source: [Beta News]
Where Hackers Find Your Weak Spots
A recent analysis highlights social engineering as a primary vector for cyber attacks, emphasising its reliance on meticulously gathered intelligence to exploit organisational vulnerabilities. Attackers leverage various intelligence sources; Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) for public data, Social Media Intelligence (SOCMINT) for social media insights, Advertising Intelligence (ADINT) from advertising data, Dark Web Intelligence (DARKINT) from the DarkWeb, and the emerging AI Intelligence (AI-INT) using artificial intelligence. These methods equip cyber criminals with detailed knowledge about potential victims, enabling targeted and effective attacks. The report underscores the critical importance of robust information management and employee training to mitigate such threats, specifically advocating for regular training, AI-use policies, and proactive intelligence gathering by organisations to protect against the substantial risks posed by social engineering.
Source: [Dark Reading]
The Role of Threat Intelligence in Financial Data Protection
The financial industry’s reliance on digital processes has made it vulnerable to cyber attacks. Criminals target sensitive customer data, leading to financial losses, regulatory fines, and reputational damage. To combat these threats such as phishing, malware, ransomware, and social engineering, financial institutions must prioritise robust cyber security measures. One effective approach is threat intelligence, which involves ingesting reliable threat data, customised to your sector and the technology you have in place, and dark web monitoring.
Source: [Security Boulevard]
Government Cannot Protect Business and Services from Cyber Attack, Decision Makers Say
According to a recent report, 66% of surveyed IT leaders expressed a lack of confidence in their government’s ability to defend people and enterprises from cyber attacks, especially those from nation state actors. This scepticism arises from the growing complexity of threats and the rapid evolution of cyber warfare. While governments play a critical role in national security, their agility in adapting to the ever-changing digital landscape leaves organisations finding themselves increasingly responsible for their own protection.
Source: [TechRadar] [Security Magazine]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Ransomware triggers cyber insurance claims increase | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Six out of 10 businesses struggle to manage cyber risk (betanews.com)
Email inbox cyber crime leaps as claims soar (emergingrisks.co.uk)
It Costs How Much?!? The Financial Pitfalls of Cyber Attacks on SMBs | Huntress
Why Cyber Security Should Be Driving Your Enterprise Risk Management Strategy (forbes.com)
Cyber attacks are on the rise, and that includes small businesses. Here's what to know | AP News
Cyber staff priority as threats continue – report (emergingrisks.co.uk)
UK government cannot protect businesses and services from cyber attacks, IT pros say | TechRadar
Why cyber attacks shouldn’t be viewed as isolated incidents - Raconteur
Bank banned from opening new accounts over IT risks • The Register
Battening down the hatches: Navigating third-party cyber threats | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Cyber Attacks Keep Rising. Here's What Small Businesses Need to Know | Inc.com
73% of SME security pros missed or ignored critical alerts - Help Net Security
Unmasking the True Cost of Cyber Attacks: Beyond Ransom and Recovery (thehackernews.com)
4 steps CISOs can take to raise trust in their business | TechTarget
NCSC Says Newer Threats Need Network Defence Strategy | Trend Micro (US)
Uncertainty is the most common driver of noncompliance - Help Net Security
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Ransomware triggers cyber insurance claims increase | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Report finds a near 20% increase in ransomware victims year-over-year | Security Magazine
Ransomware Double-Dip: Re-Victimization in Cyber Extortion (thehackernews.com)
'Junk gun' ransomware: New low-cost cyber threat targets SMBs (securitybrief.co.nz)
Mandiant: Attacker dwell time down, ransomware up in 2023 | TechTarget
Behavioural patterns of ransomware groups are changing - Help Net Security
Record ransomware attacks in March 2024, report finds (securitybrief.co.nz)
Ransomware payments drop to record low of 28% in Q1 2024 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers use developing countries as testing ground for new ransomware attacks (ft.com)
Ransomware Still On Rise Despite Better Defences, Firm Says - Law360
Hackers are using developing countries for ransomware practice | Ars Technica
Dark web inundated by cheap ransomware tools | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Unmasking the True Cost of Cyber Attacks: Beyond Ransom and Recovery (thehackernews.com)
Action needed amid escalating ransomware attacks, record-high payments | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
HelloKitty ransomware rebrands, releases CD Projekt and Cisco data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Rising Ransomware Issue: English-Speaking Western Affiliates (govinfosecurity.com)
CL0P ransomware gang is on the rise | Hogan Lovells - JDSupra
Proportion paying ransoms declines in Q1 2024, even as takings break a new record (computing.co.uk)
Megazord Ransomware Attacking Healthcare & Govt Entities (cybersecuritynews.com)
CISA ransomware warning program set to fully launch by end of 2024 | CyberScoop
Cyber Hygiene Helps Organisations Mitigate Ransomware-Related Vulnerabilities | CISA
Ransomware attacks rise in global food & agriculture sector (securitybrief.co.nz)
Ransomware Victims
Hackers Were in Change Healthcare 9 Days Before Attack (pymnts.com)
UnitedHealth BlackCat Attack Cost is $872M in Q1 | MSSP Alert
UnitedHealth admits breach could affect large chunk of US • The Register
Back from the Brink: UnitedHealth Offers Sobering Post-Attack Update (darkreading.com)
UnitedHealth Paid Ransom to Protect Patient Data | MSSP Alert
UNDP, City of Copenhagen Targeted in Data-Extortion Cyber Attack (darkreading.com)
Cannes Hospital Cancels Medical Procedures Following Cyber Attack - Security Week
Small medical practices will close because of Change cyber attack, says AMA | Healthcare IT News
HelloKitty ransomware rebrands, releases CD Projekt and Cisco data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Sweden's liquor shelves to run empty this week due to ransomware attack (therecord.media)
Authentication failure blamed for Change Healthcare ransomware attack | CSO Online
Ransomware feared as Octapharma Plasma closes 150+ centers • The Register
Red Ransomware takes credit for Targus attack | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Ransomware Gang Leaks Data Allegedly Stolen From Government Contractor - Security Week
Carpetright unable to trade after cyber attack - Retail Gazette
Street lights in Leicester City cannot be turned off due to a cyber attack (securityaffairs.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
The psychological impact of phishing attacks on your employees (betanews.com)
Hackers Create Legit Phishing Links With Ghost GitHub, GitLab Comments (darkreading.com)
Authorities investigate LabHost users after phishing service shut down | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
LA County Health Services: Patients' data exposed in phishing attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
BEC
Other Social Engineering
LastPass Users Lose Master Passwords to Ultra-Convincing Scam (darkreading.com)
Open Source Groups Warn of Social Engineering Backdoors | MSSP Alert
Artificial Intelligence
AI is a major threat and financial organisations are not doing enough to fight it | Biometric Update
Fifth of CISOs Admit Staff Leaked Data Via GenAI - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Five Eyes agencies publish report on AI security | Hogan Lovells - JDSupra
AI tools linked to data exposure in 1 in 5 UK organisations (securitybrief.co.nz)
CSOs say AI is 'biggest cyber threat' to organisations | TechRadar
Man arrested for 'framing colleague' with AI-generated voice • The Register
Microsoft Warns: North Korean Hackers Turn to AI-Fueled Cyber Espionage (thehackernews.com)
People doubt their own ability to spot AI-generated deepfakes - Help Net Security
A National Security Insider Does the Math on the Dangers of AI | WIRED
40% of organisations have AI policies for critical infrastructure | Security Magazine
GPT-4 can exploit real vulnerabilities by reading advisories • The Register
25 cyber security AI stats you should know - Help Net Security
Cyber Threats in the Age of AI: Protecting Your Digital DNA - Security Boulevard
6 security items that should be in every AI acceptable use policy | CSO Online
'Poisoned' data could wreck AIs in wartime, warns Army software acquisition chief - Breaking Defence
The use of AI in war games could change military strategy (theconversation.com)
2FA/MFA
Strengths & Weaknesses of MFA Methods Against Cyber Attacks | Duo Security
What is multi-factor authentication (MFA), and why is it important? - Help Net Security
Malware
ToddyCat APT Is Stealing Data on 'Industrial Scale' (darkreading.com)
Report says over 10 million devices were infected by data-stealing malware in 2023 - PhoneArena
New Brokewell malware takes over Android devices, steals data (bleepingcomputer.com)
GitLab affected by GitHub-style CDN flaw allowing malware hosting (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft unmasks Russia-linked ‘GooseEgg’ malware (therecord.media)
Hackers hijack antivirus updates to drop GuptiMiner malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
eScan Antivirus Update Mechanism Exploited to Spread Backdoors and Miners (thehackernews.com)
Beware! Notorious Samurai Stealer Used in Targeted Attacks (cybersecuritynews.com)
Threat Actor Uses Multiple Infostealers in Global Campaign - Security Week
Seedworm Hackers Exploit RMM Tools to Deliver Malware (cybersecuritynews.com)
Antivirus updates hijacked to drop dangerous malware | TechRadar
Hackers infect users of antivirus service that delivered updates over HTTP | Ars Technica
Researchers sinkhole PlugX malware server with 2.5 million unique IPs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Millions of IPs remain infected by USB worm years after its creators left it for dead | Ars Technica
North Korea's Lazarus Group Deploys New Kaolin RAT via Fake Job Lures (thehackernews.com)
Mobile
Report says over 10 million devices were infected by data-stealing malware in 2023 - PhoneArena
Ukrainian soldiers’ apps increasingly targeted for spying, cyber agency warns (therecord.media)
iPhone password reset attacks are real – how to protect yourself | Mashable
New Brokewell malware takes over Android devices, steals data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Godfather Banking Trojan Spawns 1.2K Samples Across 57 Countries (darkreading.com)
Give Your iPhone a Security Boost With This iOS 17.4 Feature - CNET
Data Breaches/Leaks
5.3M World-Check records may be leaked; how to check your records | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Hackers stole 7,000,000 people's DNA. But what can they do with it? | Tech News | Metro News
AT&T Offers All Customers Free Security Bundle After Data Breach (tech.co)
App bug exposes 1M neighbourhood watchers to data harvesters • The Register
Fifth of CISOs Admit Staff Leaked Data Via GenAI - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Rising Ransomware Issue: English-Speaking Western Affiliates (govinfosecurity.com)
Russian FSB Counterintelligence Chief Gets 9 Years in Cyber Crime Bribery Scheme – Krebs on Security
Authorities investigate LabHost users after phishing service shut down | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
To Catch a Cyber Criminal -- and the Fallout That Follows (informationweek.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
eScan Antivirus Update Mechanism Exploited to Spread Backdoors and Miners (thehackernews.com)
Lazarus On the Hunt: How North Korean Hackers are Targeting Crypto via LinkedIn (bitcoinist.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Most people still rely on memory or pen and paper for password management - Help Net Security
CesiumAstro claims former exec spilled trade secrets to upstart competitor AnySignal | TechCrunch
Insurance
Ransomware triggers cyber insurance claims increase | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Email inbox cyber crime leaps as claims soar (emergingrisks.co.uk)
Coalition: Insurance claims for Cisco ASA users spiked in 2023 | TechTarget
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Battening down the hatches: Navigating third-party cyber threats | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Ransomware Gang Leaks Data Allegedly Stolen From Government Contractor - Security Week
Cloud/SaaS
How Attackers Can Own a Business Without Touching the Endpoint (thehackernews.com)
5 Hard Truths About the State of Cloud Security 2024 (darkreading.com)
Identity and Access Management
How Attackers Can Own a Business Without Touching the Endpoint (thehackernews.com)
Identity-based security threats are growing rapidly: report | CSO Online
Encryption
Europol asks tech firms, governments to get rid of E2EE • The Register
How tech firms are tackling the risks of quantum computing | World Economic Forum (weforum.org)
Australian authorities call for Big Tech help with decryption • The Register
Linux and Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Most people still rely on memory or pen and paper for password management - Help Net Security
New Password Cracking Analysis Targets Bcrypt - Security Week
Brute Force Password Cracking Takes Longer - Don't Celebrate Yet (technewsworld.com)
Social Media
Dutch govt body: Don't use Facebook if unsure about privacy • The Register
North Korea's Lazarus Group Deploys New Kaolin RAT via Fake Job Lures (thehackernews.com)
Malvertising
Training, Education and Awareness
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Preparing for NIS2: A Compliance Guide For Covered Entities | UpGuard
NIS2: Preparing for EU’s New Cyber Security Rules | Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati – JDSupra
Compliance in 2024: Cutting through the noise (federalnewsnetwork.com)
Google Postpones Third-Party Cookie Deprecation Amid UK Regulatory Scrutiny (thehackernews.com)
A view from Brussels: To be sovereign, or not to be (iapp.org)
Cyber Security | UK Regulatory Outlook April 2024 - Lexology
Net neutrality has been restored in the US - Help Net Security
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Fortifying your business with ISO 27001 - DCD (datacenterdynamics.com)
Preparing for NIS2: A Compliance Guide For Covered Entities | UpGuard
Taking Time to Understand NIS2 Reporting Requirements - Security Boulevard
Data Protection
Boost your data protection with insights from Dell's report - SiliconANGLE
A view from Brussels: To be sovereign, or not to be (iapp.org)
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Cyber staff priority as threats continue – report (emergingrisks.co.uk)
Three Ways Organisations Can Overcome the Cyber Security Skills Gap - Security Boulevard
Addressing the cyber skills shortage: 5 key steps to take | CSO Online
Five Essential Steps To Land Your First Cyber Security Job (forbes.com)
Expert Insight: Outdated Recruitment Methods Are Impeding The Global Cyber Army - IT Security Guru
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Authorities investigate LabHost users after phishing service shut down | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
To Catch a Cyber Criminal -- and the Fallout That Follows (informationweek.com)
Man arrested for 'framing colleague' with AI-generated voice • The Register
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
State-Sponsored Hackers Exploit Two Cisco Zero-Day Vulnerabilities for Espionage (thehackernews.com)
China
ToddyCat APT Is Stealing Data on 'Industrial Scale' (darkreading.com)
Chinese, Russian espionage campaigns increasingly targeting edge devices (therecord.media)
UK mulls fresh controls on 'sensitive tech' after China cyber claim (thenextweb.com)
FBI Director Wray Issues Dire Warning on China's Cyber Security Threat (darkreading.com)
Head of Belgian Foreign Affairs Committee says she was hacked by China | Reuters
New tool used in China-linked attacks against Asia-Pacific | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Dutch intelligence warns of stronger threats from China, jihadists and extremists | NL Times
MITRE breached by nation-state threat actor via Ivanti zero-days - Help Net Security
Ads on .gov.uk websites raise eyebrows over privacy • The Register
Russia
Microsoft: APT28 hackers exploit Windows flaw reported by NSA (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft issues warning over ‘GooseEgg’ tool used in Russian hacking campaigns | ITPro
Chinese, Russian espionage campaigns increasingly targeting edge devices (therecord.media)
Russia's Fancy Bear Pummels Windows Print Spooler Bug (darkreading.com)
Overflowing Water Tank Linked to Russian Cyber Attack (govtech.com)
Russia accused of jamming GPS signal on flights from UK causing route chaos (inews.co.uk)
Russian Sandworm hackers targeted 20 critical orgs in Ukraine (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russian FSB Counterintelligence Chief Gets 9 Years in Cyber Crime Bribery Scheme – Krebs on Security
Campaigns and political parties are in the crosshairs of election meddlers | CyberScoop
Mandiant: Russia, Iran pose biggest threat to 2024 elections • The Register
Ukrainian soldiers’ apps increasingly targeted for spying, cyber agency warns (therecord.media)
MITRE breached by nation-state threat actor via Ivanti zero-days - Help Net Security
Ukraine participates in NATO cyber security exercise in Estonia / The New Voice of Ukraine (nv.ua)
Cyber attacks on Poland surged after election of pro-Ukraine regime (thenextweb.com)
Iran
Campaigns and political parties are in the crosshairs of election meddlers | CyberScoop
Mandiant: Russia, Iran pose biggest threat to 2024 elections • The Register
Iranian nationals charged with hacking US companies, Treasury and State departments | CyberScoop
The Biggest 2024 Elections Threat: Kitchen-Sink Attack Chains (darkreading.com)
North Korea
Hackers hijack antivirus updates to drop GuptiMiner malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft Warns: North Korean Hackers Turn to AI-Fuelled Cyber Espionage (thehackernews.com)
North Korea's Lazarus Group Deploys New Kaolin RAT via Fake Job Lures (thehackernews.com)
Other Nation State Actors, Hacktivism, Extremism, Terrorism and Other Geopolitical Threat Intelligence
Vulnerability Management
Third-Party Software Patching: Your Cyber Armor in 2024 | MSSP Alert
Automated patch management: 9 best practices for success | TechTarget
Vulnerabilities Versus Intentionally Malicious Software Components - The New Stack
GPT-4 can exploit real vulnerabilities by reading advisories • The Register
CISA ransomware warning program set to fully launch by end of 2024 | CyberScoop
Vulnerabilities
22,500 Palo Alto firewalls "possibly vulnerable" to ongoing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Palo Alto Networks Discloses More Details on Critical PAN-OS Flaw Under Attack (thehackernews.com)
Russia's Fancy Bear Pummels Windows Print Spooler Bug (darkreading.com)
'MagicDot' Windows Weakness Allows Unprivileged Rootkit Activity (darkreading.com)
Microsoft: APT28 hackers exploit Windows flaw reported by NSA (bleepingcomputer.com)
MITRE says state hackers breached its network via Ivanti zero-days (bleepingcomputer.com)
GitLab affected by GitHub-style CDN flaw allowing malware hosting (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google Patches Critical Chrome Vulnerability - Security Week
Microsoft releases Exchange hotfixes for security update issues (bleepingcomputer.com)
PoC Exploit Released For Critical Oracle VirtualBox Vulnerability (gbhackers.com)
Critical Forminator plugin flaw impacts over 300k WordPress sites (bleepingcomputer.com)
Major Security Flaw in Popular Keyboard Apps Puts Millions at Risk (cybersecuritynews.com)
Patch Now: CrushFTP Zero-Day Cloud Exploit Targets US Orgs (darkreading.com)
GitHub vulnerability leaks sensitive security reports | TechTarget
New Password Cracking Analysis Targets Bcrypt - Security Week
Maximum severity Flowmon bug has a public exploit, patch now (bleepingcomputer.com)
Tools and Controls
Seedworm Hackers Exploit RMM Tools to Deliver Malware (cybersecuritynews.com)
Third-Party Software Patching: Your Cyber Armour in 2024 | MSSP Alert
The Role of Threat Intelligence in Financial Data Protection - Security Boulevard
Automated patch management: 9 best practices for success | TechTarget
Rethinking How You Work with Detection and Response Metrics (darkreading.com)
Choosing SOC Tools? Read This First [2024 Guide] - Security Boulevard
Research Shows How Attackers Can Abuse EDR Security Products - SecurityWeek
What is multi-factor authentication (MFA), and why is it important? - Help Net Security
Strengths & Weaknesses of MFA Methods Against Cyber Attacks | Duo Security
Zero Trust Takes Over: 63% of Orgs Implementing Globally (darkreading.com)
5 Hard Truths About the State of Cloud Security 2024 (darkreading.com)
Explore CASB use cases before you decide to buy | TechTarget
SD-WAN: Don't Build a Dead End, Prepare for Future-Proof Secure Networking - SecurityWeek
Identity-based security threats are growing rapidly: report | CSO Online
Microsoft criticized for charging for security add-ons • The Register
5 insights from new Microsoft CNAPP guide | Microsoft Security Blog
The Peril of Badly Secured Network Edge Devices (inforisktoday.com)
VPNs, Firewalls' Nonexistent Telemetry Lures APTs (darkreading.com)
The first steps of establishing your cloud security strategy - Help Net Security
40% of organizations have AI policies for critical infrastructure | Security Magazine
Understand the Benefits and Limitations of Automated Tools in Penetration Testing (prweb.com)
World´s most advanced cyber defence exercise kicks off in Tallinn
CISA ransomware warning program set to fully launch by end of 2024 | CyberScoop
Reports Published in the Last Week
Mandiant's M-Trends Report Reveals New Insights from Frontline Cyber Investigations (prnewswire.com)
Boost your data protection with insights from Dell's report - SiliconANGLE
Rising Cyber Threats Pose Serious Concerns for Financial Stability (imf.org)
Cyber Security in the UK - House of Commons Library (parliament.uk)
Other News
Why Educating HR Professionals on Cyber Risk Is Crucial (thehrdirector.com)
Network Threats: A Step-by-Step Attack Demonstration (thehackernews.com)
UK cyber agency NCSC announces Richard Horne as its next chief executive (therecord.media)
Internet cable at Cali airport cut in apparent sabotage • The Register
EU Statement – UN General Assembly 1st Committee: Cyber Security | EEAS (europa.eu)
Why Tourists Are Particularly Vulnerable To Cyber Attacks (maltatoday.com.mt)
AI Is Going Well For Microsoft, But Cyber Security Is Not - Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) - Benzinga
Questions for IT and cyber leaders from the CSRB Microsoft report | Computer Weekly
World´s most advanced cyber defence exercise kicks off in Tallinn
Why Cyber Security Is Key To Solving Global Crises (forbes.com)
Colleges spending more than ever on cyber security efforts (insidehighered.com)
Foreign states targeting UK universities, MI5 warns - BBC News
Cyber resilience in the public sector: lessons for UK Councils (techinformed.com)
Digital Blitzkrieg: Unveiling Cyber Logistics Warfare (darkreading.com)
Sector Specific
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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 21 October 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 21 October 2022:
-Gen Z, Millennials Really Doesn't Care About Workplace Cyber Security
-Supply Chain Attacks Increased Over 600% This Year and Companies Are Falling Behind
-Cyber-Enabled Crimes Are Biggest Police Concerns
-List of Common Passwords Accounts for Nearly All Cyber Attacks
-Shared Responsibility or Shared Fate? Decentralized IT Means We Are All Cyber Defenders
-Ukraine War Cuts Ransomware as Kremlin Co-Opts Hackers
-96% Of Companies Report Insufficient Security for Sensitive Cloud Data
-Your Microsoft Exchange Server Is a Security Liability
-Are Cyber Security Vendors Pushing Snake Oil?
-Ransomware Preparedness, What Are You Doing Wrong?
-NSA Cybersecurity Director's Six Takeaways from the War in Ukraine
-Microsoft Confirms Server Misconfiguration Led to 65,000+ Companies' Data Leak
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
Gen Z, Millennials Really Don’t Care About Workplace Cyber Security
When it comes to cyber security in the workplace, younger employees don’t really seem to care that much, which is putting their organisations in serious harm’s way, new research has claimed.
Surveying approximately 1,000 workers using devices issued by their employers, professional services firm EY found Gen Z enterprise employees were more apathetic about cyber security than their Boomer counterparts in adhering to their employer's safety policies.
This is despite the fact that four in five (83%) of all those surveyed claimed to understand their employer’s security protocol.
When it comes to implementing mandatory IT updates, for example, 58% of Gen Z’ers and 42% of millennials would disregard them for as long as possible. Less than a third (31%) of Gen X’ers, and just 15% of baby boomers said they do the same.
Apathy in the young extends to password reuse between private and business accounts. A third of Gen Z and millennial workers surveyed admitted to this, compared to less than a quarter of all Gen X’ers and baby boomers.
Some say the apathy of young people towards technology is down to their over-familiarity with technology, and never having been without it. Being too comfortable with tech undoubtedly makes an enterprise's younger employees a major target for cyber criminals looking to exploit any hole in security.
If an organisation's cyber security practices aren't upheld strongly, threat actors can compromise huge networks with simple social engineering attacks.
https://www.techradar.com/news/younger-workers-dont-care-about-workplace-cybersecurity
Supply Chain Attacks Increased Over 600% This Year and Companies Are Falling Behind
The number of documented supply chain attacks involving malicious third-party components has increased 633% over the past year, now sitting at over 88,000 known instances, according to a new report from software supply chain management company Sonatype. Meanwhile, instances of transitive vulnerabilities that software components inherit from their own dependencies have also reached unprecedented levels and plague two-thirds of open-source libraries.
“The networked nature of dependencies highlights the importance of having visibility and awareness about these complex supply chains” Sonatype said in its newly released State of the Software Supply Chain report. “These dependencies impact our software, so having an understanding of their origins is critical to vulnerability response. Many organisations did not have the needed visibility and continued their incident response procedures for Log4Shell well beyond the summer of 2022 as a result.”
Log4Shell is a critical vulnerability discovered in November 2021 in Log4j, a widely popular open-source Java library used for logging and bundled in millions of enterprise applications and software products, often as an indirect dependency. According to Sonatype’s monitoring, as of August 2022, the adoption rate for fixed versions of Log4j sits at around 65%. Moreover, this doesn’t even account for the fact that the Log4Shell vulnerability originated in a Java class called JndiManager that is part of Log4j-core, but which has also been borrowed by 783 other projects and is now found in over 19,000 software components.
Log4Shell served as a watershed moment, highlighting the inherent risks that exist in the open-source software ecosystem – which sits at the core of modern software development – and the need to manage them properly. It also led to several initiatives to secure the software supply chain by private organisations, software repository managers, the Linux Foundation, and government bodies. Yet, most organisations are far from where they need to be in terms of open-source supply chain management.
Cyber-Enabled Crimes Are Biggest Police Concerns
Cyber-related crimes such as money laundering, ransomware and phishing pose the biggest threat to society, according to the first ever Interpol Global Crime Trend report.
The inaugural study was compiled from data received from the policing organisation’s 195 member countries, as well as information and analysis from external sources.
Money laundering was ranked the number one threat, with 67% of respondents claiming it to be a “high” or “very high” risk. Ransomware came second (66%) but was the crime type that most (72%) expected to increase in the next 3–5 years.
Of the nine top crime trends identified in the report, six are directly cyber-enabled, including money laundering, ransomware, phishing, financial fraud, computer intrusion and child sexual exploitation.
Interpol warned that the pandemic had fomented new underground offerings like “financial crime-as-a-service,” including digital money laundering tools which help to lower the barrier to entry for criminal gangs. It also claimed that demand for online child sexual exploitation and abuse (OCSEA) content surged during the pandemic. Some 62% of respondents expect it to increase or significantly increase in the coming years.
The findings represent something of a turnaround from pre-pandemic times, when drug trafficking regularly topped the list of police concerns. Thanks to a surge in corporate digitalisation, home working and online shopping, there are now rich pickings to be had from targeting consumers and business users with cyber-scams and attacks, Interpol claimed.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cyberenabled-crimes-are-biggest/
List of Common Passwords Accounts for Nearly All Cyber Attacks
Half of a million passwords from the RockYou2021 list account for 99.997% of all credential attacks against a variety of honeypots, suggesting attackers are just taking the easy road.
Tens of millions of credential-based attacks targeting two common types of servers boiled down to a small fraction of the passwords that formed a list of leaked credentials, known as the RockYou2021 list.
Vulnerability management firm Rapid7, via its network of honeypots, recorded every attempt to compromise those servers over a 12-month period, finding that the attempted credential attacks resulted in 512,000 permutations. Almost all of those passwords (99.997%) are included in a common password list — the RockYou2021 file, which has 8.4 billion entries — suggesting that attackers, or the subset of threat actors attacking Rapid7's honeypots, are sticking to a common playbook.
The overlap in all the attacks also suggest attackers are taking the easy road, said Rapid7. "We know now, in a provable and demonstrable way, that nobody — 0% of attackers — is trying to be creative when it comes to unfocused, untargeted attacks across the Internet," they said. "Therefore, it's very easy to avoid this kind of opportunistic attack, and it takes very little effort to take this threat off the table entirely, with modern password managers and configuration controls."
Every year, security firms present research suggesting users are continuing to pick bad passwords. In 2019, an evaluation of passwords leaked to the Internet found that the top password was "123456," followed by "123456789" and "qwerty," and unfortunately things have not got much better since then.
https://www.darkreading.com/endpoint/a-common-password-list-accounts-for-nearly-all-cyberattacks
Shared Responsibility or Shared Fate? Decentralised IT Means We Are All Cyber Defenders
Does your organisation truly understand the shared responsibility model? Shared responsibility emerged from the early days of cloud computing as a way to delineate responsibilities between cloud providers and their customers, but often there's a gap between what shared responsibility means and how it is interpreted. With the decentralisation of IT, this gap is getting worse.
Applications, servers, and overall technology used to be under the purview and control of the IT department, yet with the shift to cloud, and specifically software-as-a-service (SaaS), this dynamic has changed. Whether it's the sales team bringing in a customer relationship management (CRM) system like Salesforce, or the HR department operating a human resources information system (HRIS) like Workday, there's a clear "expanding universe" of IT that no longer sits where it used to. Critical business workflows exist in separate business units far from IT and security and are managed as such. Our corporate IT footprints have become decentralised.
This is not some minor, temporary trend. With the ease and speed of adopting new SaaS applications and the desire to "lift and shift" code into cloud-based environments, this is the future. The future is decentralised.
The shift to business-owned and -operated applications puts security teams in a position where risk management is their responsibility; they are not even able to log into some of these critical systems. It's like asking your doctor to keep you healthy but not giving her access to your information or having regular check-ups. It doesn't work that way.
Beyond the challenging human skills gap, there's technical entropy and diversity everywhere, with different configuration settings, event logs, threat vectors, and data sensitivities. On the access side, there are different admins, users, integrations, and APIs. If you think managing security on Windows and Mac is a lot, try it across many huge applications.
With this reality, how can the security team be expected to combat a growing amount of decentralised business technology risk?
We must operate our technology with the understanding that shared responsibility is the vertical view between cloud provider and customer, but that enterprise-owned piece of shared responsibility is the burden of multiple teams horizontally across an organisation. Too often the mentality is us versus them, availability versus security, too busy to care about risk, too concerned with risk to understand "the business."
Ukraine War Cuts Ransomware as Kremlin Co-Opts Hackers
The Ukraine war has helped reduce global ransomware attacks by 10pc in the last few months, a British cyber security company has said.
Criminal hacking gangs, usually engaged in corporate ransomware activities, are increasingly being co-opted by the Russian military to launch cyber attacks on Ukraine, according to Digital Shadows. “The war is likely to continue to motivate ransomware actors to target government and critical infrastructure entities,” according to the firm. Such attacks partly contributed to a 10pc drop in the number of ransomware threats launched during the three months to September, said the London-based company.
The drop in ransomware may also partly be caused by tit-for-tat digital attacks between rival hacking gangs. Researchers said the Lockbit gang, who recently targeted LSE-listed car retailer Pendragon with a $60m (£53.85m) ransom demand, were the target of attacks from their underworld rivals. The group is increasingly inviting resentment from competing threat groups and possibly former members.
Some cyber criminals’ servers went offline in September after what appeared to be an attack from competitors. In the world of cyber criminality, it is not uncommon for tensions to flare among rival groups.
Officials from GCHQ’s National Cyber Security Centre have said ransomware is one of the biggest cyber threats facing the UK. Figures published by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport this year revealed the average costs to businesses caused by ransomware attacks is around £19,000 per incident.
US-based cyber security company Palo Alto Networks, however, warned that the average ransom payment it saw in the early part of this year was $925,000 (£829,000).
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2022/10/23/ukraine-war-cuts-ransomware-kremlin-co-opts-hackers/
96% Of Companies Report Insufficient Security for Sensitive Cloud Data
The vast majority of organisations lack confidence in securing their data in cloud, while many companies acknowledge they lack sufficient security even for their most sensitive data, according to a new report by the Cloud Security Alliance (CSA).
The CSA report surveyed 1,663 IT and security professionals from organisations of various sizes and in various locations. "Only 4% report sufficient security for 100% of their data in the cloud. This means that 96% of organisations have insufficient security for at least some of their sensitive data," according to the report, which was sponsored by data intelligence firm BigID.
Apart from struggling with securing sensitive data, organisations are also having trouble tracking data in the cloud. Over a quarter of organisations polled aren’t tracking regulated data, nearly a third aren’t tracking confidential or internal data, and 45% aren’t tracking unclassified data, the report said.
“This suggests that organisations’ current methods of classifying data aren’t sufficient for their needs. However, if the tracking is this low, it could be a contributing factor to the issue of dark data. Organisations need to utilise data discovery and classification tools to properly understand the data they have and how to protect it,” the CSA study noted.
Your Microsoft Exchange Server Is a Security Liability
With endless vulnerabilities, widespread hacking campaigns, slow and technically tough patching, it's time to say goodbye to on-premise Exchange.
Once, reasonable people who cared about security, privacy, and reliability ran their own email servers. Today, the vast majority host their personal email in the cloud, handing off that substantial burden to the capable security and engineering teams at companies like Google and Microsoft. Now, cyber security experts argue that a similar switch is due - or long overdue - for corporate and government networks. For enterprises that use on-premise Microsoft Exchange, still running their own email machine somewhere in a closet or data centre, the time has come to move to a cloud service, if only to avoid the years-long plague of bugs in Exchange servers that has made it nearly impossible to keep determined hackers out.
The latest reminder of that struggle arrived earlier this week, when Taiwanese security researcher Orange Tsai published a blog post laying out the details of a security vulnerability in Microsoft Exchange. Tsai warned Microsoft about this vulnerability as early as June of 2021, and while the company responded by releasing some partial fixes, it took Microsoft 14 months to fully resolve the underlying security problem. Tsai had earlier reported a related vulnerability in Exchange that was massively exploited by a group of Chinese state-sponsored hackers known as Hafnium, which last year penetrated more than 30,000 targets by some counts. Yet according to the timeline described in Tsai’s post this week, Microsoft repeatedly delayed fixing the newer variation of that same vulnerability, assuring Tsai no fewer than four times that it would patch the bug before pushing off a full patch for months longer. When Microsoft finally released a fix, Tsai wrote, it still required manual activation and lacked any documentation for four more months.
Meanwhile, another pair of actively exploited vulnerabilities in Exchange that were revealed last month still remain unpatched after researchers showed that Microsoft’s initial attempts to fix the flaws had failed. Those vulnerabilities were just the latest in a years-long pattern of security bugs in Exchange’s code. And even when Microsoft does release Exchange patches, they’re often not widely implemented, due to the time-consuming technical process of installing them.
The result of those compounding problems, for many who have watched the hacker-induced headaches of running an Exchange server pile up, is a clear message: An Exchange server is itself a security vulnerability, and the fix is to get rid of it.
“You need to move off of on-premise Exchange forever. That’s the bottom line,” says Dustin Childs, the head of threat awareness at security firm Trend Micro’s Zero Day Initiative (ZDI), which pays researchers for finding and reporting vulnerabilities in commonly used software and runs the Pwn2Own hacking competition. “You’re not getting the support, as far as security fixes, that you would expect from a really mission-critical component of your infrastructure.”
https://www.wired.com/story/microsoft-exchange-server-vulnerabilities/
Are Cyber Security Vendors Pushing Snake Oil?
Survey: 96 percent of cyber security decision makers confused by vendor marketing.
The availability of new security products increases, the amount of budget spent on cyber security grows, and the number of security breaches seems to outpace both. This basic lack of correlation between increasing cyber security spend and any clear increase in cyber security effectiveness is the subject of a new analytical survey from Egress.
With 52 million data breaches in Q2 2022 alone (Statista), Egress questioned 800 cyber security and IT leaders on why vendor claims and reality aren’t aligned. The headline response in the survey is that 91% of decision makers have difficulty in selecting cyber security vendors due to unclear marketing about their specific offerings.
The financial investment cycle doesn’t help in this. For many investors, the strength of the management team is more important than the product. The argument is not whether this product is a cyber security silver bullet, but whether this management can take the company to a point where it can exit with serious profits.
If investment is achieved, much of it will go into marketing. That marketing must compete against existing, established vendors – so it tends to be louder, more aggressive, and replete with hyperbole. Marketing noise can lead to increased valuation, which can lead to a successful and profitable exit by the investors.
Of course, this is an oversimplification and doesn’t always happen. The point, however, is that it does happen and has no relevance to the real effectiveness of the product in question. Without any doubt, there are many products that have been over-hyped by marketing funds provided by profit-driven investors.
https://www.securityweek.com/are-cybersecurity-vendors-pushing-snake-oil
Ransomware Preparedness: What Are You Doing Wrong?
Axio released its 2022 State of Ransomware Preparedness research report, revealing that although notable improvements have been made since Axio’s 2021 report, organisational ransomware preparedness continues to be insufficient to keep pace with new attack vectors.
The report reveals that the lack of fundamental cyber security practices and controls, including critical vulnerability patching and employee cyber security training, continues to undermine organisational attempts to improve ransomware defences.
“Ransomware continues to wreak havoc on global organisations, regardless of size or industry,” remarked the report’s co-author David White, President of Axio. “As the number of attacks will most likely continue on an exponential trajectory, it’s more important than ever for companies to re-evaluate their cyber security practices and make the needed improvements to help combat these attacks.”
The report identifies several emerging patterns that yield insights into why organisations are increasingly susceptible to ransomware attacks. In 2021, seven key areas where organisations were deficient in implementing and sustaining basic cyber security practices were identified, and these patterns dominated the 2022 study results as well:
Managing privileged access
Improving basic cyber hygiene
Reducing exposure to supply chain and third-party risk
Monitoring and defending networks
Managing ransomware incidents
Identifying and addressing vulnerabilities in a timely manner
Improving cyber security training and awareness
Overall, most organisations surveyed are not adequately prepared to manage the risk associated with a ransomware attack. Key data findings include:
The number of organisations with a functional privileged access management solution in place increased by 10% but remains low at 33% overall.
Limitations on the use of service and local administrator accounts remain average overall, with nearly 50% of organisations reporting implementing these practices.
Approximately 40% of organisations monitor third-party network access, evaluate third-party cyber security posture, and limit the use of third-party software.
Less than 50% of respondents implement basic network segmentation and only 40% monitor for anomalous connections.
Critical vulnerability patching within 24 hours was reported by only 24% of organisations.
A ransomware-specific playbook for incident management is in place for only 30% of organisations.
Active phishing training has improved but is still not practiced by 40% of organisations.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/20/insufficient-ransomware-preparedness/
NSA Cybersecurity Director's Six Takeaways from the War in Ukraine
From the warning banner ‘Be afraid and expect the worst’ that was shown on several Ukrainian government websites on January 13, 2022, after a cyber-attack took them down, the US National Security Agency’s (NSA) cybersecurity director, Rob Joyce, knew that something was going to be different, and very aggressive, between Ukraine and Russia, and that it would be happening in the cyber space as well.
Ten months on, he was invited to speak at one of Mandiant Worldwide Information Security Exchange's (mWISE) opening keynotes on October 18, 2022. Joyce shared six takeaways from the Russia-Ukraine cyber-conflict in terms of what we learned from it and its impact on how nations should protect their organisations.
Both espionage and destructive attacks will occur in conflict
The cyber security industry has unique insight into these conflicts
Sensitive intelligence can make a decisive difference
You can develop resiliency skills
Don’t try to go it alone
You have not planned enough yet for the contingencies
Toward the end of the keynote, Joyce suggested the audience simulate a scenario based on what happened in Ukraine with the China-Taiwan conflict escalating and see what they should put in place to better prepare for such an event.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/nsa-6-takeaways-war-ukraine/
Microsoft Confirms Server Misconfiguration Led to 65,000+ Companies' Data Leak
Microsoft this week confirmed that it inadvertently exposed information related to thousands of customers following a security lapse that left an endpoint publicly accessible over the internet sans any authentication.
"This misconfiguration resulted in the potential for unauthenticated access to some business transaction data corresponding to interactions between Microsoft and prospective customers, such as the planning or potential implementation and provisioning of Microsoft services," Microsoft said in an alert.
Microsoft also emphasised that the B2B leak was "caused by an unintentional misconfiguration on an endpoint that is not in use across the Microsoft ecosystem and was not the result of a security vulnerability."
The misconfiguration of the Azure Blob Storage was spotted on September 24, 2022, by cyber security company SOCRadar, which termed the leak BlueBleed. Microsoft said it's in the process of directly notifying impacted customers.
The Windows maker did not reveal the scale of the data leak, but according to SOCRadar, it affects more than 65,000 entities in 111 countries. The exposure amounts to 2.4 terabytes of data that consists of invoices, product orders, signed customer documents, partner ecosystem details, among others.
https://thehackernews.com/2022/10/microsoft-confirms-server.html
Threats
Ransomware and Extortion
Сryptocurrency and Ransomware — The Ultimate Friendship (thehackernews.com)
Venus Ransomware targets publicly exposed Remote Desktop services (bleepingcomputer.com)
Pendragon being held to $60m ransom by dark web hackers – Car Dealer Magazine
Magniber Ransomware Is Targeting Home PC (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Hackers exploit critical VMware flaw to drop ransomware, miners (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Now Deployed as a Precursor to Physical War - MSSP Alert
TommyLeaks and SchoolBoys: Two sides of the same ransomware gang (bleepingcomputer.com)
With Conti gone, LockBit takes lead of the ransomware threat landscape | CSO Online
Tactics Tie Ransom Cartel Group to Defunct REvil Ransomware (darkreading.com)
Wholesale giant METRO hit by IT outage after cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
The link between Ransom Cartel and REvil ransomware gangs - Security Affairs
How Vice Society Got Away With a Global Ransomware Spree | WIRED
Defenders beware: A case for post-ransomware investigations - Microsoft Security Blog
Ransomware crews regrouping as LockBit rise continues (computerweekly.com)
Ransom Cartel linked to notorious REvil ransomware operation (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackney Council Ransomware Attack £12m+ Recovery - IT Security Guru
Microsoft Warns of Novel Ransomware Attacking Ukraine, Poland - MSSP Alert
Prestige ransomware hits victims of HermeticWiper • The Register
New ransomware targets transportation sectors in Ukraine, Poland | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Japanese tech firm Oomiya hit by LockBit 3.0 - Security Affairs
Ransomware attack halts circulation of some German newspapers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Insurance Security Requirement Strategies (trendmicro.com)
Australian insurance firm Medibank confirms ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
BlackByte ransomware uses new data theft tool for double-extortion (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Phishing works so well crims won't use deepfakes: Sophos • The Register
Phishing Mitigation Can Cost Businesses More Than $1M Annually (darkreading.com)
Securing your organisation against phishing can cost up to $85 per email | CSO Online
How phishing campaigns abuse Google Ad click tracking redirects - Help Net Security
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
VMware bug with 9.8 severity rating exploited to install witch’s brew of malware | Ars Technica
Microsoft’s out-of-date driver list left Windows PCs open to malware attacks for years - The Verge
Ursnif malware switches from bank account theft to initial access (bleepingcomputer.com)
Experts spotted a new undetectable PowerShell Backdoor - Security Affairs
Typosquat campaign mimics 27 brands to push Windows, Android malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Thousands of GitHub repositories deliver fake PoC exploits with malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers use new stealthy PowerShell backdoor to target 60+ victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hijacking of Popular Minecraft Launcher by Rogue Developer Raises Malware Fears - IGN
URSNIF (aka Gozi) banking trojan morphs into backdoor • The Register
What is a RAT (Remote Access Trojan)? | Definition from TechTarget
Mobile
Internet of Things – IoT
Riskiest IoT Devices - Cameras, VoIP And Video Conferencing (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Securing IoT devices against attacks that target critical infrastructure - Microsoft Security Blog
74% say connected cars and EV chargers need cyber security ratings | Ars Technica
Data Breaches/Leaks
The companies most likely to lose your data - Help Net Security
Fines are not enough! Data breach victims want better security - Help Net Security
Medibank hack turned into a data breach: The attackers are demanding money - Help Net Security
Mormon Church Hit By Cyber attack, Personal Data Exposed (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Keystone Health Data Breach Impacts 235,000 Patients | SecurityWeek.Com
Fashion brand SHEIN fined $1.9m for lying about data breach – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Client Data Exfiltrated In Advanced NHS cyber Attack (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Australian Wine Dealer Suffers Data Breach, 500,000 Customers May Be (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Advocate Aurora Health in potential 3 million patient leak • The Register
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Why Crypto Winter is No Excuse to Let Your Cyber Defences Falter (thehackernews.com)
North Korea’s Lazarus Group Attacks Japanese Crypto Firms - Decrypt
Coinbase users scammed out of $21M in crypto sue company for negligence | Ars Technica
SIM Swappers Sentenced to Prison for Hacking Accounts, Stealing Cryptocurrency | SecurityWeek.Com
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Financial losses to synthetic identity-based fraud to double by 2024 | CSO Online
AI is Key to Tackling Money Mules and Disrupting Fraud: Industry Group | SecurityWeek.Com
Deepfakes
Deepfakes: What they are and how to spot them - Help Net Security
Phishing works so well crims won't use deepfakes: Sophos • The Register
Insurance
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Software Supply Chain Attacks Soar 742% In Three Years (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
SBOMs: An Overhyped Concept That Won't Secure Your Software Supply Chain (darkreading.com)
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
Cloud/SaaS
Microsoft Data-Exposure Incident Highlights Risk of Cloud Storage Misconfiguration (darkreading.com)
3 cloud security posture questions CISOs should answer (techtarget.com)
Attack Surface Management
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
API
Open Source
New security concerns for the open-source software supply chain - Help Net Security
Python vulnerability highlights open source security woes (techtarget.com)
3 Ways to Help Customers Defend Against Linux-Based Cyber attacks - MSSP Alert
OldGremlin hackers use Linux ransomware to attack Russian orgs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Most People Still Reuse Their Passwords Despite Years Of Hacking (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Password Report: Honeypot Data Shows Bot Attack Trends Against RDP, SSH | SecurityWeek.Com
Eight RTX 4090s Can Break Passwords in Under an Hour | Tom's Hardware (tomshardware.com)
Training, Education and Awareness
Security Awareness Urged to Grow Beyond Compliance (darkreading.com)
Raising cyber security awareness is good for everyone - but it needs to be done better | ZDNET
Millennials, Gen Z blamed for poor company security • The Register
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Fines are not enough! Data breach victims want better security - Help Net Security
Fashion brand SHEIN fined $1.9m for lying about data breach – Naked Security (sophos.com)
New York fines EyeMed $4.5 million for 2020 email hack, data breach | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Health insurer pays out $4.5m over bungled data security • The Register
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
INTERPOL-led Operation Takes Down 'Black Axe' Cyber Crime Organisation (thehackernews.com)
Law enforcement arrested 31 suspects for stealing cars by hacking key fobs - Security Affairs
Interpol is setting up its own metaverse to learn how to police the virtual world | Euronews
Brazilian Police Nab Suspected Member of Lapsus$ Group (darkreading.com)
Interpol Report: "Financial Crime-as-a-Service" an Emerging Threat - MSSP Alert
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Ransomware Now Deployed as a Precursor to Physical War - MSSP Alert
US, China, Russia, more meet at Singapore infosec event • The Register
NSA cyber chief says Ukraine war is compelling more intelligence sharing with industry - CyberScoop
China-Linked Cyber-Espionage Team Homes In on Hong Kong Government Orgs (darkreading.com)
Microsoft Warns of Novel Ransomware Attacking Ukraine, Poland - MSSP Alert
Hackers target Asian casinos in lengthy cyber espionage campaign (bleepingcomputer.com)
Prestige ransomware hits victims of HermeticWiper • The Register
Pro-Russia Hackers DDoS Bulgarian Government - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Ukraine's cyber chief calls for global anti-fake news fight • The Register
German Cyber security Boss Sacked Over Kremlin Connection (darkreading.com)
New ransomware targets transportation sectors in Ukraine, Poland | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Bulgaria hit by a cyber attack originating from Russia - Security Affairs
Nation State Actors – China
As China-Taiwan tensions mount, how's your cyber defence? • The Register
Chinese 'Spyder Loader' Malware Spotted Targeting Organisations in Hong Kong (thehackernews.com)
Hackers compromised Hong Kong govt agency network for a year (bleepingcomputer.com)
WIP19 Threat Group Cyber attacks Target IT Service Providers, Telcos - MSSP Alert
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
45,654 VMware ESXi servers reached End of Life on Oct. 15 - Security Affairs
VMware bug with 9.8 severity rating exploited to install witch’s brew of malware | Ars Technica
Text message verification flaws in your Windows Active Directory (bleepingcomputer.com)
Apache Commons Vulnerability: Patch but Don't Panic (darkreading.com)
Zoom for Mac patches sneaky “spy-on-me” bug – update now! – Naked Security (sophos.com)
ProxyLogon researcher details new Exchange Server flaws (techtarget.com)
Exploited Windows zero-day lets JavaScript files bypass security warnings (bleepingcomputer.com)
Dozen High-Severity Vulnerabilities Patched in F5 Products | SecurityWeek.Com
Oracle Releases 370 New Security Patches With October 2022 CPU | SecurityWeek.Com
Palo Alto Networks fixed a high-severity flaw in PAN-OS - Security Affairs
Hackers exploit critical VMware flaw to drop ransomware, miners (bleepingcomputer.com)
Zimbra Patches Under-Attack Code Execution Bug | SecurityWeek.Com
WordPress Security Update 6.0.3 Patches 16 Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Python vulnerability highlights open source security woes (techtarget.com)
Other News
Zero trust is misused in security, say Cloudflare, Zscaler - Protocol
Cyber professional shortfall hits 3.4 million (computerweekly.com)
VPN use prevails despite interest in VPN alternatives (techtarget.com)
JP Morgan Bans Staff From Working Remotely In Hotels and Coffee Shops-But Not Airbnbs | Inc.com
Experts discovered millions of .git folders exposed to public - Security Affairs
Microsoft Defender is lacking in offline detection capabilities, says AV-Comparatives | TechSpot
Internet connectivity worldwide impacted by severed fiber cables in France (bleepingcomputer.com)
UK's Remote Shetland Mysteriously Lose Phone, Internet After Cable Cut (businessinsider.com)
CISOs, rejoice! Security spending is increasing - Help Net Security
Equifax surveilled 1,000 remote workers, fired 24 found juggling two jobs | Ars Technica
NATO Just Deployed Its First Killer Ground Robot (futurism.com)
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