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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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· Health/Medical/Pharma
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· Legal
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· 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
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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 19 August 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 19 August 2022:
-Businesses Found to Neglect Cyber Security Until it is Too Late
-Cyber Tops Staff Retention as Biggest Business Risk
-Cyber Criminals Weaponising Ransomware Data for BEC Attacks
-Callback Phishing Attacks See Massive 625% Growth Since Q1 2021
-Credential Phishing Attacks Skyrocketing, 265 Brands Impersonated in H1 2022
-Are Cloud Environments Secure Enough for Today’s Threats?
-Most Q2 Attacks Targeted Old Microsoft Vulnerabilities
-Cyber Resiliency Isn't Just About Technology, It's About People
-The “Cyber Insurance Gap” Is Threatening Most Companies
-Easing the Cyber-Skills Crisis with Staff Augmentation
-Mailchimp Suffers Second Breach In 4 Months
-Firm Told It Can't Claim Full Cyber Crime Insurance After Social Engineering Attack
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
Businesses Found to Neglect Cyber Security Until it is Too Late
Businesses only take cyber security seriously after falling victim to an attack, according to a report published by the UK's Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) this week.
For the research, the UK government surveyed IT professionals and end users in 10 UK organisations of varying sizes that have experienced cyber security breaches in the past three years. This analysed their existing level of security prior to a breach, the business impacts of the attack and how cyber security arrangements changed in the wake of the incident.
Nearly all respondents said their organisation took cyber security much more seriously after experiencing a breach, including reviewing existing practices and significantly increased investment in technology solutions.
While there was a consensus among participants that there is a greater need for vigilance and investment in cyber security, there was significant variation between organisations’ practices in this area. Medium and large organisations tended to have formal plans in place and budget allocated for further cyber security investment, but smaller businesses mostly did not due to resource constraints.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cybersecurity-seriously-breach/
Cyber Tops Staff Retention as Biggest Business Risk
Cyber security concerns represent the most serious risk facing organisations, beating inflation, talent acquisition/retention and rising production costs, according to a new PwC study.
The PwC Pulse: Managing business risks in 2022 report was compiled from interviews with 722 US C-suite executives.
Two-fifths (40%) ranked cyber-attacks as a serious risk, rising to 51% of board members. PwC said boardrooms may be getting more attuned to cyber risk after new SEC proposals were published in March that would require directors to oversee cyber security risk and be more transparent about their cyber expertise.
In fact, executives appear to be getting more proactive with cyber security on a number of fronts.
Some 84% said they are taking action or monitoring closely policy areas related to cyber security, privacy and data protection. A further 79% said they’re revising or enhancing their cyber risk management approaches, and half (49%) pointed to increased investments in cyber security and privacy.
By way of comparison, 53% said they’re increasing investment in digital transformation and 52% in IT.
Cyber security is a strategic business enabler – technology is the central nervous system of many companies – and confirming its data is secure and protected can be brand defining.
There’s now heightened attention from a wider range of business leaders and corporate directors as they recognise that cyber security and data privacy should be part of not only a risk management strategy, but also a broader corporate strategy. C-suite and boards are actively taking steps to better understand the global threat landscape, confirm a foundational cyber security program is in place, and manage these risks to create opportunities.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cyber-tops-staff-retention-biggest/
Cyber Criminals Weaponising Ransomware Data for BEC Attacks
Cyber criminals and other threat actors are increasingly using data dumped from ransomware attacks in secondary business email compromise (BEC) attacks, according to new analysis by Accenture Cyber Threat Intelligence.
The ACTI team analysed data from the 20 most active ransomware leak sites, measured by number of featured victims, between July 2021 and July 2022. Of the 4,026 victims (corporate, non-governmental organisations, and governmental entities) uncovered on various ransomware groups’ dedicated leak sites, an estimated 91% incurred subsequent data disclosures, ACTI found.
Dedicated leak sites most commonly provide financial data, followed by employee and client personally identifiable information and communication documentation. The rise of double extortion attempts – where attack groups use ransomware to exfiltrate data and then publicise the data on dedicated leak sites – has made large amounts of sensitive corporate data available to any threat actor. The most valuable types of data most useful for conducting BEC attacks are financial, employee, and communication data, as well as operational documents. There is a significant overlap between the types of data most useful for conducting BEC attacks and the types of data most commonly posted on these ransomware leak sites, ACTI said.
The data is a “rich source for information for criminals who can easily weaponise it for secondary BEC attacks,” ACTI said. “The primary factor driving an increased threat of BEC and VEC attacks stemming from double-extortion leaks is the availability of [corporate and communication data].”
Callback Phishing Attacks See Massive 625% Growth Since Q1 2021
Hackers are increasingly moving towards hybrid forms of phishing attacks that combine email and voice social engineering calls as a way to breach corporate networks for ransomware and data extortion attacks.
According to Agari's Q2 2022 cyber-intelligence report, phishing volumes have only increased by 6% compared to Q1 2022. However, the use of 'hybrid vishing' is seeing a massive 625% growth.
Vishing, "voice phishing," involves some form of a phone call to perform social engineering on the victim. Its hybrid form, called "callback phishing," also includes an email before the call, typically presenting the victim with a fake subscription/invoice notice.
The recipient is advised to call on the provided phone number to resolve any issues with the charge, but instead of a real customer support agent, the call is answered by phishing actors.
The scammers then offer to resolve the presented problem by tricking the victim into disclosing sensitive information or installing remote desktop tools on their system. The threat actors then connect to the victim's device remotely to install further backdoors or spread to other machines.
These callback phishing attacks were first introduced by the 'BazarCall/BazaCall' campaigns that appeared in March 2021 to gain initial access to corporate networks for ransomware attacks.
The attacks work so well that multiple ransomware and extortion gangs, such as Quantum, Zeon, and Silent Ransom Group, have adopted the same technique today to gain initial network access through an unsuspecting employee.
"Hybrid Vishing attacks reached a six-quarter high in Q2, increasing 625% from Q1 2021. This threat type also contributed to 24.6% of the overall share of Response-Based threats," details the Agari report.
"While this is the second quarter hybrid vishing attacks have declined in share due to the overall increase of response-based threats, vishing volume has steadily increased in count over the course of the year."
Credential Phishing Attacks Skyrocketing, 265 Brands Impersonated in H1 2022
Abnormal Security released a report which explores the current email threat landscape and provides insight into the latest advanced email attack trends, including increases in business email compromise, the evolution of financial supply chain compromise, and the rise of brand impersonation in credential phishing attacks.
The research found a 48% increase in email attacks over the previous six months, and 68.5% of those attacks included a credential phishing link. In addition to posing as internal employees and executives, cyber criminals impersonated well-known brands in 15% of phishing emails, relying on the brands’ familiarity and reputation to convince employees to provide their login credentials. Most common among the 265 brands impersonated in these attacks were social networks and Microsoft products.
“The vast majority of cyber crime today is successful because it exploits the people behind the keyboard,” said Crane Hassold, director of threat intelligence at Abnormal Security.
“By compromising people rather than networks, it’s easier for attackers to circumvent conventional security measures. This is especially true with brand impersonation, where attackers use urgency and fear to encourage their targets to provide usernames and passwords.”
LinkedIn took the top spot for brand impersonation, but Outlook, OneDrive and Microsoft 365 appeared in 20% of all attacks. What makes these attacks particularly dangerous is that phishing emails are often the first step to compromising employee email accounts. Acquiring Microsoft credentials enables cyber criminals to access the full suite of connected products, allowing them to view sensitive data and use the account to send business email compromise attacks.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/08/15/landscape-email-threat/
Are Cloud Environments Secure Enough for Today’s Threats?
Cyber security is a major problem right now. Not only is it the highest priority of any given business to keep their own data and their customers’ and clients’ data secure, but changes in the workplace have had a knock-on effect on cyber security. The concept of working from home has forced businesses all around the world to address old and new cyber security threats. People taking their laptops, and therefore their data, home to public networks that can be hacked or leaving access details like passwords scribbled on notebooks has meant that access to a business and therefore their customers’ data is a lot more accessible.
The saving grace was said to be the cloud. Beyond retraining cyber security in staff workforces, the practical solution was to move data into the cloud. But we’re now a few years from the point when the cloud really gained popularity. Is it still the answer to all our cyber security problems? Is there a chance of risk to using the cloud?
Cloud data breaches do happen and misconfiguration is a leading cause of them, mainly due to businesses inadequate cyber security strategies. This is due to several factors, such as the fundamental nature of the cloud designed to be easy for anyone to access, and businesses unable to completely see or control the cloud’s infrastructure and therefore relying on the cyber security controls that are provided by the cloud service provider (or CSP).
Unauthorised access is also a risk. The internet, which is a readily available public resource to most of the world, makes it easy for hackers to access data if they have the credentials to get past the cyber security set up by the individual business. This is where the ugliness of internal cloud breaches happens. If security is not configured well or credentials like passwords and secret questions are compromised, an attacker can easily access the cloud.
However, it’s not only through an employee that hackers access credentials. Phishing is a very common means of gaining information that would allow access to a customer or business data.
Plus, the simple nature of sharing data can easily backfire on a company. A lot of data access is granted with a link to someone external, which can then be forwarded, either sold or stolen, to an attacker to access the cloud’s data.
https://www.itsecurityguru.org/2022/08/16/are-cloud-environments-secure-enough-for-todays-threats/
Most Q2 Attacks Targeted Old Microsoft Vulnerabilities
Attacks targeting a remote code execution vulnerability in Microsoft's MSHTML browser engine — which was patched last September — soared during the second quarter of this year, according to a Kaspersky analysis.
Researchers from Kaspersky counted at least 4,886 attacks targeting the flaw (CVE-2021-40444) last quarter, an eightfold increase over the first quarter of 2022. The security vendor attributed the continued adversary interest in the vulnerability to the ease with which it can be exploited.
Kaspersky said it has observed threat actors exploiting the flaw in attacks on organisations across multiple sectors including the energy and industrial sectors, research and development, IT companies, and financial and medical technology firms. In many of these attacks, the adversaries have used social engineering tricks to try and get victims to open specially crafted Office documents that would then download and execute a malicious script. The flaw was under active attack at the time Microsoft first disclosed it in September 2021.
Attacks targeting a remote code execution vulnerability in Microsoft's MSHTML browser engine — which was patched last September — soared during the second quarter of this year, according to a Kaspersky analysis. Researchers from Kaspersky counted at least 4,886 attacks targeting the flaw last quarter, an eightfold increase over the first quarter of 2022. The security vendor attributed the continued adversary interest in the vulnerability to the ease with which it can be exploited. According to Kaspersky, exploits for Windows vulnerabilities accounted for 82% of all exploits across all platforms during the second quarter of 2022. While attacks on the MSHTML vulnerability increased the most dramatically, it was by no means the most exploited flaw, which was a remote code execution vulnerability in Microsoft Office that was disclosed and patched four years ago that was attacked some 345,827 times last quarter.
Cyber Resiliency Isn't Just About Technology, It's About People
Cyber attacks are on the rise — but if we're being honest, that statement has been true for quite a while, given the acceleration of cyber incidents over the past several years. Recent research indicates that organisations experienced 50% more attack attempts per week on corporate networks in 2021 than they did in 2020, and tactics such as phishing are becoming increasingly popular as attackers refine their tried-and-true methods to more successfully entice unsuspecting targets.
It's no surprise, then, that cyber resiliency has been a hot topic in the cyber security world. But although cyber resiliency refers broadly to the ability of an organisation to anticipate, withstand, and recover from cyber security incidents, many experts make the mistake of applying the term specifically to technology. And while it's true that detection and remediation tools, backup systems, and other resources play an important role in cyber resiliency, organisations that focus exclusively on technology risk are overlooking an equally important element: people.
People are often thought of as the weak link in cyber security. It's easy to understand why. People fall for phishing scams. They use weak passwords and procrastinate on installing security updates. They misconfigure hardware and software, leave cloud assets unsecured, and send confidential files to the wrong recipient. There's a reason so much cyber security technology is moving toward automation: removing people from the equation is seen as one of the most obvious ways to improve security. To many security experts, that's just common sense.
Except — is it, really? It's true that people make mistakes — it's called "human error" for a reason, after all — but many of those mistakes come when employees aren't put in a position to succeed. Phishing is a great example. Most people are familiar with the concept of phishing, but many may not be aware of the nefarious techniques that today's attackers deploy. If employees have not been properly trained, they may not be aware that attackers often impersonate real people within the organisation, or that the CEO asking them to buy gift cards "for a company happy hour" probably isn't legit. Organisations that want to build strong cyber-resiliency cannot pretend that people don't exist. Instead, they need to prioritise the resiliency of their people just as highly as the resiliency of their technology.
Training the organisation to recognise the signs of common attack tactics, practice better password and cyber hygiene, and report signs of suspicious activity can help ease the burden on IT and security personnel by providing them better information in a more timely manner. It also avoids some of the pitfalls that create a drain on their time and resources. By ensuring that people at every level of the business are more resilient, today's organisations will discover that their overall cyber-resiliency will improve significantly.
The “Cyber Insurance Gap” Is Threatening Most Companies
A new study by BlackBerry and Corvus Insurance confirms a “cyber insurance gap” is growing, with a majority of businesses either uninsured or under insured against a rising tide of ransomware attacks and other cyber threats.
Only 19% of all businesses surveyed have ransomware coverage limits above the median ransomware demand amount ($600,000)
Among SMBs with fewer than 1,500 employees, only 14% have a coverage limit in excess of $600,000
37% of respondents with cyber insurance do not have any coverage for ransomware payment demands
43% of those with a policy are not covered for auxiliary costs such as court fees or employee downtime
60% say they would reconsider entering into a partnership or agreement with another business or supplier if the organisation did not have comprehensive cyber insurance
Endpoint detection and response (EDR) software is frequently a key component to obtaining a policy
34% of respondents have been previously denied cyber coverage by insurance providers due to not meeting EDR eligibility requirements
Easing the Cyber-Skills Crisis with Staff Augmentation
Filling cyber security roles can be costly, slow, and chancy. More firms are working with third-party service providers to quickly procure needed expertise.
There are many possible solutions to the cyber security skills shortage, but most of them take time. Cyber security education, career development tracks, training programs, employer-sponsored academies, and internships are great ways to build a talent pipeline and develop skill sets to meet organisational needs in years to come.
But sometimes the need to fill a gap in capability is more immediate.
An organisation in the entertainment industry recently found itself in such a position. Its primary cyber security staff member quit suddenly without notice, taking along critical institutional knowledge and leaving various projects incomplete. With its key defender gone, the organisation's environment was left vulnerable. In a scarce talent market, the organisation faced a long hiring process to find a replacement — too long to leave its digital estate unattended. It needed expertise, and quickly.
According to a 2021 ESG report, 57% of organisations have been impacted by the global cyber security skills crisis. Seventy-six percent say it's difficult to recruit and hire security professionals. The biggest effects of this shortage are increasing workloads, positions open for weeks or months, and high cyber security staff burnout and attrition.
In this climate, more companies are turning to third parties for cyber security staff reinforcement. According to a NewtonX study, 56% of organisations are now subcontracting up to a quarter of their cyber security staff. Sixty-nine percent of companies rely on third-party expertise to assist in mitigating the risk of ransomware — up from 58% in 2017 — per a study by Ponemon and CBI, a Converge Company.
One way that companies gain this additional support is via third-party staff augmentation and consulting services. Cyber security staff augmentation, or strategic staffing, entails trained external consultants acting as an extension of an organisation's security team in a residency. Engagements can be anywhere from a few weeks to a few years, and roles can range from analysts and engineers to architects, compliance specialists, and virtual CISOs.
https://www.darkreading.com/operations/easing-the-cyber-skills-crisis-with-staff-augmentation
Mailchimp Suffers Second Breach In 4 Months
Mailchimp suffered another data breach earlier this month, and this one cost it a client.
In a statement Friday, Mailchimp disclosed that a security incident involving phishing and social engineering tactics had targeted cryptocurrency and blockchain companies using the email marketing platform. It was the second Mailchimp breach to target cryptocurrency customers in a four-month span.
Though Mailchimp said it has suspended accounts where suspicious activity was detected while an investigation is ongoing, it did not reveal the source of the breach or scope of the attack.
More details were provided Sunday by one of the affected customers, DigitalOcean, which cut ties with Mailchimp on Aug. 9.
The cloud hosting provider observed suspicious activity beginning Aug. 8, when threat actors used its Mailchimp account for "a small number of attempted compromises" of DigitalOcean customer accounts -- specifically cryptocurrency platforms.
While it is not clear whether any DigitalOcean accounts were compromised, the company did confirm that some email addresses were exposed. More importantly, the statement attributed a potential source of the most recent Mailchimp breach.
https://www.techtarget.com/searchsecurity/news/252523911/Mailchimp-suffers-second-breach-in-4-months
Firm Told It Can't Claim Full Cyber Crime Insurance After Social Engineering Attack
A Minnesota computer store suing its cyber insurance provider has had its case dismissed, with the courts saying it was a clear instance of social engineering, a crime for which the insurer was only liable to cover a fraction of total losses.
SJ Computers alleged in a November lawsuit that Travelers Casualty and Surety Co. owed it far more than paid on a claim for nearly $600,000 in losses due to a successful business email compromise (BEC) attack.
According to its website, SJ Computers is a Microsoft Authorised Refurbisher, reselling Dell, HP, Lenovo and Acer products, as well as providing tech services including software installs and upgrades.
Travelers, which filed a motion to dismiss, said SJ's policy clearly delineated between computer fraud and social engineering fraud. The motion was granted with prejudice last Friday.
In the dismissal order, the US District Court for Minnesota found that the two policy agreements are mutually exclusive, as well as finding SJ's claim fell squarely into its social engineering fraud agreement with Travelers, which has a cap of $100,000.
When SJ filed its claim with Travelers, the court noted, it did so only under the social engineering fraud agreement. After realising the policy limit on computer fraud was 10 times higher, "SJ Computers then made a series of arguments – ranging from creative to desperate – to try to persuade Travelers that its loss was not the result of social-engineering-fraud (as SJ Computers itself had initially said) but instead the result of computer fraud," the district judge wrote in the order.
https://www.theregister.com/2022/08/16/social_engineering_cyber_crime_insurance/
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware Group Threatens to Leak Data Stolen From Security Firm Entrust | SecurityWeek.Com
Cisco Confirms Hack: Yanluowang Ransom Gang Claims 2.8GB Of Data (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Ransomware is still on the rise. Here's what you need to do to stay safe from hackers | ZDNET
Russian Man Extradited to US for Laundering Ryuk Ransomware Money | SecurityWeek.Com
‘Coopetition’ a growing trend among ransomware gangs (computerweekly.com)
Hackers Attack UK Water Supplier, Sends Ransom Demand to the Wrong Company (gizmodo.com)
SOVA malware adds ransomware feature to encrypt Android devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
BlackByte ransomware v2 is out with new extortion novelties - Security Affairs
Ransomware is back, healthcare sector most targeted - Help Net Security
Why Hackers Are Now Targeting Electric Car Charging Stations (nocamels.com)
BlackByte Ransomware Gang Returns With Twitter Presence, Tiered Pricing (darkreading.com)
Ski-Doo maker BRP resumes operations following cyber attack; shares fluctuate - MarketWatch
Argentina's Judiciary of Córdoba hit by PLAY ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Response-based attacks make up 41% of all email-based scams - Help Net Security
PayPal Phishing Scam Uses Invoices Sent Via PayPal – Krebs on Security
Microsoft admits it can't stop scammers fooling you with their latest tricks | ZDNET
Other Social Engineering; SMishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
Hackers Deploy Bumblebee Loader to Breach Target Networks - Infosecurity Magazine
'DarkTortilla' Malware Wraps in Sophistication for High-Volume RAT Infections (darkreading.com)
Malicious browser extensions targeted almost 7 million people (bleepingcomputer.com)
DoNot Team Hackers Updated its Malware Toolkit with Improved Capabilities (thehackernews.com)
Whack-a-Mole: More Malicious PyPI Packages Spring Up Targeting Discord, Roblox (darkreading.com)
Mobile
SOVA Android malware now also encrypts victims' files - Security Affairs
Malware devs already bypassed Android 13's new security feature (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google releases Android 13 with improved privacy and security features - Help Net Security
Android malware apps with 2 million installs found on Google Play (bleepingcomputer.com)
Researchers Find 35 Adware Apps on Google Play - Infosecurity Magazine
Nearly 1,900 Signal Messenger Accounts Potentially Compromised in Twilio Hack (thehackernews.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
How attackers are exploiting corporate IoT - Help Net Security
Amazon fixes Ring Android app flaw exposing camera recordings (bleepingcomputer.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
With Plunge in Value, Cryptocurrency Crimes Decline in 2022 (darkreading.com)
Hardware-based threat defence against increasingly complex cryptojackers - Microsoft Security Blog
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Ex-HP manager jailed for $5m company card shopping spree • The Register
Microsoft Employees Exposed Own Company’s Internal Logins (vice.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Insurance
Organisations are losing cyber insurance as an important risk management tool - Help Net Security
For cyber insurance, some technology leads to higher premiums (techtarget.com)
New Study Reveals Serious Cyber-Insurance Shortfalls - Infosecurity Magazine
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
Cloud/SaaS
Organisations Struggle to Fend Off Cloud and Web Attacks - Infosecurity Magazine
Incident response in the cloud can be simple if you are prepared - Help Net Security
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Credential Theft Is (Still) A Top Attack Method (thehackernews.com)
FBI Warns of Proxies and Configurations Used in Credential Stuffing Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Over 9,000 VNC servers exposed online without a password (bleepingcomputer.com)
Privacy
Google fined $60 million over Android location data collection (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Amazon Ring Vulnerability Could Have Exposed All Your Camera Recordings (thehackernews.com)
Period and pregnancy tracking apps have bad privacy protections, report finds - The Verge
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
5 Russia-Linked Groups Target Ukraine in Cyberwar (darkreading.com)
Russia-linked Gamaredon APT continues to target Ukraine - Security Affairs
Microsoft shuts down accounts linked to Russian spies • The Register
State-Sponsored APTs Dangle Job Opps to Lure In Spy Victims (darkreading.com)
Estonia Repels Biggest Cyber-Attack Since 2007 - Infosecurity Magazine
NHS cyber attacks hit record levels in four in five trusts after Russian invasion (telegraph.co.uk)
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Microsoft disrupts Russian hackers' operation on NATO targets (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russian APT29 hackers abuse Azure services to hack Microsoft 365 users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft Disrupts Russian Group's Multiyear Cyber-Espionage Campaign (darkreading.com)
Russian hackers target Ukraine with default Word template hijacker (bleepingcomputer.com)
Estonia says it repelled major cyber attack after removing Soviet monuments | Reuters
Nation State Actors – China
Western companies wake up to China risk | Financial Times (ft.com)
China-backed APT41 Hackers Targeted 13 Organisations Worldwide Last Year (thehackernews.com)
China-linked RedAlpha behind multi-year credential theft campaign - Security Affairs
Chinese Cyberspy Group 'RedAlpha' Targeting Governments, Humanitarian Entities | SecurityWeek.Com
China's APT41 Embraces Baffling Approach for Dropping Cobalt Strike Payload (darkreading.com)
Chinese takeover of tech company blocked over security fears (telegraph.co.uk)
3 ways China's access to TikTok data is a security risk | CSO Online
Montana flagged bugs in cow app exploited in alleged China hack | Business and Economy | Al Jazeera
APT41 group: 4 malicious campaigns, 13 victims, new tools and techniques - Help Net Security
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
CISA adds 7 vulnerabilities to list of bugs exploited by hackers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google patches yet another Chrome zero-day vulnerability (techtarget.com)
Chrome browser gets 11 security fixes with 1 zero-day – update now! – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Cisco fixes High-Severity bug in Secure Web Appliance - Security Affairs
Exploit out for critical Realtek flaw affecting many networking devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
Safari 15.6.1 fixes a zero-day flaw actively exploited in the wild - Security Affairs
Rapid7: Cisco ASA and ASDM flaws went unpatched for months (techtarget.com)
Windows Vulnerability Could Crack DC Server Credentials Open (darkreading.com)
ÆPIC and SQUIP Vulnerabilities Found in Intel and AMD Processors (thehackernews.com)
PoC exploit code for the critical Realtek RCE flaw released online - Security Affairs
Other News
Exploiting stolen session cookies to bypass multi-factor authentication (MFA) - Help Net Security
Janet Jackson music video given CVE for crashing laptops • The Register
How aware are organisations of the importance of endpoint management security? - Help Net Security
The Future of Cyber Security is Prevention | SecurityWeek.Com
DigitalOcean Discloses Impact From Recent Mailchimp Cyber Attack | SecurityWeek.Com
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 25 March 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 25 March 2022:
-Morgan Stanley Client Accounts Breached in Social Engineering Attacks
-Ransomware Is Scary, But Another Scam Is Costing Victims Much, Much More
-Phishing Kits Constantly Evolve to Evade Security Software
-Ransomware Payments, Demands Rose Dramatically in 2021
-7 Suspected Members of LAPSUS$ Hacker Gang, Aged 16 to 21, Arrested in UK
-Here's How Fast Ransomware Encrypts Files
-HEAT Attacks: A New Class of Cyber Threats Organisations Are Not Prepared For
-The Cyber Warfare Predicted In Ukraine May Be Yet To Come
-The Three Russian Cyber Attacks The West Most Fears
-Do These 8 Things Now To Boost Your Security Ahead Of Potential Russian Cyber Attacks
-Cyber Crime Victims Suffered Losses of Over $6.9B in 2021 in the US Alone
-Expanding Threat Landscape: Cyber Criminals Attacking from All Sides
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
Morgan Stanley Client Accounts Breached in Social Engineering Attacks
Morgan Stanley Wealth Management says some of its customers had their accounts compromised in social engineering attacks.
The account breaches were the result of vishing (aka voice phishing), a social engineering attack where scammers impersonate a trusted entity (in this case Morgan Stanley) during a voice call to convince their targets into revealing sensitive information such as banking or login credentials.
The company said in a notice sent to affected clients that, "on or around February 11, 2022," a threat actor impersonating Morgan Stanley gained access to their accounts after tricking them into providing their Morgan Stanley Online account info.
After successfully breaching their accounts, the attacker also electronically transferred money to their own bank account by initiating payments using the Zelle payment service.
Ransomware Is Scary, But Another Scam Is Costing Victims Much, Much More
Business email compromise (BEC) remains the biggest source of financial losses, which totalled $2.4 billion in 2021, up from an estimated $1.8 billion in 2020, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) Internet Crime Center (IC3).
The FBI says in its 2021 annual report that Americans last year lost $6.9 billion to scammers and cyber criminals through ransomware, BEC, and cryptocurrency theft related to financial and romance scams. In 2020, that figure stood at $4.2 billion.
Last year, FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) received 847,376 complaints about cybercrime losses, up 7% from 791,790 complaints in 2020.
BEC has been the largest source of fraud for several years despite ransomware attacks grabbing most headlines.
Phishing Kits Constantly Evolve to Evade Security Software
Modern phishing kits sold on cybercrime forums as off-the-shelf packages feature multiple, sophisticated detection avoidance and traffic filtering systems to ensure that internet security solutions won’t mark them as a threat.
Fake websites that mimic well-known brands are abundant on the internet to lure victims and steal their payment details or account credentials.
Most of these websites are built using phishing kits that feature brand logos, realistic login pages, and in cases of advanced offerings, dynamic webpages assembled from a set of basic elements.
Ransomware Payment Demands Rose Dramatically in 2021
Ransomware attackers demanded dramatically higher ransom fees last year, and the average ransom payment rose by 78% to $541,010, according to data from incident response (IR) cases investigated by Palo Alto Networks Unit 42.
IR cases by Unit 42 also saw a whopping 144% increase in ransom demands, to $2.2 million. According to the report, the most victimised sectors were professional and legal services, construction, wholesale and retail, healthcare, and manufacturing.
Cyber extortion spiked, with 85% of ransomware victims — some 2, 556 organisations — having their data dumped and exposed on leak sites, according to the "2022 Unit 42 Ransomware Threat Report."
Conti led the ransomware attack volume, representing some one in five cases Unit 42 investigated, followed by REvil, Hello Kitty, and Phobos.
https://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/ransomware-payments-demands-rose-dramatically-in-2021
7 Suspected Members of LAPSUS$ Hacker Gang, aged 16 to 21, Arrested in UK
The City of London Police has arrested seven teenagers between the ages of 16 and 21 for their alleged connections to the prolific LAPSUS$ extortion gang that's linked to a recent burst of attacks targeting NVIDIA, Samsung, Ubisoft, LG, Microsoft, and Okta.
"The City of London Police has been conducting an investigation with its partners into members of a hacking group," Detective Inspector, Michael O'Sullivan, said in a statement shared with The Hacker News. "Seven people between the ages of 16 and 21 have been arrested in connection with this investigation and have all been released under investigation. Our enquiries remain ongoing."
The development, which was first disclosed by BBC News, comes after a report from Bloomberg revealed that a 16-year-old Oxford-based teenager is the mastermind of the group. It's not immediately clear if the minor is one among the arrested individuals. The said teen, under the online alias White or Breachbase, is alleged to have accumulated about $14 million in Bitcoin from hacking.
https://thehackernews.com/2022/03/7-suspected-members-of-lapsus-hacker.html
Here's How Fast Ransomware Encrypts Files
Forty-two minutes and 54 seconds: that's how quickly the median ransomware variant can encrypt and lock out a victim from 100,000 of their files.
The data point came from Splunk's SURGe team, which analysed in its lab how quickly the 10 biggest ransomware strains — Lockbit, REvil, Blackmatter, Conti, Ryuk, Avaddon, Babuk, Darkside, Maize, and Mespinoza — could encrypt 100,000 files consisting of some 53.93 gigabytes of data. Lockbit won the race, with speeds of 86% faster than the median. One Lockbit sample was clocked at encrypting 25,000 files per minute.
Splunk's team found that ransomware variants are all over the map speed-wise, and the underlying hardware can dictate their encryption speeds.
https://www.darkreading.com/application-security/here-s-how-fast-ransomware-encrypts-files
HEAT Attacks: A New Class of Cyber Threats Organisations Are Not Prepared For
Web malware (47%) and ransomware (42%) now top the list of security threats that organisations are most concerned about. Yet despite the growing risks, just 27% have advanced threat protection in place on every endpoint device that can access corporate applications and resources.
This is according to research published by Menlo Security, exploring what steps organisations are taking to secure themselves in the wake of a new class of cyber threats – known as Highly Evasive Adaptive Threats (HEAT).
As employees spend more time working in the browser and accessing cloud-based applications, the risk of HEAT attacks increases. Almost two-thirds of organisations have had a device compromised by a browser-based attack in the last 12 months. The report suggests that organisations are not being proactive enough in mitigating the risk of these threats, with 45% failing to add strength to their network security stack over the past year. There are also conflicting views on the most effective place to deploy security to prevent advanced threats, with 43% citing the network, and 37% the cloud.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/03/22/web-security-threats/
The Cyber Warfare Predicted in Ukraine May Be Yet to Come
In the build-up to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the national security community braced for a campaign combining military combat, disinformation, electronic warfare and cyber attacks. Vladimir Putin would deploy devastating cyber operations, the thinking went, to disable government and critical infrastructure, blind Ukrainian surveillance capabilities and limit lines of communications to help invading forces. But that’s not how it has played out. At least, not yet.
The danger is that as political and economic conditions deteriorate, the red lines and escalation judgments that kept Moscow’s most potent cyber capabilities in check may adjust. Western sanctions and lethal aid support to Ukraine may prompt Russian hackers to lash out against the west. Russian ransomware actors may also take advantage of the situation, possibly resorting to cyber crime as one of the few means of revenue generation.
https://www.ft.com/content/2938a3cd-1825-4013-8219-4ee6342e20ca
The Three Russian Cyber Attacks the West Most Fears
The UK's cyber authorities are supporting the White House's calls for "increased cyber-security precautions", though neither has given any evidence that Russia is planning a cyber-attack.
Russia has previously stated that such accusations are "Russophobic".
However, Russia is a cyber-superpower with a serious arsenal of cyber-tools, and hackers capable of disruptive and potentially destructive cyber-attacks.
Ukraine has remained relatively untroubled by Russian cyber-offensives but experts now fear that Russia may go on a cyber-offensive against Ukraine's allies.
"Biden's warnings seem plausible, particularly as the West introduced more sanctions, hacktivists continue to join the fray, and the kinetic aspects of the invasion seemingly don't go to plan," says Jen Ellis, from cyber-security firm Rapid7.
This article from the BCC outlines the hacks that experts most fear, and they are repeats of things we have already seen coming out of Russia, only potentially a lot more destructive this time around.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-60841924
Do These 8 Things Now to Boost Your Security Ahead of Potential Russian Cyber Attacks
The message comes as the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) ramp up warnings about Russian hacking of everything from online accounts to satellite broadband networks. CISA's current campaign is called Shields Up, which urges all organisations to patch immediately and secure network boundaries. This messaging is being echoed by UK and other Western Cyber authorities:
The use of Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) is being very strongly advocated. The White House and other agencies both sides of the Atlantic also urged companies to take seven other steps:
Deploy modern security tools on your computers and devices to continuously look for and mitigate threats
Make sure that your systems are patched and protected against all known vulnerabilities, and change passwords across your networks so that previously stolen credentials are useless to malicious actors
Back up your data and ensure you have offline backups beyond the reach of malicious actors
Run exercises and drill your emergency plans so that you are prepared to respond quickly to minimize the impact of any attack
Encrypt your data so it cannot be used if it is stolen
Educate your employees to common tactics that attackers will use over email or through websites
Work with specialists to establish relationships in advance of any cyber incidents.
Cyber Crime Victims Suffered Losses of Over $6.9B in 2021 in the US Alone
The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) reported a record-breaking year for 2021 in the number of complaints it received, among which business email compromise (BEC) attacks made up the majority of incidents.
IC3 handled 847,376 complaint reports last year — an increase of 7% over 2020 — which mainly revolved around phishing attacks, nonpayment/nondelivery scams, and personal data breaches. Overall, losses amounted to more than $6.9 billion.
BEC and email account compromises ranked as the No. 1 attack, accounting for 19,954 complaints and losses of around $2.4 billion.
"In 2021, heightened attention was brought to the urgent need for more cyber incident reporting to the federal government. Cyber incidents are in fact crimes deserving of an investigation, leading to judicial repercussions for the perpetrators who commit them," Paul Abbate, deputy director of the FBI wrote in the IC3's newly published annual report.
Expanding Threat Landscape: Cyber Criminals Attacking from All Sides
Research from Trend Micro warns of spiralling risk to digital infrastructure and remote workers as threat actors increase their rate of attack on organisations and individuals.
“Attackers are always working to increase their victim count and profit, whether through quantity or effectiveness of attacks,” said Jon Clay, VP of threat intelligence at Trend Micro.
“Our latest research shows that while Trend Micro threat detections rose 42% year-on-year in 2021 to over 94 billion, they shrank in some areas as attacks became more precisely targeted.”
Ransomware attackers are shifting their focus to critical businesses and industries more likely to pay, and double extortion tactics ensure that they are able to profit. Ransomware-as-a-service offerings have opened the market to attackers with limited technical knowledge – but also given rise to more specialisation, such as initial access brokers who are now an essential part of the cybercrime supply chain.
Threat actors are also getting better at exploiting human error to compromise cloud infrastructure and remote workers. Trend Micro detected and prevented 25.7 million email threats in 2021 compared to 16.7 million in 2020, with the volume of blocked phishing attempts nearly doubling over the period. Research shows home workers are often prone to take more risks than those in the office, which makes phishing a particular risk.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/03/22/threat-actors-increase-attack/
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware Infections Follow Precursor Malware – Lumu • The Register
Ransomware, Malware-as-a-Service Dominate Threat Landscape | SecurityWeek.Com
AvosLocker Ransomware - What You Need To Know | The State of Security (tripwire.com)
What the Conti Ransomware Group Data Leak Tells Us (darkreading.com)
Ransomware Demands And Payments Increase With Use Of Leak Sites (computerweekly.com)
Ten Notorious Ransomware Strains Put to The Encryption Speed Test (bleepingcomputer.com)
Lockbit Wins Ransomware Speed Test, Encrypts 25k Files/Min • The Register
Talos warns of BlackMatter-linked BlackCat Ransomware • The Register
Report: 89% of Organizations Say Kubernetes Ransomware Is A Problem Today | VentureBeat
Top Russian Meat Producer Hit with Windows BitLocker Encryption Attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Greece's Public Postal Service Offline Due To Ransomware Attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Lawsuit Claims Kronos Breach Exposed Data For 'Millions' (techtarget.com)
Estonian Man Sentenced To Prison For Role In Cyber Intrusions, Ransomware Attacks - CyberScoop
Phishing & Email
New Phishing Toolkit Lets Anyone Create Fake Chrome Browser Windows (bleepingcomputer.com)
Browser-in-the-Browser Attack Makes Phishing Nearly Invisible | Threatpost
'Unique Attack Chain' Drops Backdoor in New Phishing Campaign (darkreading.com)
Other Social Engineering
Malware
Malicious Microsoft Excel Add-Ins Used to Deliver RAT Malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
BitRAT Malware Now Spreading As A Windows 10 License Activator (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
URL Rendering Trick Enabled WhatsApp, Signal, iMessage Phishing (bleepingcomputer.com)
Downloaders Currently the Most Prevalent Android Malware (darkreading.com)
Experts Uncover Campaign Stealing Cryptocurrency from Android and iPhone Users (thehackernews.com)
Android Password-Stealing Malware Infects 100,000 Google Play Users (bleepingcomputer.com)
IoT
Botnet of Thousands of MikroTik Routers Abused in Glupteba, TrickBot Campaigns (thehackernews.com)
Honda Civics Vulnerable To Remote Unlock, Start Hack • The Register
Data Breaches/Leaks
UK MoD's Capita-Run Recruitment Portal Support Offline • The Register
Background Check Company Sued Over Data Breach - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Who is LAPSUS$, the Gang Hacking Microsoft, Samsung, and Okta? (gizmodo.com)
Hackers Are Targeting European Refugee Charities -Ukrainian Official | Reuters
Hackers Steal From Hackers By Pushing Fake Malware On Forums (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking
An Investigation of Cryptocurrency Scams and Schemes (trendmicro.com)
Global Regulators Monitor Crypto Use in Ukraine War | Reuters
Cryptocurrency Companies Impacted by HubSpot Breach (techtarget.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
6 Types Of Insider Threats And How To Prevent Them (techtarget.com)
HP Staffer Blew $5m On Personal Expenses With Company Card • The Register
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Internet Crime in 2021: Investment Fraud Losses Soar - Help Net Security
NFT Fraud in the UK Soars 400% in 2021 - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
DeFiance Capital Founder Loses $1.7M in NFTs To Phishing Scam - Decrypt
Insurance
Dark Web
Supply Chain
Cloud
Passwords & Credential Stuffing
Spyware, Espionage & Cyber Warfare
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Internet Sanctions Against Russia Pose Risks, Challenges For Businesses | CSO Online
Is It Safe To Use Russian-Based Kaspersky Antivirus? No, And Here's Why (komando.com)
Anonymous Leaked 28gb of Data Stolen from The Central Bank of Russia - Security Affairs
President Biden Says Russia Exploring Revenge Cyber Attacks • The Register
Analysis: Putin's next escalation could be a direct cyberattack on the West - CNNPolitics
Russia-backed Hackers Bypassed MFA, Exploited Print Vulnerability - MSSP Alert
Hackers Around The World Deluge Russia's Internet With Simple, Effective Cyber Attacks (nbcnews.com)
Anonymous Targets Western Companies Still Active in Russia - Security Affairs
Ukrainian Enterprises Hit with the DoubleZero Wiper - Security Affairs
NATO, G-7 Leaders Promise Bulwark Against Retaliatory Russian Cyber Attacks (cyberscoop.com)
Russia Hacked Ukrainian Satellite Communications, Officials Believe - BBC News
Russia-linked InvisiMole APT Targets State Organizations Of Ukraine - Security Affairs
Corrupted Open-Source Software Enters the Russian Battlefield | ZDNet
Nestlé Says 'Anonymous' Data Leak Actually A Self-Own • The Register
Nation State Actors – China
Another Chinese Hacking Group Spotted Targeting Ukraine Amid Russia Invasion (thehackernews.com)
Chinese APT Combines Fresh Hodur RAT with Complex Anti-Detection | Threatpost
Mustang Panda Hacking Group Takes Advantage Of Ukraine Crisis In New Attacks | ZDNet
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Vulnerabilities
CISA Adds 66 Vulnerabilities To List Of Bugs Exploited In Attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Three Critical RCE Flaws Affect Hundreds of HP Printer Models - Security Affairs
Critical Sophos Firewall vulnerability allows remote code execution (bleepingcomputer.com)
VMware Fixes Carbon Black Command Injection, Upload Bugs • The Register
Western Digital Fixes Critical Bug Giving Root On My Cloud NAS Devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
Sector Specific
Health/Medical/Pharma Sector
Scottish Mental Health Charity SAMH Targeted In Cyber Attack - BBC News
Over 1 Million Impacted in Data Breach at Texas Dental Services Provider | SecurityWeek.Com
Retail/eCommerce
Transport and Aviation
Energy & Utilities
Education and Academia
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
A Better Grasp of Cyber Attack Tactics Can Stop Criminals Faster (bleepingcomputer.com)
The Chaos (and Cost) of the Lapsus$ Hacking Carnage | SecurityWeek.Com
Soldiers told to use Signal instead of WhatsApp for security | The Times
Cyber Security Compliance: Start With Proven Best Practices - Help Net Security
Only 27% of Orgs Have Advanced Threat Protection on Endpoints | VentureBeat
Okta Breach Leads To Questions On Disclosure, Reliance On Third-Party Vendors - CyberScoop
The Challenges Audit Leaders Need To Look Out For This Year - Help Net Security
South Korean DarkHotel Hackers Targeted Luxury Hotels in Macau (thehackernews.com)
ISACA: Two-Thirds of Cybersecurity Teams Are Understaffed - Infosecurity Magazine
Security Teams are Responsible for Over 165k Assets - Infosecurity Magazine
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