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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 03 May 2024
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 03 May 2024:
-Most Attacks Impacting SMB’s Target Older, Unpatched Vulnerabilities
-91% of Ransomware Victims Paid At least One Ransom in the Past Year, as 1 in 5 Ransomware Attacks Triggers Lawsuit
-BEC and Fund Transfer Fraud Top Insurance Claims
-Correlating Cyber Investments with Business Outcomes
-Vulnerability Exploitation up 180%, 68% of Breaches involved Humans and Supply Chain Weak Link
-MOVEit & Change Healthcare Attacks Designated as Cyber Catastrophe Loss Events by Insurer
-Securing Your Organisation’s Supply Chain: Reducing the Risks of Third Parties
-Why Remote Desktop Tools are Facing an Onslaught of Cyber Threats
-95% of Organisations Revamped Cyber Security Strategies in the Last Year: Make Sure Yours is Right
-Human Factor a Significant Risk for Small and Medium-Sized Businesses.
-Microsoft CEO Says it is Putting Security Above All Else in Major Refocus
-Ending the Culture of Silence in Cyber Security; Three Ways to Empower Teams
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
Most Attacks Impacting SMB’s Target Older, Unpatched Vulnerabilities
Attackers continue to aggressively target small and mid-size businesses using specific high-profile vulnerabilities dating back a decade or more, network telemetry shows. Findings have shown that this is due to these vulnerabilities featuring in a wide range of products. Due to their prevalence, they can often become missed by organisations conducting patch management and therefore leave the organisation open.
For this reason it is critical that all organisations, including smaller organisations, have internal as well as external vulnerability scanning. You might believe your systems are patched up to date but there is no way to confirm without scanning , or to know which patches might have been missed.
Sources: [Infosecurity Magazine]
91% of Ransomware Victims Paid At least One Ransom in the Past Year, as 1 in 5 Ransomware Attacks Triggers Lawsuit
Ransomware attacks saw a significant surge in 2023, following a dip in 2022. The number of victims increased by 66% from 2022 to 2023, with 91% of those affected paying at least one ransom. 58% of organisations have been targeted six times or more.
The Sophos State of Ransomware 2023 report highlighted ransom payments rose by 500%; nearly two-thirds exceeded $1m or more, with an average payment of $2m. Furthermore, 30% of the demands were for over $5m.
In the US, 18% of incidents led to litigation, with 123 lawsuits filed in 2023 and 355 over five years. Data breaches, affecting 283.3 million records, primarily triggered these lawsuits, especially in healthcare and finance sectors. The resolution rate is 59%, with the highest settlement at $8.7m. Regulatory fines added nearly $10m to the financial impact. These figures underscore the significant financial implications of ransomware attacks and the urgent need for robust cyber security measures.
Sources: [ZD Net] [Infosecurity Magazine] [Security Magazine] [PrNewsWire] [Infosecurity Magazine]
BEC and Fund Transfer Fraud Top Insurance Claims
Cyber Insurer Coalition's 2024 Cyber Claims Report highlights a significant trend in cyber security threats, identifying email-based fraud as the predominant cause of insurance claims in 2023, accounting for 53% of all claims. Business email compromise (BEC) and funds transfer fraud (FTF) topped the list, contributing to 28% of claims and increasing claim amounts by 24% to an average loss exceeding $278,000. In contrast, ransomware, while less frequent at 19% of claims, also saw a rise in both frequency and severity, with average losses climbing to over $263,000. The report also notes a 13% year-on-year surge in overall claims, with substantial losses tied to compromised network security devices and a notable vulnerability in organisations using exposed remote desktop protocols.
Source: [Infosecurity Magazine]
Correlating Cyber Investments with Business Outcomes
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has implemented stringent new rules compelling organisations to report significant cyber incidents within four days and to annually disclose details concerning their cyber security risk management, strategy, and governance. These mandates are seen as giving “more teeth to the idea that cyber security is a business problem” and “bringing an element of cyber security to the boardroom” according to cyber security solutions provider SecurityGate. Highlighted in the "Cybersecurity Insights" podcast, experts argue for simplifying cyber security strategies, advocating sustained resource allocation over reactive measures, and emphasising the importance of training over expensive solutions. These steps are deemed crucial for enhancing organisational resilience and security in a landscape where cyber threats are increasingly sophisticated and pervasive.
Source: [InfoRisk Today]
Verizon: Vulnerability Exploitation up 180%, 68% of Breaches involved Humans and Supply Chain Weak Link
Verizon has released the findings of its 17th Annual Data Breach Investigations Report, which showed security incidents doubled year over year in 2023 to a record high 30,458 security events and 10,626 confirmed breaches. Some of the key takeaways from the 100-page report include zero-day attacks on unpatched systems and devices rising 180% in 2023, most breaches (68%) involving a non-malicious human element and the median time for users to fall for phishing emails falling just south of 60 seconds. In its first inclusion as a separate metric, supply chain attacks were found to contribute to 15% of all attacks.
Sources: [MSSP Alert] [Verizon]
MOVEit & Change Healthcare Attacks Designated as Cyber Catastrophe Loss Events by Insurer
Verisk’s Property Claim Services (PCS) has recently identified the MOVEit and Change Healthcare cyber attacks as significant Cyber Catastrophe Loss Events. These designations are part of PCS’s Global Cyber solution, which tracks cyber incidents and their potential impact on the insurance market. The designation indicates that each attack is anticipated to result in insurance industry losses exceeding USD 250 million.
The MOVEit attack, linked to the Russian-affiliated group Cl0p, compromised over 2,700 organisations globally, affecting up to 90 million individuals. The Change Healthcare attack, attributed to the ALPHV/Blackcat gang, notably disrupted UnitedHealth Group’s operations, with projected costs and lost revenue totalling up to USD 1.6 billion. These designations highlight the escalating scale and financial impact of cyber incidents on global markets.
Source: [Reinsurance News]
Securing Your Organisation’s Supply Chain: Reducing the Risks of Third Parties
Nearly every organisation is part of a supply chain, where a significant amount of data is transferred. When data leaves your infrastructure, its security depends on the third party. The risks of a cyber incident increases as the supply chain increases.
Organisations need to mitigate the risks that their third party brings. This requires an understanding of the supply chain actors, and performing cyber security assessments of the most critical ones. The objective is to ensure that your organisation is satisfied with the third party’s security controls, or to work together to remediate any gaps.
Source: [Help Net Security]
Why Remote Desktop Tools are Facing an Onslaught of Cyber Threats
In the era of hybrid work, remote desktop tools have become crucial yet vulnerable points within corporate networks, attracting significant cyber criminal attention. A study by Barracuda Networks underscores the challenges of securing these tools. Virtual Network Computing (VNC) is particularly susceptible; it is targeted in 98% of these types of attacks due to its use of multiple, sometimes unsecured ports. VNC attacks predominantly exploit weak password practices, notably through brute force methods. Conversely, Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) accounts for about 1.6% of these attacks but is favoured for more extensive network breaches, often involving ransomware or crypto mining. The study highlights a pressing need for robust endpoint management and heightened security measures to mitigate these threats.
Source: [ITPro]
95% of Organisations Revamped Cyber Security Strategies in the Last Year: Make Sure Yours is Right
A recent report found that 95% of companies have altered their cyber security strategies in the last twelve months. This was driven by keeping pace with the shifting regulatory landscape (98%), the need to meet customer expectations for data protection and privacy (89%), and the rise of AI-driven threats and solutions (65%). Almost half (44%) of non-security executives do not understand the regulatory requirements their organisation must adhere to.
When it came to reporting, the study found that security teams aren’t reporting on key operational metrics that define whether their security investments and strategy changes have a measurable impact. It is evident that there is a disconnect between security and non-security professionals when it comes to the business strategy.
Sources: [Business Wire] [Security Magazine]
Human Factor a Significant Risk for Small and Medium-Sized Businesses.
A survey of business and IT security in small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) conducted by LastPass found that roughly one in five business leaders admits to circumventing security policies, as do one in 10 IT security leaders. The survey found that password management is critically important to cyber security, with nearly half (47%) reporting recent breaches due to compromised passwords.
Sources: [Beta News] [Business Wire]
Microsoft CEO Says it is Putting Security Above All Else in Major Refocus
Following a series of high-profile attacks in recent months and a report by the US Cyber Safety Review Board (CSRB), Microsoft’s CEO has revealed it will now focus its efforts on an increase in the commitment to security. Investigating a summer 2023 attack, Microsoft was deemed to have made a series of “avoidable errors”, including the failure to detect several compromises, the CSRB said.
Sources: [TechRadar]
Ending the Culture of Silence in Cyber Security; Three Ways to Empower Teams
A recent discussion on workplace errors highlights the significant repercussions of cyber breaches compared to typical office mistakes. In the UK, nearly a third of businesses face cyber attacks weekly, with each breach costing approximately £4,000. However, a concerning trend is that 41% of these breaches are not reported to internal leadership, often due to fears among staff about the consequences of admitting faults. A three-pronged approach has been suggested to foster a blame-free culture: providing tailored and evolving cyber training, establishing safe zones for admitting mistakes, and implementing robust recovery plans. This approach not only prepares employees to handle potential breaches more effectively but also encourages them to report incidents promptly, reducing the overall impact and aiding quicker recovery. Such strategies are essential for maintaining resilience against increasingly sophisticated cyber threats.
Source: [Minute Hack]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Verizon 2024 Data Breach Investigations Report: 5 Takeaways | MSSP Alert
Verizon DBIR: Vulnerability exploitation in breaches up 180% | TechTarget
Verizon DBIR: Basic Security Gaffes Cause Breach Surge (darkreading.com)
95% of Organisations Revamped Their Cyber Security Strategies in the Last Year | Business Wire
95% of organisations adjusted cyber security strategies this past year | Security Magazine
1 in 5 US Ransomware Attacks Triggers Lawsuit - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Are Enterprises Overconfident About Cyber Security Readiness? (govinfosecurity.com)
How CISOs Can Contend with Increasing Scrutiny from Regulators (informationweek.com)
Correlating Cyber Investments with Business Outcomes (inforisktoday.com)
Ending The Culture of Silence In Cyber Security – 3 Ways To Empower Teams - Minutehack
97% of security leaders have increased SaaS security budgets - Help Net Security
The rise in CISO job dissatisfaction – what’s wrong and how can it be fixed? | CSO Online
Should Cyber Security Leadership Finally be Professionalized? - SecurityWeek
What needs to change to overcome nonchalant security approaches | TechRadar
Agile by Design: Cyber Security at the Heart of Transformation (noeticcyber.com)
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Q1 2024 Ransomware Report: 21% Increase in Q1 2023 Ransomware Activity (corvusinsurance.com)
91% of ransomware victims paid at least one ransom in the past year, survey finds | ZDNET
1 in 5 US Ransomware Attacks Triggers Lawsuit - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
There was an 81% year-over-year increase in ransomware attacks | Security Magazine
Ransom recovery costs reach $2.73 million - Help Net Security
Cactus Ransomware Group Targets Qlik Sense Servers | Decipher (duo.com)
How AI and data protection intersect in today's threat era - SiliconANGLE
Better hygiene may mitigate the need to ban ransomware payments | Computer Weekly
Ukrainian REvil Hacker Sentenced to 13 Years and Ordered to Pay $16 Million (thehackernews.com)
How Businesses Should Grapple With Ransomware Threats (eetimes.eu)
Cyber security consultant arrested after allegedly extorting IT firm (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Victims
Change Healthcare breached via Citrix portal with no MFA | TechTarget
Almost all US hospitals took financial hit from Change hack, AHA says | Reuters
Another major pharmacy chain shuts following possible cyber attack | TechRadar
Hack That Paralyzed US Health Care Turns Up Scrutiny on Insurer (claimsjournal.com)
Cyber attack to cost Western Isles Council half a million pounds (holyrood.com)
LockBit publishes confidential data stolen from Cannes hospital in France (therecord.media)
French hospital CHC-SV refuses to pay LockBit extortion demand (bleepingcomputer.com)
'Cybersecurity incident' closes London Drugs' pharmacies • The Register
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
AI-driven phishing attacks deceive even the most aware users - Help Net Security
US Post Office phishing sites get as much traffic as the real one (bleepingcomputer.com)
If you receive a Shein mystery box, do not open it | TechRadar
Why the automotive sector is a target for email-based cyber attacks - Help Net Security
BEC
BEC and Fund Transfer Fraud Top Insurance Claims - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Other Social Engineering
FBI warns of fake verification schemes targeting dating app users (bleepingcomputer.com)
A Lot of People Are Falling for Those 'Your Package Cannot Be Delivered' Texts | PCMag
Artificial Intelligence
AI-driven phishing attacks deceive even the most aware users - Help Net Security
AI is creating a new generation of cyber attacks - Help Net Security
Combating the Rising Tide of AI-Driven Cyber Crime (cryptopolitan.com)
Businesses turn to generative AI but many don't have policies on it (betanews.com)
How AI and data protection intersect in today's threat era - SiliconANGLE
Understanding emerging AI and data privacy regulations - Help Net Security
To understand the risks posed by AI, follow the money – O’Reilly (oreilly.com)
From Risk to Resilience: Managing Data Security in AI-Driven Enterprises | Inc.com
Cyber security experts face AI risks, deepfakes, burnout | Fortune
US Government Releases New AI Security Guidelines for Critical Infrastructure (thehackernews.com)
Why Using Microsoft Copilot Could Amplify Existing Data Quality and Privacy Issues - SecurityWeek
2FA/MFA
Malware
New "Goldoon" Botnet Targets D-Link Routers With Decade-Old Flaw (thehackernews.com)
New SOHO router malware aims for cloud accounts, internal company resources - Help Net Security
Guarding the Gates: The Growing Abundance of Linux Malware - VMRay
Bogus npm Packages Used to Trick Software Developers into Installing Malware (thehackernews.com)
Millions of Malicious 'Imageless' Containers Planted on Docker Hub Over 5 Years (thehackernews.com)
ZLoader Malware Evolves with Anti-Analysis Trick from Zeus Banking Trojan (thehackernews.com)
New Cuttlefish malware infects routers to monitor traffic for credentials (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
Powerful 'Brokewell' Android Trojan Allows Attackers to Takeover Devices - SecurityWeek
Google Prevented 2.28 Million Malicious Apps from Reaching Play Store in 2023 (thehackernews.com)
New Wpeeper Android malware hides behind hacked WordPress sites (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft warns of "Dirty Stream" attack impacting Android apps (bleepingcomputer.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Internet of Things – IoT
NCSC: New UK law bans default passwords on smart devices (securityaffairs.com)
A glaring Android TV security flaw might put your Gmail at risk | Android Central
Data Breaches/Leaks
PSNI data breach: Almost 5,000 officers and staff in legal action - BBC News
Kaiser Permanente data breach may have impacted 13.4 million patients (securityaffairs.com)
FBCS data breach impacted 2M individuals (securityaffairs.com)
States shares health debt data of 5,000 in an email | Guernsey Press
Qantas app exposed sensitive traveller details to random users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Philadelphia Inquirer: Data of over 25,000 people stolen in 2023 breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Australian pubgoers' personal info posted to leak site • The Register
Monash Health data breach exposes sexual assault and family violence claims (smh.com.au)
Panda Restaurant Group disclosed a data breach (securityaffairs.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
AI is creating a new generation of cyber attacks - Help Net Security
Combating the Rising Tide of AI-Driven Cyber Crime (cryptopolitan.com)
Router Roulette: Cyber Criminals and Nation-States Sharing Compromised Networks | Trend Micro (US)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
How insider threats can cause serious security breaches - Help Net Security
Ex-NSA Employee Sentenced to 22 Years for Trying to Sell U.S. Secrets to Russia (thehackernews.com)
Insurance
Cyber facility in capacity raise as risk severity grows (emergingrisks.co.uk)
Hack That Paralyzed US Health Care Turns Up Scrutiny on Insurer (claimsjournal.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Cloud/SaaS
New SOHO router malware aims for cloud accounts, internal company resources - Help Net Security
97% of security leaders have increased SaaS security budgets - Help Net Security
Encryption
UK's Investigatory Powers Bill approved to become law • The Register
Ten years of Heartbleed: Lessons learned | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Linux and Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Change Healthcare breached via Citrix portal with no MFA | TechTarget
Okta warns of "unprecedented" credential stuffing attacks on customers (bleepingcomputer.com)
NCSC: New UK law bans default passwords on smart devices (securityaffairs.com)
New Cuttlefish malware infects routers to monitor traffic for credentials (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to use a YubiKey to log into Windows and macOS (xda-developers.com)
Social Media
How TikTok Grew From a Fun App for Teens Into a Potential National Security Threat - SecurityWeek
Facebook at 20: Contemplating the Cost of Privacy (darkreading.com)
Training, Education and Awareness
Ending The Culture Of Silence In Cyber Security – 3 Ways To Empower Teams - Minutehack
Everyone's an Expert: How to Empower Your Employees for Cyber Security Success (thehackernews.com)
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
UK's Investigatory Powers Bill approved to become law • The Register
UK rolls out new consumer safeguards for smart devices (betanews.com)
FCC fines major wireless carriers over illegal location data sharing - Help Net Security
Understanding emerging AI and data privacy regulations - Help Net Security
CISA's incident reporting requirements go too far, trade groups and lawmakers say | CyberScoop
Data Protection
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Cyber security experts face AI risks, deepfakes, burnout | Fortune
The rise in CISO job dissatisfaction – what’s wrong and how can it be fixed? | CSO Online
Agencies to turn toward ‘skill-based hiring’ for cyber and tech jobs, ONCD says | CyberScoop
Cyber Security Degrees, Are They Really Worth It? | HackerNoon
Beyond the Buzz: Rethinking Alcohol as a Cyber Security Bonding Ritual - SecurityWeek
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Ukrainian REvil Hacker Sentenced to 13 Years and Ordered to Pay $16 Million (thehackernews.com)
Police shuts down 12 fraud call centres, arrests 21 suspects (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cyber security consultant arrested after allegedly extorting IT firm (bleepingcomputer.com)
CEO who sold fake Cisco devices to US military gets 6 years in prison (bleepingcomputer.com)
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Nation State Actors
China
‘Honeypots’ and influence operations: China’s spies turn to Europe (ft.com)
Philippines Pummelled by Cyber Attacks & Misinformation Tied to China (darkreading.com)
Germany grapples with wave of spying threats from Russia and China - BBC News
How TikTok Grew From a Fun App for Teens Into a Potential National Security Threat - SecurityWeek
Think tank: Tech companies spread China's propaganda • The Register
China's attacks on critical infrastructure ‘tip of the iceberg' | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Chinese Hackers Have Been Probing DNS Networks Globally for Years: Report - SecurityWeek
Muddling Meerkat hackers manipulate DNS using China’s Great Firewall (bleepingcomputer.com)
Chinese government website security has big problems • The Register
Espionage breaches account for 25% in APAC, report reveals (securitybrief.co.nz)
Russia
Router Roulette: Cyber Criminals and Nation-States Sharing Compromised Networks | Trend Micro (US)
Russian Hackers Target Industrial Systems in North America, Europe - SecurityWeek
Pro-Russia hacktivists attacking vital tech in water and other sectors, agencies say | CyberScoop
Germany grapples with wave of spying threats from Russia and China - BBC News
Ukraine Targeted in Cyber Attack Exploiting 7-Year-Old Microsoft Office Flaw (thehackernews.com)
Germany Warns Of Consequences For Alleged Russian Cyber Attack (rferl.org)
Hackers Claim to Have Infiltrated Belarus’ Main Security Service - SecurityWeek
Military Tank Manual, 2017 Zero-Day Anchor Latest Ukraine Cyber Attack (darkreading.com)
Sweden prepares for Eurovision amidst fears of protests, cyber attacks and unrest | Euronews
Ex-NSA Employee Sentenced to 22 Years for Trying to Sell U.S. Secrets to Russia (thehackernews.com)
Two British men charged with helping Russian intelligence - BBC News
Two hackers in Ukraine accused of spreading Russian propaganda (therecord.media)
Iran
North Korea
Other Nation State Actors, Hacktivism, Extremism, Terrorism and Other Geopolitical Threat Intelligence
Vulnerability Management
When is One Vulnerability Scanner Not Enough? (thehackernews.com)
Vulnerability exploitation nearly tripled in 2023 (telecoms.com)
Vulnerabilities
Cisco devices again targeted by state-linked threat campaign - TechCentral.ie
Okta warns of "unprecedented" credential stuffing attacks on customers (bleepingcomputer.com)
1,200+ Vulnerabilities Detected In Microsoft Products In 2023 (gbhackers.com)
Most attacks affecting SMBs target five older vulnerabilities | CSO Online
Severe Flaws Disclosed in Brocade SANnav SAN Management Software (thehackernews.com)
UnitedHealth hackers took advantage of Citrix vulnerability to break in, CEO says (yahoo.com)
Palo Alto Updates Remediation for Max-Critical Firewall Bug (darkreading.com)
WordPress plugin vulnerability poses severe security risk, allows for site takeovers | TechSpot
Ukraine Targeted in Cyber Attack Exploiting 7-Year-Old Microsoft Office Flaw (thehackernews.com)
New R Programming Vulnerability Exposes Projects to Supply Chain Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Grafana Tool Vulnerability Let Attackers Inject SQL Queries (gbhackers.com)
Microsoft says April Windows updates break VPN connections (bleepingcomputer.com)
NTLM auth traffic spikes after Windows Server patch • The Register
New "Goldoon" Botnet Targets D-Link Routers With Decade-Old Flaw (thehackernews.com)
Four Critical Vulnerabilities Expose HPE Aruba Devices to RCE Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Ten years of Heartbleed: Lessons learned | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
1,400 GitLab Servers Impacted by Exploited Vulnerability - SecurityWeek
Tools and Controls
Why remote desktop tools are facing an onslaught of cyber threats | ITPro
Correlating Cyber Investments With Business Outcomes (inforisktoday.com)
When is One Vulnerability Scanner Not Enough? (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft CEO says it is "putting security above all else" in major refocus | TechRadar
Can automating security relieve CISO pressure? (techinformed.com)
10 Critical Endpoint Security Tips You Should Know (thehackernews.com)
Businesses turn to generative AI but many don't have policies on it (betanews.com)
Ending The Culture Of Silence In Cyber Security – 3 Ways To Empower Teams - Minutehack
Organisations Struggle with Zero Trust: Gartner | MSSP Alert
Tech Tip: Why Haven't You Set Up DMARC Yet? (darkreading.com)
97% of security leaders have increased SaaS security budgets - Help Net Security
DPRK's Kimsuky APT Abuses Weak DMARC Policies, Feds Warn (darkreading.com)
How to Red Team GenAI: Challenges, Best Practices, and Learnings (darkreading.com)
Chinese Hackers Have Been Probing DNS Networks Globally for Years: Report - SecurityWeek
Muddling Meerkat hackers manipulate DNS using China’s Great Firewall (bleepingcomputer.com)
Why LLMs are predicting the future of compliance and risk management | VentureBeat
Other News
Microsoft CEO says it is "putting security above all else" in major refocus | TechRadar
A Season Of Health Breaches, A Season Of Changes (forbes.com)
Bank of England tells payment firms to step up disruption mitigation plans (yahoo.com)
NCSC updates warning over hacktivist threat to CNI | Computer Weekly
The EU's Strategy for a Cyber Secure Digital Single Market | UpGuard
To Damage OT Systems, Hackers Tap USBs, Old Bugs & Malware (darkreading.com)
During National Small Business Week, Take Steps to Secure Your Business | CISA
At Microsoft, years of security debt come crashing down | Cybersecurity Dive
Sweden prepares for Eurovision amidst fears of protests, cyber attacks and unrest | Euronews
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 08 July 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 08 July 2022:
-Businesses Urged Not To Give In To Ransomware Cyber Criminals As Authorities See Increase In Payouts
-People Are the Primary Attack Vector Around the World
-Early Detection Crucial in Stopping Business Email Compromise (BEC) Scams
-54% of SMBs Do Not Implement Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA)
-New Cyber Threat Emerges from the Inside, Research Report Finds
-Ransomware: Why it's still a big threat, and where the gangs are going next
-NCSC: Prepare for Protected Period of Heightened Cyber-Risk
-69% Of Employees Need to Deal With More Security Measures In A Hybrid Work Environment
-FBI and MI5 Leaders Give Unprecedented Joint Warning on Chinese Spying
-As Cyber Criminals Recycle Ransomware, They're Getting Faster
-UK Military Investigates Hacks on Army Social Media Accounts
-APT Campaign Targeting SOHO Routers Highlights Risks to Remote Workers
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Businesses Urged Not to Give In To Ransomware Cyber Criminals As Authorities See Increase In Payouts
While there have been arguments made for criminalising the payment of ransoms, it poses a number of additional risks such as providing the criminals with an additional factor they could use to extort their victims.
Businesses are being urged not to pay cyber extortionists as authorities say they are seeing evidence of a rise in ransomware payments.
In a joint letter to the Law Society, the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) and the Information Commissioner's Office are warning solicitors who may have been advising their clients to pay.
It follows warnings earlier this year by cyber security experts from the UK, US, and Australia of a "growing wave of increasingly sophisticated ransomware attacks" which could have "devastating consequences".
The joint letter states that while ransomware payments are "not unusually unlawful" those who pay them "should be mindful of how relevant sanctions regimes (particularly those related to Russia)" when considering making the payment.
The US sanctioned in December 2019 any financial dealings with a Russian cyber crime group that was accused of working with Russian intelligence to steal classified government documents.
Despite the spillover from the Russian war in Ukraine - in one case knocking 5,800 wind turbines in Germany offline - the NCSC says it has not detected any increase in hostile activity targeting Britain during the conflict.
Businesses however had been warned that there is a heightened threat level when it comes to cyber attacks due to the conflict which is likely to be here "for the long-haul".
People Are the Primary Attack Vector Around the World
With an unprecedented number of employees now working in hybrid or fully remote environments, compounded by an increase in cyber threats and a more overwhelmed, COVID-19 information fatigued workforce, there has never been a more critical time to effectively create and maintain a cyber secure workforce and an engaged security culture.
People have become the primary attack vector for cyber-attackers around the world. Humans, rather than technology, represent the greatest risk to organisations and the professionals who oversee security awareness programs are the key to effectively managing that risk.
Awareness programs enable security teams to effectively manage their human risk by changing how people think about cyber security and help them exhibit secure behaviours, from the Board of Directors on down.
Effective and mature security awareness programs not only change their workforce’s behaviour and culture but also measure and demonstrate their value to leadership via a metrics framework. Organisations can no longer justify an annual training to tick the compliance box, and it remains critical for organisations to dedicate enough personnel, resources, and tools to manage their human risk effectively.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/07/05/people-primary-attack-vector/
Early Detection Crucial in Stopping Business Email Compromise (BEC) Scams
Cofense Intelligence studied hundreds of business email compromise attacks and found that most scams attempt to establish trust with targeted employees over multiple emails.
Avoiding a costly social engineering attack often requires employees to spot suspicious emails before threat actors request sensitive information or access.
Cofense Intelligence published new research Thursday that showed most business email compromise (BEC) scams can be thwarted in their initial stages when the attackers are not asking for money or a transfer of funds. The cyber security vendor analysed hundreds of BEC emails sent to customers during March and April, and engaged with the threat actors in approximately half the cases.
The company found that only 36% of attackers looking to conduct fraud attacks opened with a cordial greeting and request for cash, gift cards or confidential payment information. Most BEC scams, Cofense found, attempt to slowly build up trust over the course of multiple email exchanges with the target and ingratiate them with common phrases like "sorry to bother you."
Once they realise they can get money out of you, they will do everything they can to drain you dry. For many of the scammers, this becomes a literal hustle, where they will quickly pivot to other cash-out methods. Just because something starts as a wire transfer doesn't mean they won't ask you to send cryptocurrency, gift cards, a cheque, or use your personal Venmo or PayPal to wire them money.
54% of SMBs Do Not Implement Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA)
SMB owners across the globe are still relying only on usernames and passwords to secure critical employee, customer, and partner data, according to the Global Small Business Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) Study released by the Cyber Readiness Institute (CRI).
Services that enforce MFA require users to present more than one piece of evidence whenever they log in to a business account (e.g., company email, payroll, human resources, etc.).
MFA has been in use for decades and is widely recommended by cyber security experts, yet 55% of SMBs surveyed are not “very aware” of MFA and its security benefits, and 54% do not use it for their business. Of the businesses that have not implemented MFA, 47% noted they either didn’t understand MFA or didn’t see its value. In addition, nearly 60% of small business and medium-sized owners have not discussed MFA with their employees.
Nearly all account compromise attacks can be stopped outright, just by using MFA. It’s a proven, effective way to thwart bad actors.
Of the companies that have implemented some form of MFA, many still seem to have done so haphazardly. Only 39% of those who offer MFA have a process for prioritising critical hardware, software, and data, with 49% merely “encouraging the use of MFA when it is available.”
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/07/08/smb-implement-mfa/
New Cyber Threat Emerges from the Inside, Research Report Finds
In its 2022 Insider Risk Intelligence & Research Report, DTEX Systems, a workforce cyber intelligence and security company, identifies a new cyber threat: the “Super Malicious Insider.”
Just what is a Super Malicious Insider and where does it come from? Well, it comes from inside your own organisation or someone who recently worked for you — a threat actor who may be truly of your own making.
“It was the year (2021) we all came to realise the Work-from-Anywhere (WFA) movement was here to stay,” DTEX reports. “For security and risk professionals, this hastened the end of corporate perimeter-centric security, and a requirement to protect hundreds of thousands of ‘remote offices’ outside of traditional corporate controls. To make matters worse, a measurable increase in employee attrition toward the end of 2021 created the perfect storm for insider threats.”
So, if your organisation didn’t observe a proportional increase in attempted or actual data loss, then you were likely not looking, DTEX asserts.
Critically your insiders know your vulnerabilities and can exploit them, for example, when an employee quits to join a competitor, it is often tempting to take proprietary information with them. This can include customer lists, product plans, financial data and other intellectual property.
The Super Malicious Insider is better able to hide their activities, obfuscate data and exfiltrate sensitive information without detection. Importantly, in numerous insider incidents reviewed in 2021, the Super Malicious Insider had made significant efforts to appear normal by not straying outside of their day-to-day routine, DTEX reports.
Here are some key statistics from the report:
Industrial espionage is at an all-time high. In 2021, 72% of respondents saw an increase in actionable insider threat incidents. IP or data theft led the list at 42% of incidents, followed by unauthorised or accidental disclosure (23%), sabotage (19%), fraud (%) and other (7%). In fact, 42% of all DTEX i3 investigations involved theft of IP or customer data.
The technology industry (38%), followed by pharma/life sciences (21%), accounted for the most IP theft incidents. In addition, technology (33%) had the most super malicious incidents, followed by critical infrastructure (24%) and government (11%).
Investigations that led to criminal prosecution occurred within someone’s home 75% of the time. More telling, 32% of malicious incident incidents included sophisticated insider techniques.
Ransomware: Why It's Still A Big Threat, And Where The Gangs Are Going Next
Ransomware attacks are still lucrative for cyber criminals because victims pay ransoms - and the threat is still evolving.
Ransomware has been a cyber security issue for a long time, but last year it went mainstream. Security threats like malware, ransomware and hacking gangs are always evolving.
Major ransomware attacks like those on Colonial Pipeline, the Irish Healthcare Executive and many others demonstrated how significant the problem had become as cyber attacks disrupted people's lives.
What was once a small cyber-criminal industry based around encrypting files on personal computers and demanding a ransom of a few hundred dollars for a decryption key had evolved into a massive ecosystem designed around holding critical services and infrastructure to ransom - and making extortion demands of millions of dollars.
No wonder Lindy Cameron, head of the UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), has described ransomware as "the biggest global cyber threat".
Ransomware is continually evolving, with new variants appearing, new ransomware groups emerging, and new techniques and tactics designed to make the most money from attacks.
And as the recent Conti ransomware leaks showed, the most successful ransomware gangs are organised as if they were any other group of software developers.
They are really acting like a business. Aside from the fact they're not legitimately registered, they really are. They're functioning like a real business and sometimes the number of people within these organisations is bigger than some startups. They have shown a lot of resilience and a lot of agility in adapting to what's new.
NCSC: Prepare for Protracted Period of Heightened Cyber Risk
The UK’s leading cyber security agency has urged organisations to follow best practices and take care of their infosecurity staff in order to weather an extended period of elevated cyber risk due to the ongoing war in Ukraine.
The National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) guide, Maintaining A Sustainable Strengthened Cyber Security Posture, comes on the back of warnings that organisations must “prepare for the long haul” as the conflict enters its fifth month.
Alongside basic hygiene controls, the strengthening of cyber-resilience and revisiting of risk-based decisions made in the earlier acute phase of the war, organisations should pay special attention to their security staff, the NCSC said.
“Increased workloads for cyber security staff over an extended period can harm their wellbeing and lead to lower productivity, with a potential rise in unsafe behaviours or errors,” it said.
With this in mind, the guide highlighted several steps IT security managers should consider:
Empower staff to make decisions in order to improve agility and free-up leaders to focus on medium-term priorities
Spread workloads evenly across a wider pool of staff to reduce the risk of burnout and enable less experienced employees to benefit from development opportunities
Provide opportunities for staff to recharge through more frequent breaks and time away from the office, as well as work on less pressured tasks
Look after each other by watching for signs that colleagues are struggling and ensuring they always have the right resources to hand
Engage the entire workforce with the right internal communications processes, and support so that all staff are able to identify and report suspicious behaviour
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/ncsc-prepare-cyber-risk/
69% Of Employees Need to Deal with More Security Measures In A Hybrid Work Environment
Security firm Ivanti worked with global digital transformation experts and surveyed 10,000 office workers, IT professionals, and the C-Suite to evaluate the level of prioritisation and adoption of digital employee experience in organisations and how it shapes the daily working experiences for employees. The report revealed that 49% of employees are frustrated by the tech and tools their organisation provides and 64% believe that the way they interact with technology directly impacts morale.
One of the biggest challenges facing IT leaders today is the need to enable a seamless end user experience while maintaining robust security. The challenge becomes more complex when there is pressure from the top to bypass security measures, with 49% of C-level executives reporting they have requested to bypass one or more security measures in the last year.
Maintaining a secure environment and focusing on the digital employee experience are two inseparable elements of any digital transformation. In the war for talent a key differentiator for organisations is providing an exceptional and secure digital experience. Ivanti, a cyber security software provider, says “We believe that organisations not prioritising how their employees experience technology is a contributing factor for the Great Resignation”.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/07/04/security-measures-hybrid-work-environment/
FBI and MI5 Leaders Give Unprecedented Joint Warning on Chinese Spying
The head of the FBI and the leader of Britain’s domestic intelligence agency have delivered an unprecedented joint address, raising fresh alarm about the Chinese government, warning business leaders that Beijing is determined to steal their technology for competitive gain.
In a speech at MI5’s London headquarters intended as a show of western solidarity, Christopher Wray, the FBI director, stood alongside the MI5 director general, Ken McCallum. Wray reaffirmed longstanding concerns about economic espionage and hacking operations by China, as well as the Chinese government’s efforts to stifle dissent abroad.
“We consistently see that it’s the Chinese government that poses the biggest long-term threat to our economic and national security, and by ‘our’, I mean both of our nations, along with our allies in Europe and elsewhere,” Wray said.
He told the audience the Chinese government was “set on stealing your technology, whatever it is that makes your industry tick, and using it to undercut your business and dominate your market”.
Ken McCallum said MI5 was running seven times as many investigations into China as it had been four years ago and planned to “grow as much again” to tackle the widespread attempts at inference which pervade “so many aspects of our national life”.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/06/fbi-mi5-china-spying-cyberattacks-business-economy
As Cyber Criminals Recycle Ransomware, They're Getting Faster
Like history, ransomware repeats itself. Researchers recently encountered a new variant of a ransomware campaign and observed that it has been improving itself by reusing code from publicly available sources.
Nokoyawa is a new ransomware for Windows that first appeared at the beginning of this year. The first samples found by researchers were gathered in February 2022 and contain significant coding similarities with other older ransomware strains, some going back to 2019.
These new variants had been improving themselves by reusing code from publicly available sources. The April 2022 samples include three new features that increase the number of files that Nokoyawa can encrypt. These features already existed in recent ransomware families, and their addition just indicates that Nokoyawa developers are trying to match pace with other operators in terms of technological capability.
https://www.securityweek.com/cybercriminals-recycle-ransomware-theyre-getting-faster
UK Military Investigates Hacks on Army Social Media Accounts
British military authorities are trying to find out who hacked the army’s social media accounts over the weekend, flooding them with cryptocurrency videos and posts related to collectible electronic art.
The investigation was launched after authorised content on the army’s YouTube account was replaced with a video feed promoting cryptocurrencies that included images of billionaire Elon Musk. The Army’s Twitter account retweeted a number of posts about non-fungible tokens, unique digital images that can be bought and sold but have no physical counterpart.
“Apologies for the temporary interruption to our feed,” the Army said in a tweet posted after the Twitter account was restored on Sunday. “We will conduct a full investigation and learn from this incident. Thanks for following us, and normal service will now resume.”
The Ministry of Defence said late Sunday that both breaches had been “resolved.”
While internet users were unable to access the Army’s YouTube site on Monday, a spokesperson said the site was down for standard maintenance. The Twitter feed was operating normally.
Although U.K. officials have previously raised concerns about state-sponsored Russian hacking, the military did not speculate on who was responsible for Sunday’s breaches.
“The Army takes information security extremely seriously, and until their investigation is complete it would be inappropriate to comment further,” the Ministry of Defence said.
https://www.securityweek.com/uk-military-investigates-hacks-army-social-media-accounts
Campaign Targeting SOHO Routers Highlights Risks to Remote Workers
A targeted attack campaign has been compromising small office/home office (SOHO) routers since late 2020, with the goal of hijacking network communications and infecting local computers with stealthy and sophisticated backdoors. Attacks against home routers are not new, but the implants used by attackers in this case were designed for local network reconnaissance and lateral movement instead of just abusing the router itself.
"The rapid shift to remote work in spring of 2020 presented a fresh opportunity for threat actors to subvert traditional defence-in-depth protections by targeting the weakest points of the new network perimeter - devices that are routinely purchased by consumers but rarely monitored or patched - small office/home office (SOHO) routers," researchers from Black Lotus Labs, the threat intelligence arm of telecommunications company Lumen Technologies said in a recent report.
Threats
Ransomware
Lawyers Urged to Stop Advising Clients to Pay Ransomware Demands - Infosecurity Magazine
Ransomware in 2022: Evolving threats, slow progress (techtarget.com)
AstraLocker ransomware closes doors to pursue cryptojacking • The Register
Ransomware gangs are feeling the crypto winter's impact | TechSpot
LockBit explained: How it has become the most popular ransomware | CSO Online
Hive ransomware gang turns to Rust, more complex encryption • The Register
New RedAlert Ransomware targets Windows, Linux VMware ESXi servers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware, hacking groups move from Cobalt Strike to Brute Ratel (bleepingcomputer.com)
North Korean ransomware dubbed Maui active since May 2021 • The Register
Hive Ransomware Upgrades to Rust for More Sophisticated Encryption Method (thehackernews.com)
Ransomware, hacking groups move from Cobalt Strike to Brute Ratel (bleepingcomputer.com)
New 'HavanaCrypt' Ransomware Distributed as Fake Google Software Update | SecurityWeek.Com
As New Clues Emerges, Experts Wonder: Is REvil Back? (thehackernews.com)
Researchers Detail Techniques LockBit Ransomware Using to Infect its Targets (thehackernews.com)
New 0mega ransomware targets businesses in double-extortion attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Evolution of the LockBit Ransomware operation relies on new techniques - Security Affairs
AstraLocker ransomware shuts down and releases decryptors (bleepingcomputer.com)
QNAP warns of new Checkmate ransomware targeting NAS devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
Quantum ransomware attack affects 657 healthcare orgs (bleepingcomputer.com)
How Conti ransomware group crippled Costa Rica — then fell apart | Financial Times (ft.com)
Researchers Detail Techniques LockBit Ransomware Using to Infect its Targets (thehackernews.com)
EternalBlue 5 years after WannaCry and NotPetya - SANS Internet Storm Center
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Malware
Hackers Exploiting Follina Bug to Deploy Rozena Backdoor (thehackernews.com)
Dangerous new malware dances past more than 50 antivirus services | TechRadar
Raspberry Robin campaign leverages compromised QNAP devicesSecurity Affairs
Malware knocks IT services vendor SHI offline • The Register
Near-undetectable malware linked to Russia's Cozy Bear • The Register
New stealthy OrBit malware steals data from Linux devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers are using YouTube videos to trick people into installing malware | TechRadar
Mobile
This WhatsApp scam promises big, but just sends you into a spiral | ZDNet
Android malware subscribes you to premium services without you knowing - GSMArena.com news
Free smartphone stalkerware detection tool gets dedicated hub (bleepingcomputer.com)
Apple Debuts Spyware Protection for State-Sponsored Cyber Attacks (darkreading.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Data Breaches/Leaks
Marriott Data Breach Exposes PII, Credit Cards (darkreading.com)
Aon Hack Exposed Sensitive Information of 146,000 Customers - Infosecurity Magazine
Hackers Claim to Have Stolen Police Data in China’s Largest Cyber Security Breach - Bloomberg
Human Error Blamed for Leak of 1 Billion Records of Chinese Citizens | Threatpost
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Ransomware gangs are feeling the crypto winter's impact | TechSpot
AstraLocker ransomware closes doors to pursue cryptojacking • The Register
Hackers are using YouTube videos to trick people into installing malware | TechRadar
PennyWise crypto-stealing malware spreads through YouTube (cointelegraph.com)
US urges Japan to step up pressure on crypto miners with links to Russia | Financial Times (ft.com)
Large-scale cryptomining campaign is targeting the NPM repositorySecurity Affairs
ECB to warn eurozone countries over crypto regulation | Financial Times (ft.com)
Microsoft Issue Updated Warning Against Known Cloud Threat Actor Group - IT Security Guru
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Human Error Blamed for Leak of 1 Billion Records of Chinese Citizens | Threatpost
HackerOne incident raises concerns for insider threats (techtarget.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Cloud/SaaS
Microsoft Issue Updated Warning Against Known Cloud Threat Actor Group - IT Security Guru
What Do All of Those Cloud Cyber Security Acronyms Mean? (darkreading.com)
Identity and Access Management
Asset Management
Encryption
Encryption is high up on corporate priority lists - Help Net Security
Quantum-resistant encryption recommended for standardization • The Register
The threat of quantum computing to sensitive data - Help Net Security
Inside NIST's 4 Crypto Algorithms for a Post-Quantum World (darkreading.com)
End-to-end encryption’s central role in modern self-defence | Ars Technica
API
Open Source
Social Media
Digital Transformation
Travel
Cyber Bullying and Cyber Stalking
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
ICO Set to Scale Back Public Sector Fines - Infosecurity Magazine
ECB to warn eurozone countries over crypto regulation | Financial Times (ft.com)
Wegmans hit with $400,000 data-breach penalty (democratandchronicle.com)
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Apple's New "Lockdown Mode" Protects iPhone, iPad, and Mac Against Spyware (thehackernews.com)
Pro-Kremlin hackers Killnet hit Latvia with biggest cyber attack in its history | World | The Times
TrickBot Gang Shifted its Focus on "Systematically" Targeting Ukraine (thehackernews.com)
NATO Announce Plans to Develop Cyber Rapid Response Capabilities - IT Security Guru
FBI and MI5 bosses: China cheats and steals at massive scale • The Register
Hackers linked to the Chinese government increasingly target Russia, analysis suggests - CyberScoop
In Switch, Trickbot Group Now Attacking Ukrainian Targets (darkreading.com)
Apple Debuts Spyware Protection for State-Sponsored Cyber Attacks (darkreading.com)
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Russian Info Ops Ramp Up Effort to Divide West on Ukraine - Infosecurity Magazine
Near-undetectable malware linked to Russia's Cozy Bear • The Register
Nation State Actors – China
China Censors What Could Be Biggest Data Hack in History (gizmodo.com)
Hackers linked to the Chinese government increasingly target Russia, analysis suggests - CyberScoop
China’s Cabinet Stresses Cyber Security After Data Leak - Bloomberg
Security warning after sale of stolen Chinese data - BBC News
Five accused of trying to silence China critics in US • The Register
50 Chinese students leave UK in three years after spy chiefs’ warning | Espionage | The Guardian
More UK calls for ban of CCTV makers Hikvision, Dahua • The Register
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Russian information operations focus on dividing Western coalition supporting Ukraine - CyberScoop
North Korean ransomware dubbed Maui active since May 2021 • The Register
Nation State Actors – Iran
Vulnerabilities
Cisco and Fortinet Release Security Patches for Multiple Products (thehackernews.com)
OpenSSL version 3.0.5 fixes a flaw that could potentially lead to RCE - Security Affairs
Django fixes SQL Injection vulnerability in new releases (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google fixes the fourth Chrome zero-day in 2022 - Security Affairs - Security Affairs
Tens of Jenkins plugins are affected by zero-day vulnerabilities - Security Affairs
OpenSSL fixes two “one-liner” crypto bugs – what you need to know – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Fortinet addressed multiple vulnerabilities in several products - Security Affairs
There’s a Nasty Security Hole in the Apache Webserver – The New Stack
Sector Specific
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
We currently provide tailored threat intelligence based on the following sectors, additional sectors by arrangement:
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
Other News
These are the cyber security threats of tomorrow that you should be thinking about today | ZDNet
Why Browser Vulnerabilities Are a Serious Threat — and How to Minimize Your Risk (darkreading.com)
Microsoft rolls back plan to block macros by default • Graham Cluley
Attacker groups adopt new penetration testing tool Brute Ratel | CSO Online
Security tester says he broke into datacenter via toilets • The Register
SQL injection, XSS vulnerabilities continue to plague organisations | CSO Online
Imagination is key to effective data loss prevention - Help Net Security
The Age of Collaborative Security: What Tens of Thousands of Machines Witness (thehackernews.com)
Maintaining a sustainable strengthened cyber security posture - NCSC.GOV.UK
Zero Trust Bolsters Our National Defence Against Rising Cyber Threats (darkreading.com)
Security advisory accidentally exposes vulnerable systems (bleepingcomputer.com)
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 23 July 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 23 July 2021: 40% Fell Victim To A Phishing Attack In The Past Month; Traditional Ransomware Defences Are Failing Businesses; The Number Of Employees Going Around IT Security May Surprise You; 740 Ransomware Victims Named On Data Leak Sites In Q2 2021; A More Dynamic Approach Is Needed To Tackle Today’s Evolving Cyber Security Threats; Law Firm For Ford, Boeing, Exxon, Marriott, Walgreens, And More Hacked In Ransomware Attack; UK And Allies Accuse China Of 'Reckless' Cyber Extortion And Microsoft Hack; Even after Emotet takedown, Office docs deliver 43% of all malware downloads now; Gun owners' fears after firearms dealer data breach
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
40% Fell Victim To A Phishing Attack In The Past Month
The global shift to remote work has exacerbated the onslaught, sophistication, and impact of phishing attacks, according to Ivanti. Nearly three-quarters (74%) of respondents said their organisations have fallen victim to a phishing attack in the last year, with 40% confirming they have experienced one in the last month.
Eighty percent of respondents said they have witnessed an increase in volume of phishing attempts and 85% said those attempts are getting more sophisticated. In fact, 73% of respondents said that their IT staff had been targeted by phishing attempts, and 47% of those attempts were successful.
Smishing and vishing scams are the latest variants to gain traction and target mobile users. According to recent research by Aberdeen, attackers have a higher success rate on mobile endpoints than on servers – a pattern that is trending dramatically worse. Meanwhile, the annualized risk of a data breach resulting from mobile phishing attacks has a median value of about $1.7M, and a long tail of value of about $90M.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/07/23/risk-phishing-attacks/
Traditional Ransomware Defences Are Failing Businesses
Traditional cyber security strategies are failing to protect organisations from ransomware attacks, new research suggests. Based on a poll of 200 IT decision-makers whose businesses recently suffered ransomware attacks, 54 percent of all victims had their employees go through anti-phishing training. Furthermore, almost half (49 percent) had perimeter defences set up at the time of the attack. However, attack methods have grown too sophisticated for traditional security measures to keep up. Many attacks (24 percent) still start with a successful phishing attempt, while almost a third (31 percent) see attacker enter the network through public cloud.
https://www.itproportal.com/news/traditional-ransomware-defenses-are-failing-businesses/
Cyber Security Risk: The Number Of Employees Going Around IT Security May Surprise You
Last month, a report was published highlighting challenges associated with enabling IT freedoms while ensuring tight security procedures. The findings detail a complex balancing act between IT teams and network users. Calibrating this equilibrium is particularly challenging in the age of remote work as employees log on and virtually collaborate via a host of digital solutions. Overall, the survey found that virtually all employees (93%) "are working around IT restrictions," and a mere 7% said they were "satisfied with their corporate IT restrictions." Interestingly, this information about IT workarounds does not match security leaders' and IT expectations.
740 ransomware victims named on data leak sites in Q2 2021: report
More than 700 organizations were attacked with ransomware and had their data posted to data leak sites in Q2 of 2021, according to a new research report from cyber security firm Digital Shadows.
Out of the almost 2,600 victims listed on ransomware data leak sites, 740 of them were named in Q2 2021, representing a 47% increase compared to Q1.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/740-ransomware-victims-named-on-data-leak-sites-in-q2-2021-report/
A More Dynamic Approach Is Needed To Tackle Today’s Evolving Cyber Security Threats
For decades, the cyber security industry has followed a defense-in-depth strategy, which allowed organisations to designate the battlefield against bad actors at their edge firewall. Nowadays, cyber criminals have become as creative as ever. New cyber threats are emerging every day, and with the constantly increasing rate of Ransomware, Phishing, etc. We’re forced to take a more dynamic approach when tackling these cyber threats on a day to day basis. Recent statistics demonstrate the scale of the cyber security issues faced by companies. In 2020, malware attacks increased by 358% and ransomware increased by 435%, and the average cost of recovering from a ransomware attack has doubled in the last 12 months, reaching almost $2 million in 2021.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/07/13/dynamic-approach-cybersecurity-threats/
Law Firm For Ford, Boeing, Exxon, Marriott, Walgreens, And More Hacked In Ransomware Attack
Campbell Conroy & O'Neil, P.C., a law firm handling hundreds of cases for the world's leading companies, has announced a large data breach that resulted from a ransomware attack in February. In a statement, the law firm said it noticed unusual activity on its network on February 27. The firm later realized it was being hit with a ransomware attack and contacted the FBI as well as cyber security companies for help.
UK And Allies Accuse China Of 'Reckless' Cyber Extortion And Microsoft Hack
The Government was hinting yet again at covertly using Britain’s own offensive cyber capabilities – hitting back at cyber attacks with cyber attacks of our own. This approach goes all the way back to 2013, when then defence secretary told the Conservative Party conference that the UK would “build a dedicated capability to counter-attack in cyber space and, if necessary, to strike in cyber space”.
Even after Emotet takedown, Office docs deliver 43% of all malware downloads now
Malware delivered over the cloud increased by 68% in Q2, according to data from cyber security firm Netskope.
The company released the fifth edition of its Cloud and Threat Report that covers the cloud data risks, threats and trends they see throughout the quarter.
The report noted that cloud storage apps account for more than 66% of cloud malware delivery.
"In Q2 2021, 43% of all malware downloads were malicious Office docs, compared to just 20% at the beginning of 2020. This increase comes even after the Emotet takedown, indicating that other groups observed the success of the Emotet crew and have adopted similar techniques," the report said.
Gun Owners' Fears After Firearms Dealer Data Breach
Thousands of names and addresses belonging to UK customers of a leading website for buying and selling shotguns and rifles have been published to the dark web following a "security breach".
Guntrader.uk told the BBC it learned of the breach on Monday and had notified the Information Commissioner's Office.
Police, including the National Crime Agency, are investigating.
One affected gun owner said he was afraid the breach could lead to his family being targeted by criminals.
Gun ownership is tightly controlled in the UK, making guns difficult to acquire, and potentially valuable on the black market.
The individual, who did not wish to be named, told the BBC the breach "seriously compromises my security arrangements for my firearms and puts me in a situation where me and my family could be targeted and in danger".
Threats
Ransomware
BEC
Phishing
Malware
Leaked NSO Group Data Hints At Widespread Pegasus Spyware Infections
This New Malware Hides Itself Among Windows Defender Exclusions To Evade Detection
MacBook Users Beware! Hackers Are Buying $49 Malware To Wreak Havoc On MacOS
New MosaicLoader Malware Targets Software Pirates Via Online Ads
CISA Warns Of Stealthy Malware Found On Hacked Pulse Secure Devices
This Password-Stealing Windows Malware Is Distributed Via Ads In Search Results
Mobile
Vulnerabilities
Researcher Uncovers Yet Another Unpatched Windows Printer Spooler Vulnerability
16-Year-Old Security Bug Affects Millions Of HP, Samsung, Xerox Printers
Fortinet Fixes Bug Letting Unauthenticated Hackers Run Code As Root
Windows 10 Vulnerability Lets Anyone Get Administrator Privileges
Researchers Discover Security Flaws In Telegram Encryption Protocol
Microsoft Shares Workaround For Windows 10 SeriousSAM Vulnerability
Apple Issues Urgent iPhone Updates; None for Pegasus Zero-Day
Data Breaches
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Supply Chain
DoS/DDoS
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
UK And Allies Hold Chinese State Responsible For Pervasive Pattern Of Hacking
Chinese Hacking Group APT31 Uses Mesh Of Home Routers To Disguise Attacks
France Warns Of APT31 Cyber Spies Targeting French Organisations
APT Hackers Distributed Android Trojan Via Syrian E-Government Portal
Cloud
Privacy
Other News
Application Security Tools Ineffective Against New And Growing Threats
Pegasus: What Is The Israeli Spyware And How Can You Tell If It’s On Your Phone?
DHS Releases New Mandatory Cyber Security Rules For Pipelines After Colonial Ransomware Attack
1 in 5 companies fail PCI compliance assessments of their infrastructure
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 weekly ‘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 06 November 2020
Cyber Threat Briefing 06 November 2020
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest of open source intelligence (OSINT), 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 Headlines of the Week
2020 could be 'the worst year in cyber security history'
Businesses around the world are severely unprepared to face the sheer scale of cyber threats facing us today, new research has claimed.
The latest 2020 Business Threat Landscape report from security firm Bitdefender has said that this could be the worst year in cyber security history, as despite multiple warnings, many firms still aren't ready to protect themselves.
Bitdefender's report found that the "new normal" of remote working had led many businesses to face difficulties in ensuring their online protection, with 50% of organisations "completely unprepared" to face a scenario in which they had to migrate their entire workforce in a working from home environment.
https://www.techradar.com/news/2020-could-be-the-worst-year-in-cybersecurity-history
Two-Thirds of Financial Services Firms Suffered Cyber-Attack in the Past Year
Almost two-thirds (65%) of large financial services companies have suffered a cyber attack in the past year, while 45% have experienced a rise in attack attempts since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
This is according to new research from HelpSystems, which surveyed 250 CISOs and CIOs in global financial services firms about the impact of the pandemic on their cybersecurity.
It highlighted that these organisations are taking cybersecurity increasingly seriously, with 92% stating that they have increased investment in this area over the past 12 months, with 26% doing so by a significant amount. The main targets of this investment have included secure file transfer (64%), protecting the remote workforce (63%) and cloud/office365 (56%).
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/two-thirds-financial-services/
Proofpoint survey: IT security leaders worry about and are ill-prepared to defeat cyber-attacks
IT security leaders say they are ill-prepared for a cyber attack and believe that human error and a lack of security awareness are major risk factors for their organisations, according to a series of reports and surveys from cyber security vendor Proofpoint. But there are some marked variations in both the rates and the types of cyber attack between the regions surveyed.
It’s a dynamic attack landscape: in the DACH countries of Germany, Austria and Switzerland 67 per cent of IT security leaders say they have suffered at least one attack in the last 12 months, while in Benelux 72 per cent of respondents say their business has suffered at least one cyber attack in the same time period. In Sweden 59 per cent of businesses have been attacked at least once, while in the UAE the figure is much higher at 82 per cent - with 51 per cent of IT security leaders in the UAE saying their business has been targeted multiple times.
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/05/proofpoint_survey_it_security_leaders/
Akamai sees doubling in malicious internet traffic as remote world’s bad actors boom, too
Akamai Technologies’ CEO said he is impressed by the amazing traffic levels on the internet during the coronavirus pandemic, and the world technology infrastructure’s ability to handle it. But during the stay-at-home boom, the web and cyber security expert also has been closely watching a boom in bad actors.
With so many people working from home, hackers are taking advantage, and massively increasing the number of attacks as daily routine changes caused by the pandemic are prolonged, and become potentially permanent.
“I think the threat actors are trying to take advantage of the pandemic, and of course, the prize is greater now that so much business has moved online”
Quarter-over-quarter — Akamai reported its Q3 results this week — the cyber security and cloud computing company has tracked a doubling of malicious traffic as telecommuting makes for easier targets.
Attacks Against Microsoft’s Remote Desktop Protocol Soar Under Work From Home Measures
The number of Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) attacks soared by 140% in Q3 compared with the previous quarter, as cyber criminals looked to take advantage of companies relying on remote access while working from home.
RDP makes it possible for one computer to connect to another over a network and control it as though the individual was sat at the keyboard themselves. While the Microsoft tool is useful for businesses and popular among IT administrators, it has increasingly been targeted by hackers who try to gain administrator access to company servers. Once inside they are able to disable security software, steal files, delete data and install malicious software.
Slovak internet security firm ESET detected the surge between July and September, with the number of separate companies reporting brute-force attacks against their RDP connection increasing by 37% quarter-over-quarter.
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware gangs that steal your data don't always delete it
Ransomware gangs that steal a company's data and then get paid a ransom fee to delete it don't always follow through on their promise.
The number of cases where something like this has happened has increased, according to a report published by Coveware this week and according to several incidents shared by security researchers with ZDNet researchers over the past few months.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ransomware-gangs-that-steal-your-data-dont-always-delete-it/
Spike in Emotet activity could mean big payday for ransomware gangs
There's been a massive increase in Emotet attacks and cyber criminals are taking advantage of machines compromised by the malware to launch more malware infections as well as ransomware campaigns.
The October 2020 HP-Bromium Threat Insights Report reports a 1,200% increase in Emotet detections from July to September compared to the previous three months in which deployment of the malware appeared to decline.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/spike-in-emotet-activity-could-mean-big-payday-for-ransomware-gangs/
Italian beverage vendor Campari knocked offline after ransomware attack
Campari Group, the famed Italian beverage vendor behind brands like Campari, Cinzano, and Appleton, has been hit by a ransomware attack and has taken down a large part of its IT network.
The attack took place last Sunday, on November 1, and has been linked to the RagnarLocker ransomware gang, according to a copy of the ransom note shared with ZDNet by a malware researcher who goes online by the name of Pancak3.
Hackney Council still working to restore services as IT boss describes horror at cyber attack
Hackney’s director of information communication technology (ICT) Rob Miller was playing football with his family on a Sunday morning early in October when he got a message letting him know there was a systems outage being investigated at the Town Hall.
By the end of Sunday, the council had moved swiftly to shut down its systems, declared an emergency and notified national agencies after Miller’s team found “clear markers” that the local authority had been hit by a serious cyber attack.
Leading toy maker Mattel hit by ransomware
Toy industry giant Mattel disclosed that they suffered a ransomware attack in July that impacted some of its business functions but did not lead to data theft.
Mattel is the second-largest toymaker in the world with 24,000 employees and $5.7 billion in revenue for 2019. Mattel is known for its popular brands, including Barbie, Hot Wheels, Fisher-Price, American Girl, and Thomas & Friends.
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/leading-toy-maker-mattel-hit-by-ransomware/
Business Email Compromise (BEC)
BEC attacks increase in most industries, invoice and payment fraud rise by 155%
BEC attacks increased 15% quarter-over-quarter, driven by an explosion in invoice and payment fraud, Abnormal Security research reveals.
“As the industry’s only measure of BEC attack volume by industry, our quarterly BEC research is important for CISOs to prepare and stay ahead of attackers,” said Evan Reiser, CEO of Abnormal Security.
“Not only are BEC campaigns continuing to increase overall, they are rising in 75% of industries that we track. Since these attacks are targeted and sophisticated, these increases could indicate an ability for threat actors to scale that may overwhelm some businesses.”
For this research, BEC campaigns across eight major industries were tracked, including retail/consumer goods and manufacturing, technology, energy/infrastructure, services, medical, media/tv, finance and hospitality.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2020/11/03/bec-attacks-increase-quarter-over-quarter/
Phishing
Sneaky Office 365 phishing inverts images to evade detection
A creative Office 365 phishing campaign has been inverting images used as backgrounds for landing pages to avoid getting flagged as malicious by crawlers designed to spot phishing sites.
These inverted backgrounds are commonly used as part of phishing kits that attempt to clone legitimate login pages as closely as possible to harvest a target's credentials by tricking them into entering them into a fake login form.
The BBC Experiences Over 250,000 Malicious Email Attacks Per Day
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), the UK’s public service broadcaster, faces in excess of a quarter of a million malicious email attacks every day, according to data obtained following a Freedom of Information (FoI) request.
The corporation blocked an average of 283,597 malicious emails per day during the first eight months of 2020.
According to the data, every month the BBC receives an average of 6,704,188 emails that are classified as scam or spam as well as 18,662 malware attacks such as viruses, ransomware and spyware. In total, 51,898,393 infected emails were blocked in the period from January to August 2020.
The month which contained the highest amount of recorded incidents was July, when the BBC received 6,787,635 spam and 13,592 malware attempts. The next highest was March, when the COVID-19 first struck the UK, with 6,768,632 spam emails and 14,089 malware attacks.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/bbc-experiences-malicious-email/
Malware
US Cyber Command exposes new Russian malware
US Cyber Command has exposed eight new malware samples that were developed and deployed by Russian hackers in recent attacks
Six of the eight samples are for the ComRAT malware (used by the Turla hacking group), while the other two are samples for the Zebrocy malware (used by the APT28 hacking group).
Both ComRAT and Zebrocy are malware families that have been used by Russia hacking groups for years, with ComRAT being deployed in attacks for more than a decade, having evolved from the old Agent.BTZ malware.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/us-cyber-command-exposes-new-russian-malware/
IoT
New data shows just how badly home users overestimate IoT security
A new survey from the National Cyber Security Alliance (NCSA) shows adult workers vastly overestimate the security of the internet devices in their homes.
The survey polled 1,000 adults – 500 aged 18-34 and 500 aged 50-75 – and found that the overwhelming majority of both believed the internet of things devices they owned were secure.
IoT devices, particularly those that are cheap, outdated and hard to upgrade, are widely considered to be an easy target for hackers. Yet 87 percent of the younger group and 77 percent of the older group said they were either “somewhat” or “very confident” in the security of their connected things
Vulnerabilities
Windows 10 zero-day could allow hackers to seize control of your computer
A security bug has been discovered that affects every version of the Windows operating system, from Windows 7 to Windows 10. The vulnerability can be found within the Windows Kernel Cryptography Driver and enables attackers to gain admin-level control of a victim’s computer.
The flaw was discovered by Google’s Project Zero security team, which subsequently notified Microsoft. The Redmond-based firm was given seven days to patch the bug before Google published further details – a task that proved beyond the company.
Adobe warns Windows, MacOS users of critical acrobat and reader flaws
Adobe has fixed critical-severity flaws tied to four CVEs in the Windows and macOS versions of its Acrobat and Reader family of application software services. The vulnerabilities could be exploited to execute arbitrary code on affected products.
These critical flaws include a heap-based buffer overflow, out-of-bounds write glitch and two use-after free flaws. The bugs are part of Adobe’s regularly scheduled patches, which overall patched critical-, important- and moderate-severity vulnerabilities tied to 14 CVEs.
https://threatpost.com/adobe-windows-macos-critical-acrobat-reader-flaws/160903/
Zero-day in Cisco AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client yet to be fixed
Cisco has disclosed a zero-day vulnerability, in the Cisco AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client software with the public availability of a proof-of-concept exploit code.
The flaw resided in the inter-process communication (IPC) channel of Cisco AnyConnect Client, it can be exploited by authenticated and local attackers to execute malicious scripts via a targeted user.
Critical bug actively used to deploy Cobalt Strike on Oracle servers
Threat actors are actively exploiting Oracle WebLogic servers unpatched against CVE-2020-14882 to deploy Cobalt Strike beacons which allow for persistent remote access to compromised devices.
Cobalt Strike is a legitimate penetration testing tool also used by threat actors in post-exploitation tasks and to deploy so-called beacons that enable them to gain persistent remote access.
This later allows them to access the compromised servers to harvest data and to deploy second stage malware payloads.
Oracle Solaris Zero-Day Attack Revealed
A previously known threat group, called UNC1945, has been compromising telecommunications companies and targeting financial and professional consulting industries, by exploiting a security flaw in Oracle’s Solaris operating system.
Researchers said that the group was exploiting the bug when it was a zero-day, long before a patch arrived.
The bug, was recently addressed in Oracle’s October 2020 Critical Patch Update. The vulnerability exists in the Oracle Solaris Pluggable Authentication Module (PAM) and allows an unauthenticated attacker with network access via multiple protocols to exploit and compromise the operating system. Threat actors utilized a remote exploitation tool, which researchers call “EVILSUN,” to exploit the flaw.
https://threatpost.com/oracle-solaris-zero-day-attack/160929/
Data Breaches
Marriott Hotels fined £18.4m for data breach that hit millions
The UK's data privacy watchdog has fined the Marriott Hotels chain £18.4m for a major data breach that may have affected up to 339 million guests.
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) said names, contact information, and passport details may all have been compromised in a cyber-attack.
The breach included seven million guest records for people in the UK.
The ICO said the company failed to put appropriate safeguards in place but acknowledged it had improved.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-54748843
23,600 hacked databases have leaked from a defunct 'data breach index' site
More than 23,000 hacked databases have been made available for download on several hacking forums and Telegram channels in what threat intel analysts are calling the biggest leak of its kind.
The database collection is said to have originated from Cit0Day.in, a private service advertised on hacking forums to other cybercriminals.
Cit0day operated by collecting hacked databases and then providing access to usernames, emails, addresses, and even cleartext passwords to other hackers for a daily or monthly fee.
Cybercriminals would then use the site to identify possible passwords for targeted users and then attempt to breach their accounts at other, more high-profile sites.
Other News
Deloitte's 'Test your Hacker IQ' site fails itself after exposing database user name, password in config file
Suspended sentence for bank IT worker who hacked his boss's webcam because he didn't get a payrise
APT Groups Finding Success with Mix of Old and New Tools
Quantum computing may make current encryption obsolete, a quantum internet could be the solution
Reports Published in the Last Week
NCSC defends UK from more than 700 cyber attacks while supporting national pandemic response
The NCSC's fourth Annual Review reveals its ongoing work against cyber attacks, support for the UK during the coronavirus pandemic.
https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/news/ncsc-defends-uk-700-cyber-attack-national-pandemic
Ransomware Demands continue to rise as Data Exfiltration becomes common, and Maze subdues
The Coveware Quarterly Ransomware Report describes ransomware incident response trends during Q3 of 2020. Ransomware groups continue to leverage data exfiltration as a tactic, though trust that stolen data will be deleted is eroding as defaults become more frequent when exfiltrated data is made public despite the victim paying. In Q3, Coveware saw the Maze group sunset their operations as the active affiliates migrated to Egregor (a fork of Maze). We also saw the return of the original Ryuk group, which has been dormant since the end of Q1.
https://www.coveware.com/blog/q3-2020-ransomware-marketplace-report
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Cyber Weekly Flash Briefing 03 April 2020 – GFSC warn over increased fraud & cybercrime, attacks up 37% in a month, criminals sending USB devices in post, Zoom phishers register 2000 domains
Cyber Weekly Flash Briefing for 03 April 2020 – GFSC warns over increased risk of fraud and cyber crime, Attacks Up 37% over last month, criminals sending USB device in post, Zoom Phishers Register 2000 Domains in a Month, increase in DDoS attacks
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.
GFSC warns over increased risk of fraud and cyber crime
The GFSC has put out a warning to regulated firms on the Island around increased likelihood of fraud and other cyber crimes as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Commission has stated that they expect licensees to apply effective controls, including having suitable controls to prevent cybercrime.
Cyber-Attacks Up 37% Over Past Month as #COVID19 Bites
Online threats have risen by as much as six-times their usual levels over the past four weeks as the COVID-19 pandemic provides new ballast for cyber-attacks.
Analysis of UK traffic figures for the past four weeks compared to the previous month noted a sharp uptick in malicious activity.
Hacking and phishing attempts were up 37% month-on-month, while on some days, there were between four- and six-times the number of attacks it would usually see.
More here: https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cyberattacks-up-37-over-past-month/
Cybercrime spikes during coronavirus pandemic, says Europol
Just like everyone else in the face of a pandemic, criminals seem to be staying home — but they're just turning to different methods to make a buck.
That's the message from a new Europol report out this week, which reveals that criminals are adapting to exploit the global chaos.
While many police departments are reporting a lull in physical crime, other types of crime are having a heyday — and those numbers are only expected to increase.
Europol identified cybercrime, fraud, counterfeit goods and organised property crime as categories of particular concern.
Read more here: https://www.euronews.com/2020/03/27/cybercrime-spikes-during-coronavirus-pandemic-says-europol
Cybercriminal group mails malicious USB dongles to targeted companies
Security researchers have come across an attack where an USB dongle was mailed to a company under the guise of a Best Buy gift card. This technique has been used by security professionals during physical penetration testing engagements in the past, but it has very rarely been observed in the wild. This time it's a known sophisticated cybercriminal group who is likely behind it.
The attack was analysed after a US company in the hospitality sector received the USB sometime in mid-February.
The package contained an official-looking letter with Best Buy's logo and other branding elements informing the recipient that they've received a $50 gift card for being a regular customer. "You can spend it on any product from the list of items presented on an USB stick," the letter read. Fortunately, the USB dongle was never inserted into any computers and was passed along for analysis, because the person who received it had security training.
Top Email Protections Fail in Latest COVID-19 Phishing Campaign
Threat actors continue to capitalize on fears surrounding the spread of the COVID-19 virus through a surge in new phishing campaigns that use spoofing tactics to effectively evade Proofpoint and Microsoft Office 365 advanced threat protections (ATPs), researchers have found.
New phishing attacks were discovered that use socially engineered emails promising access to important information about cases of COVID-19 in the receiver’s local area.
The emails evade basic security checks and user common sense in a number of ways, to circumvent detection and steal the user’s Microsoft log-in credentials, he said. They also don’t include specific names or greetings in the body of the messages, suggesting they are being sent out to a broad target audience, according to the report.
More: https://threatpost.com/top-email-protections-fail-covid-19-phishing/154329/
Zoom Phishers Register 2000 Domains in a Month
Over 2000 new phishing domains have been set up over the past month to capitalise on the surging demand for Zoom from home workers, according to new data.
The report analysed data from a threat hunting system since the start of the year, and found 3300 new domains had been registered with the word “Zoom” in them.
The vast majority of these (67%) were created in March, as the COVID-19 pandemic forced lockdowns in multiple European countries and across parts of the US.
With surging levels of interest in Zoom and other video conferencing apps, comes renewed scrutiny from cyber-criminals.
Nearly a third (30%) of the new “Zoom” websites spotted activated an email server which indicates these domains are being used to facilitate phishing attacks.
More here: https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/zoom-phishers-register-2000/
Across-the-board increase in DDoS attacks of all sizes
There has been a 168% increase in DDoS attacks in Q4 2019, compared with Q4 2018, and a 180% increase overall in 2019 vs. 2018, according to a report.
DDoS attacks grew across all size categories increase in 2019, with attacks sized 5 Gbps and below seeing the largest growth. These small-scale attacks made up more than three quarters of all attacks the company mitigated on behalf of its customers in 2019.
In 2019, the largest mitigated threat, at 587 gigabits per second (Gbps), was 31% larger than the largest attack of 2018, while the maximum attack intensity observed in 2019, 343 million packets per second (Mpps), was 252% higher than that of the most intense attack seen in 2018.
However, despite these higher peaks, the average attack size (12 Gbps) and intensity (3 Mpps) remained consistent year over year. The longest single, uninterrupted attack experienced in 2019 lasted three days, 13 hours and eight minutes.
Though the number of attacks increased significantly across all size categories, small-scale attacks (5 Gbps and below) again saw the largest growth in 2019, continuing the trend from the previous year.
More here: https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2020/03/27/ddos-attacks-increase-2020/
Cybersecurity insurance firm Chubb investigates its own ransomware attack
A notorious ransomware gang claims to have successfully compromised the infrastructure of a company selling cyber insurance.
The Maze ransomware group says it has encrypted data belonging to Chubb, which claims to be one of the world’s largest insurance companies, and is threatening to publicly release data unless a ransom is paid.
The announcement by the cybercrime gang was published on Maze’s website, where it lists what it euphemistically describes as its “new clients”.
Maze’s normal modus operandi is to compromise an organisation, steal its data, infect the network with its ransomware, and post a pre-announcement on its website as a warning to the corporate victim that if they do not pay a ransom their stolen data will be published on the internet.
Read the full article here: https://hotforsecurity.bitdefender.com/blog/cybersecurity-insurance-firm-chubb-investigates-its-own-ransomware-attack-22753.html
Ransomware Payments on the Rise
More ransomware victims than ever before are complying with the demands of their cyber-attackers by handing over cash to retrieve encrypted files.
New research published this week shows that both the number of ransomware attacks and the percentage of attacks that result in payment have increased every year since 2017.
The report states 62% of organisations were victimised by ransomware in 2019, up from 56% in 2018 and 55% in 2017.
In 2017, just 39% of organizations hit by ransomware paid to retrieve their encrypted data. That figure rose to 45% in 2018, then shot up to 58% in 2019.
Read the full article here: https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/rise-in-ransomware-payments/
Marriott hit by second data breach exposing “up to” 5.2 million people
Hotel chain Marriott International this week announced that it has been hit by a second data breach exposing the personal details of “up to approximately 5.2 million guests”.
The breach, which began in mid-January 2020 and was discovered at the end of February 2020, saw contact details, including names, addresses, birth dates, gender, email addresses and telephone numbers exposed. Employer name, gender, room stay preferences and loyalty account numbers were also exposed.
The hotel company has stressed that not all data was exposed for each person.
Marriott has also said that at present it does not believe passports, payment details or passwords were exposed in the data breach.
The data is believed to have been accessed by an unknown third party using the login credentials of two employees at a group hotel operated as a franchise. Marriott has said that it has notified relevant authorities, and has begun notifying those whose data was exposed in the breach. It has also set up a dedicated website to help those impacted by the breach.
More here: https://www.verdict.co.uk/marriott-second-data-breach/
Lawyers urged to switch off Alexa when working from home
Law firms are warning their employees to turn off their smart speakers while working from home due to security concerns.
Smart speakers such as Amazon’s Echo series and Google’s Nest range have become wildly popular in Britain with an estimated 34pc of households now using them.
But privacy and security experts have repeatedly said the devices may pose a security threat and now law firms have advised staff not to disclose sensitive details when they are in use nearby.
A spokesman from one firm of solicitors said that that hackers could access sensitive details through the speakers, telling their staff to check the default settings on the speaker and to the extent that you can, switch them off during the working day.
More here: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/2020/03/30/lawyers-urged-switch-alexa-working-home/