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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 9th June 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 09 June 2023:
-74% of Breaches Involve Human Element- Make Employees Your Best Asset
-Cyber Security Agency Urges Vigilance as MOVEit Attack Impacts Major Companies Including British Airways, Boots and the BBC
-CISOs and IT Lack Confidence in Executives’ Cyber Defence Knowledge as the Spotlight Falls on the Boardroom
-Only 1 in 10 CISOs are Board-ready as Nearly Half of Boards Lack Cyber Expertise
-BEC Volumes and Ransomware Costs Double in a Year
-Hackers are Targeting C-Suite Executives Through Their Personal Email
-Proactive Detection is Crucial as Organisations Lack Effective Threat Research
-Number of Vulnerabilities Exploited Rose by 55%
-Ransomware Behind Most Cyber Attacks, with Record-breaking May
-4 Areas of Cyber Risk That Boards Need to Address
-North Korea Makes 50% of Income from Cyber Attacks
-Going Beyond “Next Generation” Network Security
-Worldwide 2022 Email Phishing Statistics and Examples
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
74% of Breaches Involve Human Element- Make Employees Your Best Asset
Verizon’s recent data breach report analysed 16,312 security incidents and 5,199 breaches. A total of 74% of breaches involved a human element, highlighting the role of employees in achieving good cyber resilience. Organisations looking to improve their resilience should therefore consider how well and how frequently they train their users. In a recent report, Fortinet found that 90% of leaders believed that increasing their employee cyber security awareness would help decrease the occurrence of cyber attacks. Worryingly, despite 85% of leaders having an awareness and training programme in place, 50% believed their employees still lacked cyber security knowledge.
With an effective training programme, organisations can increase their employees’ cyber risk awareness and empower them in defending the organisation, laying the foundation for a strong cyber security culture.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/06/06/verizon-data-breach-investigations-report-2023-dbir/
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/06/09/employees-cybersecurity-knowledge/
Cyber Security Agency Urges Vigilance as MOVEit Attack Impacts Major Companies Including British Airways, Boots and the BBC
The recent cyber attacks on file transfer software MOVEit have impacted a number of major companies through their supply chain. The attack, which hit UK-based HR and payroll provider Zellis has had a huge knock-on effect, with major companies such as British Airways, Boots and the BBC suffering as a result of using Zellis in their supply chain. The UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) has emphasised the need for organisations to exercise heightened vigilance.
Organisations must be aware of supply chain risks, and how an attack on a supplier or service provider can impact their own organisation. It is important for organisations to manage supply chain security, assess third party risks, communicate with suppliers and keep on top of emerging threats; it’s no simple task.
https://www.securityweek.com/several-major-organizations-confirm-being-impacted-by-moveit-attack/
CISOs and IT Lack Confidence in Executives’ Cyber Defence Knowledge as the Spotlight Falls on the Boardroom
Nearly three-quarters of data breaches include an element of human failure, and senior business leaders were particularly at risk, according to a recent report. Not only do business leaders possess the most sensitive information, but they are often the least protected, with many organisations making security protocol exemptions for them. Such factors have pushed the boardroom into the spotlight more.
In another report, it was found that only 28% of IT professionals were confident in their executives’ ability to recognise a phishing email. The report found that as many as 71% of executives were reusing compromised passwords from personal accounts inside the company. Technology alone won’t solve the problem: user awareness training is required and this includes the boardroom.
Only 1 in 10 CISOs are Board-ready as Nearly Half of Boards Lack Cyber Expertise
A recent study has found that only 1 in 10 chief information security officers (CISOs) have all the key traits thought to be crucial for success on a corporate board, with many lacking governance skills and experience and other attributes needed for board readiness. Worryingly, nearly half of the 1,000 companies in the study lacked at least one director with cyber security expertise. This is concerning as good cyber security starts from the board: the board is responsible for understanding the business risks of a cyber incident and for endorsing whether the cyber controls in place have reduced those risks to a level that the board is happy with. Similarly, the board would not sign off financial risks without ensuring they had someone with financial experience and qualifications present. The Black Arrow vCISO service is ideal for organisations that need expertise in assessing and managing cyber risks, underpinned by governance reporting and metrics presented to enable the board to make educated and informed decisions.
https://www.csoonline.com/article/3698291/only-one-in-10-cisos-today-are-board-ready-study-says
BEC Volumes and Ransomware Costs Double in a Year
The number of recorded business email compromise (BEC) attacks doubled over the past year, with the threat comprising nearly 60% of social engineering incidents studied by Verizon for its 2023 Data Breach Investigations Report. The report this year was based on analysis of 16,312 security incidents and 5,199 breaches over the past year.
Pretexting, which is commonly using in BEC attacks, is now more common than phishing in social engineering incidents, although the latter is still more prevalent in breaches, the report noted. The median amount stolen in pretexting attacks now stands at $50,000. The vast majority of attacks (97%) over the past year were motivated by financial gain rather than espionage.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/bec-volumes-ransomware-costs/
Hackers are Targeting C-Suite Executives Through Their Personal Email
As companies rely on chief financial officers (CFOs) to mitigate risk, cyber attacks and the costs associated with them are a major concern. Now there is also a growing trend of cyber criminals targeting C-suite executives in their personal lives, where it is easier to pull off a breach as there are fewer, if any, protections, instead of targeting them through their business accounts. Once attackers have access, they then try to use this to gain entry to the corporate systems. The report found that 42% of companies have experienced cyber criminal attacks on their senior-level corporate executives, which can compromise sensitive business data. The report found that 58% of respondents stated that cyber threat prevention for executives and their digital assets are not covered in their cyber, IT and physical securities strategies and budgets.
https://fortune.com/2023/06/08/hackers-targeting-c-suite-executives-personal-email-cybersecurity
Proactive Detection is Crucial as Organisations Lack Effective Threat Research
In a recent study, it was found that CISOs are spending significantly less time on threat research and awareness, despite 58% having an increase in their budget for cyber security; the same number reported that their team is so busy, they may not detect an attack. In a different report, keeping up with threat intelligence was identified as one of the biggest challenges faced.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/06/06/cisos-cybersecurity-spending/
Number of Vulnerabilities Exploited Rose by 55%
A recent report from Palo Alto Networks’ Unit 42 found that the number of vulnerabilities that attackers are exploiting has grown by 55% compared to 2021, with most of the increase resulting from supply chain vulnerabilities; along with this was a 25% rise in the number of CVE’s, the term used for identified vulnerabilities. Worryingly ChatGPT scams saw a 910% increase in monthly domain registrations, pointing to an exponential growth in fraudulent activities taking advantage of the widespread usage and popularity of AI-powered chatbots.
Such growth puts further strain on cyber security staff, making it even harder for organisations to keep up. A strong threat management programme is needed, to help organisations prioritise threats and use organisational resources effectively to address said threats.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/exploitation-vulnerabilities-grew/
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cves-surge-25-2022-another-record/
Ransomware Behind Most Cyber Attacks, with Record-breaking May
2022 saw ransomware account for nearly one in four (24%) cyber attacks, with 95% of events resulting in a loss costing upwards of $2.25 million during 2021-2022. Ransomware remains a significant threat as evidenced by a different report, which stated that May 2023 saw a 154% spike in ransomware compared to May 2022. Other key findings include unreported attacks being five times more likely than reported attacks.
4 Areas of Cyber Risk That Boards Need to Address
As technological innovations such as cloud computing, the Internet of Things, robotic process automation, and predictive analytics are integrated into organisations, it makes them increasingly susceptible to cyber threats. This means that governing and assessing cyber risks becomes a prerequisite for successful business performance. This need for transparency has been recognised by the regulators and facilitated by the new cyber security rules to ensure companies maintain adequate cyber security controls and appropriately disclose cyber-related risks and incidents.
To ensure they fulfil the requirements, organisations should focus on the following areas: position security as a strategic business enabler; continuously monitor the cyber risk capability performance; align cyber risk management with business needs through policies and standards; and proactively anticipate the changing threat landscape by utilising threat intelligence sources for emerging threats.
https://hbr.org/2023/06/4-areas-of-cyber-risk-that-boards-need-to-address
North Korea Makes 50% of Income from Cyber Attacks
The North Korean regime makes around half of its income from cyber attacks on cryptocurrency and other targets. A 2019 UN estimate claimed North Korea had amassed as much as $2bn through historic attacks on crypto firms and traditional banks.
North Korean hackers have been blamed for some of the biggest ever heists of cryptocurrency, including the $620m stolen from Sky Mavis’ Ronin Network last year and the $281m taken from KuCoin in 2020 and $35m from Atomic Wallet just this last weekend.
They are using increasingly sophisticated techniques to get what they want. The 3CX supply chain attacks, in which backdoor malware was implanted into a legitimate-looking software update from the eponymous comms provider, is thought to have been a targeted attempt at hitting crypto exchanges.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/north-korea-makes-50-income/
Going Beyond “Next Generation” Network Security
Over a decade ago, the phrase “next generation” was used in the network security space to describe the introduction of application-layer controls with firewalls. It was a pivotal moment for the space, setting a new standard for how we protected the perimeter. A lot has happened in the last decade though, most notably, the rapid adoption of cloud and multicloud architectures and the loss of the “perimeter.” Today, 82% of IT leaders have adopted hybrid cloud architectures, and 58% of organisations use between two and three public Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) clouds. On top of that, 95% of web traffic is encrypted which limits visibility. Applications are everywhere, access privileges are unstructured, increasing the attack surface, and businesses expect near-perfect availability and resilience. To make things more complicated, enterprises have tried to solve these challenges with disparate solutions, leading to vendor sprawl among security stacks and operational inefficiency. What was once considered “next-generation” network security no longer cuts it.
Worldwide 2022 Email Phishing Statistics and Examples
Remote and hybrid work environments have become the new norm. The fact that email has become increasingly integral to business operations, has led malicious actors to favour email as an attack vector. According to a report by security company Egress, 92% of organisations have fallen victim to phishing attacks in 2022, a 29% increase in phishing incidents from 2021. Phishing attacks aimed at stealing info and data, also known as credential phishing, saw a 4% growth in 2022, with nearly 7 million detections. Rather worryingly, there was a 35% increase in the number of detections that related to business email compromise (BEC); these attacks mostly impersonated executives or high-ranking management personnel. With the increase in AI tools, it is expected that cyber criminals will be better able to create and deploy more sophisticated phishing attacks.
https://www.trendmicro.com/en_us/ciso/23/e/worldwide-email-phishing-stats-examples-2023.html
Governance, Risk and Compliance
CISOs, IT lack confidence in executives’ cyber-defence knowledge | CSO Online
Cyber spotlight falls on boardroom ‘privilege’ as incidents soar | Computer Weekly
CISOs focus more on business strategy than threat research - Help Net Security
Only one in 10 CISOs today are board-ready, study says | CSO Online
Employee cyber security awareness takes centre stage in defence strategies - Help Net Security
The Importance of Managing Your Data Security Posture (thehackernews.com)
How CISOs Can Manage the Intersection of Security, Privacy, And Trust (darkreading.com)
Why Companies Should Consider Developing A Chief Security Officer Position (forbes.com)
Want Sustainable Security? Find Middle Ground Between Tech & Education (darkreading.com)
VeeamON 2023: When Your Nightmare Comes True - The New Stack
Make Your Employees Your Best Asset in Combating Cyber crime | CISO Collective (fortinet.com)
UK Organisations lack clear path to achieve threat intelligence - IT Security Guru
CIOs prioritize new technologies over tech stack optimization - Help Net Security
Top factors driving enterprise demand for new cyber security technology - Help Net Security
Factors influencing IT security spending - Help Net Security
How to Boost Cyber Security Through Better Communication (securityintelligence.com)
Generative AI's influence on data governance and compliance - Help Net Security
Essential Cyber security Compliance Standards (trendmicro.com)
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Verizon DBIR: Social Engineering Gains Lead to Spiraling Breach Costs (darkreading.com)
Ransomware Behind Most Cyber Attacks, Verizon Business Reports - MSSP Alert
Ransomware Hit New Attack Highs in May 2023, BlackFog Report Says - MSSP Alert
Hacking Spree Feared After Breach of File-Sharing Software - Bloomberg
Clop ransomware likely testing MOVEit zero-day since 2021 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Clop extortion gang gives MOVEit exploit victims one week to reach out | CSO Online
New Linux Ransomware Strain BlackSuit Shows Striking Similarities to Royal (thehackernews.com)
Cyclops Ransomware group offers a multiplatform Info StealerSecurity Affairs
Royal ransomware gang adds BlackSuit encryptor to their arsenal (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Victims
BA, BBC and Boots staff data hit by Russia-linked cyber attack (telegraph.co.uk)
Ransomware takes down multiple municipalities in May | TechTarget
Several Major Organisations Confirm Being Impacted by MOVEit Attack - SecurityWeek
Spanish Bank Globalcaja Hit By Ransomware Attack - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
2.5M Impacted by Enzo Biochem Data Leak After Ransomware Attack (darkreading.com)
Burton Snowboards discloses data breach after February attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
City of Dallas Still Clawing Back Weeks After Cyber Incident (darkreading.com)
Caribbean Island Suffers Cyber Attack, MSSP Expert Recommends Low-Code Automation - MSSP Alert
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Fixing email security: It's still a rocky road ahead - SiliconANGLE
Worldwide 2022 Email Phishing Statistics and Examples (trendmicro.com)
New Security Warning Issued For Google's 1.8 Billion Gmail Users (forbes.com)
New Horabot campaign takes over victim's Gmail, Outlook accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing Attack Prevention Checklist - A Detailed Guide (gbhackers.com)
Gmail spoofing vulnerability sparks Google ‘Priority 1’ probe | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Artificial Intelligence
ChatGPT creates mutating malware that evades detection by EDR | CSO Online
The Growing Cyber Threats of Generative AI: Who's Accountable? (darkreading.com)
Consumers overestimate their deepfake detection skills - Help Net Security
Department of Defence AI principles have a place in the CISO’s playbook | CSO Online
Generative AI's influence on data governance and compliance - Help Net Security
Traditional malware increasingly takes advantage of ChatGPT for attacks | CSO Online
OWASP lists 10 most critical large language model vulnerabilities | CSO Online
Japan privacy watchdog warns ChatGPT-maker OpenAI on user data | Reuters
Sextortionists are making AI nudes from your social media images (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber crooks Scrape OpenAI API Keys to Pirate GPT-4 (darkreading.com)
2FA/MFA
Malware
High-profile malware and targeted attacks in Q1 2023 | Securelist
ChatGPT creates mutating malware that evades detection by EDR | CSO Online
Malicious Chrome extensions with 75M installs removed from Web Store (bleepingcomputer.com)
Qakbot: The trojan that just won't go away - Help Net Security
Qbot malware adapts to live another day … and another … • The Register
Alarming Surge in TrueBot Activity Revealed with New Delivery Vectors (thehackernews.com)
New PowerDrop Malware Targeting US Aerospace Industry (thehackernews.com)
Dissecting the Dark Web Supply Chain: Stealer Logs in Context (bleepingcomputer.com)
Minecraft Malware Spreading Through Mods, Plug-ins (darkreading.com)
Online sellers targeted by new information-stealing malware campaign (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google puts $1M behind its mining-malware detection promise • The Register
Mobile
Over 60,000 Android apps secretly installed adware for past six months (bleepingcomputer.com)
Android security update fixes Mali GPU flaw exploited by spyware (bleepingcomputer.com)
New tool scans iPhones for 'Triangulation' malware infection (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Android feature drop will scan the dark web for your Gmail address | Trusted Reviews
Apple announces next-level privacy and security innovations - Help Net Security
How Does Android Stack Up Vs IOS? (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Botnets
New Horabot campaign takes over victim's Gmail, Outlook accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Alarming Surge in TrueBot Activity Revealed with New Delivery Vectors (thehackernews.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Outlook.com hit by outages as hacktivists claim DDoS attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft OneDrive down worldwide following claims of DDoS attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Britain to remove Chinese surveillance gear from government sites | Surveillance | The Guardian
Morrisons and Tesco ban Chinese CCTV cameras over security fears (telegraph.co.uk)
Amazon’s Ring doorbell employees spied on users’ bathrooms (telegraph.co.uk)
High-risk vulnerabilities patched in ABB Aspect building management system - Help Net Security
New York City sues Hyundai, Kia claiming cars easy to steal • The Register
Data Breaches/Leaks
Verizon DBIR: Social Engineering Gains Lead to Spiraling Breach Costs (darkreading.com)
BA, BBC and Boots staff data hit by Russia-linked cyber attack (telegraph.co.uk)
This Google Workspace security flaw could let hackers quietly steal your Drive files | TechRadar
Hackers launch another wave of mass-hacks targeting company file transfer tools | TechCrunch
Massive free VPN data breach exposes 360M records | Fox News
2.5M Impacted by Enzo Biochem Data Leak After Ransomware Attack (darkreading.com)
Cloud misconfiguration causes massive data breach at Toyota Motor | CSO Online
Honda API flaws exposed customer data, dealer panels, internal docs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Every Netherlands resident affected by data leak: watchdog | NL Times
German recruiter Pflegia leaks sensitive job seeker info- Security Affairs
What’s really changed 10 years after the Snowden revelations? | Edward Snowden | The Guardian
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
North Korean Hackers Blamed for $35 Million Atomic Wallet Crypto Theft – Security Week
Google puts $1M behind its mining-malware detection promise • The Register
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Scammers publish ads for hacking services on government websites | TechCrunch
Hackers hijack legitimate sites to host credit card stealer scripts (bleepingcomputer.com)
A new wave of sophisticated digital fraud hits Europe - Help Net Security
ID fraud a possibility forever, claims data breach lawsuit • The Register
Magento, WooCommerce, WordPress, and Shopify Exploited in Web Skimmer Attack (thehackernews.com)
Brazilian Cyber criminals Using LOLBaS and CMD Scripts to Drain Bank Accounts (thehackernews.com)
Virtual claims raise alarms among insurance carriers and customers - Help Net Security
UK banks to reimburse fraud victims under new rules, regulator confirms | Scams | The Guardian
Impersonation Attacks
'Picture-in-Picture' Obfuscation Spoofs Delta, Kohl's for Credential Harvesting (darkreading.com)
Gmail spoofing vulnerability sparks Google ‘Priority 1’ probe | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Deepfakes
Sextortionists are making AI nudes from your social media images (bleepingcomputer.com)
Deepfakes being used in ‘sextortion’ scams, FBI warns • The Register
Consumers overestimate their deepfake detection skills - Help Net Security
Defenders Buckle Up for a Future of Detecting Deepfakes (darkreading.com)
Insurance
Dark Web
New Android feature drop will scan the dark web for your Gmail address | Trusted Reviews
Dissecting the Dark Web Supply Chain: Stealer Logs in Context (bleepingcomputer.com)
What is the dark web and how do you access it? (androidpolice.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
BA, BBC and Boots staff data hit by Russia-linked cyber attack (telegraph.co.uk)
Clop extortion gang gives MOVEit exploit victims one week to reach out | CSO Online
Clop Ransomware Gang Likely Aware of MOVEit Transfer Vulnerability Since 2021 (thehackernews.com)
Hacking Spree Feared After Breach of File-Sharing Software - Bloomberg
data privacy: Swiss administration hit by cyber attack - The Economic Times (indiatimes.com)
Software Supply Chain
SBOMs - Software Supply Chain Security’s Future or Fantasy? - SecurityWeek
10 security tool categories needed to shore up software supply chain security | CSO Online
Cloud/SaaS
The Annual Report: 2024 Plans and Priorities for SaaS Security (thehackernews.com)
Cloud misconfiguration causes massive data breach at Toyota Motor | CSO Online
This Google Workspace security flaw could let hackers quietly steal your Drive files | TechRadar
Current SaaS security strategies don't go far enough - Help Net Security
Hybrid/Remote Working
Filling the Gaps: How to Secure the Future of Hybrid Work (darkreading.com)
Thought of Going Into Office Gives Quarter of Employees Sunday Scaries - IT Security Guru
Surveilling your employees? You could be putting your company at risk of attack - Help Net Security
Shadow IT
Encryption
API
Honda API flaws exposed customer data, dealer panels, internal docs (bleepingcomputer.com)
OWASP's 2023 API Security Top 10 Refines View of API Risks - SecurityWeek
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Social Media
Microsoft Preps $425M Payment for LinkedIn GDPR Violations (darkreading.com)
Hate speech is driving advertisers away from Twitter • Graham Cluley
US government's TikTok ban extended to include contractors • The Register
Training, Education and Awareness
Employee cyber security awareness takes center stage in defense strategies - Help Net Security
Want Sustainable Security? Find Middle Ground Between Tech & Education (darkreading.com)
Make Your Employees Your Best Asset in Combating Cyber crime | CISO Collective (fortinet.com)
How to Boost Cyber security Through Better Communication (securityintelligence.com)
Embracing realistic simulations in cyber security training programs - Help Net Security
Data Protection
SEC drops 42 cases after staff bungle data protection • The Register
Japan privacy watchdog warns ChatGPT-maker OpenAI on user data | Reuters
Microsoft Preps $425M Payment for LinkedIn GDPR Violations (darkreading.com)
Microsoft Fined $20M For Xbox Child Data Collection (darkreading.com)
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Nation State Actors
A Peek Behind the Curtain: Examining the Dimensions of a National-level Cyber Program | Mandiant
North Korean APT group targets email credentials in social engineering campaign | CSO Online
UK to strip Chinese surveillance cameras from sensitive government sites | Financial Times (ft.com)
Morrisons and Tesco ban Chinese CCTV cameras over security fears (telegraph.co.uk)
US government's TikTok ban extended to include contractors • The Register
Camaro Dragon Strikes with New TinyNote Backdoor for Intelligence Gathering (thehackernews.com)
Kimsuky APT poses as journalists and broadcast writers in attacks- Security Affairs
Meet TeamT5, the Taiwanese infosec outfit taking on Beijing • The Register
China has closed unofficial ‘police stations’ in Britain, UK minister says | China | The Guardian
Lazarus hackers linked to the $35 million Atomic Wallet heist (bleepingcomputer.com)
Kimsuky Targets Think Tanks and News Media with Social Engineering Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Hostile states face contract ban amid security concerns (thetimes.co.uk)
North Korean Hackers Blamed for $35 Million Atomic Wallet Crypto Theft - SecurityWeek
Vulnerability Management
OWASP lists 10 most critical large language model vulnerabilities | CSO Online
Public sector apps show higher rates of security flaws - Help Net Security
Vulnerabilities
Zyxel vulnerability under 'widespread exploitation' | TechTarget
Barracuda Urges Immediate Replacement of Hacked ESG Appliances (thehackernews.com)
Urgent Security Updates: Cisco and VMware Address Critical Vulnerabilities (thehackernews.com)
High-Severity Vulnerabilities Patched in Splunk Enterprise - SecurityWeek
Zero Day Initiative — CVE-2023-24941: Microsoft Network File System Remote Code Execution
Gigabyte Slams Backdoor Shut With Attack-Killing BIOS Update (darkreading.com)
Zero-Day Alert: Google Issues Patch for New Chrome Vulnerability - Update Now! (thehackernews.com)
Android security update fixes Mali GPU flaw exploited by spyware (bleepingcomputer.com)
High-risk vulnerabilities patched in ABB Aspect building management system - Help Net Security
Easily Exploitable Microsoft Visual Studio Bug Opens Developers to Takeover (darkreading.com)
Tools and Controls
CISOs focus more on business strategy than threat research - Help Net Security
CIOs prioritize new technologies over tech stack optimization - Help Net Security
Going Beyond “Next Generation” Network Security - Cisco Blogs
Make Your Employees Your Best Asset in Combating Cybercrime | CISO Collective (fortinet.com)
UK Organisations lack clear path to achieve threat intelligence - IT Security Guru
Employee cybersecurity awareness takes center stage in defence strategies - Help Net Security
Want Sustainable Security? Find Middle Ground Between Tech & Education (darkreading.com)
Factors influencing IT security spending - Help Net Security
Top factors driving enterprise demand for new cyber security technology - Help Net Security
How to Boost Cyber security Through Better Communication (securityintelligence.com)
MoD adopts ‘secure by design’ for cyber security | UKAuthority
Everyone is selling VPNs, and that's a problem for security | Engadget
ISMG Editors: Why Communications Skills Matter for CISOs (inforisktoday.com)
Phishing Attack Prevention Checklist - A Detailed Guide (gbhackers.com)
Ransomware Attack Prevention Checklist - 2023 (cybersecuritynews.com)
OWASP lists 10 most critical large language model vulnerabilities | CSO Online
This Google Workspace security flaw could let hackers quietly steal your Drive files | TechRadar
Embracing realistic simulations in cyber security training programs - Help Net Security
The Key to Zero Trust Identity Is Automation (darkreading.com)
What generative AI's rise means for the cyber security industry | TechTarget
Cisco spotlights generative AI in security, collaboration | Network World
10 security tool categories needed to shore up software supply chain security | CSO Online
How to Improve Your API Security Posture (thehackernews.com)
Consolidate Vendors and Products for Better Security - SecurityWeek
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 06 January 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 06 January 2023:
-Cyber War in Ukraine, Ransomware Fears Drive Surge in Demand for Threat Intelligence Tools
-Cyber Premiums Holding Firms to Ransom
-Ransomware Ecosystem Becoming More Diverse For 2023
-Attackers Evolve Strategies to Outmanoeuvre Security Teams
-Building a Security-First Culture: The Key to Cyber Success
-Adobe, Apple, Cisco, Microsoft Flaws Make Up Half of Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalogue
-First LastPass, Now Slack and CircleCI. The Hacks Go On (and will likely worsen)
-Data of 235 Million Twitter Users Leaked Online
-16 Car Makers, including BMW, Ferrari, Ford, Honda, Kia, Land Rover, Mercedes and Toyota, and Their Vehicles Hacked via Telematics, APIs, Infrastructure
-Ransomware Gang Apologizes, Gives SickKids Hospital Free Decryptor
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
Cyber War in Ukraine, Ransomware Fears Drive 2022 Surge in Demand for Threat Intelligence Tools
Amid the heightened fear of ransomware in 2022, threat intelligence emerged as a core requirement of doing business in a world gone mad.
A sizable amount of interest in the historically tech-centric discipline was fuelled in part by fear of cyber attacks tied to the war between Russia and Ukraine. In one example, the Ukrainian government warned the world that the Russian military was planning for multi-pronged attacks targeting the energy sector. Other nation-state cyber attack operations also contributed to the demand, including one June 2022 incident were Iran’s Cobalt Mirage exploited PowerShell vulnerabilities to launch ransomware attacks.
And of course, headlines of data breaches tied to vulnerabilities that organisations did not even know existed within their networks caught the attention not just of security teams, but the C-Suite and corporate board. A misconfigured Microsoft server, for example, wound up exposing years of sensitive data for tens of thousands of its customers, including personally identifiable information, user data, product and project details and intellectual property.
Indeed, according to 183 security pros surveyed by CyberRisk Alliance Business Intelligence in June 2022, threat intelligence has become critical in arming their security operations centres (SOCs) and incident response teams with operational data to help them make timely, informed decisions to prevent system downtime, thwart the theft of confidential data, and protect intellectual property.
Threat intelligence has emerged as a useful tool for educating executives. Many also credited threat intelligence for helping them protect their company and customer data — and potentially saving their organisation's reputation.
Cyber Premiums Holding Firms to Ransom
Soaring premiums for cyber security insurance are leaving businesses struggling to pay other bills, a key industry player has warned.
Mactavish, which buys insurance policies on behalf of companies, said that more than half of big businesses that had bought cyber security insurance had been forced to make cuts elsewhere to pay for it.
In a survey of 200 companies with a turnover above £10 million, Mactavish found that businesses were reducing office costs and staff bonuses and were cutting other types of insurance to meet the higher payments.
Last month Marsh, an insurance broker, revealed that costs for cyber insurance had increased by an average of 66 per cent in the third quarter compared with last year.
Meanwhile, the risk to businesses from hackers continues to rise. A government report on digital threats, published this month, showed the proportion of businesses experiencing cyber security incidents at least monthly had increased from 53 per cent to 60 per cent in the past year. Uber, Cisco and InterContinental Hotels Group were among high-profile targets this year.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/cyber-safety-premiums-hold-firms-to-ransom-tnrsz3vs2
Ransomware Ecosystem Becoming More Diverse for 2023
The ransomware ecosystem has changed significantly in 2022, with attackers shifting from large groups that dominated the landscape toward smaller ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) operations in search of more flexibility and drawing less attention from law enforcement. This democratisation of ransomware is bad news for organisations because it also brought in a diversification of tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs), more indicators of compromise (IOCs) to track, and potentially more hurdles to jump through when trying to negotiate or pay ransoms.
Since 2019 the ransomware landscape has been dominated by big and professionalised ransomware operations that constantly made the news headlines and even looked for media attention to gain legitimacy with potential victims. We've seen ransomware groups with spokespeople who offered interviews to journalists or issued "press releases" on Twitter and their data leak websites in response to big breaches.
The DarkSide attack against Colonial Pipeline that led to a major fuel supply disruption along the US East Coast in 2021 highlighted the risk that ransomware attacks can have against critical infrastructure and led to increased efforts to combat this threat at the highest levels of government. This heightened attention from law enforcement made the owners of underground cyber crime forums reconsider their relationship with ransomware groups, with some forums banning the advertising of such threats. DarkSide ceased operations soon thereafter and was followed later in the year by REvil, also known as Sodinokibi, whose creators were indicted and one was even arrested. REvil was one of the most successful ransomware groups since 2019.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 quickly put a strain on the relationship between many ransomware groups who had members and affiliates in both Russia and Ukraine, or other former USSR countries. Some groups, such as Conti, rushed to take sides in the war, threatening to attack Western infrastructure in support of Russia. This was a departure from the usual business-like apolitical approach in which ransomware gangs had run their operations and drew criticism from other competing groups.
This was also followed by a leak of internal communications that exposed many of Conti's operational secrets and caused uneasiness with its affiliates. Following a major attack against the Costa Rican government the US State Department put up a reward of $10 million for information related to the identity or location of Conti's leaders, which likely contributed to the group's decision to shut down operations in May.
Conti's disappearance led to a drop in ransomware activity for a couple of months, but it didn't last long as the void was quickly filled by other groups, some of them newly set up and suspected to be the creation of former members of Conti, REvil and other groups that ceased operations over the past two years.
Attackers Evolve Strategies to Outmanoeuvre Security Teams
Attackers are expected to broaden their targeting strategy beyond regulated verticals such as financial services and healthcare. Large corporations (41%) will be the top targeted sector for cyber attacks in 2023, favoured over financial institutions (36%), government (14%), healthcare (9%), and education (8%), according to cyber security solution provider Titaniam.
The fast pace of change has introduced new vulnerabilities into corporate networks, making them an increasingly attractive target for cyber attackers. To compete in the digital marketplace, large companies are adopting more cloud services, aggregating data, pushing code into production faster, and connecting applications and systems via APIs.
As a result, misconfigured services, unprotected databases, little-tested applications, and unknown and unsecured APIs abound, all of which can be exploited by attackers.
The top four threats in 2022 were malware (30%), ransomware and extortion (27%), insider threats (26%), and phishing (17%).
The study found that enterprises expected malware (40%) to be their biggest challenge in 2023, followed by insider threats (26%), ransomware and related extortion (21%), and phishing (16%).
Malware, however, has more enterprises worried for 2023 than it did for 2022. It is important to note that these threats can overlap, where insiders can have a hand in ransomware attacks, phishing can be a source of malware, etc.
Attackers are evolving their strategies to surprise and outmanoeuvre security teams, which have hardened ransomware defences and improved phishing detection. They’re using new malware, such as loaders, infostealers, and wipers to accelerate attacks, steal sensitive data and create mayhem.
They’re also buying and stealing employee credentials to walk in through the front door of corporate networks.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/01/04/attackers-evolve-strategies-outmaneuver-security-teams/
Building a Security-First Culture: The Key to Cyber Success
Everyone has heard a car alarm go off in the middle of the night, but how often does that notification actually lead to action? Most people will hear the alarm, glance in its direction and then hope the owner will quickly remedy the situation.
Cars alarms often fail because they go off too often, leading to apathy and annoyance instead of being a cause for emergency. For many, cyber security has also become this way. While we see an increase in the noise surrounding the need for organisations to improve the security skillset and knowledge base of employees, there continues to be little proactive action on this front. Most organisations only provide employees with elementary-grade security training, often during their initial onboarding process or as part of a standard training requirement.
At the same time, many organisations also make the grave mistake of leaving all of their security responsibilities and obligations in the hands of IT and security teams. Time and time again, this approach has proven to be highly ineffective, especially as cyber criminals refine their social engineering tactics and target user accounts to execute their attacks.
Alarmingly, recent research found that 30% of employees do not think that they play a role in maintaining their company’s cyber security posture. The same report also revealed that only 39% of employees say they are likely to report a security incident.
As traditional boundaries of access disintegrate and more employees obtain permissions to sensitive company data and systems to carry out their tasks, business leaders must change the mindset of their employees when it comes to the role they play in keeping the organisation safe from cyber crime. The key is developing an integrated cyber security strategy that incorporates all aspects—including all stakeholders—of the organisation. This should be a strategy that breaks down departmental barriers and creates a culture of security responsibility where every team member plays a part.
Adobe, Apple, Cisco, Microsoft Flaws Make Up Half of Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalogue
Back in November 2021, the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) published the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalogue to help federal agencies and critical infrastructure organisations identify and remediate vulnerabilities that are actively being exploited. CISA added 548 new vulnerabilities to the catalogue across 58 updates from January to end of November 2022, according to cyber security solution provider Grey Noise in its first-ever "GreyNoise Mass Exploits Report."
Including the approximately 300 vulnerabilities added in November and December 2021, CISA listed approximately 850 vulnerabilities in the first year of the catalogue's existence.
Actively exploited vulnerabilities in Microsoft, Adobe, Cisco, and Apple products accounted for over half of the updates to the KEV catalogue in 2022, Grey Noise found. Seventy-seven percent of the updates to the KEV catalogue were older vulnerabilities dating back to before 2022. Many of these vulnerabilities have been around for two decades.
Several of the vulnerabilities in the KEV catalogue are from products that have already entered end-of-life (EOL) and end-of-service-life (EOSL), according to an analysis by a team from cyber security solution provider Cyber Security Works. Even though Windows Server 2008 and Windows 7 are EOSL products, the KEV catalogue lists 127 Server 2008 vulnerabilities and 117 Windows 7 vulnerabilities.
Even though the catalogue was originally intended for critical infrastructure and public-sector organisations, it has become the authoritative source on which vulnerabilities are – or have been – exploited by attackers. This is key because the National Vulnerability Database (NVD) assigned Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) identifiers for over 12,000 vulnerabilities in 2022, and it would be unwieldy for enterprise defenders to assess every single one to identify the ones relevant to their environments. Enterprise teams can use the catalogue's curated list of CVEs under active attack to create their priority lists.
First LastPass, Now Slack and CircleCI. The Hacks Go On (and will likely worsen)
In the past week, the world has learned of serious breaches hitting chat service Slack and software testing and delivery company CircleCI, though giving the companies' opaque wording—“security issue” and “security incident,” respectively—you'd be forgiven for thinking these events were minor.
The compromises—in Slack’s case, the theft of employee token credentials and for CircleCI, the possible exposure of all customer secrets it stores—come two weeks after password manager LastPass disclosed its own security failure: the theft of customers’ password vaults containing sensitive data in both encrypted and clear text form. It’s not clear if all three breaches are related, but that’s certainly a possibility.
The most concerning of the two new breaches is the one hitting CircleCI. The company reported a “security incident” that prompted it to advise customers to rotate “all secrets” they store on the service. The alert also informed customers that it had invalidated their Project API tokens, an event requiring them to go through the hassle of replacing them.
CircleCI says it’s used by more than 1 million developers in support of 30,000 organisations and runs nearly 1 million daily jobs. The potential exposure of all those secrets—which could be login credentials, access tokens, and who knows what else—could prove disastrous for the security of the entire Internet.
It’s possible that some or all of these breaches are related. The Internet relies on a massive ecosystem of content delivery networks, authentication services, software development tool makers, and other companies. Threat actors frequently hack one company and use the data or access they obtain to breach that company's customers or partners. That was the case with the August breach of security provider Twilio. The same threat actor targeted 136 other companies. Something similar played out in the last days of 2020 when hackers compromised Solar Winds, gained control of its software build system, and used it to infect roughly 40 Solar Winds customers.
For now, people should brace themselves for additional disclosures from companies they rely on. Checking internal system logs for suspicious entries, turning on multifactor authentication, and patching network systems are always good ideas, but given the current events, those precautions should be expedited. It’s also worth checking logs for any contact with the IP address 54.145.167.181, which one security practitioner said was connected to the CircleCI breach.
Data of 235 Million Twitter Users Leaked Online
A data leak containing email addresses for 235 million Twitter users has been published on a popular hacker forum. Many experts have immediately analysed it and confirmed the authenticity of many of the entries in the huge leaked archive.
In January 2022, a report claimed the discovery of a vulnerability that can be exploited by an attacker to find a Twitter account by the associated phone number/email, even if the user has opted to prevent this in the privacy options. The vulnerability was exploited by multiple threat actors to scrape Twitter user profiles containing both private (phone numbers and email addresses) and public data, and was present within the social media platforms application programming interface (API) from June 2021 until January 2022.
At the end of July 2022, a threat actor leaked data of 5.4 million Twitter accounts that were obtained by exploiting the forementioned, now-fixed vulnerability in the popular social media platform. The scraped data was then put up for sale on various online cyber crime marketplaces. In August, Twitter confirmed that the data breach was caused by a now-patched zero-day flaw.
In December another Twitter data leak made the headlines, a threat actor obtained data of 400,000,000 Twitter users and attempted to sell it. The seller claimed the database is private, and he provided a sample of 1,000 accounts as proof of claims which included the private information of prominent users such as Donald Trump JR, Brian Krebs, and many more. The seller, who is a member of a popular data breach forum, claimed the data was scraped via a vulnerability. The database includes emails and phone numbers of celebrities, politicians, companies, normal users, and a lot of special usernames.
https://securityaffairs.com/140352/data-breach/twitter-data-leak-235m-users.html
16 Car Makers, including BMW, Ferrari, Ford, Honda, Kia, Land Rover, Mercedes and Toyota, and Their Vehicles Hacked via Telematics, APIs, and Infrastructure
A group of seven security researchers have discovered numerous vulnerabilities in vehicles from 16 car makers, including bugs that allowed them to control car functions and start or stop the engine.
Multiple other security defects, the researchers say, allowed them to access a car maker’s internal applications and systems, leading to the exposure of personally identifiable information (PII) belonging to customers and employees, and account takeover, among others. The hacks targeted telematic systems, automotive APIs, and infrastructure.
Impacted car models include Acura, BMW, Ferrari, Ford, Genesis, Honda, Hyundai, Infiniti, Jaguar, Kia, Land Rover, Mercedes-Benz, Nissan, Porsche, Rolls Royce, and Toyota. The vulnerabilities were identified over the course of 2022. Car manufacturers were informed about the security holes and they released patches.
According to the researchers, they were able to send commands to Acura, Genesis, Honda, Hyundai, Kia, Infiniti, Nissan, and Porsche vehicles.
Using only the VIN (vehicle identification number), which is typically visible on the windshield, the researchers were able to start/stop the engine, remotely lock/unlock the vehicle, flash headlights, honk vehicles, and retrieve the precise location of Acura, Honda, Kia, Infiniti, and Nissan cars.
They could also lock users out of remote vehicle management and could change car ownership.
https://www.securityweek.com/16-car-makers-and-their-vehicles-hacked-telematics-apis-infrastructure
Ransomware Gang Apologises, and Gives SickKids Hospital Free Decrypter
The LockBit ransomware gang has released a free decrypter for the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), saying one of its members violated rules by attacking the healthcare organisation. SickKids is a teaching and research hospital in Toronto that focuses on providing healthcare to sick children.
On December 18th, the hospital suffered a ransomware attack that impacted internal and corporate systems, hospital phone lines, and the website. While the attack only encrypted a few systems, SickKids stated that the incident caused delays in receiving lab and imaging results and resulted in longer patient wait times.
On December 29th, SickKids announced that it had restored 50% of its priority systems, including those causing diagnostic or treatment delays. Two days after SickKids' latest announcement, the LockBit ransomware gang apologised for the attack on the hospital and released a decrypter for free.
“We formally apologise for the attack on sikkids.ca and give back the decrypter for free, the partner who attacked this hospital violated our rules, is blocked and is no longer in our affiliate programme," stated the ransomware gang.
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Rackspace: Ransomware Attack Bypassed ProxyNotShell Mitigations (darkreading.com)
Rackspace: Customer email data accessed in ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware gang cloned victim’s website to leak stolen data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Rackspace identifies hacking group responsible for early December ransomware attack | TPR
Ransomware ecosystem becoming more diverse for 2023 | CSO Online
Rackspace Sunsets Email Service Downed in Ransomware Attack (darkreading.com)
December ransomware disclosures reveal high-profile victims | TechTarget
The Guardian ransomware attack hits week two as staff WFH • The Register
Unraveling the techniques of Mac ransomware - Microsoft Security Blog
Bitdefender releases free MegaCortex ransomware decryptor (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Research: More than 200 US Infrastructure Organisations Attacked in 2022 - MSSP Alert
Ransomware impacts over 200 govt, edu, healthcare orgs in 2022 (bleepingcomputer.com)
Guardian ransomware attack: Staff told work from home to 23 Jan (pressgazette.co.uk)
Rail giant Wabtec discloses data breach after Lockbit ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Christmas Eve 'cyber attack' forced Arnold Clark's network down | STV News
Royal ransomware claims attack on Queensland University of Technology (bleepingcomputer.com)
LockBit: Sorry for SickKids, but not housing authority • The Register
Canadian mining firm shuts down mill after ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Data of 235 million Twitter users leaked online - Security Affairs
Is NHS The Most Impersonated UK Government "Brand"? (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
The Evolving Tactics of Vidar Stealer: From Phishing Emails to Social Media (thehackernews.com)
Ongoing Flipper Zero phishing attacks target infosec community (bleepingcomputer.com)
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
Raspberry Robin Worm Evolves to Attack Financial and Insurance Sectors in Europe (thehackernews.com)
Hackers abuse Windows error reporting tool to deploy malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
New SHC-compiled Linux malware installs cryptominers, DDoS bots (bleepingcomputer.com)
Bluebottle hackers used signed Windows driver in attacks on banks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Dridex Returns, Targets MacOS Using New Entry Method (trendmicro.com)
New Linux malware uses 30 plugin exploits to backdoor WordPress sites (bleepingcomputer.com)
PyTorch discloses malicious dependency chain compromise over holidays (bleepingcomputer.com)
WordPress Sites Under Attack from Newly Found Linux Trojan (darkreading.com)
Blind Eagle Hackers Return with Refined Tools and Sophisticated Infection Chain (thehackernews.com)
Raspberry Robin Worm Hatches a Highly Complex Upgrade (darkreading.com)
The Evolving Tactics of Vidar Stealer: From Phishing Emails to Social Media (thehackernews.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Internet of Things – IoT
Data Breaches/Leaks
Data of over 200 million Deezer users stolen, leaks on hacking forum • Graham Cluley
Five Guys Data Breach Puts HR Data Under a Heat Lamp (darkreading.com)
Analysis Of Top 10 Countries Mostly Targeted By Data Breaches (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
I bought a $15 router at Goodwill — and found a millionaire's dirty secrets (nypost.com)
Critical flaws found in Ferrari, BMW, Porsche, and other carmakers - Security Affairs
Toyota, Mercedes, BMW API flaws exposed owners’ personal info (bleepingcomputer.com)
Threat actors stole Slack private source code repositories - Security Affairs
Data of over 200 million Deezer users stolen, leaks on hacking forum • Graham Cluley
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Threat Actors Evade Detection Through Geofencing & Fingerprinting (darkreading.com)
Attackers create 130K fake accounts to abuse limited-time cloud computing resources | CSO Online
Ukrainian Cops Bust Prolific Fraud Call Centre - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Software engineer busted after being inspired by Office Space scam | PC Gamer
Are Meta and Twitter Ushering in a New Age of Insider Threats? (darkreading.com)
Ex-GE engineer sentenced for stealing turbine tech for China • The Register
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Avast: Expect Cyber crime "Scamdemic" to Continue in 2023 - MSSP Alert
Software engineer busted after being inspired by Office Space scam | PC Gamer
US regulators warn banks over cryptocurrency risks - BBC News
RedZei Chinese Scammers Targeting Chinese Students in the UK (thehackernews.com)
Ukrainian Cops Bust Prolific Fraud Call Centre - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Impersonation Attacks
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Insurance
Cyber safety premiums holding firms to ransom | Business | The Times
How can businesses decrease cyber insurance premiums while maintaining coverage? - Help Net Security
Dark Web
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Cloud/SaaS
Encryption
API
Car companies massively exposed to web vulnerabilities | The Daily Swig (portswigger.net)
16 Car Makers and Their Vehicles Hacked via Telematics, APIs, Infrastructure | SecurityWeek.Com
What Are Some Ways to Make APIs More Secure? (darkreading.com)
Critical flaws found in Ferrari, BMW, Porsche, and other carmakers - Security Affairs
Open Source
New SHC-compiled Linux malware installs cryptominers, DDoS bots (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Linux malware uses 30 plugin exploits to backdoor WordPress sites (bleepingcomputer.com)
Social Media
Data of 235 million Twitter users leaked online - Security Affairs
The Evolving Tactics of Vidar Stealer: From Phishing Emails to Social Media (thehackernews.com)
Are Meta and Twitter Ushering in a New Age of Insider Threats? (darkreading.com)
Meta fined €390m over use of data for targeted ads - BBC News
More Political Storms for TikTok After US Government Ban | SecurityWeek.Com
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Cyber safety premiums holding firms to ransom | Business | The Times
Attackers never let a critical vulnerability go to waste - Help Net Security
Attackers evolve strategies to outmanoeuvre security teams - Help Net Security
How to start planning for disaster recovery - Help Net Security
Building A Security-First Culture: The Key To Cyber Success (forbes.com)
Data backup is no longer just about operational fallback - Help Net Security
Threat Actors Evade Detection Through Geofencing & Fingerprinting (darkreading.com)
How can businesses decrease cyber insurance premiums while maintaining coverage? - Help Net Security
Secure Disposal
Backup and Recovery
Data Protection
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
National security fears over police using Chinese tech | News | The Times
Meta fined €390m over use of data for targeted ads - BBC News
Artificial Intelligence
ChatGPT: An Easy Cyber crime Target For Cyber attacks (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
OpenAI's ChatGPT previews how AI can help hackers breach more networks (axios.com)
NATO tests AI’s ability to protect critical infrastructure against cyber attacks | CSO Online
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
War and Geopolitical Conflict: The New Battleground for DDoS Attacks (darkreading.com)
Cyber attacks against governments jumped 95% in last half of 2022, CloudSek says | CSO Online
It's time to focus on information warfare's hard questions (cyberscoop.com)
National security fears over police using Chinese tech | News | The Times
Ex-GE engineer sentenced for stealing turbine tech for China • The Register
Pro-Russia cyber attacks aim at destabilizing Poland - Security Affairs
Poland warns of attacks by Russia-linked Ghostwriter hacking group (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Nation State Actors – China
National security fears over police using Chinese tech | News | The Times
Ex-GE engineer sentenced for stealing turbine tech for China • The Register
Nation State Actors – Iran
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerability Management
Adobe, Apple, Cisco, Microsoft Flaws Make Up Half of KEV Catalog (darkreading.com)
Attackers never let a critical vulnerability go to waste - Help Net Security
Vulnerabilities
Over 60,000 Exchange servers vulnerable to ProxyNotShell attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Adobe, Apple, Cisco, Microsoft Flaws Make Up Half of KEV Catalog (darkreading.com)
Rackspace: Ransomware Attack Bypassed ProxyNotShell Mitigations (darkreading.com)
Zoho urges admins to patch severe ManageEngine bug immediately (bleepingcomputer.com)
Android's First Security Updates for 2023 Patch 60 Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Fortinet and Zoho Urge Customers to Patch Enterprise Software Vulnerabilities (thehackernews.com)
Qualcomm, Lenovo flag multiple high impact firmware vulnerabilities | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Netgear Wi-Fi routers need to be patched immediately | TechRadar
Other News
The cyber security industry will undergo significant changes in 2023 - Help Net Security
SecurityAffairs Top 10 cybersecurity posts of 2022 - Security Affairs
BleepingComputer's most popular cybersecurity stories of 2022
WordPress Security: 22 Ways To Protect Your Website (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Cyber attacks against governments jumped 95% in last half of 2022, CloudSek says | CSO Online
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 19 February 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 19 February 2021: Masslogger Swipes Outlook & Chrome Credentials; Phishers trick LinkedIn users; Solarwinds Attack ‘Largest And Most Sophisticated Attack’ Ever; Ransomware gangs are running riot, paying them off doesn’t help; Most security bugs in the wild are years old; Hacker Claims Files Stolen from Prominent Law Firm; 100+ Financial Services Firms Targeted in Ransom DDoS Attacks in 2020; 14 million alleged Amazon and eBay account details sold online; Think backups will protect you from ransomware? What do you think gets attacked first?
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
Masslogger Swipes Microsoft Outlook, Google Chrome Credentials
Cyber Criminals are targeting Windows users with a new variant of the Masslogger trojan, which is spyware designed to swipe victims’ credentials from Microsoft Outlook, Google Chrome and various instant-messenger accounts. Researchers uncovered the campaign targeting users in Italy, Latvia and Turkey starting in mid-January. When the Masslogger variant launched its infection chain, it disguised its malicious RAR files as Compiled HTML (CHM) files. This is a new move for Masslogger, and helps the malware sidestep potential defensive programs, which would otherwise block the email attachment based on its RAR file extension, said researchers on Wednesday.
https://threatpost.com/masslogger-microsoft-outlook-google-chrome/164011/
Phishers tricking users via fake LinkedIn Private Shared Document
The phishing message is delivered via LinkedIn’s internal messaging system and looks like it has been sent by one of the victim’s contacts. The message urges the recipient to follow a third-party link to view a document. If they fail to find this suspicious, they’ll be redirected to a convincingly spoofed LinkedIn login page, and if they enter their login credentials, their account will probably soon be sending out phishing messages to their contacts.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/02/18/linkedin-private-shared-document/
Solarwinds Attack Hit 100 Companies And Took Months Of Planning’; ‘Largest And Most Sophisticated Attack’ Ever Seen According To Microsoft; Hackers Downloaded Some Azure, Exchange, And Intune Source Code
A hacking campaign that used a tech company as a springboard to compromise a raft of US government agencies has been called “the largest and most sophisticated attack the world has ever seen”, according to Microsoft. Nine US governmental agencies were breached along with 100 different private sector companies , many of which were technology companies, including products that could be used to launch additional intrusions. Microsoft said it has formally completed its investigation into the SolarWinds-related breach and found no evidence that hackers abused its internal systems or official products to pivot and attack end-users and business customers, though it did state that it had discovered that hackers used the access they gained through the SolarWinds Orion app to pivot to Microsoft's internal network, where they accessed the source code of several internal projects.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/solarwinds-attack-hit-100-companies-and-took-months-of-planning-says-white-house/ https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/solarwinds-us-russia-hacking-b1802299.html https://www.zdnet.com/article/microsoft-says-solarwinds-hackers-downloaded-some-azure-exchange-and-intune-source-code/
Ransomware gangs are running riot – paying them off doesn’t help
In the past five years, ransomware attacks have evolved from rare misfortunes into common and disruptive threats. Hijacking the IT systems of organisations and forcing them to pay a ransom in order to reclaim them, cyber criminals are freely extorting millions of pounds from companies – and they’re enjoying a remarkably low risk of arrest as they do it.
https://theconversation.com/ransomware-gangs-are-running-riot-paying-them-off-doesnt-help-155254
Most security bugs in the wild are years old
Most vulnerabilities exploited in the wild are years old and some could be remedied easily with a readily available patch. This is one of the findings of a new report, which states that two thirds (65 percent) of CVEs found in 2020 were more than three years old, while a third of those (32 percent) were originally identified in 2015 or earlier.
https://www.itproportal.com/news/most-security-bugs-in-the-wild-are-multiple-years-old/
Hacker Claims to Have Stolen Files Belonging to Prominent Law Firm Jones Day
A hacker claims to have stolen files belonging to the global law firm Jones Day and posted many of them on the dark web. Jones Day has many prominent clients, including former President Donald Trump and major corporations. Jones Day, in a statement, disputed that its network has been breached. The statement said that a file-sharing company that it has used was recently compromised and had information taken. Jones Day said it continues to investigate the breach and will continue to be in discussion with affected clients and appropriate authorities.
Former Spy Chief Calls For Military Cyber Attacks On Ransomware Hackers
The state should launch military cyber attacks to shut down ransomware gangs that have extorted millions of pounds from British businesses, a former spy chief has said.
Ciaran Martin, who previously led the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre, said the problem of criminal gangs locking and stealing files has become so serious that Government should now seek to disrupt the operations of prolific criminals.
The plans would mark a major change of tack for the UK authorities, who have long downplayed the idea they could routinely use offensive hacking as well as cyber defence.
Think your backups will protect you from ransomware? What do you think the malware attacked first?
If you think your backup strategy means you’re protected from the worst that cyber criminals can throw at you, we’ve got some bad news. Ransomware creators know all about backups, too. So, if you are unlucky enough to get a “pay up or else” notice, there’s a very good chance that the attacker in question has already been stealthily working their way through your systems for some time, ensuring your recovery data has already been comprehensively trashed.
https://www.theregister.com/2021/02/17/protect_yourself_from_ransomware_webcast/
100+ Financial Services Firms Targeted in Ransom DDoS Attacks in 2020
More than 100 financial services firms across multiple countries were targeted in a wave of ransom distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks conducted by the same threat actor in 2020. The attacks moved in methodical fashion across Europe, North America, Latin America, and Asia, hitting dozens of organizations in the financial sector in each region, the Financial Services Information Sharing and Analysis Center (FS-ISAC) disclosed this week. Among those targeted were banks, exchanges, payments companies, card issuers, payroll companies, insurance firms, and money transfer services.
14 million alleged Amazon and eBay account details sold online
An unknown user was offering the data of 14 million Amazon and eBay customers’ accounts for sale on a popular hacking forum. The data appears to come from users who had Amazon or eBay accounts from 2014-2021 in 18 different countries. The database was being sold for $800 and the accounts are divided into their respective countries. The leaked data includes the customer’s full name, postal code, delivery address, and shop name, as well 1.6 million phone records.
https://cybernews.com/security/14-million-amazon-and-ebay-accounts-sold-online-in-new-leak/
Threats
Ransomware
BEC
Phishing
This phishing email promises you a bonus - but actually delivers this Windows trojan malware
How Hackers use Phishing to Hijack Sites through Hosting Provider
Malware
Windows and Linux servers targeted by new WatchDog botnet for almost two years
TrickBot's BazarBackdoor malware is now coded in Nim to evade antivirus
Mobile
IOT
Vulnerabilities
WordPress plugin exploit puts more than one million sites at risk
Bug in shared SDK can let attackers join calls undetected across multiple apps
Malvertisers Exploited WebKit 0-Day to Redirect Browser Users to Scam Sites
Microsoft Pulls Bad Windows Update After Patch Tuesday Headaches
Telegram privacy feature failed to delete self-destructing video files
Data Breaches
Organised Crime
Insider Threats
Supply Chain
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation-State Actors
Russian state hackers targeted Centreon servers in years-long campaign
Feds Indict North Korean Hackers for Years of Heists and Scams
MPs sign up to Clubhouse app despite Chinese security concerns
Privacy
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Most businesses plan to move away from VPNs, adopt a zero-trust access model
20 Common Tools & Techniques Used by macOS Threat Actors & Malware
Discord is fast becoming a favourite tool among cyber criminals
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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