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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 25 August 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 25 August 2023:
-Cloud Hosting Firm Loses All Customer Data After Ransomware Attack
-Would You Infect Others to Rid Yourself of Ransomware?
-Artificial Intelligence and USBs Drive 8% Rise in Cyber Attacks
-Ransomware Attacks Broke Records in July, Mainly Driven By One Group
-Cyber Risk in The Boardroom
-Malware-Infected Advertising Grows Ever More Sophisticated, And More Damaging
-Cyber Security is Everyone’s Responsibility
-QR Code Hacks Are Another Thing to Worry About Now
-Security Basics Aren’t So Basic Anymore
-Apple MacOS Security Myths
-Security Leaders Report Misalignment of Investments and Risk Reduction
-Many CISOs Tout SaaS (Cloud) Cyber Security Confidence, but 79% Admit to SaaS Incidents, New Report Finds
-If You Ever Used Duolingo, Watch Out for Phishing Email
-91% of Security and IT Professionals Agree Cyber Criminals are Already Using AI in Email Attacks
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Cloud Hosting Firm Loses All Customer Data After Ransomware Attack
CloudNordic, a Danish cloud hosting provider, has told customers to consider all of their data as having been lost following a ransomware infection that encrypted the large Danish cloud provider. The threat actors had destroyed the organisation’s backups, which prevented the firm from recovering effectively. The attack also impacted AzeroCloud, which is owned by the same company.
Worryingly, many organisations believe that having backups and using the cloud is enough for them to be able to recover from any cyber incident; unfortunately, as shown in the CloudNordic and AzeroCloud attacks, it is not enough. Organisations need to have a recovery plan in place which is tested and improved, to best strengthen themselves in the event of a cyber incident.
Sources: [The Register] [Bleeping Computer] [Help Net Security]
Would You Infect Others to Rid Yourself of Ransomware?
Hackers continually develop ransomware with new and creative attack methods that keep internet security professionals on their toes and pose challenges for people trying to detect threats. Victims of ransomware usually see messages asking them to pay for file access restoration; however, the Popcorn Time ransomware group takes a different approach to getting victims involved.
The Popcorn Time ransomware approach works via the referral method. The ransomware group is willing to give victims access to their files if they send the referral link to two other people, extending the attacker’s reach. Most people would hesitate to distribute a ransomware link through email, WhatsApp, or another method that is easy for victims to identify them as the perpetrators. Law enforcement bodies categorise ransomware attacks as crimes that come with hefty fines and prison time. Even those choosing to send the links to people they know face disastrous consequences beyond law enforcement, including the loss of jobs and relationships.
Source: [CyberNews]
Artificial Intelligence and USBs Drive 8% Rise in Cyber Attacks
Checkpoint’s 2023 Mid-Year Security Report shows an 8% surge in global weekly cyber attacks during Q2, marking the most significant increase in two years. The report highlights the fusion of advanced artificial intelligence (AI) technology with traditional tools like USB devices used for disruptive cyber attacks.
Other significant findings include the evolution of ransomware tactics. The report found that ransomware groups are exploiting vulnerabilities in common corporate software and shifting focus from encrypting data to stealing it. USB devices have resurfaced as threats, employed by both state-affiliated groups and cyber-criminals to distribute malware globally. The misuse of AI has escalated, as attackers use generative AI tools for phishing emails, keystroke monitoring malware and basic ransomware code.
Source: [InfoSecurity Magazine]
Ransomware Attacks Broke Records in July, Mainly Driven By One Group
A number of ransomware actors are utilising the threat of releasing sensitive data to get organisations to pay ransoms; in some cases this is combined with encryption to give the actor two avenues of payment. A report has found there were over 500 attacks last month, an increase of 153% compared to one year ago, and a 16% increase compared to June. Within Europe, there was a 59% increase in ransomware attacks from June to July.
Part of the significant rise is due to the ransomware group called Cl0p, whose attack on the MOVEit software has accounted for hundreds of victims this year. The Cl0p ransomware group has kept its promise to publish files on the clearweb of all its victims if contact was not made. The clearweb is simply what we know as the internet; anyone can access it. As such, there will be many organisations who are now having their sensitive data published and readily viewable for anyone who has access to the internet.
Sources: [Gov Info Seccurity] [Security Week] [ZDNET] [Cyber News]
Cyber Risk in The Boardroom
The relationship between the CISO and the wider boardroom has become increasingly cooperative, with 77% of CEO’s seeing cyber as a strategic function and a potential source of competitive advantage. While it is ultimately up to the board to take steps to keep cybersecurity high on the agenda, the CISO also has a responsibility to press the message and bridge any gaps.
CISOs must deliver concerns, strategies and recommendations in a business-first manner, while avoiding jargon and overly technical language. Attracting and retaining good quality senior security professionals is very challenging in the current market and Black Arrow offer a fractional CISO service, giving access to a whole team of specialists with wider expertise, experience and backgrounds, for less than the cost of hiring one individual.
Sources: [Security Week] [TechRadar]
Malware-Infected Advertising Grows Ever More Sophisticated, And More Damaging
The malware exploits known as malware-infected ads, or malvertising, have been around for decades, but new reports point to a steady rise in efficacy. With malvertising, the infected ads are typically placed on legitimate ad networks, which makes them more difficult to spot and remove. The technique continues to use more and more sophisticated mechanisms for getting their infections spread throughout the web and keeping them running for a long time. The exploits can operate in one of several ways, including intercepting a user’s clickstream on random hyperlinks and substituting them with redirects to advertising websites.
Adblockers either on endpoints or at the network level can also help to prevent malvertising from causing harm.
Source: [SiliconAngle]
Cyber Security is Everyone’s Responsibility
A recent survey found that 41% of respondents said that poor quality training, or a lack of training altogether, and insider threats were impacting their organisation’s security. Cyber security involves everyone as any employee can be an entry point for a cyber incident, but they also have the power to prevent one. It is important to make sure all employees are provided adequate training. Not every role requires the same training however, so it is important for organisations to identify and provide training that is appropriate to employees. Black Arrow provide live in person and online instructor lead cyber security training, both through Cyber Risk and Governance Workshops for Senior Leadership and Awareness, Behaviour and Culture Training for employees and contractors.
Source: [IT Pro Today]
QR Code Hacks Are Another Thing to Worry About Now
One of the upcoming technologies thrust upon us is QR codes. At this point, you can find them at most restaurants and parking sites. You simply scan the code and you are taken to the relevant site, for example, the menu for the restaurant. Attackers have cottoned on to this and started to use QR codes in phishing attacks; the idea being that the victim will scan the code without scrutinising it and be taken to a malicious website instead.
Source: [Bloomberg]
Security Basics Aren’t So Basic Anymore
The basics of cyber security, it turns out, aren’t so basic anymore. What was considered basic has moved way beyond just having firewalls and antivirus, and the most basic controls nowadays include more advanced controls such as robust identity and access management, multi-factor authentication (MFA) and patching and vulnerability management. Many of these now basic controls are lacking or non-existent across the economy according to cyber security experts. A report found that only 28% of Microsoft users had MFA enabled as 2022 closed.
You can’t solve all the problems at once. However, progress on these fronts also relies heavily on the need for a cultural shift. Organisations need to get to the point where they view cyber security in the same light as locks on doors and seatbelts in cars.
Source: [CioDive]
Apple MacOS Security Myths
Apple has maintained a reputation as being more secure than other manufacturers, and whilst Apple has put many different security mechanisms into its operating system, no technology is bulletproof. Assuming an Apple device is invulnerable can lead users to believe that their Mac will not get viruses or be subject to a plethora of other cyber threats. As a result, this can lead to poor cyber hygiene from the individual, as they assume they are safe regardless of what they do. Apple users need to remain every bit as aware of risks, social engineering, keeping devices up to date, and having appropriate security controls.
Source: [Huntress]
Security Leaders Report Misalignment of Investments and Risk Reduction
The cyber risk landscape was analysed in a recent report that examined the amount of risk that organisations are willing to accept, their resource constraints and key priorities for approaching cyber risk in the future. The report found 66% of respondents indicating that they have limited visibility and insight into their cyber risk profiles, hindering their ability to prioritise investments and allocate resources effectively. 67% of organisations experienced a breach requiring attention within the last two years despite having traditional threat-based security measures in place. Further, 61% of security executives expressed concerns over the current misalignment between cyber security investments and their organisation's risk reduction priorities.
Source: [InfoSecurity Magazine]
Many CISOs Tout SaaS (Cloud) Cyber Security Confidence, but 79% Admit to Incidents
Cyber security, IT, and business leaders alike recognise SaaS (cloud) cyber security as an increasingly important part of the cyber threat landscape. And at first glance, respondents appear generally optimistic about their SaaS cyber security as 85% answered that they are confident or very confident in their company's or customer's data security in sanctioned SaaS apps.
Despite the confidence, 79% of respondents confirmed that their organisation had identified SaaS cyber security incidents over the past 12 months. Many of those incidents occurred in environments with cyber security policies in place and enforced, as 66% of respondents claimed in their responses.
Source: [The Hacker News]
If You Ever Used Duolingo, Watch Out for Phishing Email
Users of Duolingo, past and present, should be wary of phishing emails as data on about 2.6 million accounts were scraped through an exposed application programming interface (API), and then offered on a hacking forum back in January. Login and real names, email addresses, phone numbers, and courses studied were part of the collection, which went for $1,500. Now that data has resurfaced on a different forum, and at a substantially lower cost of just a few dollars, users of the service can expect this data to be used in fresh phishing campaigns.
Source: [PCWorld]
91% of Security and IT Professionals: Criminals are Already Using AI in Email Attacks
Recent research found that 91% of security and IT professionals are noticing cyber criminals already using AI as part of email attack campaigns, with 74% indicating they have experienced an increase in the use of AI by cyber criminals in the past six months. This is worrying as 52% reported that email security is among one of their top three concerns.
Organisations need to make sure that their technologies, procedures and policies are updated to factor in AI-enabled email attacks to help reduce the risk they pose to the organisation. Such improvements should also include employees.
Source: [PR Newswire]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Cyber security 'number one on the agenda in boardrooms,' Cramer says (cnbc.com)
Firms have mere hours to deflect cyber attacks, warns cyber security CEO (cointelegraph.com)
The End of “Groundhog Day” for the Security in the Boardroom Discussion? - SecurityWeek
How Cyber Security Leaders Can Help Lower Expenses While Reducing Risk (informationweek.com)
Cyber crime: A Multi-Billion-Dollar Industry (thecyberwire.com)
How the downmarket impacted enterprise cyber security budgets - Help Net Security
The Changing Landscape of Cyber Security Education (inforisktoday.com)
Protect Your Cyber Security Budget and Your Organisation | Dell USA
Rapid cyber attacks demand modernised security, says Palo Alto CEO (crypto.news)
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Cl0p dumps all MOVEit victim data on clearnet, threat insiders talk ransom strategy | Cybernews
Cuba ransomware gang looking for unpatched Veeam installations: Report | IT Business
Ransomware attacks broke records in July, mainly driven by this one group | ZDNET
Hosting firm says it lost all customer data after ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Would You Infect Others to Rid Yourself of Ransomware? (makeuseof.com)
How Application Allowlisting Combats Ransomware Attacks (securityintelligence.com)
Akira ransomware gang spotted targeting Cisco VPN products to hack organisations-Security Affairs
Why Ransomware Gangs Opt for Encryption-Less Attacks (govinfosecurity.com)
MOVEit Health Data Breach Tally Keeps Growing (inforisktoday.com)
British intelligence is tipping off ransomware targets to disrupt attacks (therecord.media)
What the Hive Ransomware Case Says About RaaS and Cryptocurrency (darkreading.com)
Three trends to watch in the growing threat landscape (betanews.com)
Ransomware Victims
Cl0p dumps all MOVEit victim data on clearnet, threat insiders talk ransom strategy | Cybernews
Hosting firm says it lost all customer data after ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
BlackCat ransomware group claims the hack of Seiko network -Security Affairs
Mysterious Cyber Attack Shuts Down Yet More Telescopes For Weeks | IFLScience
St Helens Council hit by suspected Ransomware cyber attack | St Helens Star
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
91% of security pros say cyber criminals are using AI in email attacks | Security Magazine
Cyber criminals turn to AI to bypass modern email security measures - Help Net Security
New Generation of Phishing Hides Behind Trusted Services (securityintelligence.com)
New phishing campaign recognised in Europe and South America | Security Magazine
If you ever used Duolingo, watch out for phishing emails | PCWorld
Open redirect flaws increasingly exploited by phishers - Help Net Security
How to spot phishing on a hacked WordPress website | Kaspersky official blog
New Telegram Bot "Telekopye" Powering Large-scale Phishing Scams from Russia (thehackernews.com)
eBay Users Beware Russian 'Telekopye' Telegram Phishing Bot (darkreading.com)
Phish in a Barrel: Real-World Cyber Attack Examples (govinfosecurity.com)
Email Security: Top 5 Threats and How to Protect Your Business - ReadWrite
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Blockchain Capital’s Bart Stephens Lost $6.3 Million In SIM-Swap Hack (forbes.com)
What Is Virtual Kidnapping and How Can You Fight It? (makeuseof.com)
Artificial Intelligence
Cyber criminals turn to AI to bypass modern email security measures - Help Net Security
Tricks for making AI chatbots break rules are freely available online | New Scientist
What Is Virtual Kidnapping and How Can You Fight It? (makeuseof.com)
Generative AI Is Scraping Your Data. So, Now What? (darkreading.com)
Fake versions of Google Bard are spreading malware | TechRadar
AI and the evolution of surveillance systems - Help Net Security
Thinking of Deploying Generative AI? You May Already Have (govinfosecurity.com)
Three trends to watch in the growing threat landscape (betanews.com)
Careful -- Hackers are targeting Google Bard ads for malware | Digital Trends
Malware
Serious WinRAR Flaw Can Be Exploited to Launch Malware (pcmag.com)
Hackers use VPN provider's code certificate to sign malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
HiatusRAT Malware Resurfaces: Taiwan Firms and US Military Under Attack (thehackernews.com) Ask the Mac Guy: macOS Security Myths (huntress.com)
New Variant of XLoader macOS Malware Disguised as 'OfficeNote' Productivity App (thehackernews.com)
Researchers Uncover New Lazarus Group Malware Details | Decipher (duo.com)
Mobile
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Internet of Things – IoT
TP-Link smart bulbs can let hackers steal your WiFi password (bleepingcomputer.com)
When Your Home Security System Turns the Camera on You | The Epoch Times
Anticipating the next wave of IoT cyber security challenges - Help Net Security
The Physical Impact of Cyber Attacks on Cities (darkreading.com)
Smart Cities: Utopian Dream, Security Nightmare, or Political Gimmick? - SecurityWeek
Data Breaches/Leaks
Tesla Data Breach Investigation Reveals Inside Job (darkreading.com)
Leak of 75k staff records was insiders' fault, Tesla claims • The Register
Guernsey CCTV investigation widened after more footage leaked | Bailiwick Express Jersey
Scraped data of 2.6 million Duolingo users released on hacking forum (bleepingcomputer.com)
Thousands of Charity Donors Have Details Leaked Onto Dark Web | The Epoch Times
How a Christie’s website revealed where people kept their art | The Seattle Times
Defence contractor Belcan leaks admin password with a list of flaws-Security Affairs
What lessons must be learned from the Electoral Register cyber attack? | theHRD (thehrdirector.com)
5 Early Warning Indicators That Are Key to Protecting National Secrets (darkreading.com)
University of Minnesota Confirms Data Breach, Says Ransomware Not Involved - SecurityWeek
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Check Point reveals 8% spike in global cyber attacks by mid-2023 (securitybrief.co.nz)
UK Court Convicts Lapsus$ Hacker for Breaching ISP BT and EE UPDATE - ISPreview UK
Cyber crime: A Multi-Billion-Dollar Industry (thecyberwire.com)
Hacking group KittenSec claims to 'pwn anything we see' to expose corruption | CyberScoop
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Blockchain Capital’s Bart Stephens Lost $6.3 Million In SIM-Swap Hack (forbes.com)
What the Hive Ransomware Case Says About RaaS and Cryptocurrency (darkreading.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Leak of 75k staff records was insiders' fault, Tesla claims • The Register
Three trends to watch in the growing threat landscape (betanews.com)
Phish in a Barrel: Real-World Cyber Attack Examples (govinfosecurity.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Interpol arrest 14 who allegedly scammed $40m from victims • The Register
Germany Hunts for Cyber Criminals Amid Billion-Euro Scams - Bloomberg
Sneaky Amazon Google ad leads to Microsoft support scam (bleepingcomputer.com)
Blockchain Capital’s Bart Stephens Lost $6.3 Million In SIM-Swap Hack (forbes.com)
Surge in identity crime victims reporting suicidal thoughts - Help Net Security
Impersonation Attacks
Deepfakes
Insurance
Cyber security insurance is missing the risk - Help Net Security
Cyber Security Insurance Market Size & Share Analysis - (globenewswire.com)
Dark Web
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Cloud/SaaS
Cloud hosting firms hit by devastating ransomware attack - Help Net Security
Warning: Attackers Abusing Legitimate Internet Services (inforisktoday.com)
Maintaining consistent security in diverse cloud infrastructures - Help Net Security
How API authentication vulnerabilities are at the center of cloud security concerns | CSO Online
Lack of visibility into cloud access policies leaves enterprises flying blind - Help Net Security
Cloud services are creating more cyber-risks for telcos - Mobile Europe
Identity and Access Management
Ongoing Duo outage causes Azure Auth authentication errors (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cisco's Duo Security suffers major authentication outage • The Register
Encryption
API
Understanding how attackers exploit APIs is more important than ever - Help Net Security
How API authentication vulnerabilities are at the centre of cloud security concerns | CSO Online
Biometrics
ICO publishes guidance on use of biometric data in the UK - Tech Monitor
Is Facial Recognition Technology Becoming a Privacy Risk? (makeuseof.com)
Facial Recognition Technology (FRT) Statistics for 2023 (techreport.com)
Social Media
Malvertising
Sneaky Amazon Google ad leads to Microsoft support scam (bleepingcomputer.com)
Malware-infected advertising grows ever more sophisticated, and lethal - SiliconANGLE
Careful -- Hackers are targeting Google Bard ads for malware | Digital Trends
Training, Education and Awareness
2023 Cyber Security Awareness Month Appeal: Make Online Security Easier (govtech.com)
The Changing Landscape of Cyber Security Education (inforisktoday.com)
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Cyber Bullying, Cyber Stalking and Sextortion
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Apple security updates could be banned by British government (9to5mac.com)
How EU lawmakers can make mandatory vulnerability disclosure responsible - Help Net Security
Morgan Stanley Fined for UK Energy Trading WhatsApp Breach (yahoo.com)
Controversial Cyber crime Law Passes in Jordan (darkreading.com)
Experian Pays $650,000 to Settle Spam Claims - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Strengthening Cyber Security In Finance: A Look At EU DORA Regulations (forbes.com)
Backup and Recovery
Data Protection
ICO publishes guidance on use of biometric data in the UK - Tech Monitor
Experian Pays $650,000 to Settle Spam Claims - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Unrealistic expectations exacerbate the cyber security talent shortage - Help Net Security
It's Time to Approach The Cyber Security Skills Gap Differently - IT Security Guru
How To Become Chief Information Security Officer - The Economic Times (indiatimes.com)
4 ways simulation training alleviates team burnout - Help Net Security
Tens of thousands of students receive free training to build cyber skills - The Business Magazine
5 Ways SMBs Can Bridge the Cyber Security Skills Gap | Mimecast
The Importance of Accessible and Inclusive Cyber Security (securityintelligence.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Interpol arrest 14 who allegedly scammed $40m from victims • The Register
UK Court Convicts Lapsus$ Hacker for Breaching ISP BT and EE UPDATE - ISPreview UK
Germany Hunts for Cyber Criminals Amid Billion-Euro Scams - Bloomberg
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Russia
Incident response lessons learned from the Russian attack on Viasat | CSO Online
Ukrainian hackers claim to leak emails of Russian parliament deputy chief (therecord.media)
New Telegram Bot "Telekopye" Powering Large-scale Phishing Scams from Russia (thehackernews.com)
China
Mounting Cyber Espionage and Hacking Threat from China - Modern Diplomacy
HiatusRAT Malware Resurfaces: Taiwan Firms and US Military Under Attack (thehackernews.com)
New Supply Chain Attack Hit Close to 100 Victims—and Clues Point to China | WIRED
Exposed: the Chinese spy using LinkedIn to hunt UK secrets (thetimes.co.uk)
FBI: Suspected Chinese actors continue Barracuda ESG attacks | TechTarget
Microsoft says Chinese hacking crew is targeting Taiwan | CyberScoop
US space companies face foreign spy threat, intelligence agencies say (usatoday.com)
North Korea
N. Korean Kimsuky APT targets S. Korea-US military exercises-Security Affairs
Researchers Uncover New Lazarus Group Malware Details | Decipher (duo.com)
Misc/Other/Unknown
Vulnerability Management
NCSC issues warning on cyber vulnerabilities (ukdefencejournal.org.uk)
How EU lawmakers can make mandatory vulnerability disclosure responsible - Help Net Security
Vulnerabilities
Juniper Networks fixes flaws leading to RCE in firewalls and switches - Help Net Security
Serious WinRAR Flaw Can Be Exploited to Launch Malware (pcmag.com)
Ivanti issues fix for third zero-day flaw exploited in the wild | TechTarget
Ivanti Ships Urgent Patch for API Authentication Bypass Vulnerability - SecurityWeek
FBI: Patches for Recent Barracuda ESG Zero-Day Ineffective - SecurityWeek
Critical Adobe ColdFusion Flaw Added to CISA's Exploited Vulnerability Catalog (thehackernews.com)
3,000 Openfire Servers Exposed to Attacks Targeting Recent Vulnerability - SecurityWeek
Western Digital patches potentially dangerous security flaw, so update now | TechRadar
Tools and Controls
How Cyber Security Leaders Can Help Lower Expenses While Reducing Risk (informationweek.com)
Security leaders report misalignment of investments and risk reduction | Security Magazine
Cyber security insurance is missing the risk - Help Net Security
Bolstering Cyber Security: Why Browser Security Is Crucial (inforisktoday.com)
How Application Allowlisting Combats Ransomware Attacks (securityintelligence.com)
The Vanishing Data Loss Prevention (DLP) Category - IT Security Guru
Unveiling the Hidden Risks of Routing Protocols (darkreading.com)
Hackers use VPN provider's code certificate to sign malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Network detection and response in the modern era - Help Net Security
What’s Beyond SASE? The Next Steps (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Prevention First: Don’t Neglect Endpoint Security | CSO Online
More Than Half of Browser Extensions Pose Security Risks (darkreading.com)
Protect Your Cyber Security Budget and Your Organisation | Dell USA
How the downmarket impacted enterprise cyber security budgets - Help Net Security
SEC Cyber Security Rules: Considerations for Incident Response Planning
Maintaining consistent security in diverse cloud infrastructures - Help Net Security
How API authentication vulnerabilities are at the centre of cloud security concerns | CSO Online
The Needs of a Modernized SOC for Hybrid Cloud (securityintelligence.com)
2023 Cyber Security Awareness Month Appeal: Make Online Security Easier (govtech.com)
The MOVEit hack and what it taught us about application security (bleepingcomputer.com)
The Changing Landscape of Cyber Security Education (inforisktoday.com)
Akamai Survey Finds Third-Party Defences Help Reduce Risk from Online Threats (prnewswire.com)
5 Best Practices for Implementing Risk-First Cyber Security (darkreading.com)
What's Going on With LastPass, and is it Safe to Use? (securityintelligence.com)
Malicious web application transactions skyrocket 500% (securitybrief.co.nz)
Other News
Our health care system may soon receive a much-needed cyber security boost | Ars Technica
Swan Retail cyber attack: 300 retailers crippled by breach (techmonitor.ai)
Cyber Attack on Energy One affects corporate systems in Australia and the UK | CSO Online
Vendors criticize Microsoft for repeated security failings | TechTarget
Microsoft's become a cyber security titan. That could be a problem - Tech Monitor
Global Naval Communication Market Research Report (globenewswire.com)
IT's rising role in physical security technology - Help Net Security
Hackers knocked out San Francisco's main real estate database | Fortune
Microsoft's 6 Biggest Hacks: Is Better Security Needed? (makeuseof.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.
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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 28 October 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 28 October 2022:
-‘Biggest Cyber Risk Is Complacency, Not Hackers’ - UK Information Commissioner Issues Warning as Construction Company Fined £4.4 Million
-Ransomware Threat Shifts from US to EMEA and APAC
-Phishing Attacks Increase by Over 31% In Third Quarter
-UK Urged to Watch for Fraud as People Aim to Make Extra Cash in Cost of Living Crisis
-HR Departments Play a Key Role in Cyber Security
-The Long-Term Psychological Effects of Ransomware Attacks
-7 Hidden Social Media Cyber Risks for Enterprises
-54% of Staff Would Reconsider Working for a Firm That Had Experienced a Cyber Breach, Research Finds
-Evolve as Fast as the Cyber Criminals: Protect Your Business Now, Before it’s Too Late
-Enterprise Ransomware Preparedness Improving but Still Lacking
-Why Are There So Many Data Breaches? A Growing Industry of Criminals is Brokering in Stolen Data
-How The "pizza123" Password Could Take Down an Organisation
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
‘Biggest Cyber Risk Is Complacency, Not Hackers’ - UK Information Commissioner Issues Warning as Construction Company Fined £4.4 Million
The UK Information Commissioner has warned that companies are leaving themselves open to cyber attack by ignoring crucial measures like updating software and training staff.
The warning comes as the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) issued a fine of £4,400,000 to Interserve Group Ltd, a Berkshire based construction company, for failing to keep personal information of its staff secure. This is a breach of data protection law.
The ICO found that the company failed to put appropriate security measures in place to prevent a cyber attack, which enabled hackers to access the personal data of up to 113,000 employees through a phishing email.
The compromised data included personal information such as contact details, national insurance numbers, and bank account details, as well as special category data including ethnic origin, religion, details of any disabilities, sexual orientation, and health information.
John Edwards, UK Information Commissioner, said:
“The biggest cyber risk businesses face is not from hackers outside of their company, but from complacency within their company. If your business doesn't regularly monitor for suspicious activity in its systems and fails to act on warnings, or doesn't update software and fails to provide training to staff, you can expect a similar fine from my office.
“Leaving the door open to cyber attackers is never acceptable, especially when dealing with people’s most sensitive information. This data breach had the potential to cause real harm to Interserve’s staff, as it left them vulnerable to the possibility of identity theft and financial fraud.
“Cyber attacks are a global concern, and businesses around the world need to take steps to guard against complacency. The ICO and NCSC already work together to offer advice and support to businesses, and this week I will be meeting with regulators from around the world, to work towards consistent international cyber guidance so that people’s data is protected wherever a company is based.”
Ransomware Threat Shifts from US to EMEA and APAC
The volume of ransomware detections in Q3 2022 was the lowest in two years, but certain geographical regions have become bigger targets as attacks on US organisations wane, according to SonicWall. The security vendor used its own threat detection network, including over one million security sensors in more than 200 countries, to reveal the current landscape.
The good news is that global malware volumes have remained flat for the past three quarters, amounting to a total of over four billion detections in the year to date. Of these, ransomware is also trending down after a record-breaking 2021. Even so, SonicWall detected 338 million compromise attempts in the first three quarters of the year.
Year-to-date ransomware attempts in 2022 have already exceeded the full-year totals from four of the past five years, the vendor claimed. While attacks on US organisations dipped by 51% year-on-year during the period, they increased significantly in the UK (20%), EMEA (38%) and APAC (56%).
The cyber-warfare battlefront continues to shift, posing dangerous threats to organisations of all sizes. With expanding attack surfaces, growing numbers of threats and the current geopolitical landscape, it should be no surprise that even the most seasoned IT professional can feel overwhelmed.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/ransomware-threat-shifts-from-us/
Phishing Attacks Increase by Over 31% In Third Quarter
Email security and threat detection company Vade has found that phishing emails in the third quarter this year increased by more than 31% quarter on quarter, with the number of emails containing malware in the first three quarters surpassing the 2021 level by 55.8 million.
Malware emails in the third quarter of 2022 alone increased by 217% compared to same period in 2021. Malware email volume peaked in July, reaching 19.2 million, before month-over-month declines in August and September, with numbers dropping to 16.8 million and 16.5 million respectively.
According to the report, email is the preferred attack vector for phishing and malware, as it gives hackers a direct channel to users, the weakest link in an organisation’s attack surface. The report analyses phishing and malware data captured by Vade, which does business internationally.
As attacks become more sophisticated, Vade said, they also become increasingly capable of evading the basic security offered by email providers, which almost eight in 10 businesses still rely on, according to Vade’s research.
While the activity of threat actors fluctuates, Vade’s research found that impersonating trusted and established brands remains the most popular strategy for hackers. In the third quarter of 2022, Facebook was the most impersonated brand for the second consecutive quarter, followed by Google, MTB, PayPal, and Microsoft.
The financial services sector remains the most impersonated industry, representing 32% of phishing emails detected by Vade, followed by cloud at 25%, social media at 22%, and internet/telco at 13%.
As phishing attacks increase, the techniques used by threat actors continue to evolve. While phishing campaigns were traditionally large scale and random, more recent campaigns seen by Vade suggest that hackers have pivoted to using more targeted campaigns.
UK Urged to Watch for Fraud as People Aim to Make Extra Cash in Cost of Living Crisis
Brits have been warned to “stay alert for fraud” as more people are out to make extra cash as the cost of living rises across the country.
UK Finance said that more than half (56%) of people admitted that they are likely to look for opportunities to make extra money in the coming months, which could leave some people more susceptible to fraud.
According to the trade association’s Take Five To Stop Fraud campaign, one in six, or 16%, of people said the rising cost of living means they are more likely to respond to an unprompted approach from someone offering an investment opportunity or a loan.
Young people were more likely to be at risk, the data suggested, which surveyed 2,000 people across the UK. More than a third (34%) of 18 to 34-year-olds said they are more likely to respond to an unprompted approach from someone, with three in 10 (30%) also more likely to provide their personal or financial details to secure the arrangement.
Overall, three in five people (60%) said they are concerned about falling victim to financial fraud or a scam. It comes as recent figures from UK Finance showed that £609.8m was lost due to fraud and scams in the first half of this year.
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/uk-watch-for-fraud-extra-cash-cost-of-living-crisis-230154352.html
HR Departments Play a Key Role in Cyber Security
A common shortcoming of human resources (HR) departments is that — despite being an operation designed to put humans at the centre of how an organisation is run — they often fail to adequately align with their IT counterparts and the core technology systems that define how a business is run and protected from cyber-risk.
Insufficient coordination between HR and IT processes and procedures remains common and gives rise to security gaps that can represent some of the most dangerous vulnerabilities on a company's attack surface. Let's examine the scope of the challenge and some key cyber-asset management priorities that can close the schism for a more robust cyber security posture.
Gone are the days when HR's role in securing the enterprise relied on basic tutorials for employees about protecting passwords on company equipment. Today's threat environment intersects with the workforce in more ways than ever — from bring-your-own-device (BYOD) and authentication gaps to user vulnerabilities that make spear-phishing seem quaint. Traditional social engineering attacks are now being augmented by zero-click exploits that compromise employee devices without the user ever having to click a link or take any action at all.
Beyond malicious threats, even routine HR processes can introduce risk to the organisation when they're not adequately aligned with the IT processes in an organisation. As just one example, when an employee leaves a company, the offboarding goes far beyond just the exit interview to also include removing access to multiple enterprise systems, accounts, and devices — all of which require close coordination between HR and IT personnel and systems.
To better secure the enterprise, it's mission-critical to get HR and IT more united in a common and advanced understanding of cyber hygiene and risk mitigation. This relies on enhanced awareness of the impact that HR processes have on cyber assets in other parts of the organisation, as well as the HR role in access management for employees and contractors. This requires asset visibility that must be ongoing and in real time, since our roles, devices, and access to data and systems may change multiple times over the course of our employment.
https://www.darkreading.com/vulnerabilities-threats/hr-departments-play-a-key-role-in-cybersecurity
The Long-Term Psychological Effects of Ransomware Attacks
Northwave has conducted scientific research into the psychological effects of a ransomware crisis on both organisations and individuals. The findings reveal the deep marks that a ransomware crisis leaves on all those affected. It also shows how their IT and security teams can turn in disarray long after the crisis itself has passed.
The research reveals how the psychological impact of ransomware attacks can persist on people in affected organisations for a very long time. It shows that crisis team members may develop serious symptoms far later. Top management and HR need to take measures against this, in fact right from the very beginning of the crisis. They are the ones bearing responsibility for the well-being of their staff.
They also discovered how teams have fallen apart some time after the crisis, with members leaving or staying home on sick-leave. The study reveals that effects can linger throughout the organisation. All in all the investigation shows that this invisible impact of a cyber crisis is an issue for the general business management, and certainly also for HR.
Northwave regards the response to a cyber attack as occurring in three phases. First comes the actual crisis situation, which evolves into an incident phase after about a week. A plan of action is then in place, and recovery measures are launched. The fire has been largely extinguished after a month or so, with the first (basic) functionalities available again.
Full recovery can take one to two years. Each phase has its specific effects on the minds and bodies of those involved, and by extension, on the organisation or parts of it. “On average a company is down for three weeks following a malware attack,” notes Van der Beijl. “But it surprised us that the impact persists for so long afterwards. Psychological issues are still surfacing a year after the actual crisis.”
One of every seven employees involved in the attack, either directly or indirectly, exhibits severe enough symptoms several months later, at a level considered to be above the clinical threshold at which professional trauma treatment help is needed. One in five employees say they would actually have needed more professional help subsequently in coming to terms with the attack. One in three liked to have more knowledge and concrete tools to deal with the psychological effects of the attack.
A ransomware attack has enduring psychological effects on the way employees view the world. Two-thirds of employees, including those not actually involved in the attack, now believe the world is less safe. As one IT manager pointed out, “I’ve become far more suspicious. The outside world is a dangerous place.”
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/10/25/psychological-effects-ransomware/
7 Hidden Social Media Cyber Risks for Enterprises
Whether they use it to amplify the brand, recruit new employees, advertise new products, or even sell directly to consumers, corporate brands love social media.
According to recent figures, brand advertising on social media is up by 53% in the last year, and that's not accounting for further investments that brands are making in developing and distributing content. They're pushing viral videos, funny memes, podcasts, written material, and more to increase engagement with their customers.
And brands are doing it across not only the old reliable social networks like Facebook and Twitter, but also emerging platforms like TikTok. In fact, according to another recent study, in 2022 marketers are expanding their horizons, with their increased content investments focused on areas like live streaming, long-form and short-form video content, virtual reality and augmented reality content, experimental content, and live audio chat rooms. The top platforms they're focused on most for increasing spending are now TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and LinkedIn.
With the broadening of these social-media marketing strategies comes more risk. Whether an organisation uses social media to amplify its brand, or its executives and employees leverage social channels to bolster their professional and personal brands, these marketing platforms are a breeding ground for a wide range of cyber attacks and scams, including in the areas of artificial intelligence, deepfakes, and biometrics.
Cyber criminals, fraudsters, spies, and activists work around the clock to take advantage of emerging attack surfaces that arise from enterprise use of social media. The article below presents just a few avenues that organisations may overlook when they double-down on their social media investments.
https://www.darkreading.com/application-security/7-hidden-social-media-cyber-risks-enterprises
54% of Staff Would Reconsider Working for a Firm That Had Experienced a Cyber Breach, Research Finds
Over half (54%) of office workers would reconsider working for a company that had recently experienced a cyber breach. That's according to a new study by cyber security technology provider, Encore.
An independent study of 100 C-level executives, 100 Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) and 500 office workers in the US and the UK, conducted by Censuswide, sought to uncover the gap that remains between boards and security teams when it comes to addressing cyber demands.
Only a third (33%) of staff said they would be "completely unphased" if their employer suffered a cyber break-in. The majority (57%) of C-level executives polled said they have been breached in the last 12 months alone. Most office workers, however, were unaware, with only 39% believing their organisation had been the victim of a successful attack.
The immediate financial cost of a cyber-attack remains the number one concern for businesses, but security teams are learning that there is a long tail to these breaches, with employees at risk of losing faith in their company, its ethics and values and its overarching responsibilities to the general public. In a competitive market, this is a stark warning to businesses across the world. Keeping your staff in the dark about cyber risk is a fundamental error, not to mention the additional impact of delayed disclosure to customers.
41% of C-level executives polled named reputational damage as one of the biggest costs to their business following a cyber-attack, with 34% agreeing that loss of clientele or their trust was a significant cost.
Despite many admitting to suffering a cyber breach in the last year, the overwhelming majority (92%) of CISOs and C-level executives polled believe their business is secure at any given moment. Encore believes that a mindset shift is needed at an organisational level, treating cyber incidents and the security of employee and customer data as a fundamental part of normal business operations, not a function that sits on the outside, looking in.
Evolve as Fast as the Cyber Criminals: Protect Your Business Now, Before It’s Too Late
According to the 2022 Cyber Threat Report, 2021 saw a global average increase of 105% in the number of ransomware attacks. Proofpoint's 2022 State of the Phish report said that a staggering 82% of UK businesses that experienced a ransomware attack sent payment to the cyber criminals – believing this was the cheapest and easiest way to regain access to their data. However, in many cases criminals simply took the payment without restoring access and the organisation finds itself on criminal target lists as it has demonstrated that attacks pay off. Even when decryption keys are handed over it can take an extended period of time to restore data.
One attack, on a hospital in Dusseldorf, Germany, was implicated in the death of a patient who had to be diverted to an alternative site as the A&E department had been forced to close due to the loss of core computer systems. It appears that the attack had been misdirected, and the hackers – who were quickly apprehended by the police – handed over the encryption keys immediately when they realised what had happened. Nevertheless, the decryption process was slow. It began in the early hours of September 11 and by September 20 the hospital was still unable to add or retrieve information, or even send emails. 30 servers had been corrupted.
The methods and techniques required to conduct a cyber-attack have never been more accessible. Whether it is on the darknet or through open-source content, the ability to purchase material that allows a malicious user to conduct a cyber-attack is readily available. Conducting a ransomware attack and using it to extort money from companies and government services alike, is now viewed as a viable business model by organised criminals.
Enterprise Ransomware Preparedness Improving but Still Lacking
The majority of organisations have made ransomware preparedness a top-five business priority, yet only half believe their preparedness is stronger than it was two years ago. That is according to a recent survey, "The Long Road Ahead to Ransomware Preparedness" by Enterprise Strategy Group, a division of TechTarget.
Despite warnings and available preparedness resources, ransomware continues to distress companies. Seventy-nine percent of survey respondents said they suffered a successful attack within the last year, and 73% reported they had one or more attacks that caused negative financial impact or disrupted business operations in the same time period.
The good news is the board and the C-suite are finally getting the message that more needs to be done to address impending ransomware attempts. In fact, 79% of respondents said business leaders made ransomware preparedness a top business priority, and 82% of organisations plan to invest more in ransomware preparedness over the next 12 to 18 months.
With preparedness investments expected to grow, the survey asked how organisations currently tackle ransomware. Respondents said the most important prevention tactics involve efforts in the following:
network security (43%)
backup infrastructure security (40%)
endpoint security (39%)
email security (36%)
data encryption (36%)
Ongoing activities cited included data recovery testing, employee security awareness training, response readiness assessments, incident response functional exercises, penetration testing, incident planning and playbook development, phishing simulation programs, tabletop exercises, and blue/red/purple team engagements.
Why Are There So Many Data Breaches? A Growing Industry of Criminals is Brokering in Stolen Data
New details have emerged on the severity of the Australian Medibank hack, which has now affected all users. Optus, Medibank, Woolworths, and, last Friday, electricity provider Energy Australia are all now among the Australian household names that have fallen victim to a data breach.
If it seems like barely a week goes by without news of another incident like this, you would be right. Cyber crime is on the rise – seven major Australian businesses were affected by data breaches in the past month alone.
But why now? And who is responsible for this latest wave of cyber attacks?
In large part, the increasing number of data breaches is being driven by the growth of a global illicit industry that trades in your data. In particular, hackers known as “initial access brokers” specialise in illegally gaining access to victim networks and then selling this access to other cyber criminals.
Hackers and initial access brokers are just one part of a complex and diversifying cyber crime ecosystem. This ecosystem contains various cyber criminal groups who increasingly specialise in one particular aspect of online crime and then work together to carry out the attacks.
Ransomware attacks are complex, involving up to nine different stages. These include gaining access to a victim’s network, stealing data, encrypting a victim’s network, and issuing a ransom demand. Increasingly, these attacks are carried out not by lone cyber criminal groups, but rather by networks of different cyber crime groups, each of which specialises in a different stage of the attack.
Initial access brokers will often carry out the first stage of a ransomware attack. Described by Google’s Threat Analysis Group as “the opportunistic locksmiths of the security world”, it’s their job to gain access to a victim’s network.
How The "pizza123" Password Could Take Down an Organisation
Criminal hackers took responsibility for a recent FastCompany breach, saying they exploited an easily guessed default password, "pizza123." The business magazine reused the weak password across a dozen WordPress accounts, according to the hackers, who described the attack in their own article on FastCompany.com before the publication took the site down.
The breach, the bitter taste of pizza123, and the plight of malicious push notifications, demand caution when selecting and managing passwords.
The hackers claimed to have used the vulnerable password pizza123 to access authentication tokens, Apple News API keys, and Amazon Simple Email Service (SES) tokens. Then they sent offensive push notifications to the home screens of subscribers of the FastCompany channel on the Apple News service.
After decades of investment in sculpting the organisation's brand image, a business can watch its reputation flounder in the face of an obscene push notification. The sentiment of millions of faithful customers can turn sour in an instant. By the time organisations block the messages and make public apologies, the harm is done.
Customers can swap to a competitor, or even sue for the offence when they have entrusted a publisher to provide safe content. Regulatory bodies can fine organisations. The company can spend time and money defending itself in court and restoring its image. But malicious push notifications can do a lot worse than offend customers—criminal hackers can load messages with malware and infect consumer devices, leading to privacy violations and consumer financial fraud.
People often build passwords using the first word that comes to mind and a brief series of numbers. Pizza123 is a perfect example of an easy-to-guess password. Employees will create passwords already appearing on breached password lists. Criminal hackers use brute force attacks to confirm working passwords from the same lists.
Nearly two-thirds of employees reuse their passwords. The more they reuse them across business and personal accounts, the more likely criminal hackers will breach them and test them on the organisation. Hackers know to try the same passwords on different companies they hack because of password reuse.
Robust password management enables fine-grained password policies and policy customisation. With a custom password policy, organisations can increase complexity requirements, like length and previous-password change minimums. A custom password policy with increased complexity requirements will block 95% of weak and breached passwords.
Password length is a particularly critical component of strong passwords. Ninety-three percent of the passwords used in brute force attacks include eight or more characters. A custom password policy can require a minimum password length, decreasing password entropy.
Threats
Ransomware and Extortion
SonicWall: Ransomware down this year, but there’s a catch • The Register
Health insurer Medibank's infosec diagnosis is getting worse • The Register
Microsoft links Raspberry Robin worm to Clop ransomware attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to detect Windows worm that now distributes ransomware • The Register
Ransomware Barrage Aimed at US Healthcare Sector, Feds Warn (darkreading.com)
BlackByte ransomware affiliate also steals victims' data • The Register
Cuba ransomware affiliate targets Ukraine, CERT-UA warns - Security Affairs
OldGremlin Ransomware Fierce Comeback Against Russian Targets (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
CISA warns of ransomware attacks on healthcare providers (techtarget.com)
Ransom Cartel - REvil Rebrand? (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Addressing Ransomware in Hospitals & Medical Devices (trendmicro.com)
Australian Clinical Labs says patient data stolen in ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Vice Society Hackers Confess To Education Sector Ransomware Attacks (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Why Ransomware in Education on the Rise and What That Means for 2023 (thehackernews.com)
Largest EU copper producer Aurubis suffers cyber attack, IT outage (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hive Ransomware Hackers Begin Leaking Data Stolen from Tata Power Energy Company (thehackernews.com)
Ransomware Gangs Ramp Up Industrial Attacks in US (darkreading.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Social engineering attacks anybody could fall victim to - Help Net Security
Twilio Says Employees Targeted in Separate Smishing, Vishing Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Malware
Threat Groups Repurpose Banking Trojans into Backdoors (darkreading.com)
Types of cloud malware and how to defend against them (techtarget.com)
Chrome extensions with 1 million installs hijack targets’ browsers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers use Microsoft IIS web server logs to control malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
Internet of Things – IoT
IoT Fingerprinting Helps Authenticate and Secure All Those Devices (darkreading.com)
IoT security strategy from enterprises using connected devices | Network World
Your CCTV devices can be hacked and weaponized - Help Net Security
Data Breaches/Leaks
Thomson Reuters leaked at least 3TB of sensitive data | Cybernews
See Tickets discloses 2.5 years-long credit card theft breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Twilio discloses another hack from June, blames voice phishing (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Ukrainian charged for operating Raccoon Stealer malware service (bleepingcomputer.com)
Interpol says metaverse opens up new world of cyber crime | Reuters
From Bounty to Exploit Observations About Cyber criminal Contests (trendmicro.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Purpleurchin: Cryptocurrency miners scour GitHub, Heroku • The Register
Cryptomining campaign abused free GitHub account trials (techtarget.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Dealers Report Dramatic Increase in Identity Fraud: Most Lack Effective Protection (darkreading.com)
LinkedIn Releases New Security Features To Combat Fraud (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Beware Of SCAMS As Cost Of Living Bites Finances, Expert Comments (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Insurance
Health insurer Medibank's infosec diagnosis is getting worse • The Register
Cyber Insurance Market 2022: FAQs & Updates with iBynd (trendmicro.com)
Dark Web
Notorious ‘BestBuy’ hacker arraigned for running dark web market (bleepingcomputer.com)
Student arrested for running one of Germany’s largest dark web markets (bleepingcomputer.com)
British hacker arraigned for running The Real Deal dark web marketplace - Security Affairs
Software Supply Chain
How the Software Supply Chain Security is Threatened by Hackers (thehackernews.com)
Open Source Is Just the Tip of the Iceberg in Software Supply Chain Security (darkreading.com)
Consumer behaviours are the root of open source risk - Help Net Security
Denial of Service DoS/DDoS
Key observations on DDoS attacks in H1 2022 - Help Net Security
Meet the Windows servers that have been fuelling massive DDoSes for months | Ars Technica
Cloud/SaaS
Everything you Need to Know about Cloud Hacking and its Methodologies (analyticsinsight.net)
Top Cloud Security Challenges & How to Beat Them (trendmicro.com)
Atlassian Vulnerabilities Highlight Criticality of Cloud Services (darkreading.com)
Threat Actors Target AWS EC2 Workloads to Steal Credentials (trendmicro.com)
Cloud and Hybrid Working Security Concerns Surge - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
4 Reasons Open Source Matters for Cloud Security (darkreading.com)
Cloud Providers Throw Their Weight Behind Confidential Computing (darkreading.com)
Hybrid Working
Balancing remote work privacy vs. productivity monitoring (techtarget.com)
Cloud and Hybrid Working Security Concerns Surge - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Attack Surface Management
Attack Surface Management 2022 Midyear Review Part 2 (trendmicro.com)
Asset risk management: Getting the basics right - Help Net Security
Encryption
New Critical Vuln In Component That Allow Encryption Across Internet - (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
API
Open Source
Open Source Is Just the Tip of the Iceberg in Software Supply Chain Security (darkreading.com)
4 Reasons Open Source Matters for Cloud Security (darkreading.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Why it's time to expire mandatory password expiration policies (techtarget.com)
Feds say Ukrainian man running malware service amassed 50M unique credentials | Ars Technica
Biometrics
Social Media
LinkedIn Phishing Spoof Bypasses Google Workspace Security (darkreading.com)
LinkedIn's new security features combat fake profiles, threat actors (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber security event cancelled after scammers disrupt LinkedIn live chat (bitdefender.com)
Expert Opinion: What Does Musk's Takeover Mean For Cyber security? (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Cyber attackers Target Instagram Users With Threats of Copyright Infringement (darkreading.com)
Cyber Bullying, Cyber Stalking and Sextortion
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Data Protection
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Ukraine: Russian cyber attacks aimless and opportunistic (techtarget.com)
Unknown Actors are Deploying RomCom RAT to Target Ukrainian Military (thehackernews.com)
Slovak, Polish Parliaments Hit by Cyber attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Cuba ransomware affiliate targets Ukraine, CERT-UA warns - Security Affairs
Ukraine Warns of Cuba Ransomware Attacks - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Russia says Starlink satellites could become military target • The Register
Calls for inquiry mount after reports that Truss’s phone was hacked | Financial Times
OldGremlin Ransomware Fierce Comeback Against Russian Targets (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Nation State Actors – China
Chinese Connected Cyber Crew Unleashes Disinformation Campaign Ahead of US Elections - MSSP Alert
Federal bans don't stop US states from buying Chinese kit • The Register
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Vulnerabilities
OpenSSL to fix the second critical flaw ever - Security Affairs
Urgent: Google Issues Emergency Patch for Chrome Zero-Day (darkreading.com)
ConnectWise fixes RCE bug exposing thousands of servers to attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Apple megaupdate: Ventura out, iOS and iPad kernel zero-day – act now! – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Windows Mark of the Web Zero-Days Remain Patchless, Under Exploit (darkreading.com)
22-Year-Old Vulnerability Reported in Widely Used SQLite Database Library (thehackernews.com)
Cisco warns admins to patch AnyConnect flaws exploited in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Exploit released for critical VMware RCE vulnerability, patch now (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cisco Confirms In-the-Wild Exploitation of Two VPN Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Incoming OpenSSL critical fix: Organisations, users, get ready! - Help Net Security
Cisco Users Informed of Vulnerabilities in Identity Services Engine | SecurityWeek.Com
VMware fixes critical RCE in VMware Cloud Foundation - Security Affairs
VMware Patches Critical Vulnerability in End-of-Life Product | SecurityWeek.Com
Multiple vulnerabilities affect the Juniper Junos OS - Security Affairs
Other News
Cyber Security Risks & Stats This Spooky Season (darkreading.com)
Cyber Certification Skills Are For Life, Not Just For Linkedin (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Implementing Defence in Depth to Prevent and Mitigate Cyber Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Cyber security’s importance and impact reaches all levels of the tech workforce - Help Net Security
Stress Is Driving Cyber Security Professionals to Rethink Roles (darkreading.com)
Equifax's Lessons Are Still Relevant, 5 Years Later (darkreading.com)
Why dark data is a growing danger for corporations - Help Net Security
Know the dangers you're facing: 4 notable TTPs used by cyber criminals worldwide - Help Net Security
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
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