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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 21 April 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 21 April 2023:
-March 2023 Broke Ransomware Attack Records with a 91% Increase from the Previous Month
-Organisations Overwhelmed with Cyber Security Alerts, Threats and Attack Surfaces
-One in Three Businesses Faced Cyber Attacks Last Year
-Why Your Anti-Fraud, Identity & Cybersecurity Efforts Should Be Merged
-Tight Budgets and Burnout Push Enterprises to Outsource Cyber Security
-Complex 8 Character Passwords Can Be Cracked in as Little as 5 Minutes
-83% of Organizations Paid Up in Ransomware Attacks
-Security is a Revenue Booster, Not a Cost Centre
-EX-CEO Gets Prison Sentence for Bad Security
-Warning From UK Cyber Agency for a New ‘Class’ of Russian Hackers
-KnowBe4 Q1 Phishing Report Reveals IT and Online Services Emails Drive Dangerous Attack Trend
-Outsourcing Group Capita Admits Customer Data May Have Been Breached During Cyber-Attack
-Outdated Cyber Security Practices Leave Door Open for Criminals
-Quantifying cyber risk vital for business survival
-Recycled Network Devices Exposing Corporate Secrets
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
March 2023 Broke Ransomware Attack Records with a 91% Increase from the Previous Month
March 2023 was the most prolific month recorded by cyber security analysts in recent years, measuring 459 attacks, an increase of 91% from the previous month and 62% compared to March 2022. According to NCC Group, which compiled the report based on statistics derived from its observations, the reason last month broke all ransomware attack records was CVE-2023-0669. This is a vulnerability in Fortra's GoAnywhere MFT secure file transfer tool that the Clop ransomware gang exploited as a zero-day to steal data from 130 companies within ten days.
Regarding the location of last month's victims, almost half of all attacks (221) breached entities in North America. Europe followed with 126 episodes, and Asia came third with 59 ransomware attacks.
The recorded activity spike in March 2023 highlights the importance of applying security updates as soon as possible, mitigating potentially unknown security gaps like zero days by implementing additional measures and monitoring network traffic and logs for suspicious activity.
Organisations Overwhelmed with Cyber Security Alerts, Threats and Attack Surfaces
Many organisations are struggling to manage key security projects while being overwhelmed with volumes of alerts, increasing cyber threats and growing attack surfaces, a new report has said. Compounding that problem is a tendency by an organisation’s top brass to miss hidden risks associated with digital transformation projects and compliance regulations, leading to a false sense of confidence in their awareness of these vulnerabilities.
The study comprised IT professionals from the manufacturing, government, healthcare, financial services, retail and telecommunications industries. Five of the biggest challenges they face include:
Keeping up with threat intelligence (70%)
Allocating cyber security resources and budget (47%)
Visibility into all assets connected to the network (44%)
Compliance and regulation (39%)
Convergence of IT and OT (32%)
The report also focused on breaches within organisations, finding that 64% had suffered a breach or ransomware attack in the last five years; 43% said it had been caused by employee phishing.
One in Three Businesses Faced Cyber Attacks Last Year
Nearly a third of businesses and a quarter of charities have said they were the subject of cyber attacks or breaches last year, new data has shown. Figures collected for the UK Government by polling company Ipsos show a similar proportion of larger and medium-sized companies and high-income charities faced attacks or breaches last year as in 2021.
Overall, 32% of businesses said they had been subject to attacks or breaches over a 12-month period, with 24% of charities saying the same. Meanwhile, about one in ten businesses (11%) and 8% of charities said they had been the victims of cyber crime – which is defined more narrowly – over the 12-month period. This rose to a quarter (26%) of medium-sized businesses, 37% of large businesses and 25% of high-income charities. The UK Government estimated there had been 2.4 million instances of cyber crime against UK businesses, costing an average of £15,300 per victim.
https://www.aol.co.uk/news/one-three-businesses-faced-cyber-105751822.html
Why Your Anti-Fraud, Identity & Cyber Security Efforts Should Be Merged
Across early-stage startups and mature public companies alike, organisations are increasingly moving to a convergence of fraud prevention, identity and access management (IdAM), and cyber security. To improve an organisation's overall security posture, business, IT, and fraud leaders must realise that their areas shouldn't be treated as separate line items. Ultimately, these three disciplines serve the same purpose — protecting the business — and they must converge. This is a simple statement, but complex in practice, due mainly to the array of people, strategies, and tooling that today's organisations have built.
The convergence of these three functions comes at a seminal moment, as global threats are heightened due to several factors: geopolitical tensions like the war on Ukraine, the economic downturn, and a never-ending barrage of sophisticated attacks on businesses and consumers. At the same time, companies are facing slowing revenues, rising inflation, and increased pressure from investors, causing layoffs and budget reductions in the name of optimisation. Cutting back in the wrong areas, however, increases risk.
Tight Budgets and Burnout Push Enterprises to Outsource Cyber Security
With cyber security teams struggling to manage the remediation process and monitor for vulnerabilities, organisations are at a higher risk for security breaches, according to cyber security penetration test provider Cobalt. As enterprises prioritise efficiencies, security leaders increasingly turn to third-party vendors to alleviate the pressures of consistent testing and to fill in talent gaps.
Cobalt’s recent report found:
Budget cuts and layoffs plague security teams: 63% of US cyber security professionals had their department’s budget cut in 2023.
Cyber security professionals deprioritise responsibilities to stay afloat: 79% of US cyber security professionals admit to deprioritising responsibilities leading to a backlog of unaddressed vulnerabilities.
Inaccurate security configurations cause vulnerabilities: 40% of US respondents found the most security vulnerabilities were related to server security misconfigurations.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/04/19/cybersecurity-professionals-responsibilities/
Complex 8 Character Passwords Can Be Cracked in as Little as 5 Minutes
Recently, security vendor Hive released their findings on the time it takes to brute force a password in 2023. This year’s study included the emergence of AI tools. The vendor found that a complex 8 character password could be cracked in as little as 5 minutes. This number rose to 226 years when 12 characters were used and 1 million years when 14 characters were used. A complex password involves the use of numbers, upper and lower case letters and symbols.
Last year, the study found the same 8 and 12 character passwords would have taken 39 minutes and 3,000 years, showing the significant drop in the time it takes to brute force a password. The study highlights the importance for organisations to be aware of their password security and the need for consistent review and updates to the policy.
https://www.hivesystems.io/blog/are-your-passwords-in-the-green
83% of Organisations Paid Up in Ransomware Attacks
A report this week found that 83% of victim organisations paid a ransom at least once. The report found that while entities like the FBI and CISA argue against paying ransoms, many organisations decide to eat the upfront cost of paying a ransom, costing an average of $925,162, rather than enduring the further operational disruption and data loss.
Organisations are giving ransomware attackers leverage over their data by failing to address vulnerabilities created by unpatched software, unmanaged devices and shadow IT. For instance, 77% of IT decision makers argue that outdated cyber security practices have contributed to at least half of security incidents. Over time, these unaddressed vulnerabilities multiply, giving threat actors more potential entry points to exploit and greater leverage to force companies into paying up.
https://venturebeat.com/security/83-of-organizations-paid-up-in-ransomware-attacks/
Security is a Revenue Booster, Not a Cost Centre
Security has historically been seen as a cost centre, which has led to it being given as little money as possible. Many CISOs, CSOs, and CROs fed into that image by primarily talking in terms of disaster avoidance, such as data breaches hurting the enterprise and ransomware potentially shutting it down. But what if security presented itself instead as a way to boost revenue and increase market share? That could easily shift those financial discussions into something much more comfortable.
For example, Apple touted its investments into the secure enclave to claim that it offers users better privacy. Specifically, the company argued that it couldn't reveal information to federal authorities because the enclave was just that secure. Apple turned that into a powerful competitive argument against rival Android creator Google, which makes much of its revenue by monetising users' data.
In another scenario, bank regulations require financial institutions to reimburse customers who are victimised by fraudsters, but they carve out an exception for wire fraud. Imagine if a bank realises that covering all fraud — even though it is not required to do so — could be a powerful differentiator that would boost its market share by supporting customers better than competitors do.
https://www.darkreading.com/edge-articles/security-is-a-revenue-booster-not-a-cost-center
Ex-CEO Gets Prison Sentence for Bad Security
A clinic was recently subject to a cyber attack and even though the clinic was itself the victim, the ex-CEO of the clinic faced criminal charges, too. It would appear that the CEO was aware of the clinic’s failure to employ data security precautions and was aware of this for up to two years before the attack took place.
Worse still, the CEO allegedly knew about the problems because the clinic suffered breaches in 2018 and 2019, and failed to report them; presumably hoping that no traceable cyber crimes would arise as a result, and thus that the company would never get caught out. However, modern breach disclosure and data protection regulations, such as GDPR in Europe, make it clear that data breaches can’t simply be “swept under the carpet” any more, and must be promptly disclosed for the greater good of all.
The former CEO has now been convicted and given a prison sentence, reminding business leaders that merely promising to look after other people’s personal data is not enough. Paying lip service alone to cyber security is insufficient, to the point that you can end up being treated as both a cyber crime victim and a perpetrator at the same time.
Warning From UK Cyber Agency for a New ‘Class’ of Russian Hackers
There is a new ‘class’ of Russian hackers, the UK cyber-agency NCSC warns. Due to an increased danger of attacks by state-aligned Russian hackers, the NCSC is encouraging all businesses to put the recommended protection measures into place. The NCSC alert states, “during the past 18 months, a new kind of Russian hacker has developed.” These state-aligned organisations frequently support Russia’s incursion and are driven more by ideology than money. These hacktivist organisations typically concentrate their harmful online activity on launching DDoS (distributed denial of service) assaults against vital infrastructure, including airports, the legislature, and official websites. The NCSC has released a special guide with a list of steps businesses should take when facing serious cyber threats. System patching, access control confirmation, functional defences, logging, and monitoring, reviewing backups, incident plans, and third-party access management are important steps.
https://informationsecuritybuzz.com/warning-uk-cyberagency-russian-hackers/
KnowBe4 Q1 Phishing Report Reveals IT and Online Services Emails Drive Dangerous Attack Trend
KnowBe4 announced the results of its Q1 2023 top-clicked phishing report, and the results included the top email subjects clicked on in phishing tests.
The report found that phishing tactics are changing with the increasing trend of cyber criminals using email subjects related to IT and online services such as password change requirements, Zoom meeting invitations, security alerts and more. These are effective because they would impact an end users’ daily workday and subsequent tasks to be completed.
71% of the most effective phishing lures related to HR (including leave, dress code, expenses, pay and performance) or tax, and these types of emails continue to be very effective.
Emails that are disguised as coming from an internal source such as the IT department or HR are especially dangerous because they appear to come from a more trusted, familiar place where an employee would not necessarily question it or be as sceptical. Building up an organisation’s human firewall by fostering a strong security culture is essential to outsmart bad actors.
Outsourcing Group Capita Admits Customer Data May Have Been Breached During Cyber Attack
Capita, which runs crucial services for the UK NHS, Government, Military and Financial Services, has for the first time admitted that hackers accessed potential customer, staff and supplier data during a cyber attack last month. The company said its investigation into the attack – which caused major IT outages for clients – found that hackers infiltrated its systems around 22 March, meaning they had around nine days before Capita “interrupted” the breach on 31 March.
While Capita has admitted that data was breached during the incident, it raises the possibility that public sector information was accessed by hackers. Capita, which employs more than 50,000 people in Britain, is one of the government’s most important suppliers and holds £6.5bn-worth of public sector contracts. Capita stopped short of disclosing how many customers were potentially affected by the breach, and is still notifying anyone whose data might be at risk.
Outdated Cyber Security Practices Leave Door Open for Criminals
A recent report found that as organisations increasingly find themselves under attack, they are drowning in cyber security debt – unaddressed security vulnerabilities like unpatched software, unmanaged devices, shadow IT, and insecure network protocols that act as access points for bad actors. The report found a worrying 98% of respondents are running one or more insecure network protocols and 47% had critical devices exposed to the internet. Despite these concerning figures, fewer than one-third said they have immediate plans to address any of the outdated security practices that put their organisations at risk.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/04/20/outdated-cybersecurity-practices/
Quantifying Cyber Risk Vital for Business Survival
Organisations are starting to wake up to the fact that the impact of ransomware and other cyber attacks cause long term issues. The financial implications are far reaching and creating barriers for companies to continue operations after these attacks. As such, quantifying cyber risk is business-specific, and organisations must assess what type of loss they may face, which includes revenue, remediation, legal settlement, or otherwise.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/04/19/cyber-attacks-financial-impact/
Recycled Network Devices Exposing Corporate Secrets
Over half of corporate network devices sold second-hand still contain sensitive company data, according to a new study. The study involved the purchase of recycled routers, finding that 56% contained one or more credentials as well as enough information to identify the previous owner.
Some of the analysed data included customer data, credentials, connection details for applications and authentication keys. In some cases, the data allowed for the location of remote offices and operators, which could be used in subsequent exploitation efforts.
In a number of cases the researchers were able to determine with high confidence — based on the data still present on the devices — who their previous owner was. The list included a multinational tech company and a telecoms firm, both with more than 10,000 employees and over $1 billion in revenue.
The study informed organisations who had owned the routers. Unfortunately, when contacted, some of the organisations failed to respond or acknowledge the findings.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/recycled-network-exposing/
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
83% of organisations paid up in ransomware attacks | VentureBeat
March 2023 broke ransomware attack records with 459 incidents (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers start abusing Action1 RMM in ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Vice Society ransomware uses new PowerShell data theft tool in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
RTM Locker: Emerging Cyber crime Group Targeting Businesses with Ransomware (thehackernews.com)
Western Digital Hackers Demand 8-Figure Ransom Payment for Data (darkreading.com)
NCR was the victim of BlackCat/ALPHV ransomware gang - Security Affairs
Darktrace Denies Getting Hacked After Ransomware Group Names Company on Leak Site - SecurityWeek
LockBit ransomware encryptors found targeting Mac devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers publish sensitive employee data stolen during CommScope ransomware attack | TechCrunch
Vice Society is using custom PowerShell tool for data exfiltrationSecurity Affairs
Black Basta claims it's selling off stolen Capita data • The Register
Ransomware reinfection and its impact on businesses - Help Net Security
Microsoft SQL servers hacked to deploy Trigona ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Play ransomware gang uses custom Shadow Volume Copy data-theft tool (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware gangs abuse Process Explorer driver to kill security software (bleepingcomputer.com)
Medusa ransomware crew boasts of Microsoft code leak • The Register
New Ransomware Attack Hits Health Insurer Point32Health (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
New Qbot campaign delivers malware by hijacking business emails | CSO Online
AI tools like ChatGPT expected to fuel BEC attacks - Help Net Security
Marketing biz sent 107M spam emails in a year, says watchdog • The Register
Phishing FAQ: How to Spot Scams and Stop Them in Their Tracks - CNET
UK government employees receive average of 2,246 malicious emails per year - IT Security Guru
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Crypto phishing attacks up by 40% in one year: Kaspersky (cointelegraph.com)
AI tools like ChatGPT expected to fuel BEC attacks - Help Net Security
US charges three men with six million dollar business email compromise plot | Tripwire
2FA/MFA
Malware
Ex-Conti and FIN7 Actors Collaborate with New Domino Backdoor (securityintelligence.com)
US, UK warn of govt hackers using custom malware on Cisco routers (bleepingcomputer.com)
New QBot campaign delivered hijacking business correspondenceSecurity Affairs
Hard-to-detect malware loader distributed via AI-generated YouTube videos | CSO Online
Hackers Storing Malware in Google Drive as Encrypted ZIP Files (gbhackers.com)
Raspberry Robin Adopts Unique Evasion Techniques - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
'AuKill' Malware Hunts & Kills EDR Processes (darkreading.com)
What Are Computer Worms And How To Prevent Them (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Mobile
Android malware infiltrates 60 Google Play apps with 100M installs (bleepingcomputer.com)
CISA warns of Android bug exploited by Chinese app to spy on users (bleepingcomputer.com)
NSO Group is Back in Business With 3 New iOS Zero-Click Exploits (darkreading.com)
Global Spyware Attacks Spotted Against Both New & Old iPhones (darkreading.com)
Botnets
Internet of Things – IoT
Military helicopter crash blamed on missing software patch • The Register
Why xIoT Devices Are Cyberattackers' Gateway Drug for Lateral Movement (darkreading.com)
Hikvision: Chinese surveillance tech giant denies leaked Pentagon spy claim - BBC News
The Car Thieves Using Tech Disguised Inside Old Nokia Phones and Bluetooth Speakers (vice.com)
Popular Fitness Apps Leak Location Data Even When Users Set Privacy Zones (darkreading.com)
Five Eye nations release new guidance on smart city cyber security | CSO Online
Data Breaches/Leaks
Kodi Confirms Data Breach: 400K User Records and Private Messages Stolen (thehackernews.com)
Rheinmetall suffers cyber attack, military business unaffected, spokesperson says | Reuters
Jack Teixeira's charges in full: 'Top secret' access, leak searches and the Espionage Act - BBC News
Online Gaming Chats Have Long Been Spy Risk for US Military - SecurityWeek
Air Force Unit in Document Leaks Case Loses Intel Mission - SecurityWeek
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Inside look at cyber criminal organisations: Why size matters | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Standardized data collection methods can help fight cyber crime | TechTarget
Why Cyber criminals Love The Rust Programming Language (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Crypto phishing attacks up by 40% in one year: Kaspersky (cointelegraph.com)
On the hunt for the businessmen behind a billion-dollar scam - BBC News
Hundred Finance loses $7 million in Optimism hack (cointelegraph.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Human-Centered Approach Can Reduce Cyber security Failures, Gartner Predicts - MSSP Alert
HR Magazine - UK government plans to make businesses liable for employee fraud
Top risks and best practices for securely offboarding employees | CSO Online
How to Strengthen your Insider Threat Security - IT Security Guru
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Pre-pandemic techniques are fueling record fraud rates - Help Net Security
HR Magazine - UK government plans to make businesses liable for employee fraud
Why Your Anti-Fraud, Identity & Cyber security Efforts Should Be Merged (darkreading.com)
Police disrupts $98M online fraud ring with 33,000 victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
US extradites Nigerian charged in $6m email fraud scam • The Register
Crypto phishing attacks up by 40% in one year: Kaspersky (cointelegraph.com)
Three charged over banking fraud for hire website | Computer Weekly
On the hunt for the businessmen behind a billion-dollar scam - BBC News
Hundred Finance loses $7 million in Optimism hack (cointelegraph.com)
Dennis Kozlowski and the Infamous $6,000 Shower Curtain | Entrepreneur
FTC orders payments firm to pay $650k over tech support scam • The Register
Scammers using social media to dupe people into becoming money mules - Help Net Security
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Insurance
Bank of America warns Lloyd’s over state-backed cyber attack exclusion | Financial Times (ft.com)
Cyber insurance Backstop: Can the Industry Survive Without One? - SecurityWeek
Cyber insurer launches InsurSec solution to help SMBs improve security, risk management | CSO Online
Dark Web
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Capita PLC falls on reports cyber attack was worse than admitted (proactiveinvestors.co.uk)
Lazarus APT group employed Linux Malware in recent attacks-Security Affairs
Hackers start abusing Action1 RMM in ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Software Supply Chain
Cloud/SaaS
Cloud Security Alerts Take Six Days to Resolve - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Linux kernel logic allowed Spectre attack on major cloud • The Register
Western Digital Hackers Demand 8-Figure Ransom Payment for Data (darkreading.com)
Is there really a march from the public cloud back on-prem? | TechCrunch
Uncovering (and Understanding) the Hidden Risks of SaaS Apps (thehackernews.com)
Hackers Storing Malware in Google Drive as Encrypted ZIP Files (gbhackers.com)
Microsoft 365 outage blocks access to web apps and services (bleepingcomputer.com)
Experts disclosed 2 critical flaws in Alibaba cloud database services Security Affairs
Attack Surface Management
Shadow IT
Identity and Access Management
Why Your Anti-Fraud, Identity & Cyber security Efforts Should Be Merged (darkreading.com)
The Attacks that can Target your Windows Active Directory (bleepingcomputer.com)
The biggest data security blind spot: Authorization - Help Net Security
Encryption
API
Open Source
Linux kernel logic allowed Spectre attack on major cloud • The Register
Security beyond software: The open source hardware security evolution - Help Net Security
Report: Most IT Teams Can't Fix Open Source Software Security - DevOps.com
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Social Media
LinkedIn deploys new secure identity verification for all members | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Hard-to-detect malware loader distributed via AI-generated YouTube videos | CSO Online
Crime agencies condemn Facebook and Instagram encryption plans | Meta | The Guardian
Scammers using social media to dupe people into becoming money mules - Help Net Security
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Human rights groups raise alarm over UN Cyber crime Treaty • The Register
EU privacy regulators to create task force to investigate ChatGPT | Computerworld
What Business Needs to Know About the New U.S. Cybersecurity Strategy (hbr.org)
Marketing biz sent 107M spam emails in a year, says watchdog • The Register
As Consumer Privacy Evolves, Here's How You Can Stay Ahead of Regulations (darkreading.com)
Brit cops rapped over app that recorded 200k phone calls • The Register
Three Effective Ways For Boards To Prepare For Imminent SEC Cyber Rules (forbes.com)
US imposes $300m penalty over hard disk drive exports to Huawei - BBC News
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Security Is a Revenue Booster, Not a Cost Centre (darkreading.com)
Tight budgets and burnout push enterprises to outsource cyber security - Help Net Security
'One in three firms faced cyber attacks last year' (aol.co.uk)
Skills shortage puts Europe’s cyber resilience to the test – EURACTIV.com
Quantifying cyber risk vital for business survival - Help Net Security
Wargaming an effective data breach playbook - Help Net Security
Outdated cyber security practices leave door open for criminals - Help Net Security
CISOs struggling to protect sensitive data records - Help Net Security
Why Your Anti-Fraud, Identity & Cyber security Efforts Should Be Merged (darkreading.com)
3 Flaws, 1 War Dominated Cyber-Threat Landscape in 2022 (darkreading.com)
Lack of Breach Info on Notices Surges in Q1 - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Ex-CIO must pay £81k over Total Shambles Bank migration • The Register
Economic uncertainty drives upskilling as a key strategy for organisations - Help Net Security
Top risks and best practices for securely offboarding employees | CSO Online
How companies are struggling to build and run effective cyber security programs - Help Net Security
Three Effective Ways For Boards To Prepare For Imminent SEC Cyber Rules (forbes.com)
Small Business Interest in Cyber-Hygiene Wanes - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Secure Disposal
Backup and Recovery
Data Protection
Government reprimanded for serious breaches of data protection law - Jersey Evening Post
Marketing biz sent 107M spam emails in a year, says watchdog • The Register
Brit cops rapped over app that recorded 200k phone calls • The Register
ChatGPT's Data Protection Blind Spots and How Security Teams Can Solve Them (thehackernews.com)
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Police disrupts $98M online fraud ring with 33,000 victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
US extradites Nigerian charged in $6m email fraud scam • The Register
Three charged over banking fraud for hire website | Computer Weekly
US citizens charged with pushing pro-Kremlin disinformation • The Register
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Human rights groups raise alarm over UN Cyber crime Treaty • The Register
What the Recent Collapse of SVB Means for Privacy (darkreading.com)
As Consumer Privacy Evolves, Here's How You Can Stay Ahead of Regulations (darkreading.com)
Popular Fitness Apps Leak Location Data Even When Users Set Privacy Zones (darkreading.com)
Artificial Intelligence
AI tools like ChatGPT expected to fuel BEC attacks - Help Net Security
Stolen ChatGPT premium accounts up for sale on the dark web | CSO Online
Pen testing amid the rise of AI-powered threat actors | TechTarget
EU privacy regulators to create task force to investigate ChatGPT | Computerworld
Cyber crims hop geofences, clamor for stolen ChatGPT accounts • The Register
AI-created malware sends shockwaves through cybersecurity world | Fox News
Hard-to-detect malware loader distributed via AI-generated YouTube videos | CSO Online
Tech Insight: Dangers of Using Large Language Models Before They Are Baked (darkreading.com)
ChatGPT-Related Malicious URLs on the Rise - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
ChatGPT's Data Protection Blind Spots and How Security Teams Can Solve Them (thehackernews.com)
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Russian hackers targeting UK more frequently (thetimes.co.uk)
CISA warns of Android bug exploited by Chinese app to spy on users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Jack Teixeira's charges in full: 'Top secret' access, leak searches and the Espionage Act - BBC News
Russian SolarWinds Culprits Launch Fresh Barrage of Espionage Cyberattacks (darkreading.com)
Meet the hacker armies on Ukraine's cyber front line - BBC News
Offensive cyber company QuaDream shutting down amidst spyware accusations | Ctech (calcalistech.com)
Genius hackers help Russia’s neighbors thwart cyber incursions | Cybernews
NSO Group is Back in Business With 3 New iOS Zero-Click Exploits (darkreading.com)
UK, US sound the alarm on Russians exploiting Cisco flaws • The Register
Microsoft: Iranian hackers behind retaliatory cyber attacks on US orgs (bleepingcomputer.com)
US citizens charged with pushing pro-Kremlin disinformation • The Register
Heightened threat of state-aligned groups against western... - NCSC.GOV.UK
Microsoft shifts to a new threat actor naming taxonomy - Microsoft Security Blog
How cyber support to Ukraine can build its democratic future | CyberScoop
Google TAG Warns of Russian Hackers Conducting Phishing Attacks in Ukraine (thehackernews.com)
Blind Eagle Cyber Espionage Group Strikes Again: New Attack Chain Uncovered (thehackernews.com)
Britain sounds alarm on spyware, mercenary hacking market | Reuters
Global Spyware Attacks Spotted Against Both New & Old iPhones (darkreading.com)
The UK will need more than words in this cyber war | Financial Times (ft.com)
Google: Ukraine targeted by 60% of Russian phishing attacks in 2023 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nation State Actors
BT holds China-Taiwan war game to stress test supply chains | Financial Times (ft.com)
3CX Supply Chain Attack Tied to Financial Trading App Breach (darkreading.com)
UK security chief’s alert over threat from China (thetimes.co.uk)
Russia accuses NATO of launching 5,000 cyberattacks since 2022 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Human rights groups raise alarm over UN Cyber crime Treaty • The Register
CISA warns of Android bug exploited by Chinese app to spy on users (bleepingcomputer.com)
APT41 Taps Google Red Teaming Tool in Targeted Info-Stealing Attacks (darkreading.com)
US charges 44 members of alleged Chinese troll army • The Register
Hikvision: Chinese surveillance tech giant denies leaked Pentagon spy claim - BBC News
Iranian Hackers Using SimpleHelp Remote Support Software for Persistent Access (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft: Iranian hackers behind retaliatory cyber attacks on US orgs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Heightened threat of state-aligned groups against western... - NCSC.GOV.UK
Microsoft shifts to a new threat actor naming taxonomy - Microsoft Security Blog
Killnet Boss Exposes Rival Leader in Kremlin Hacktivist Beef (darkreading.com)
Iranian Government-Backed Hackers Targeting U.S. Energy and Transit Systems (thehackernews.com)
Lazarus Group Adds Linux Malware to Arsenal in Operation Dream Job (thehackernews.com)
US imposes $300m penalty over hard disk drive exports to Huawei - BBC News
Vulnerability Management
Military helicopter crash blamed on missing software patch • The Register
Google Outlines Initiatives to Fortify Vulnerability Management - MSSP Alert
Beyond CVEs: The Key to Mitigating High-Risk Security Exposures (darkreading.com)
Vulnerabilities
UK, US sound the alarm on Russians exploiting Cisco flaws • The Register
Thousands at risk from critical RCE bug in legacy MS service | Computer Weekly
Critical Flaws in vm2 JavaScript Library Can Lead to Remote Code Execution (thehackernews.com)
Hackers actively exploit critical RCE bug in PaperCut servers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google patches another actively exploited Chrome zero-day (bleepingcomputer.com)
Experts disclosed 2 critical flaws in Alibaba cloud database services - Security Affairs
VMware Patches Pre-Auth Code Execution Flaw in Logging Product - SecurityWeek
Microsoft Defender update causes Windows Hardware Stack Protection mess (bleepingcomputer.com)
Tools and Controls
Pen testing amid the rise of AI-powered threat actors | TechTarget
7 countries unite to push for secure-by-design development | CSO Online
Wargaming an effective data breach playbook - Help Net Security
Cloud Security Alerts Take Six Days to Resolve - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
DFIR via XDR: How to expedite your investigations with a DFIRent approach (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft opens up Defender with file hash, URL search • The Register
Beyond CVEs: The Key to Mitigating High-Risk Security Exposures (darkreading.com)
Enterprises Exposed to Hacker Attacks Due to Failure to Wipe Discarded Routers - SecurityWeek
CISOs struggling to protect sensitive data records - Help Net Security
AI defenders ready to foil AI-armed attackers • The Register
Newer Authentication Tech a Priority for 2023 (darkreading.com)
Other News
Misconfiguration leaves thousands of servers vulnerable to attack, researchers find | CyberScoop
Fortra shares findings on GoAnywhere MFT zero-day attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to defend against TCP port 445 and other SMB exploits | TechTarget
Criminal Records Service still disrupted 4 weeks after hack - BBC News
Attackers use abandoned WordPress plugin to backdoor websites (bleepingcomputer.com)
EU launches Cyber Solidarity Act to respond to large-scale attacks – EURACTIV.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)
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· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
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As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
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Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 14 April 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 14 April 2023:
-Almost Half of Former Employees Say Their Passwords Still Work
-Efficient Risk Based Patch Management Means Eliminating Just 2% of Exposures Could Protect 90% of Critical Assets
-Printers Pose Persistent Yet Overlooked Threat
-Employees Are as Likely as Cyber Criminals to Cause Cyber Incidents
-Over 90% of Organisations Find Threat Hunting a Challenge
-75% of Organisations Have Suffered a Cyber Security Breach
-Leak Shows Evolving Russian Cyber War Capabilities
-Outsourced Payroll and HR Services Firm Forced to Shut Down After Cyber Attack
-When a Cyber Criminal Steals Personal Data from Your Organisation What Do You Do and Who Do You Need to Inform?
-Insider Threat and Ransomware: A Growing Issue
-How LockBit Changed Cyber Security Forever
-Hybrid Work Environments Are Stressing CISOs
-Protect Your Data with a USB Condom
-Strategising Cyber Security: Why a Risk-based Approach is Key
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
Almost Half of Former Employees Say Their Passwords Still Work
An alarming number of organisations are not properly offboarding employees when they leave, especially in regard to passwords. In a new survey of 1,000 workers who had access to company passwords at their previous jobs, 47% admitted to using them after leaving the company.
According to the survey one in three respondents said they had been using the passwords for upwards of two years, which is a distressingly long time for organisations not to be aware of who is accessing those accounts and services.
When asked what they use the passwords for, 64% said to access their former email accounts and 44% to access company data. A concerning 10% of respondents said they were trying to disrupt company activities.
Efficient Risk Based Patch Management Means Eliminating Just 2% of Exposures Could Protect 90% of Critical Assets
A recent cyber security report analysed over 60 million security exposures, or weaknesses that could give an attacker access to systems. The report found that only 2% enabled attackers access to critical assets, while 75% of exposures along attack paths lead to “dead ends”. Further, the report shows that average organisations have 11,000 exploitable security exposures monthly, with techniques targeting credentials and permissions affecting 82% of organisations and exploits accounting for over 70% of all identified security exposures.
The report found that most security alerts were benign and did not lead to critical assets. By applying efficient risk based patch management and reducing unnecessary access to critical assets, organisations can mitigate a significant amount of risk. This isn’t a simple task however, for an organisation to be able to employ efficient risk based patch management it must have a sufficient level of cyber maturity and internal vulnerability scanning accompanied by a dynamic threat intelligence component.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/eliminating-2-exposures-protect-90/
Printers Pose Persistent Yet Overlooked Threat
A rash of printer-related vulnerabilities in 2023 have punctuated security expert warnings that printers continue to be a significant vulnerability within companies — especially as remote workers require printing resources or access to corporate printers. So far in 2023, Lexmark advised that a publicly available remote exploit had already targeted a code execution flaw in its printers, HP warned of a vulnerable firmware version on some of its enterprise printers, and Microsoft fixed three remote code execution vulnerabilities in its printer drivers.
Printers remain a likely soft spot in most companies’ attack surface area, particularly because they are not always part of a company’s asset management process and are often left out of security assessments and risk registers. Many organisations don’t know where their printers are, their security status, configuration, monitoring or logging activity. Research has shown that 67% of companies are worried about the risk home printers may pose and only 26% of information technology and cyber security professionals are confident in their organisation’s printing infrastructure security.
https://www.darkreading.com/vulnerabilities-threats/printers-pose-persistent-yet-overlooked-threat
Employees Are as Likely as Cyber Criminals to Cause Cyber Incidents
Employees and cyber criminals cause similar numbers of data leakages. Kaspersky’s 2022 IT Security Economics survey found cyber-attacks caused 23% of data leakages, while employees caused a similar proportion, at 22%. The rise in employees causing leakages may be linked with more remote working since the pandemic, with new staff laptops, tablets, and virtual private networks (VPNs) featuring among the extra endpoints and systems needing security. Although innocent mistakes or ignoring cyber-security policy were behind most leakages, security managers reported 36% of employee-triggered leakages were deliberate acts of sabotage or espionage. The high number of cyber-incidents stemming from employee action shows all organisations need thorough cyber-security awareness training to teach all staff how to avoid common security mistakes.
Over 90% of Organisations Find Threat Hunting a Challenge
Executing essential cyber security operations tasks during the threat hunting process is an increasingly challenging proposition to the vast majority of organisations, with 93% of those polled for a Sophos report saying they find basic security operations a chore.
In the report, “The state of cybersecurity 2023: The business impact of adversaries on defenders”, Sophos said these findings were likely the result of the ongoing cyber security skills shortage, which is creating a domino effect in security operations: a lack of skilled personnel makes investigating alerts take longer, which reduces the security team’s capacity and increases the organisation’s exposure to higher levels of risk.
Organisations that suffer the most are those with revenues of less than $10m (£8m), which are more likely to lack the necessary skillsets, followed by organisations with revenues of more than $5bn, where organisational and system complexity likely play a more prominent role.
75% of Organisations Have Suffered a Cyber Security Breach
Most organisations need stronger security controls to stop cyber security breaches and cyber attacks, according to “The Data Dilemma: Cloud Adoption and Risk Report” from security service edge (SSE) company Skyhigh Security. Key takeaways from the report include:
97% of organisations indicated they are experiencing private cloud problems.
75% have experienced a cyber security breach, threat and/or theft of data.
75% said shadow IT “impairs their ability to keep data secure.”
60% allow employees to download sensitive data to their personal devices.
52% noted their employees are using SaaS services that are commissioned by departments outside of IT and without direct involvement of their IT department.
37% said they do not trust the public cloud to secure their sensitive data.
Leak Shows Evolving Russian Cyber War Capabilities
The leak of thousands of pages of secret documentation related to the development of Moscow’s cyber and information operations capabilities paint a picture of a government obsessed with social control and committed to scaling their capacity for non-kinetic interference.
The leaked documents detail methods and training simulations intended to prepare an operator workforce for offensive operations against critical infrastructure targets. Tools revealed by these recent leaks suggest a desire and an ability to extensively map foreign vulnerabilities and make the job of Russia’s cyber conflict operators as accessible and scalable as possible.
This leak reinforces the significant concern regarding the threat posed by Russian cyber forces to firms across the globe.
Outsourced Payroll and HR Services Firm Forced to Shut Down After Cyber Attack
Belgian headquartered HR and payroll giant SD Worx has suffered a cyber attack causing them to shut down all IT systems for their UK and Ireland services. While the login portals for other European countries are working correctly, the company's UK customer portal was not accessible. As a full-service human resources and payroll company, SD Worx manages a large amount of sensitive data for their client's employees.
According to the company's general conditions agreement, this data may include tax information, government ID numbers, addresses, full names, birth dates, phone numbers, bank account numbers, employee evaluations, and more.
When a Cyber Criminal Steals Personal Data from Your Organisation What Do You Do and Who Do You Need to Inform?
If that happens it might be time for your management to clear their desks. The prospect of financial penalties and reputational damage is very real. You need to know your obligations — for instance, reporting the breach to applicable authorities and regulators within strict timeframes — understand the breach, and prioritise. Then you communicate and remedy. If you haven’t planned well, it’s going to be tough.
You need to understand the data breach. Who is affected — is it staff or customer data? What exactly have the cyber criminals accessed? Consider the type of information: salary details and passport copies, or customer payment information.
If personal data has been lost or compromised, you will likely have an obligation under data protection regulations to report the breach to your applicable data protection authority within 72 hours, and if you are a regulated business there will likely be similar requirements to report to your regulator within a similar timeframe. Knowing your obligations — ideally before any hack takes place — will guide how well you respond.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/who-should-i-inform-after-a-data-hack-dcrzvgp2x
Insider Threat and Ransomware: A Growing Issue
Ransomware is a growing epidemic. 2022 saw a slew of high-profile attacks leading to massive paydays for cyber criminals. Cyber criminals work just as hard to conceal their identities and location as they do to exploit weaknesses and capture valuable data to hold hostage. Organisations not only stand to lose money in this scenario, but the damage to their reputation and trustworthiness in the market can be challenging to recover from. Customers place high trust in the safety of their personal information, and it’s the company they hold accountable – not the thieves – if it slips into the wrong hands.
Even if you have good technical controls, the low-hanging fruit is capitalising on the human element and gaining entrance through a person within your organisation. Insider threats come in all shapes and sizes and roles, including employees, executives, former employees, board members, contractors, and service providers. Insider threats, by their very nature, pose a unique challenge for organisations.
https://informationsecuritybuzz.com/insider-threat-and-ransomware-a-growing-issue/
How LockBit Changed Cyber Security Forever
LockBit are one of the most prolific ransomware gangs globally, accounting for almost half of ransomware attacks in 2022. They not only maintain a high profile, but they’ve also turned ransom monetisation upside down. Thanks to their innovative approach, the group has claimed 44% of total ransomware attacks launched in 2022. LockBit made history by launching the industry’s first bug bounty program initiated by a ransomware group. The operation invites security experts to uncover vulnerabilities and report them for rewards ranging from $1,000 to a staggering $1 million. This has since been expanded and now offers bounties for creative ways to enhance ransomware operations.
https://securityintelligence.com/articles/how-lockbit-changed-cybersecurity/
Hybrid Work Environments Are Stressing CISOs
The impact of the hybrid workforce on security posture, as well as the risks introduced by this way of working, are posing concerns for CISOs and driving them to develop new strategies for hybrid work security, according to a new report.
Among the report’s most critical findings is the revelation that browsing-based threats ranked as CISOs’ number one concern, regardless of whether their organisation was operating primarily in an in-office, hybrid, or remote setting.
And as for the risks posed by hybrid and remote workers specifically, insecure browsing also topped the list of CISOs’ concerns.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/04/12/hybrid-work-environments-stressing-cisos/
Protect Your Data with a USB Condom
USB isn't just a charging protocol, it also allows data to flow back and forth, and while most of the time this data flow is safe, it is possible to create a malicious charging port that can do bad things, such as plant malware on your device or steal your data. Equally, an employee plugging their personal phone into a corporate USB port may present a danger to the corporate network through the phone. A USB condom is a small dongle that adds a layer of protection between your device and the charging point you're attaching it to by blocking the data being transferred through the port. If you must use a charger, cable, or charging port that isn't under your control, it makes sense to use a USB condom.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/protect-your-data-with-a-usb-condom/
Strategising Cyber Security: Why a Risk-based Approach is Key
By 2027, cyber crime could cost the global economy nearly $24 trillion. Businesses often find themselves at the sharp end of this challenge, and, as such, cyber security is a critical aspect of the modern business landscape. Cyber threats are multiplying and pose serious financial, legal and reputational challenges to organisations.
Modern and effective cyber security management entails more than managing technology risk; it encompasses managing business risk. Organisations must recognise cyber security as a strategic imperative integrated into their overall risk management framework — and this starts at the board level. In some cases, board members may find it beneficial to seek help in assessing appropriate levels of control.
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/04/strategizing-cybersecurity-why-a-risk-based-approach-is-key/
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Microsoft Issues Patches for 97 Flaws, Including Active Ransomware Exploit (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft patches vulnerability used in Nokoyawa ransomware attacks | CSO Online
How LockBit Changed Cyber security Forever (securityintelligence.com)
Insider Threat And Ransomware: A Growing Issue (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Rorschach ransomware deployed by misusing a security tool - Help Net Security
Medusa ransomware claims attack on Open University of Cyprus (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyble — New Cylance Ransomware with Power-Packed CommandLine Options
Taiwanese PC Company MSI Falls Victim to Ransomware Attack (thehackernews.com)
KFC, Pizza Hut owner discloses data breach after ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
7 Things Your Ransomware Response Playbook Is Likely Missing (darkreading.com)
Cyber crime group exploits Windows zero-day in ransomware attacks-Security Affairs
Windows zero-day vulnerability exploited in ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware gangs increasingly deploy zero-days to maximize attacks | CyberScoop
Latitude Financial Refuses to Pay Ransom - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Superyacht-Maker Hit by Easter Ransomware Attack - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Microsoft: Phishing attack targets accountants as Tax Day approaches (bleepingcomputer.com)
Researchers Uncover Thriving Phishing Kit Market on Telegram Channels (thehackernews.com)
Phishing Campaign Targeting YouTube Content Creators, Malware Hitting Charging Stations - MSSP Alert
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
2FA/MFA
Comparing enabled and enforced MFA in Microsoft 365 | TechTarget
Rilide browser extension steals MFA codes - Help Net Security
Malware
New Mirai Variant Employs Uncommon Tactics to Distribute Malware (darkreading.com)
Typhon Reborn Stealer Malware Resurfaces with Advanced Evasion Techniques (thehackernews.com)
BlackGuard Stealer Extends its Capabilities in New Variant - MSSP Alert
Check Point Software Technologies: Qbot Top Malware in March 2023 - MSSP Alert
Cryptocurrency Stealer Malware Distributed via 13 NuGet Packages (thehackernews.com)
Attackers Hide RedLine Stealer Behind ChatGPT, Google Bard Facebook Ads (darkreading.com)
Microsoft shares guidance to detect BlackLotus UEFI bootkit attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft, Fortra Gains Legal Rights Against Cobalt Strike Abuse (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Legion Malware Marches onto Web Servers to Steal Credentials, Spam Mobile Users (darkreading.com)
WhatsApp boosts defence against account takeover via malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
FBI warns about dangers of public USB charging ports | Popular Science (popsci.com)
Researchers Uncover Thriving Phishing Kit Market on Telegram Channels (thehackernews.com)
Android phones vulnerable to remote hacking — update right now | Tom's Guide (tomsguide.com)
Burglars tunnel through Apple Store’s neighbour, allegedly steal $500K in iPhones | Ars Technica
5G connections set to rise past 5.9 billion by 2027 - Help Net Security
Cyber criminals To Add Android Malware On Google Play Up To $20,000 (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
WhatsApp boosts defence against account takeover via malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Hackers Flood NPM with Bogus Packages Causing a DoS Attack (thehackernews.com)
DDoS attacks shifting to VPS infrastructure for increased power (bleepingcomputer.com)
DDoS alert traffic reaches record-breaking level of 436 petabits in one day - Help Net Security
DDoS attacks rise as pro-Russia groups attack Finland, Israel (techrepublic.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Printers Pose Persistent Yet Overlooked Threat (darkreading.com)
There’s a new form of keyless car theft that works in under 2 minutes | Ars Technica
Special Report: Tesla workers shared sensitive images recorded by customer cars | Reuters
Default static key in ThingsBoard IoT platform can give attackers admin access | CSO Online
5G connections set to rise past 5.9 billion by 2027 - Help Net Security
Zigbee PRO 2023 introduces new security mechanisms, feature enhancements - Help Net Security
Critical Vulnerability in Hikvision Storage Solutions Exposes Video Security Data - SecurityWeek
Data Breaches/Leaks
Samsung employees unwittingly leaked company secret data by using ChatGPT-Security Affairs
Cloud accounting firm in a pickle after researchers find admin login data | TechRadar
Service NSW breach exposes personal data affecting thousands of customers | 7NEWS
Military Intel Leak Investigated By US Officials (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Hyundai data breach exposes owner details in France and Italy (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Criminal businesses adopt corporate behaviour as they grow - Help Net Security
Seized Genesis malware market's infostealers infected 1.5 million computers | CSO Online
Breached shutdown sparks migration to ARES data leak forums (bleepingcomputer.com)
FBI: Crooks posing as PRC agents prey on Chinese in the US • The Register
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Sentiment DeFi Hacker Makes Amends by Returning 90% of Funds (beincrypto.com)
Cryptocurrency Stealer Malware Distributed via 13 NuGet Packages (thehackernews.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Employees are as likely as cyber-criminals to cause cyber-incidents | The Independent
Cyber criminals use simple trick to obtain personal data - Help Net Security
Insider Threat And Ransomware: A Growing Issue (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
FBI warns of companies exploiting sextortion victims for profit (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cambodia deports 19 Japanese cyber crime scam suspects | News | Al Jazeera
‘Overemployed’ Hustlers Exploit ChatGPT To Take On Even More Full-Time Jobs (vice.com)
When Banking Laws Don't Protect Consumers From Cybertheft (darkreading.com)
AI clones child’s voice in fake kidnapping scam | The Independent
Five arrested after 33,000 victims lose $98M to online investment fraud (bleepingcomputer.com)
Stolen Card Numbers Plummet 94% Globally - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
3CX confirms North Korean hackers behind supply chain attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Capita: IT outsourcer reels from being locked out of its own IT (thetimes.co.uk)
Cloud/SaaS
Western Digital struggles to fix massive My Cloud outage, offers workaround (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft Azure Users Warned of Potential Shared Key Authorization Abuse - SecurityWeek
Iranian APT group launches destructive attacks in hybrid Azure AD environments | CSO Online
Cloud accounting firm in a pickle after researchers find admin login data | TechRadar
Securing the Chaos – Harnessing Dispersed Multi-Cloud, Hybrid Environments - SecurityWeek
Hybrid/Remote Working
Hybrid work environments are stressing CISOs - Help Net Security
‘Overemployed’ Hustlers Exploit ChatGPT To Take On Even More Full-Time Jobs (vice.com)
Attack Surface Management
How to Secure Web Applications in a Growing Digital Attack Surface (bleepingcomputer.com)
The new weakest link in the cyber security chain - Help Net Security
Shadow IT
Identity and Access Management
Identity Management Day: 3 Things MSSPs Need to Know - MSSP Alert
Centralized vs. decentralized identity management explained | TechTarget
The Service Accounts Challenge: Can't See or Secure Them Until It's Too Late (thehackernews.com)
Encryption
API
Google launches dependency API and curated package repository with security metadata | CSO Online
Why Shadow APIs are More Dangerous than You Think (thehackernews.com)
Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Almost Half of Former Employees Say Their Passwords Still Work (darkreading.com)
Why it's time to move towards a passwordless future - Help Net Security
AI can crack most password in less than a minute | TechRadar
How an AI tool could crack your passwords in seconds | ZDNET
Meet PassGAN, the supposedly “terrifying” AI password cracker that’s mostly hype | Ars Technica
Social Media
Malvertising
Training, Education and Awareness
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Lagging regulations frustrate protecting data from cyber attacks (themandarin.com.au)
Battle could be brewing over new FCC data breach reporting rules | CSO Online
When Banking Laws Don't Protect Consumers From Cyber Theft (darkreading.com)
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Employees are as likely as cyber-criminals to cause cyber-incidents | The Independent
Skyhigh Security Report: 75% of Organizations Have Suffered a Cyber security Breach - MSSP Alert
Strategising cyber security: Why a risk-based approach is key | World Economic Forum (weforum.org)
Outcome-based cyber security paves way for organizational goals - Help Net Security
Why reporting an incident only makes the cyber security community stronger | CSO Online
6 common challenges facing cyber security teams and how to overcome them | TechCrunch
Top 10 Cyber security Trends for 2023: From Zero Trust to Cyber Insurance (thehackernews.com)
Most Security Exposures Do Not Put Organizations' Critical Assets At Risk, Study Shows - MSSP Alert
Threat hunting programs can save organizations from costly security breaches - Help Net Security
Gartner: Human-Centric Design Is Top Cyber Security Trend for 2023 (darkreading.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Seized Genesis malware market's infostealers infected 1.5 million computers | CSO Online
Spanish cops arrest teenage 'Robin Hood hacker' • The Register
Australia Is Scouring the Earth for Cyber criminals — the US Should Too (darkreading.com)
Cambodia deports 19 Japanese cyber crime scam suspects | News | Al Jazeera
Dutch Police mails RaidForums members to warn they’re being watched (bleepingcomputer.com)
Five arrested after 33,000 victims lose $98M to online investment fraud (bleepingcomputer.com)
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Tesla Sued Over Workers' Alleged Access to Car Video Imagery - SecurityWeek
Consumers take data control into their own hands amid rising privacy concerns - Help Net Security
Artificial Intelligence
Samsung employees unwittingly leaked company secret data by using ChatGPT - Security Affairs
Cyber crime: be careful what you tell your chatbot helper… | Chatbots | The Guardian
US cyber chiefs warn of threats from China and AI • The Register
When you're talking to a chatbot, who's listening? | CNN Business
Bad Actors Will Use Large Language Models — but Defenders Can, Too (darkreading.com)
AI can crack most password in less than a minute | TechRadar
‘Overemployed’ Hustlers Exploit ChatGPT To Take On Even More Full-Time Jobs (vice.com)
AI clones child’s voice in fake kidnapping scam | The Independent
European privacy watchdog creates ChatGPT task force | Reuters
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Russian hackers linked to widespread attacks targeting NATO and EU (bleepingcomputer.com)
NTC Vulkan leak shows evolving Russian cyberwar capabilities | CSO Online
The Discord servers at the center of a massive US intelligence leak | CyberScoop
Cisco trashed offices and destroyed spares as it quit Russia • The Register
Another zero-click Apple spyware biz shows up in town again • The Register
Ukrainian hackers spend $25,000 of pro-Russian blogger's money on sex toys (bitdefender.com)
DDoS attacks rise as pro-Russia groups attack Finland, Israel (techrepublic.com)
Russian Hacker Group Zarya Hit Canadian Pipeline—Leaked Docs (gizmodo.com)
Russia's Joker DPR Claims Access to Ukraine Troop Movement Data (darkreading.com)
Spyware Offered to Cyber attackers via PyPI Python Repository (darkreading.com)
Russian hackers ‘target security cameras inside Ukraine coffee shops’ | Ukraine | The Guardian
Nation State Actors
Russia-linked APT29 is behind recent attacks targeting NATO and EU-Security Affairs
North Korean Hackers Uncovered as Mastermind in 3CX Supply Chain Attack (thehackernews.com)
US cyber chiefs warn of threats from China and AI • The Register
Ukrainian hackers spend $25,000 of pro-Russian blogger's money on sex toys (bitdefender.com)
Google is on a crusade against cyber security threats from North Korea | TechRadar
Russian Hacker Group Zarya Hit Canadian Pipeline—Leaked Docs (gizmodo.com)
Iranian APT group launches destructive attacks in hybrid Azure AD environments | CSO Online
FBI: Crooks posing as PRC agents prey on Chinese in the US • The Register
Vulnerability Management
Most Security Exposures Do Not Put Organizations' Critical Assets At Risk, Study Shows - MSSP Alert
Ransomware gangs increasingly deploy zero-days to maximize attacks | CyberScoop
Vulnerabilities
Microsoft Issues Patches for 97 Flaws, Including Active Ransomware Exploit (thehackernews.com)
Windows admins warned to patch critical MSMQ QueueJumper bug (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nokoyawa ransomware attacks with Windows zero-day | Securelist
Thousands at risk from critical RCE bug in legacy MS service | Computer Weekly
1M+ WordPress Sites Hacked via Zero-Day Plug-in Bugs (darkreading.com)
Sophos Patches Critical Code Execution Vulnerability in Web Security Appliance - SecurityWeek
Cisco Patches Code and Command Execution Vulnerabilities in Several Products - SecurityWeek
CISA orders agencies to patch Backup Exec bugs used by ransomware gang (bleepingcomputer.com)
CISA Adds Two Known Exploited Vulnerabilities to Catalog | CISA
Data-leak flaw in Qualcomm, HiSilicon-based Wi-Fi AP chips • The Register
Twitter 'Shadow Ban' Bug Gets Official CVE (darkreading.com)
Exploit available for critical bug in VM2 JavaScript sandbox library (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft finally gets around to fixing half-decade-old Firefox CPU bug | TechRadar
SAP releases security updates for two critical-severity flaws (bleepingcomputer.com)
Adobe Plugs Gaping Security Holes in Reader, Acrobat - SecurityWeek
Limit Login Attempts Plugin Patches Severe Unauthenticated Stored XSS Vulnerability – WP Tavern
Fortinet Patches Critical Vulnerability in Data Analytics Solution - SecurityWeek
How Microsoft’s Shared Key authorization can be abused and how to fix it | CSO Online
Microsoft shares fix for Outlook issue blocking access to emails (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical Vulnerability in Hikvision Storage Solutions Exposes Video Security Data - SecurityWeek
Tools and Controls
Threat hunting programs can save organizations from costly security breaches - Help Net Security
Stopping criminals from abusing security tools - Microsoft On the Issues
Most Security Exposures Do Not Put Organizations' Critical Assets At Risk, Study Shows - MSSP Alert
The Pope's Security Gets a Boost With Vatican's MDM Move (darkreading.com)
Bad Actors Will Use Large Language Models — but Defenders Can, Too (darkreading.com)
Cyber crime: be careful what you tell your chatbot helper… | Chatbots | The Guardian
Detailed Analysis Of The Best Password Managers In 2023 (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
How CIEM Can Improve Identity, Permissions Management for Multicloud Deployments (darkreading.com)
Centralized vs. decentralized identity management explained | TechTarget
The Service Accounts Challenge: Can't See or Secure Them Until It's Too Late (thehackernews.com)
What is an Intrusion Prevention System (IPS)? (techtarget.com)
Securing the Chaos – Harnessing Dispersed Multi-Cloud, Hybrid Environments - SecurityWeek
How to Secure Web Applications in a Growing Digital Attack Surface (bleepingcomputer.com)
4 strategies to help reduce the risk of DNS tunnelling | CSO Online
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
MSI Confirms Cyber Attack, Issues Firmware Download Guidance - SecurityWeek
1M+ WordPress Sites Hacked via Zero-Day Plug-in Bugs (darkreading.com)
Western Digital restores service; attack details remain unclear | TechTarget
Rapid7 Has Good News for UK Security Posture - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.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 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)
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
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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 14 October 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 14 October 2022:
-Ransomware Report: Most Organisations Unprepared for an Attack, Lack Incident Playbook, Research Finds
-LinkedIn Scams, Fake Instagram Accounts Hit Businesses, Execs
-Study Highlights Surge in Identity Theft and Phishing Attacks
-Increase in Cyber Liability Insurance Claims as Cyber Crime Skyrockets
-UK Government Urges Action to Enhance Supply Chain Security
-For Most Companies Ransomware Is the Scariest Of All Cyber Attacks
-EDR Is Not a Silver Bullet
-Attackers Use Automation to Speed from Exploit to Compromise
-Rising Premiums, More Restricted Cyber Insurance Coverage Poses Big Risk for Companies
-Why CISO Roles Require Business and Technology Savvy
-Wi-Fi Spy Drones Used to Snoop on Financial Firm
-Magniber Ransomware Attacking Individuals and Home Users
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Ransomware Report: Most Organisations Unprepared for an Attack, Lack Incident Playbook, Research Finds
Some organisations have made significant improvements to their ransomware readiness profile in the last year, Axio said in a newly released report. However, a lack of fundamental cyber security practices and controls, inadequate vulnerability patching and employee training continues to leave ransomware defences lacking in potency.
Axio’s report reveals that only 30% of organisations have a ransomware-specific playbook for incident management in place. In 2021’s report Axio, maker of a cloud-based cyber management software platform, identified seven key areas emerged where organisations were deficient in implementing and sustaining basic cyber security practices.
The same patterns showed up in the 2022 report:
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.
Active phishing training has improved but is still not practiced by 40% of organisations.
LinkedIn Scams, Fake Instagram Accounts Hit Businesses, Execs
Business owners with public social media accounts are easy targets for scammers who lift information to create fake accounts. The arduous process for removing fraudulent accounts leaves victims frustrated and vulnerable to further data privacy issues. Victims say platform providers, particularly Facebook and Instagram, must improve their responses to reports of fraud.
Impersonation of a brand or executive contributed to more than 40% of all phishing and social media incidents in the second quarter, according to the Agari and Phish Labs Quarterly Threat Trends and Intelligence Report released in August. Q2 marks the second quarter that impersonation attacks have represented the majority of threats, despite a 6.1% decrease from Q1.
Executive impersonation has been on the rise over the past four quarters — representing more than 15% of attacks, according to the report — as impersonating a corporate figure or company on social media is simple and effective for threat actors.
Thom Singer, CEO for the Austin Technology Council and a public speaker, was recently impersonated on Instagram. A scammer created a fake Instagram account with his name and photos, creating a handle with an extra "r" at the end of Singer. That account appeared to amass over 2,300 followers – nearly as many as Singer's own account – lending to its appearance of authenticity.
He learned of the fake account from a contact who texted to ask if he'd reached out on Instagram, which wasn't a channel Singer typically uses to communicate. Singer reported the fraudulent account using the platform's report button and asked his followers to do the same.
"You can't reach anyone at these platforms, so it takes days to get a fake account removed," Singer said. "These social media sites have no liability, nothing to lose when fraud is happening. They need to up their game and have a better process to get [fraud] handled in a timely manner."
Study Highlights Surge in Identity Theft and Phishing Attacks
A new study from behavioural risk firm CybSafe and the National Cybersecurity Alliance (NCA) has been launched and it highlights an alarming surge in phishing and identity theft attacks.
The report, titled ‘Oh, Behave! The Annual Cybersecurity Attitudes and Behaviors report’, studied the opinions of 3,000 individuals across the US, the UK and Canada towards cyber security and revealed that nearly half (45%) of users are connected to the internet all the time, however, this has led to a surge in identity theft with almost 1 in 4 people being affected by the attack.
Furthermore, 1 in 3 (36%) respondents revealed they have lost money or data due to a phishing attack. Yet the study also revealed that 70% of respondents feel confident in their ability to identify a malicious email, but only 45% will confirm the authenticity of a suspicious email by reaching out to the apparent sender.
When it comes to implementing cyber security best practices, only 33% of respondents revealed they use a unique password for important online accounts, while only 16% utilise passwords of over 12 characters in length. Furthermore, only 18% of participants have downloaded a stand-alone password manager, while 43% of respondents have not even heard of multi-factor authentication.
Increase in Cyber Liability Insurance Claims as Cyber Crime Skyrockets
A cyber insurer, Acuity Insurance, is reporting an increased need for cyber liability insurance across both personal and business policyholders. From June 2021 to June 2022, the insurer saw cyber liability insurance claims on its commercial insurance policies increase by more than 50%. For personal policies, they saw more than a 90% increase in cyber claims being reported in 2021 compared with 2020.
Our lives, homes and businesses are more connected than ever before. Being connected leads to a greater risk of cyber attacks, which aren't covered under standard homeowners or business insurance policies.
The insurance experts caution that everyone is at risk — whether you are a small business owner or an individual — as cyber attacks continue to pose a serious financial threat. From 2019 to 2021, cyber attacks were up 50% from the previous year, according to recent research. Wire fraud and gift card scams are two of the most common types of cyber attacks impacting both businesses and individuals.
Scams involving social engineering are some of the easiest to fall for, as fraudsters exploit a person's trust to obtain money or personal information, which can then be used for unauthorised withdrawals of money. Cyber insurance can protect you from financial loss caused by wire transfer fraud, phishing attacks, cyber extortion, cyberbullying and more, Acuity reported.
While all cyber crimes have a financial impact, fraudulent wire transfers often come with greater losses. Banks are typically not responsible for funds lost as a result of a fraudulent wire transfer inadvertently authorised by the customer. Whether it's a wrongful money transfer by a business or an individual, cyber insurance can help mitigate some of the financial loss caused by these scams.
UK Government Urges Action to Enhance Supply Chain Security
The UK government has warned organisations to take steps to strengthen their supply chain security.
New National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) guidance has been issued amid a significant increase in supply chain attacks in recent years, such as the SolarWinds incident in 2020. The NCSC cited official government data showing that just over one in 10 businesses review the risks posed by their immediate suppliers (13%), while the proportion covering the wider supply chain is just 7%.
Aimed at medium-to-large organisations, the document sets out practical steps to better assess cyber security across increasingly complex supply chains. This includes a description of typical supplier relationships and ways that organisations are exposed to vulnerabilities and cyber-attacks via the supply chain, and the expected outcomes and key steps needed to assess suppliers’ approaches to security.
The new guidance followed a government response to a call for views last year which highlighted the need for further advice. Supply chain attacks are a major cyber threat facing organisations and incidents can have a profound, long-lasting impact on businesses and customers. With incidents on the rise, it is vital organisations work with their suppliers to identify supply chain risks and ensure appropriate security measures are in place.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/uk-government-supply-chain-security/
For Most Companies Ransomware Is the Scariest Of All Cyber Attacks
SonicWall released the 2022 SonicWall Threat Mindset Survey which found that 66% of customers are more concerned about cyber attacks in 2022, with the main threat being focused on financially motivated attacks like ransomware.
“No one is safe from cyber attacks — businesses or individuals,” said SonicWall Executive Chairman of the Board Bill Conner. “Today’s business landscape requires persistent digital trust to exist. Supply-chain attacks have dramatically changed the attack surface of the typical enterprise in the past few years, with more suppliers and service providers touching sensitive data than ever before.
“It’s likely we’ll see continued acceleration and evolution of ransomware tactics, as well as other advanced persistent threats (APTs), as cyber crime continues to scale the globe seeking both valuable and weak targets.”
Companies are not only losing millions of dollars to unending malware and ransomware strikes, but cyber attacks on essential infrastructure are impacting real-world services. Despite the growing concern of cyber attacks, organisations are struggling to keep pace with the fast-moving threat landscape as they orient their business, networks, data and employees against unwavering cyber attacks.
“The evolving cyber threat landscape has made us train our staff significantly more,” said Stafford Fields, IT Director, Cavett Turner & Wyble. “It’s made us spend more on cyber security. And what scares me is that an end-user can click on something and bring all our systems down — despite being well protected.”
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/12/customers-concerned-ransomware/
EDR Is Not a Silver Bullet
Old lore held that shooting a werewolf, vampire, or even just your average nasty villain with a silver bullet was a sure-fire takedown: one hit, no more bad guy.
As cyber security professionals, we understand – much like folks in the Old West knew – that there are no panaceas, no actual silver bullets. Yet humans gravitate towards simple solutions to complex challenges, and we are constantly (if unconsciously) seeking silver bullet technology.
Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) tools have become Standard Operating Procedures for cyber security regimes. They are every CIO’s starting point, and there’s nothing wrong with this. In a recent study by Cymulate of over one million tests conducted by customers in 2021, the most popular testing vector was EDR.
Yet cyber security stakeholders should not assume that EDR is a silver bullet. The fact is that EDR’s efficacy and protective prowess as a standalone solution has been slowly diminished over the decade since the term was first coined by Gartner. Even as it became a mainstay of enterprise and SMB/SME security posture – attacks have skyrocketed in frequency, severity, and success. Today, EDR is facing some of its greatest challenges, including threats laser-targeting EDR systems like the highly-successful Grandoiero banking trojan.
While EDR should not be your only line of defence against advanced threats, including it in a defence solution array is paramount. It should be installed on all organisational servers – including Linux-based ones. Yet installation is not enough. Your organisation is at significant risk if the underlying OS and EDR are not both implemented and fine-tuned.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/11/edr-is-not-a-silver-bullet/
Attackers Use Automation to Speed from Exploit to Compromise
A report from Laceworks examines the cloud security threat landscape over the past three months and unveils the new techniques and avenues cyber criminals are exploiting for profit at the expense of businesses. In this latest edition, the Lacework Labs team found a significantly more sophisticated attacker landscape, with an increase in attacks against core networking and virtualisation software, and an unprecedented increase in the speed of attacks following a compromise. Key trends and threats identified include:
Increased speed from exposure to compromise: Attackers are advancing to keep pace with cloud adoption and response time. Many classes of attacks are now fully automated to capitalise on timing. Additionally, one of the most common targets is credential leakage. In a specific example from the report, a leaked AWS access key was caught and flagged by AWS in record time. Despite the limited exposure, an unknown adversary was able to log in and launch tens of GPU EC2 instances, underscoring just how quickly attackers can take advantage of a single simple mistake.
Increased focus on infrastructure, specifically attacks against core networking and virtualisation software: Commonly deployed core networking and related infrastructure consistently remains a key target for adversaries. Core flaws in infrastructure often appear suddenly and are shared openly online, creating opportunities for attackers of all kinds to exploit these potential targets.
Continued Log4j reconnaissance and exploitation: Nearly a year after the initial exploit, the Lacework Labs team is still commonly observing vulnerable software targeted via OAST requests. Analysis of Project Discovery (interact.sh) activity revealed Cloudflare and DigitalOcean as the top originators.
Rising Premiums, More Restricted Cyber Insurance Coverage Poses Big Risk for Companies
Among the many consequences of the rising number of costly data breaches, ransomware, and other security attacks are pricier premiums for cyber security insurance. The rise in costs could put many organisations out of the running for this essential coverage, a risky proposition given the current threat landscape.
Cyber insurance is a type of specialty insurance that protects organisations against a variety of risks related to information security attacks such as ransomware and data breaches. Ordinarily, these types of risks aren’t included with traditional commercial general liability policies or are not specifically defined in these insurance plans.
Given the rise in attacks, the growing sophistication of these incidents and the potential financial impact, having cyber insurance coverage has become critical for many organisations. Premiums for these plans have been on the rise because of the increase in security-related losses and rising demand for coverage.
Cyber insurance premiums increased by an average of 28% in the first quarter of 2022 compared with the fourth quarter of 2021, according to the Council of Insurance Agents & Brokers (CIAB), an association for commercial insurance and employee benefits intermediaries.
Among the primary drivers for the continued price increases were a reduced carrier appetite for the risk and high demand for coverage, CIAB said. The high demand for cyber coverage is in part fueled by greater awareness among companies of the threat cyber risk poses for businesses of all sizes, it said.
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/11/companies-are-finding-it-harder-to-get-cyber-insurance-.html
Why CISO Roles Require Business and Technology Savvy
Listening and communicating to both the technical and business sides is critical to successfully leading IT teams and business leaders to the same end-goal.
Of all the crazy postings that advertise for CISO jobs, the one asking for a CISO to code in Python was probably the most outrageous example of the disconnect about a CISO’s role, says Joe Head, CISO search director at UK-based search firm, Intaso. This was a few years ago, and one can only guess that the role had been created by a technologist who didn’t care about or didn’t understand the business — or, inversely by a businessperson who didn’t understand enough about technology.
In either case, the disconnect is real. However, Head and other experts say that when it comes to achieving the true, executive role and reporting to the CEO and board, business skills rule. That doesn’t mean, however, that most CISOs know nothing about technology, because most still start out with technology backgrounds.
In the 2022 CISO survey by executive placement firm, Heidrick & Struggles, most CISOs come from a functional IT background that reflects the issues of the time. For example, in 2022 10% of CISOs came from software engineering backgrounds, which tracks with the White House directive to protect the software supply chain. The report notes that the majority of CISOs have experience in the financial services industry, which has a low risk tolerance and where more money is spent on security.
The survey also indicates that only a small core of CISOs (working primarily for the Fortune 500) rise to the executive level with the combination of business and technical responsibilities that come with the role. In it, more than two-thirds of CISOs responding to the survey worked for companies worth over $5 billion. So, instead of bashing a CISO’s lack of IT skills, the real need lies in developing business skills for the technologists coming up the ranks.
Wi-Fi Spy Drones Used to Snoop on Financial Firm
Modified off-the-shelf drones have been found carrying wireless network-intrusion kit in a very unlikely place.
The idea of using consumer-oriented drones for hacking has been explored over the past decade at security conferences like Black Hat 2016, in both the US and in Europe, but now these sort of attacks are actually taking place. A security researcher recently recounted an incident that occurred over the summer at a US East Coast financial firm focused on private investment.
The hacking incident was discovered when the financial firm spotted unusual activity on its internal Atlassian Confluence page that originated from within the company's network. The company's security team responded and found that the user whose MAC address was used to gain partial access to the company Wi-Fi network was also logged in at home several miles away. That is to say, the user was active off-site but someone within Wi-Fi range of the building was trying to wirelessly use that user's MAC address, which is a red flag. The team then took steps to trace the Wi-Fi signal and used a Fluke system to identify the Wi-Fi device.
This led the team to the roof, where two modified commercially available consumer drones series were discovered. One drone was in fine condition and had a modified Wi-Fi Pineapple device, used for network penetration testing. The second drone was carrying a case that contained a Raspberry Pi, several batteries, a GPD mini laptop, a 4G modem, and another Wi-Fi device. It had landed near the building's heating and ventilation system and appeared to be damaged but still operable.
During their investigation, they determined that the first drone had originally been used a few days prior to intercept a worker's credentials and Wi-Fi, and this data was then hard coded into the tools that were deployed on the second drone.
https://www.theregister.com/2022/10/12/drone-roof-attack/
Magniber Ransomware Attacking Individuals and Home Users
A recent analysis shows that Magniber ransomware has been targeting home users by masquerading as software updates.
Reports have shown a ransomware campaign isolated by HP Wolf Security in September 2022 saw Magniber ransomware spread. The malware is known as a single-client ransomware family that demands $2,500 from victims. Magniber was previously primarily spread through MSI and EXE files, but in September 2022 HP Wolf Security began seeing campaigns distributing the ransomware in JavaScript files.
HP Wolf Security reported that some malware families rely exclusively on JavaScript, but have done so for some time. Currently, analysts are also seeing more HTML smuggling, such as with Qakbot and IcedID. This technique also makes use of JavaScript to decode malicious content. The only difference is that the HTML file is executed in the context of the browser and therefore usually requires further user interaction.
Remarkably, HP Wolf Security said, the attackers used clever techniques to evade detection, such as running the ransomware in memory, bypassing User Account Control (UAC) in Windows, and bypassing detection techniques that monitor user-mode hooks by using syscalls instead of standard Windows API libraries.
It appears that with the UAC bypass, the malware deletes the infected system’s shadow copy files and disables backup and recovery features, preventing the victim from recovering their data using Windows tools.
Having recently described the ransomware campaign in a recent interview, HP Wolf noted that the infection chain starts with a web download from an attacker-controlled website.
Threats
Ransomware and Extortion
More and more ransomware is just data theft, no encryption • The Register
Magniber ransomware now infects Windows users via JavaScript files (bleepingcomputer.com)
Fake adult sites push data wipers disguised as ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
It was LockBit that forced NHS tech supplier to shut down • The Register
Ransomware posing as Windows antivirus update will just empty your wallet | TechRadar
Microsoft: New Prestige ransomware targets orgs in Ukraine, Poland (bleepingcomputer.com)
BlackByte ransomware uses new EDR evasion technique (techtarget.com)
Prevent Ransomware Attacks on Critical Infrastructure (trendmicro.com)
Microsoft Exchange servers hacked to deploy LockBit ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Harvard Business Publishing licensee hit by ransomware - Security Affairs
LockBit affiliates compromise Microsoft Exchange servers to deploy ransomware - Security Affairs
Police tricks DeadBolt ransomware out of 155 decryption keys (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Caffeine service lets anyone launch Microsoft 365 phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
A whole load of phishing emails make it past Microsoft Defender, researchers say | TechRadar
Google Forms abused in new COVID-19 phishing wave in the U.S. (bleepingcomputer.com)
US election workers hit with phishing, malware emails • The Register
Cyber criminals are having it easy with phishing-as-a-service - Help Net Security
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
How a Microsoft blunder opened millions of PCs to potent malware attacks | Ars Technica
Banks face their 'darkest hour' as crimeware powers up • The Register
Emotet Rises Again With More Sophistication, Evasion (darkreading.com)
QAKBOT Attacks Spike Amid Concerning Cyber Criminal Collaborations (darkreading.com)
Hackers behind IcedID malware attacks diversify delivery tactics (bleepingcomputer.com)
Eternity threat group’s LilithBot: A criminal multitool • The Register
Here's another excellent reason not to browse adult websites at work | TechRadar
Experts analysed the evolution of the Emotet supply chain - Security Affairs
Mobile
Modified WhatsApp App Caught Infecting Android Devices with Malware (thehackernews.com)
Meta uncovers 400 malicious apps on Android and iOS apps | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
‘Zero-Click’ Spyware Emerges as a Menacing Mobile Threat - Bloomberg
Mullvad: Android may leak information when connected to a VPN - gHacks Tech News
Android Security Updates Patch Critical Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Hackers Using Vishing to Trick Victims into Installing Android Banking Malware (thehackernews.com)
Mystery iPhone update patches against iOS 16 mail crash-attack – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Data Breaches/Leaks
Client data exfiltrated in Advanced NHS cyber attack (digitalhealth.net)
Mormon Church data stolen in 'state-sponsored' cyber attack • The Register
2K Customer Data Stolen, Sold Online After Support Desk Scam (kotaku.com)
Toyota discloses data leak after access key exposed on GitHub (bleepingcomputer.com)
Fast Company says Executive Board member info was not stolen in attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
State Bar of Georgia Confirms Data Breach Following Ransomware Attack | SecurityWeek.Com
Singtel's second unit faces cyber attack weeks after Optus data breach | Reuters
Zoetop pays $1.9m to settle customer data theft case • The Register
CommonSpirit Health IT still suffering after cyber attack • The Register
Over 80,000 DJI drone IDs exposed in data leak: Report (dronedj.com)
High-Value Targets: String of Aussie Telco Breaches Continues (darkreading.com)
Data of 380K patients compromised in hack of 13 anesthesia practices | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Australian police secret agents exposed in Colombian data leak (bleepingcomputer.com)
Toyota Reveals Data Leak of 300,000 Customers - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
INTERPOL arrests ‘Black Axe’ cyber crime syndicate members (bleepingcomputer.com)
Caffeine Phishing-as-a-Service toolkit available in the underground - Security Affairs
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
North Korea's Crypto Hackers Are Paving the Road to Nuclear Armageddon - CNET
Fake Solana Phantom security updates push crypto-stealing malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
'Baby Al Capone' to pay $22m to SIM-swap crypto-heist victim • The Register
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Alternative payment methods are creating new fraud risks - Help Net Security
Prison inmate charged with $11m fraud via cell phone • The Register
Mastercard moves to protect ‘risky and frisky’ transactions • The Register
Deepfakes
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Insurance
Dark Web
Software Supply Chain
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
US airports' sites taken down in DDoS attacks by pro-Russian hackers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russian DDoS attack project pays contributors for more firepower (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cloud/SaaS
Encryption
Microsoft Office 365 uses insecure block ciphers • The Register
Microsoft Office 365 email encryption could expose message content (bleepingcomputer.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Social Media
Training, Education and Awareness
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Cyber Bullying and Cyber Stalking
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Backup and Recovery
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Vladimir Putin’s hybrid war has begun and the West must be ready | Evening Standard
Internet outages hit Ukraine following Russian missile strikes (bitdefender.com)
Seven 'Creepy' Backdoors Used by Lebanese Cyberspy Group in Israel Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Researchers Uncover Custom Backdoors and Spying Tools Used by Polonium Hackers (thehackernews.com)
We must tackle Europe’s winter cyber threats head-on – POLITICO
Researchers Detail Malicious Tools Used by Cyber Espionage Group Earth Aughisky (thehackernews.com)
‘Zero-Click’ Spyware Emerges as a Menacing Mobile Threat - Bloomberg
SpaceX’s Starlink terminals in Ukraine back online after outages | Financial Times
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
German Cyber security Chief Accused of Russian Contact Faces Sacking - IT Security Guru
Russian DDoS attack project pays contributors for more firepower (bleepingcomputer.com)
Extreme Networks admits sales to banned Russian arms maker • The Register
Nation State Actors – China
UK Spy Chief to Warn of 'Huge' China Tech Threat | SecurityWeek.Com
China’s attack motivations, tactics, and how CISOs can mitigate threats | CSO Online
China will manipulate new tech for global influence, warns GCHQ boss | Metro News
UK telcos legally required to remove Huawei equipment • The Register
Chinese-linked hackers targeted U.S. state legislature, researchers say - CyberScoop
New Chinese Malware Attack Framework Targets Windows, macOS, and Linux Systems (thehackernews.com)
UK to designate China a ‘threat’ in hawkish foreign policy shift | Foreign policy | The Guardian
WIP19, a new Chinese APT targets IT Service Providers and Telcos - Security Affairs
China-linked Budworm APT returns to target a US entity - Security Affairs
We must tackle China’s satellite-busting technology, says GCHQ chief | News | The Times
GCHQ boss: China could use Digital Yuan to swerve sanctions • The Register
Young people using TikTok is no problem, GCHQ chief says | TikTok | The Guardian
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
Concerns Over Fortinet Flaw Mount; PoC Released, Exploit Activity Grows (darkreading.com)
Microsoft October 2022 Patch Tuesday fixes zero-day used in attacks, 84 flaws (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft Addresses Zero-Days, but Exchange Server Exploit Chain Remains Unpatched (darkreading.com)
Auth bypass bug in FortiOS, FortiProxy is exploited in the wild (CVE-2022-40684) - Help Net Security
Chrome 106 Update Patches Several High-Severity Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Researchers Detail Windows Zero-Day Vulnerability Patched Last Month (thehackernews.com)
Almost 900 servers hacked using Zimbra zero-day flaw (bleepingcomputer.com)
Patch Tuesday: Critical Flaws in ColdFusion, Adobe Commerce | SecurityWeek.Com
Aruba fixes critical RCE and auth bypass flaws in EdgeConnect (bleepingcomputer.com)
WordPress Vulnerability In Shortcodes Ultimate Impacts 700,000 Sites (searchenginejournal.com)
Critical Open Source vm2 Sandbox Escape Bug Affects Millions (darkreading.com)
VMware vCenter Server bug disclosed last year still not patched (bleepingcomputer.com)
Other News
Board members should make CISOs their strategic partners - Help Net Security
5 Attack Elements Every Organisations Should Be Monitoring (darkreading.com)
Ukraine’s Starlink problems show the dangers of digital dependency | Financial Times (ft.com)
Here's 5 of the world's riskiest connected devices - Help Net Security
Older, Stored Data Is Cyber Security Risk, Report Warns - MSSP Alert
What the Uber Breach Verdict Means for CISOs in the US (darkreading.com)
Increasing network visibility is critical to improving security posture - Help Net Security
What the Uber Hack can teach us about navigating IT Security (bleepingcomputer.com)
Consumers want more transparency on how companies manage their data - Help Net Security
Gaming Is Booming. That’s Catnip for Cyber criminals. - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
Fear of cyber criminals drives cyber security improvements - Help Net Security
The next Ford Mustang won’t be easy to tune; blame cyber security | Ars Technica
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
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Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.