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Black Arrow Cyber Advisory 10 August 2023 – Microsoft Patch Tuesday Fixes 86 Vulnerabilities, including Two Actively Exploited, and Adobe Updates Summary
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory 10 August 2023 – Microsoft Patch Tuesday Fixes 86 Vulnerabilities, including Two Actively Exploited, and Adobe Updates Summary
Executive summary
Microsoft’s August Patch Tuesday provides updates to address 86 security issues across its product range, including two zero-day vulnerabilities (CVE-2023-36884, CVE-2023-38180). The vulnerabilities allow remote code execution and denial of service. Among the updates provided by Microsoft, 6 addressed critical vulnerabilities.
What’s the risk to me or my business?
The vulnerabilities allow an attacker to remotely execute code and cause a denial-of-service, impacting the confidentiality, integrity and availability of data held by an organisation. CVE-2023-38180, which is a denial-of-service vulnerability has been recorded by the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) in its “Known Exploited Vulnerabilities” Catalogue.
What can I do?
Security updates are available for all supported versions of Windows impacted. The updates should be applied immediately for the zero-day vulnerabilities and as soon as possible for all other vulnerabilities. Microsoft has also published an separate advisory for CVE-2023-36884.
Technical Summary
CVE-2023-36884: This vulnerability, if exploited allows threat actors to create specially crafted documents which bypass Mark of the Web (MoTW) security features, causing files to be opened with no warning, allowing a threat actor to perform remote code execution.
CVE-2023-38180: The actively exploited vulnerability allows an attacker to cause a denial-of-service attack on .NET applications and Visual Studio.
Adobe
In addition to Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday Adobe released fixes for 36 vulnerabilities, of which 19 were rated critical. The critical vulnerabilities spanned across Adobe Acrobat and Reader (16), Adobe Commerce and Adobe Dimension (2). At current, Adobe is not aware of any of these vulnerabilities being actively exploited. The vulnerabilities include remote code execution, memory leak and security bypass.
further details on other specific updates within this patch Tuesday can be found here:
Further details about CVE-2023-38180 can be found here:
https://msrc.microsoft.com/update-guide/vulnerability/CVE-2023-38180
Further details about CVE-2023-36884 can be found here:
https://msrc.microsoft.com/update-guide/vulnerability/CVE-2023-36884
The advisory from Microsoft can be found here:
Further information on CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog can be found here:
https://www.cisa.gov/known-exploited-vulnerabilities-catalog
https://msrc.microsoft.com/update-guide/vulnerability/ADV230003
Further details of the vulnerabilities addressed in Adobe Acrobat DC and Reader can be found here: https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/acrobat/apsb23-30.html
Further details of the vulnerabilities addressed in Adobe Commerce can be found here: https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/magento/apsb23-42.html
Further details of the vulnerabilities addressed in Adobe Dimension can be found here: https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/dimension/apsb23-44.html
Need help understanding your gaps, or just want some advice? Get in touch with us.
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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 30 December 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 30 December 2022:
-Cyber Attacks Set to Become ‘Uninsurable’, Says Zurich Chief
-Your Business Should Compensate for Modern Ransomware Capabilities Right Now
-Reported Phishing Attacks Have Quintupled
-Ransomware, DDoS See Major Upsurge Led by Upstart Hacker Group
-Videoconferencing Worries Grow, With SMBs in Cyber Attack Crosshairs
-Will the Crypto Crash Impact Cyber Security in 2023? Maybe.
-The Worst Hacks of 2022
-Geopolitical Tensions Expected to Further Impact Cyber Security in 2023
-Fraudsters’ Working Patterns Have Changed in Recent Years
-Hacktivism is Back and Messier Than Ever
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Cyber Attacks Set to Become ‘Uninsurable’, Says Zurich Chief
The chief executive of one of Europe’s biggest insurance companies has warned that cyber attacks, rather than natural catastrophes, will become “uninsurable” as the disruption from hacks continues to grow.
Insurance executives have been increasingly vocal in recent years about systemic risks, such as pandemics and climate change, that test the sector’s ability to provide coverage. For the second year in a row, natural catastrophe-related claims are expected to top $100bn.
But Mario Greco, chief executive at insurer Zurich, told the Financial Times that cyber was the risk to watch. “What will become uninsurable is going to be cyber,” he said. “What if someone takes control of vital parts of our infrastructure, the consequences of that?” Recent attacks that have disrupted hospitals, shut down pipelines and targeted government departments have all fed concern about this expanding risk among industry executives. Focusing on the privacy risk to individuals was missing the bigger picture, Greco added: “First off, there must be a perception that this is not just data . . . this is about civilisation. These people can severely disrupt our lives.”
Spiralling cyber losses in recent years have prompted emergency measures by the sector’s underwriters to limit their exposure. As well as pushing up prices, some insurers have responded by tweaking policies so clients retain more losses. There are exemptions written into policies for certain types of attacks. In 2019, Zurich initially denied a $100mn claim from food company Mondelez, arising from the NotPetya attack, on the basis that the policy excluded a “warlike action”. The two sides later settled. In September, Lloyd’s of London defended a move to limit systemic risk from cyber attacks by requesting that insurance policies written in the market have an exemption for state-backed attacks.
https://www.ft.com/content/63ea94fa-c6fc-449f-b2b8-ea29cc83637d
Your Business Should Compensate for Modern Ransomware Capabilities Right Now
The “if, not when” mentality surrounding ransomware may be the biggest modern threat to business longevity. Companies of all sizes and across all industries are increasingly common targets for ransomware attacks, and we know that 94% of organisations experienced a cyber security incident last year alone. Yet, many enterprises continue to operate with decades-old security protocols that are unequipped to combat modern ransomware. Leaders have prioritised improving physical security measures in light of the pandemic — so why haven’t ransomware protections improved?
Maybe it’s the mistaken notion that ransomware attacks are declining. In reality, Q1 of 2022 saw a 200% YoY increase in ransomware incidents. Meanwhile, the rise in Ransomware as a Service (RaaS) offerings suggests that cyber threats have become a commodity for bad actors.
The RaaS market presents a new and troubling trend for business leaders and IT professionals. With RaaS — a subscription ransomware model that allows affiliates to deploy malware for a fee — the barrier to entry for hackers is lower than ever. The relatively unskilled nature of RaaS hackers may explain why the average ransomware downtime has plummeted to just 3.85 days (compared to an average attack duration of over two months in 2019).
While the decrease in attack duration is promising, the rise of RaaS still suggests an inconvenient truth for business leaders: All organisations are at risk. And in time, all organisations will become a target, which is why it’s time for IT and business leaders to implement tough cyber security protocols.
Reported Phishing Attacks Have Quintupled
In the third quarter of 2022, the international Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) consortium observed 1,270,883 total phishing attacks; the worst quarter for phishing that APWG has ever observed. The total for August 2022 was 430,141 phishing sites, the highest monthly total ever reported to APWG.
Over recent years, reported phishing attacks submitted to APWG have more than quintupled since the first quarter of 2020, when APWG observed 230,554 attacks. The rise in Q3 2022 was attributable, in part, to increasing numbers of attacks reported against several specific targeted brands. These target companies and their customers suffered from large numbers of attacks from persistent phishers.
Threat researchers at the cyber security solution provider Fortra noted a 488 percent increase in response-based email attacks in Q3 2022 compared to the prior quarter. While every subtype of these attacks increased compared to Q2, the largest increase was in Advance Fee Fraud schemes, which rose by a staggering 1,074 percent.
In the third quarter of 2022, APWG founding member OpSec Security found that phishing attacks against the financial sector, which includes banks, remained the largest set of attacks, accounting for 23.2 percent of all phishing. Attacks against webmail and software-as-a-service (SaaS) providers remained prevalent as well. Phishing against social media services fell to 11 percent of the total, down from 15.3 percent.
Phishing against cryptocurrency targets — such as cryptocurrency exchanges and wallet providers — fell from 4.5 percent of all phishing attacks in Q2 2022 to 2 percent in Q3. This mirrored the fall in value of many cryptocurrencies since mid-year.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/12/28/reported-phishing-attacks-quintupled/
Ransomware, DDoS See Major Upsurge Led by Upstart Hacker Group
Cyber threat actors Cuba and Royal are driving a 41% boom in ransomware and other attacks hitting industry and consumer goods and services.
According to the Global Threat Intelligence team of information assurance firm NCC Group, November saw a 41% increase in ransomware attacks from 188 incidents to 265. In its most recent Monthly Threat Pulse, the group reported that the month was the most active for ransomware attacks since April this year.
Key takeaways from the study:
Ransomware attacks rose by 41% in November.
Threat group Royal (16%) was the most active, replacing LockBit as the worst offender for the first time since September 2021.
Industrials (32%) and consumer cyclicals (44%) remain the top two most targeted sectors, but technology experienced a large 75% increase over the last month.
Regional data remains consistent with last month — North America (45%), Europe (25%) and Asia (14%)
DDoS attacks continue to increase.
Recent examples in the services sector include the Play ransomware group’s claimed attack of the German H-Hotels chain, resulting in communications outages. This attack reportedly uses a vulnerability in Microsoft Exchange called ProxyNotShell, which as the name implies, has similarities to the ProxyShell zero-day vulnerability revealed in 2021.
Also, back on the scene is the TrueBot malware downloader (a.k.a., the silence.downloader), which is showing up in an increasing number of devices. TrueBot Windows malware, designed by a Russian-speaking hacking group identified as Silence, has resurfaced bearing Ransom.Clop, which first appeared in 2019. Clop ransomware encrypts systems and exfiltrates data with the threat that if no ransom is forthcoming, the data will show up on a leak site.
https://www.techrepublic.com/article/ransomware-ddos-major-upsurge-led-upstart-hacker-group/
Videoconferencing Worries Grow, With SMBs in Cyber Attack Crosshairs
Securing videoconferencing solutions is just one of many IT security challenges small businesses are facing, often with limited financial and human resources.
It's no secret that the acceleration of work-from-home and distributed workforce trends — infamously spurred on by the pandemic — has occurred in tandem with the rise of video communications and collaboration platforms, led by Zoom, Microsoft, and Cisco.
But given that videoconferencing now plays a critical role in how businesses interact with their employees, customers, clients, vendors, and others, these platforms carry significant potential security risks, researchers say.
Organisations use videoconferencing to discuss M&A, legal, military, healthcare, intellectual property and other topics, and even corporate strategies. A loss of that data could be catastrophic for a company, its employees, its clients, and its customers.
However, a recent report on videoconferencing security showed that 93% of IT professionals surveyed acknowledged security vulnerabilities and gaping risks in their videoconferencing solutions.
Among the most relevant risks is the lack of controlled access to conversations that could result in disruption, sabotage, compromise, or exposure of sensitive information, while use of nonsecure, outdated, or unpatched videoconferencing applications can expose security flaws.
The risks include the potential for interruptions, unauthorised access, and perhaps most concerning, the opportunity for a bad actor to acquire sensitive information.
Will the Crypto Crash Impact Cyber Security in 2023? Maybe.
With the implosion of the FTX exchange putting a punctuation mark on the cryptocurrency crash of 2022, one of the natural questions for those in the cyber security world is, how will this rapid decline of cryptocurrency valuations change the cyber crime economy?
Throughout the most recent crypto boom, and even before then, cyber criminals have used and abused cryptocurrency to build up their empires. The cryptocurrency market provides the extortionary medium for ransomware; it's a hotbed of scams against consumers to steal their wallets and accounts. Traditionally, it's provided a ton of anonymous cover for money laundering on the back end of a range of cyber criminal enterprises.
Even so, according to cyber security experts and intelligence analysts, while there certainly have been some shifts in trends and tactics that they believe are loosely tied to the crypto crash, the jury's still out on long-term impacts.
Regardless of crypto values, cyber criminals this year have definitely become more sophisticated in how they use cryptocurrencies to monetise their attacks including the use by some ransomware groups taking advantage of yield farming within decentralised finance (DeFi), as an example.
The concept of yield farming is the same as lending money, with a contract in place that clearly shows how much interest will need to be paid. The advantage for ransomware groups is that the 'interest' will be legitimate proceeds, so there will be no need to launder or hide it.
Threat actors are increasingly turning toward 'stablecoins,' which are usually tied to fiat currencies or gold to stem their volatility. In many ways, the downturn in crypto values has increased the risk appetite of cyber criminals and is spurring them into more investment fraud and cryptocurrency scams.
https://www.darkreading.com/threat-intelligence/crypto-crash-impact-cybersecurity-2023-maybe
The Worst Hacks of 2022
The year was marked by sinister new twists on cyber security classics, including phishing, breaches, and ransomware attacks.
With the pandemic evolving into an amorphous new phase and political polarisation on the rise around the world, 2022 was an uneasy and often perplexing year in digital security. And while hackers frequently leaned on old chestnuts like phishing and ransomware attacks, they still found vicious new variations to subvert defences.
Technology magazine Wired looked back on the year's worst breaches, leaks, ransomware attacks, state-sponsored hacking campaigns, and digital takeovers. If the first years of the 2020s are any indication, the digital security field in 2023 will be more bizarre and unpredictable than ever. Stay alert, and stay safe out there.
Russia Hacking Ukraine
For years, Russia has pummelled Ukraine with brutal digital attacks causing blackouts, stealing and destroying data, meddling in elections, and releasing destructive malware to ravage the country's networks. Since invading Ukraine in February, though, times have changed for some of Russia's most prominent and most dangerous military hackers. Shrewd long-term campaigns and grimly ingenious hacks have largely given way to a stricter and more regimented clip of quick intrusions into Ukrainian institutions, reconnaissance, and widespread destruction on the network—and then repeated access over and over again, whether through a new breach or by maintaining the old access.
Twilio and the 0ktapus Phishing Spree
Over the summer, a group of researchers dubbed 0ktapus went on a massive phishing bender, compromising nearly 10,000 accounts within more than 130 organisations. The majority of the victim institutions were US-based, but there were dozens in other countries as well.
Ransomware Still Hitting the Most Vulnerable Targets
In recent years, countries around the world and the cyber security industry have increasingly focused on countering ransomware attacks. While there has been some progress on deterrence, ransomware gangs were still on a rampage in 2022 and continued to target vulnerable and vital social institutions, including health care providers and schools. The Russian-speaking group Vice Society, for example, has long specialised in targeting both categories, and it focused its attacks on the education sector this year.
The Lapsus$ Rampage Continues
The digital extortion gang Lapsus$ was on an intense hacking spree at the beginning of 2022, stealing source code and other sensitive information from companies like Nvidia, Samsung, Ubisoft, and Microsoft and then leaking samples as part of apparent extortion attempts. Lapsus$ has a sinister talent for phishing, and in March, it compromised a contractor with access to the ubiquitous authentication service Okta.
LastPass
The beleaguered password manager giant LastPass, which has repeatedly dealt with data breaches and security incidents over the years, said at the end of December that a breach of its cloud storage in August led to a further incident in which hackers targeted a LastPass employee to compromise credentials and cloud storage keys.
Vanuatu
At the beginning of November, Vanuatu, an island nation in the Pacific, was hit by a cyber attack that took down virtually all of the government's digital networks. Agencies had to move to conducting their work on paper because emergency systems, medical records, vehicle registrations, driver's license databases, and tax systems were all down.
Honourable Mention: Twitter-Related Bedlam
Twitter has been in chaos mode for months following Elon Musk's acquisition of the company earlier this year. Amidst the tumult, reports surfaced in July and then again in November of a trove of 5.4 million Twitter users' data that has been circulating on criminal forums since at least July, if not earlier. The data was stolen by exploiting a vulnerability in a Twitter application programming interface, or API.
https://www.wired.com/story/worst-hacks-2022/
Geopolitical Tensions Expected to Further Impact Cyber Security in 2023
Geopolitics will continue to have an impact on cyber security and the security posture of organisations long into 2023.
The impact of global conflicts on cyber security was thrust into the spotlight when Russia made moves to invade Ukraine in February 2022. Ukraine’s Western allies were quick to recognise that with this came the threat of Russian-backed cyber-attacks against critical national infrastructure (CNI), especially in retaliation to hefty sanctions. While this may not have materialised in the way many expected, geopolitics is still front of mind for many cyber security experts looking to 2023.
Russia has always been among a handful of states recognised for their cyber prowess and being the source of many cyber criminal gangs. As previously mentioned, we have failed to see a significant cyber-attack, at least one comparable to the Colonial Pipeline incident, in 2022. However the cyber security services provider, e2e-assure, warned: “We have underestimated Russia’s cyber capability. There is a wide view that Russian cyber activity leading up to and during their invasion of Ukraine indicated that they aren’t the cyber power we once thought. Patterns and evidence will emerge in 2023 that shows this wasn’t the case, instead Russia was directing its cyber efforts elsewhere, with non-military goals (financial and political).”
NordVPN, the virtual private network (VPN) provider, warns that the cyber-war is only just starting: “With China’s leader securing his third term and Russia’s war in Ukraine, many experts predict an increase in state-sponsored cyber-attacks. China may increase cyber-attacks on Taiwan, Hong Kong, and other countries opposing the regime. Meanwhile, Russia is predicted to sponsor attacks on countries supporting Ukraine.”
We are used to seeing cyber-attacks that encrypt data and ask for ransom, but it is likely in this era of nation-state sponsored attacks we could experience attacks for the sake of disruption.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/geopolitical-tensions-impact/
Fraudsters’ Working Patterns Have Changed in Recent Years
Less sophisticated fraud — in which doctored identity documents are readily spotted — has jumped 37% in 2022, according to the identify verfication provider Onfido. Fraudsters can scale these attacks on an organisation’s systems around the clock.
It is estimated that the current global financial cost of fraud is $5.38 trillion (£4.37 trillion), which is 6.4% of the world’s GDP. With most fraud now happening online (80% of reported fraud is cyber-enabled), Onfido’s Identity Fraud Report uncovers patterns of fraudster behaviour, attack techniques, and emerging tactics.
Over the last four years, fraudsters’ working patterns have dramatically changed. In 2019, attacks mirrored a typical working week, peaking Monday to Friday and dropping off during the weekends. Yet over the last three years, fraudulent activity started to shift so that levels of fraud span every day of the week.
In 2022, fraud levels were consistent across 24 hours, seven days a week. With technology, fraudsters are more connected across the globe and are able to traverse regions and time zones, and can easily take advantage of businesses’ closed hours when staff are likely offline. This hyperconnectivity means there are no more ‘business hours’ for fraudsters and sophisticated fraud rings — they will scam and defraud 24/7.
“As criminals look to take advantage of digitisation processes, they’re able to commit financial crimes with increasing efficiency and sophistication, to the extent that financial crime and cyber crime are now invariably linked,” said Interpol. “A significant amount of financial fraud takes place through digital technologies, and the pandemic has only hastened the emergence of digital money laundering tools and other cyber-enabled financial crimes.”
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/12/29/less-sophisticated-fraud/
Hacktivism is Back and Messier Than Ever
Throughout 2022, geopolitics has given rise to a new wave of politically motivated attacks with an undercurrent of state-sponsored meddling.
During its brutal war in Ukraine, Russian troops have burnt cities to the ground, raped and tortured civilians, and committed scores of potential war crimes. On November 23, lawmakers across Europe overwhelmingly labelled Russia a “state sponsor” of terrorism and called for ties with the country to be reduced further. The response to the declaration was instant. The European Parliament’s website was knocked offline by a DDoS attack.
The unsophisticated attack—which involves flooding a website with traffic to make it inaccessible—disrupted the Parliament’s website offline for several hours. Pro-Russian hacktivist group Killnet claimed responsibility for the attack. The hacktivist group has targeted hundreds of organisations around the world this year, having some limited small-scale successes knocking websites offline for short periods of time. It’s been one player in a bigger hacktivism surge.
Following years of sporadic hacktivist activity, 2022 has seen the re-emergence of hacktivism on a large scale. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine spawned scores of hacktivist groups on both sides of the conflict, while in Iran and Israel, so-called hacktivist groups are launching increasingly destructive attacks. This new wave of hacktivism, which varies between groups and countries, comes with new tactics and approaches and, increasingly, is blurring lines between hacktivism and government-sponsored attacks.
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Jersey school locked out of systems as hackers demand "ransom" | Bailiwick Express Jersey
Vice Society Ransomware Attackers Adopt Robust Encryption Methods (thehackernews.com)
Global counter-ransomware task force to become active in January - CyberScoop
Fool Me Thrice? How to Avoid Double and Triple Ransomware Extortion (darkreading.com)
Rackspace criticized for PR response to ransomware attack (expressnews.com)
Ransomware, DDoS see major upsurge led by upstart hacker group (techrepublic.com)
6 Ways to Protect Your Organisation Against LAPSUS$ (darkreading.com)
Your business should compensate for modern ransomware capabilities right now | VentureBeat
Vice Society Adds Custom-branded Payload PolyVice to its Arsenal | Cyware Alerts - Hacker News
Hackers stole data from multiple electric utilities in recent ransomware attack | CNN Politics
Ransomware attack at Louisiana hospital impacts 270,000 patients (bleepingcomputer.com)
The mounting death toll of hospital cyber attacks - POLITICO
Royal ransomware claims attack on Intrado telecom provider (bleepingcomputer.com)
Healthcare Providers and Hospitals Under Ransomware's Siege (darkreading.com)
Guardian Australia staff sent home after cyber attack takes out systems (theage.com.au)
Dumfries Arnold Clark garages hit by company-wide cyber attack - Daily Record
Ransom Deadline Given By LockBit In Port Of Lisbon Attack (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Reported phishing attacks have quintupled - Help Net Security
6 Ways to Protect Your Organisation Against LAPSUS$ (darkreading.com)
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
GuLoader implements new evasion techniques - Security Affairs
PrivateLoader PPI Service Found Distributing Info-Stealing RisePro Malware (thehackernews.com)
2022 sees over 5000 times new Windows malware vs macOS, over 60 times vs Linux - Neowin
APT Hackers Turn to Malicious Excel Add-ins as Initial Intrusion Vector (thehackernews.com)
New information-stealing malware is being spread by fake pirate sites | TechSpot
Mobile
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Internet of Things – IoT
Smart Home Cyber security Hubs: Protecting Endpoints in Your Smarthome (compuquip.com)
Google Home speakers allowed hackers to snoop on conversations (bleepingcomputer.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
BetMGM discloses security breach impacting 1.5 Million customers - Security Affairs
Massive Twitter data leak investigated by EU privacy watchdog (bleepingcomputer.com)
Massive EDiscovery Provider Shut Down Over 'Unauthorized Access' - Above the LawAbove the Law
Data of 400 Million Twitter users up for sale - Security Affairs
It’s all in the (lack of) details: 2022’s badly handled data breaches | TechCrunch
Military device with biometric database of 2K people sold on eBay for $68 | Ars Technica
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
How ‘brazen’ multibillion-dollar crypto fraud fell to pieces | Business | The Times
BTC.com lost $3 million worth of cryptocurrency in cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers steal $8 million from users running trojanized BitKeep apps (bleepingcomputer.com)
Bitcoin Mining Pool Btc.com Suffers $3 Million Cyber attack – Mining Bitcoin News
Crypto wallet BitKeep lost over $9M over a cyber attack - Security Affairs
Case for blockchain in financial services dented by failures | Financial Times (ft.com)
Digital Assets Of $9.9 Million Stolen In BitKeep Cyber Attack (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Crypto platform 3Commas admits hackers stole API keys (bleepingcomputer.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Linkedin Is Full Of Job Scams – Be Careful Out There (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Scam complaints from Revolut users more than double since 2020 (telegraph.co.uk)
Fraudsters’ working patterns have changed in recent years - Help Net Security
Experts warn of attacks exploiting WordPress gift card plugin - Security Affairs
North Korean Hackers Created 70 Fake Bank, Venture Capital Firm Domains | SecurityWeek.Com
Ukraine shuts down fraudulent call center claiming 18,000 victims (bleepingcomputer.com)
Insurance
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Why Attackers Target GitHub, and How You Can Secure It (darkreading.com)
Improving Software Supply Chain Cyber security (trendmicro.com)
Cloud/SaaS
Identity and Access Management
Enterprises waste money on identity tools they don't use - Help Net Security
Steps To Planning And Implementation Of PAM Solutions (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Encryption
API
Crypto platform 3Commas admits hackers stole API keys (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google: With Cloud Comes APIs & Security Headaches (darkreading.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Biometrics
Social Media
TikTok User Data Has Been Compromised (giantfreakinrobot.com)
Elon Musk ‘orders Twitter to remove suicide prevention feature’ | Twitter | The Guardian
Massive Twitter data leak investigated by EU privacy watchdog (bleepingcomputer.com)
Meta settles Cambridge Analytica scandal case for $725m - BBC News
TikTok bans haven't really banned much of anything - The Washington Post
Twitter restores suicide prevention feature | Twitter | The Guardian
Data of 400 Million Twitter users up for sale - Security Affairs
Hacker claims to be selling Twitter data of 400 million users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Malvertising
Privacy
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Governance, Risk and Compliance
IBM and 70 Global Banks Co-Create New Cyber security, Risk Framework (accelerationeconomy.com)
Economic uncertainty compels IT leaders to rethink their strategy - Help Net Security
3 important changes in how data will be used and treated - Help Net Security
2022 Top Five Immediate Threats in Geopolitical Context (thehackernews.com)
Secure Disposal
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
IT Jobs: How To Become An Information Security Analyst (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
‘There's a career in cyber security for everyone,’ Microsoft Security CVP says | Fortune
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Google Home speakers allowed hackers to snoop on conversations (bleepingcomputer.com)
Police in China can track protests by enabling ‘alarms’ on Hikvision software | China | The Guardian
The Threat of Predictive Policing to Data Privacy and Personal Liberty (darkreading.com)
Meta settles Cambridge Analytica scandal case for $725m - BBC News
78% of Employers Are Using Remote Work Tools to Spy on You (entrepreneur.com)
Germany: Police surveillance software a legal headache – DW – 12/22/2022
Artificial Intelligence
Code-generating AI can introduce security vulnerabilities, study finds | TechCrunch
AI cyber attacks are a ‘critical threat’. This is how NATO is countering them | Euronews
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
2022 Top Five Immediate Threats in Geopolitical Context (thehackernews.com)
Russia’s Cyberwar Foreshadowed Deadly Attacks on Civilians | WIRED
Hundreds of Russian cyber attacks on CHPPs, regional power plants prevented - SBU
Ukrainian Hackers Gather Data on Russian Soldiers, Minister Says - Bloomberg
North Korean hackers targeted nearly 1,000 South Korean foreign policy experts
German double agent ‘passed Ukraine intelligence to Russia’ (telegraph.co.uk)
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Hundreds of Russian cyber attacks on CHPPs, regional power plants prevented - SBU
Russian mobile calls, internet seen deteriorating after Nokia, Ericsson leave – EURACTIV.com
Nation State Actors – China
Police in China can track protests by enabling ‘alarms’ on Hikvision software | China | The Guardian
Nation State Actors – North Korea
BlueNoroff APT Hackers Using New Ways to Bypass Windows MotW Protection (thehackernews.com)
North Korean Hackers Created 70 Fake Bank, Venture Capital Firm Domains | SecurityWeek.Com
North Korean hacking outfit impersonating venture capital firms | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
North Korean hackers targeted nearly 1,000 South Korean foreign policy experts
Nation State Actors – Iran
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerability Management
Vulnerabilities
Patch now: Serious Linux kernel security hole uncovered | ZDNET
Microsoft Patches Azure Cross-Tenant Data Access Flaw | SecurityWeek.Com
Critical Linux Kernel flaw affects SMB servers with ksmbd enabled - Security Affairs
Critical “10-out-of-10” Linux kernel SMB hole – should you worry? – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Log4Shell remains a big threat and a common cause for security breaches | CSO Online
Thousands of Citrix servers vulnerable to patched critical flaws (bleepingcomputer.com)
Netgear warns users to patch recently fixed WiFi router bug (bleepingcomputer.com)
CISA Warns of Active exploitation of JasperReports Vulnerabilities (thehackernews.com)
Tools and Controls
Other News
AI cyber attacks are a ‘critical threat’. This is how NATO is countering them | Euronews
Review: 10 Biggest Hacks And Cyber Security Threats Of 2022 (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
New information-stealing malware is being spread by fake pirate sites | TechSpot
Trend Micro: Expect 2023 to Bring Uncertainty to Cyber Attackers and Defenders - MSSP Alert
After the Uber Breach: 3 Questions All CISOs Should Ask Themselves (darkreading.com)
Top 10 Cyber Security Predictions For 2023 Based On Expert Responses (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
The Five Stories That Shaped Cyber security in 2022 | SecurityWeek.Com
Sector Specific
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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 11 November 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 11 November 2022:
-Research Finds Organisations Lack Tools and Teams to Address Cyber Security Threats
-Some 98% of Global Firms Suffer Supply Chain Breach in 2021
-Only 30% of Cyber Insurance Holders Say Ransomware is Covered
-Companies Hit by Ransomware Often Targeted Again, Research Says
-Ransomware Remains Top Cyber Risk for Organisations Globally, Says Allianz
-How Geopolitical Turmoil Changed the Cyber Security Threat Landscape
-Swiss Re Wants Government Bail Out academias Cyber Crime Insurance Costs Spike
-Extortion Economics: Ransomware's New Business Model
-Confidence in Data Recovery Tools Low
-Russia’s Sway Over Criminal Ransomware Gangs Is Coming into Focus
-Insider Risk on the Rise: 12% of Employees Take IP When Leaving Jobs
-Why a Clear Cyber Policy is Critical for Companies
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
Research Finds Organisations Lack Tools and Teams to Address Cyber Security Threats
In research conducted in the summer of 2022 by BlackBerry, the findings describe the situation facing organisations regardless of size or vertical.
The survey of 405 senior IT, networking, and security decision-makers in the US, Canada, and the UK revealed 83% of organisations agreed building cyber security programs is expensive due to required tools, licenses, and personnel, and 80% agreed it’s challenging to fill specialised security roles. Most organisations (78%) have an incident management process, but about half (49%) agree they lack the teams and tools to be effective 24x7x365. Evolving security threats (53%) and the task of integrating new technology (53%) are cited as top challenges in maintaining security posture.
While it’s likely these findings surprise no one, they do reveal the challenges facing organisations who are caught between limited resources and increased risk. The urgency increases if we look at the critical infrastructure that keeps things running–like utilities, banks, transportation, key suppliers, industrial controls, and more.
Some 98% of Global Firms Suffer Supply Chain Breach in 2021
Just 2% of global organisations didn’t suffer a supply chain breach last year, with visibility into cyber risk getting harder as these ecosystems expand, according to BlueVoyant.
The security firm polled 2100 C-level execs with responsibility for supply chain and cyber risk management from companies with 1000+ employees to compile its study, The State of Supply Chain Defense: Annual Global Insights Report 2022.
It found the top challenges listed by respondents were:
Awareness internally that third-party suppliers are part of their cyber security posture
Meeting regulatory requirements and ensuring third-party cyber security compliance
Working with third-party suppliers to improve their posture.
Supply chains are growing: the number of firms with over 1000 suppliers increased from 38% in 2021’s report to 50%. Although 53% of organisations audited or reported on supplier security more than twice annually, 40% still rely on suppliers to ensure security levels are sufficient. That means they have no way of knowing if an issue arises with a supplier.
Worse, 42% admitted that if they do discover an issue in their supply chain and inform their supplier, they cannot verify that the issue was resolved. Just 3% monitor their supply chain daily, although the number of respondents using security ratings services to enhance visibility and reduce cyber risk increased from 36% last year to 39% in this year’s report.
With the escalating threat landscape and number of high-profile incidents being reported, firms should focus more strategically on addressing supply chain cyber security risk. In the current volatile economic climate, the last thing any business needs is any further disruption to their operations, any unexpected costs, or negative impact on their brand.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/98-global-firms-supply-chain/
Only 30% of Cyber Insurance Holders Say Ransomware is Covered
Cyber insurance providers appear to be limiting policy coverage due to surging costs from claimants, according to a new study from Delinea.
The security vendor polled 300 US-based IT decision makers to compile its latest report, Cyber insurance: if you get it be ready to use it.
Although 93% were approved for specialised cyber insurance cover by their provider, just 30% said their policy covered “critical risks” including ransomware, ransom negotiations and payments. Around half (48%) said their policy covers data recovery, while just a third indicated it covers incident response, regulatory fines and third-party damages.
That may be because many organisations are regularly being breached and look to their providers for pay-outs, driving up costs for carriers. Some 80% of those surveyed said they’ve had to call on their insurance, and half of these have submitted claims multiple times, the study noted.
As a result, many insurers are demanding that prospective policyholders implement more comprehensive security controls before they’re allowed to sign up.
Half (51%) of respondents said that security awareness training was a requirement, while (47%) said the same about malware protection, AV software, multi-factor authentication (MFA) and data backups.
However, high-level checks may not be enough to protect insurers from surging losses, as they can’t guarantee customers are properly deploying security controls.
Cyber insurance providers need to start advancing beyond simple checklists for security controls. They must require their customers to validate that their security controls work as designed and expected. They need their customers to simulate their adversaries to ensure that when they are attacked, the attack will not result in a breach. In fact, we're already starting to see government regulations and guidance that includes adversary simulation as part of their proactive response to threats.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cyberinsurance-ransomware-cover/
Companies Hit by Ransomware Often Targeted Again, Research Says
It has been reported that more than a third of companies who paid a ransom to cyber criminals after being hit by a ransomware attack went on to be targeted for a second time, according to a new report.
The Hiscox Cyber Readiness Report found that 36% of companies that made the ransom payment were hit again, while 41% who paid failed to recover all of their data.
The head of the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), Lindy Cameron, said last year that ransomware attacks were the “most immediate danger” to the UK and urged companies to take more steps to protect themselves and their data.
The NCSC urges firms not to pay ransoms as it not only helps fund further crime but offers no guarantee that criminals will return the stolen or locked data. The Hiscox report appeared to back up the NCSC’s warnings, with 43% of the businesses who paid a ransom saying they still had to rebuild their systems while 29% said that despite making the payment their stolen data was still leaked. A further 26% said a ransomware attack had had a significant financial impact on their business.
Ransomware Remains Top Cyber Risk for Organisations Globally, Says Allianz
According to an Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty cyber report, ransomware remains a top cyber risk for organisations globally, while the threat of state-sponsored cyber attacks grows.
There were a record 623 million attacks in 2021, which was double that of 2020, says Allianz.
It also notes that despite the frequency reducing 23% globally during H1 of 2022, the year-to-date total still exceeds that of the full years of 2017, 2018 and 2019, while Europe saw attacks surge over this period. Allianz suggests that ransomware is forecast to cause $30bn in damages to organisations globally by 2023.
It adds that from an Allianz perspective, the value of ransomware claims the company was involved in together with other insurers, accounted for well over 50% of all cyber claims costs during 2020 and 2021.
The cyber risk landscape doesn’t allow for any resting on laurels. Ransomware and phishing scams are as active as ever and on top of that there is the prospect of a hybrid cyber war.
Most companies will not be able to evade a cyber threat. However, it is clear that organisations with good cyber maturity are better equipped to deal with incidents. Even when they are attacked, losses are typically less severe due to established identification and response mechanisms.
Many companies still need to strengthen their cyber controls, particularly around IT security trainings, better network segmentation for critical environments and cyber incident response plans and security governance.
Allianz observes that geopolitical tensions, such as the war in Ukraine, are a major factor reshaping the cyber threat landscape as the risks of espionage, sabotage, and destructive cyber-attacks against companies with ties to Russia and Ukraine increase, as well as allies and those in neighbouring countries.
How Geopolitical Turmoil Changed the Cyber Security Threat Landscape
ENISA, EU’s Agency for Cybersecurity, released its annual Threat Landscape report, covering the period from July 2021 up to July 2022.
With more than 10 terabytes of data stolen monthly, ransomware still fares as one of the prime threats in the new report with phishing now identified as the most common initial vector of such attacks. The other threats to rank highest along ransomware are attacks against availability also called Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks.
However, the geopolitical situations particularly the Russian invasion of Ukraine have acted as a game changer over the reporting period for the global cyber domain. While we still observe an increase of the number of threats, we also see a wider range of vectors emerge such as zero-day exploits and AI-enabled disinformation and deepfakes. As a result, more malicious and widespread attacks emerge having more damaging impact.
EU Agency for Cybersecurity Executive Director, Juhan Lepassaar stated that “Today’s global context is inevitably driving major changes in the cyber security threat landscape. The new paradigm is shaped by the growing range of threat actors. We enter a phase which will need appropriate mitigation strategies to protect all our critical sectors, our industry partners and therefore all EU citizens.”
State sponsored, cyber crime, hacker-for-hire actors and hacktivists remain the prominent threat actors during the reporting period of July 2021 to July 2022.
ENISA sorted threats into 8 groups. Frequency and impact determine how prominent all of these threats still are.
Ransomware: 60% of affected organisations may have paid ransom demands
Malware: 66 disclosures of zero-day vulnerabilities observed in 2021
Social engineering: Phishing remains a popular technique but we see new forms of phishing arising such as spear-phishing, whaling, smishing and vishing
Threats against data: Increasing in proportionally to the total of data produced
Disinformation – misinformation: Escalating AI-enabled disinformation, deepfakes and disinformation-as-a-service
Supply chain targeting: Third-party incidents account for 17% of the intrusions in 2021 compared to less than 1% in 2020
Threats against availability:
Largest denial of service (DDoS) attack ever was launched in Europe in July 2022
Internet: destruction of infrastructure, outages and rerouting of internet traffic.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/11/08/cybersecurity-threat-landscape-2022/
Swiss Re Wants Government Bail Out as Cyber Crime Insurance Costs Spike
As insurance companies struggle to stay afloat amid rising cyber claims, Swiss Re has recommended a public-private partnership insurance scheme with one option being a government-backed fund to help fill the coverage gap.
Global cyber insurance premiums hit $10 billion in 2021, according to Swiss Re's estimates. In a study published this week, the insurance giant forecasted 20 percent annual growth to 2025, with premiums rising to $23 billion over the next few years.
Meanwhile, annual cyber attack-related losses total about $945 billion globally, and about 90% of that risk remains uninsured, according to insurance researchers at the Geneva Association.
While Forrester estimates a typical data breach costs an average $2.4 million for investigation and recovery, only 55 percent of companies currently have cyber insurance policies. Additionally, less than 20 percent have coverage limits in excess of $600,000, which the analyst firm cites as the median ransomware demand in 2021.
https://www.theregister.com/2022/11/08/government_cyber_insurance/
Extortion Economics: Ransomware's New Business Model
Ransomware-as-a-service lowers the barriers to entry, hides attackers’ identities, and creates multitier, specialised roles in service of ill-gotten gains.
Did you know that more than 80% of ransomware attacks can be traced to common configuration errors in software and devices? This ease of access is one of many reasons why cyber criminals have become emboldened by the underground ransomware economy.
And yet many threat actors work within a relatively small and interconnected ecosystem of players. This pool of cyber criminals has created specialised roles and consolidated the cyber crime economy, fuelling ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) to become the dominant business model. In doing so, they've enabled a wider range of criminals to deploy ransomware regardless of their technical expertise and forced all of us to become cyber security defenders in the process.
Ransomware takes advantage of existing security compromises to gain access to internal networks. In the same way businesses hire gig workers to cut costs, cyber criminals have turned to renting or selling their ransomware tools for a portion of the profits rather than performing the attacks themselves.
This flourishing RaaS economy allows cyber criminals to purchase access to ransomware payloads and data leakage, as well as payment infrastructure. What we think of as ransomware gangs are actually RaaS programs like Conti or REvil, used by the many different actors who switch between RaaS programs and payloads.
RaaS lowers the barrier to entry and obfuscates the identity of the attackers behind the ransoming. Some programs can have 50 or more "affiliates," as they refer to their users, with varying tools, tradecraft, and objectives. Anyone with a laptop and credit card who is willing to search the Dark Web for penetration-testing tools or out-of-the-box malware can join this maximum efficiency economy.
https://www.darkreading.com/microsoft/extortion-economics-ransomware-s-new-business-model
Confidence in Data Recovery Tools Low
A recent IDC and Druva survey asked 505 respondents across 10 industries about their ransomware experiences and found that many organisations struggle to recover after an attack. In the survey, 85% of the respondents said their organisations had a ransomware recovery plan. The challenge seems to lie in effectively executing that plan.
"A majority of organisations suffered significant consequences from ransomware attacks including long recoveries and unrecoverable data despite paying a ransom," states the "You Think Ransomware Is Your Only Problem? Think Again" report.
Data resiliency is such an important element of cyber security that 96% of respondents considered it a top priority for their organisations, with a full 77% placing it in the top 3. What's striking about the survey results is that only 14% of respondents said they were "extremely confident" in their tools, even though 92% called their data resiliency tools "efficient" or "highly efficient."
When data is spread across hybrid, cloud, and edge environments, data resiliency becomes much more complicated. A plan might seem to cover everything, but then you realise that you lost your backup or can't find the latest restore point.
The ability to recover from an attack is vital, since the growth in ransomware makes it likely that your organisation will get hit. This is why agencies like NIST recommend preparing for when an attacker pierces your defences rather than trying to keep out every intruder. That mindset also shifts the priority to preparation and planning; you need to create a disaster recovery plan that includes policy on restore points and recovery tools — and you need to practice implementing that plan before disaster strikes.
The report lists three key performance indicators that reveal the success of an organisation's recovery from a cyber attack:
The ability to fully recover encrypted or deleted data without paying a ransom.
Zero data loss in the process of recovering the data.
Rapid recovery as defined by applicable service-level requirements.
When a recovery fails to meet these criteria, then the organisation may suffer financial loss, loss of reputation, permanently lost customers, and reduced employee productivity.
https://www.darkreading.com/tech-trends/confidence-in-data-recovery-tools-low
Russia’s Sway Over Criminal Ransomware Gangs Is Coming into Focus
Russia-based ransomware gangs are some of the most prolific and aggressive, in part thanks to an apparent safe harbour the Russian government extends to them. The Kremlin doesn't cooperate with international ransomware investigations and typically declines to prosecute cyber criminals operating in the country so long as they don't attack domestic targets. A long-standing question, though, is whether these financially motivated hackers ever receive directives from the Russian government and to what extent the gangs are connected to the Kremlin's offensive hacking. The answer is starting to become clearer.
New research presented at the Cyberwarcon security conference in Arlington, Virginia, this week looked at the frequency and targeting of ransomware attacks against organisations based in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, and France in the lead-up to these countries' national elections. The findings suggest a loose but visible alignment between Russian government priorities and activities and ransomware attacks leading up to elections in the six countries.
The project analysed a data set of over 4,000 ransomware attacks perpetrated against victims in 102 countries between May 2019 and May 2022. The analysis showed a statistically significant increase in ransomware attacks from Russia-based gangs against organisations in the six victim countries ahead of their national elections. These nations suffered the most total ransomware attacks per year in the data set, about three-quarters of all the attacks.
The data was used to compare the timing of attacks for groups believed to be based out of Russia and groups based everywhere else. They looked at the number of attacks on any given day, and what they found was an interesting relationship where for these Russia-based groups, there was an increase in the number of attacks starting four months before an election and moving three, two, one month in, up to the event.
The findings showed broadly that non-Russian ransomware gangs didn't have a statistically significant increase in attacks in the lead-up to elections. Whereas two months out from a national election, for example, the researchers found that organisations in the six top victim countries were at a 41 percent greater chance of having a ransomware attack from a Russia-based gang on a given day, compared to the baseline.
https://www.wired.com/story/russia-ransomware-gang-connections/
Insider Risk on the Rise: 12% of Employees Take IP When Leaving Jobs
Twelve percent of all employees take sensitive intellectual property (IP) with them when they leave an organisation.
The data comes from workforce cyber intelligence and security company Dtex, which published a report about top insider risk trends for 2022. “Customer data, employee data, health records, sales contacts, and the list goes on,” reads the document. “More and more applications are providing new features that make data exfiltration easier. For example, many now provide the ability to maintain clipboard history and sync across multiple devices.”
Case in point, the report also suggests a 55% increase in unsanctioned application usage, including those making data exfiltration easier by allowing users to maintain clipboard history and sync IP across multiple devices. “Bring Your Own Applications (BYOA) or Shadow IT can be a source of intelligence for business innovation,” Dtex wrote. “Still, they pose a major risk if the security team has not tested these tools thoroughly.”
Further, the new data highlight a 20% increase in resignation letter research and creation from employees taking advantage of the tight labour market to switch positions for higher wages.
“In most cases, an individual planning to leave the business is not pleased with the company’s product, co-workers, work environment, or compensation,” reads the report. “Disgruntled employees are usually jaded by a business that has not shown any steps to alleviate concerns, even after communication attempts.”
Finally, the Dtex report says the industry has witnessed a 200% increase in unsanctioned third-party work on corporate devices from a high prevalence of employees engaged in side gigs.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/12-of-employees-take-ip-when/
Why a Clear Cyber Policy is Critical for Companies
In October, Joe Sullivan, Uber’s former head of security, was convicted of covering up a 2016 data breach at the ride hailing giant by hiding details from US regulators and then paying off the hackers.
It was a trial followed nervously by cyber security professionals around the world — coming eight years after an incident that had compromised the personal information of more than 57mn people.
“Any news about another company dealing with a data security incident can strike a bit of fear across industries,” notes Mary Pothos, chief privacy officer at digital travel company Booking.com. She adds that incidents like these cause “many companies to pause, rethink or revisit their internal processes to make sure that they are operating effectively”.
These incidents, and threats, are growing at lightning speed, too. War in Ukraine is now being played out as much in cyber space as on the battlefield. The Covid pandemic has forced businesses to rethink where their employees work, and handle or access data. At the same time, the sheer number of web-connected devices is multiplying.
“We need to be people who can predict what is coming along the line, predict the future, almost” said Victor Shadare, head of cyber security at media company Condé Nast, at a recent FT event on cyber security.
Palo Alto Networks, a specialist security company, found that cyber extortion grew rapidly in 2021. Some 35 new ransomware gangs emerged, the average ransom demand increasing 144 per cent that year to $2.2mn, and the average payment rose by 78 per cent to $541,010.
Meanwhile, cyber security personnel have found themselves hemmed in by increasingly onerous regulations. These include threats of legal action if the right people are not informed about breaches, or if products come to market that are not safe enough. On September 15, for example, the European Commission presented a proposal for a new Cyber Resilience Act to protect consumers from products with inadequate security features.
“New domains of security have sprung up over the past years, so it’s not just an information technology problem any more, it’s really a full company risk issue,” says Kevin Tierney, vice-president of global cyber security at automotive group General Motors. He warns that automated and connected vehicles have thrown up additional threats to be addressed.
“You have to start out with the right governance structure and the right policies and procedures — that’s step one of really getting the company to understand what it needs to do,” he says. These include clear rules on how to disable access to tech equipment, on data protection and storage, on transferring and disposing of data, on using corporate networks, and on reporting any data breaches.
Security experts also tend to agree that there need to be robust systems of governance and accountability, to prevent the sort of trouble that befell Sullivan at Uber. Perhaps most crucially, staff across the organisation, from C-suite to assistants, need to know how to spot and manage a threat.
https://www.ft.com/content/0bb6df09-7d77-4605-aac3-89443ed65a18
Threats
Ransomware and Extortion
Medibank: Hackers release abortion data after stealing Australian medical records - BBC News
Medical data hacked from 10m Australians begins to appear on dark web | World news | The Guardian
How ransomware gangs and malware campaigns are changing - Help Net Security
Thales confirms hackers have released its data on the dark web | Reuters
Most SMBs Fear Ransomware Attack Amid Heightened Geopolitical Tensions - MSSP Alert
Australia to consider banning paying of ransoms to cyber criminals | Reuters
LockBit gang claims to have stolen data from Kearney & Company - Security Affairs
Azov Ransomware is a wiper, destroying data 666 bytes at a time (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Gang Offers to Sell Files Stolen From Continental for $50 Million | SecurityWeek.Com
Canadian food retail giant Sobeys hit by Black Basta ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
LockBit affiliate uses Amadey Bot malware to deploy ransomware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Russia-linked IRIDIUM APT linked to Prestige ransomware attacks against Ukraine - Security Affairs
US Health Dept warns of Venus ransomware targeting healthcare orgs (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware attacks on hospitals take toll on patients (nbcnews.com)
Hackers post Hereford schoolchildren's data records on dark web | Hereford Times
CISA and Spain Partnership to Develop Tool to Help Countries Combat Ransomware - MSSP Alert
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Phishing threats are increasingly convincing and evasive - Help Net Security
Robin Banks phishing-as-a-service platform continues to evolve - Security Affairs
Phishing drops IceXLoader malware on thousands of home, corporate devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
Massive Phishing Campaigns Target India Banks’ Clients (trendmicro.com)
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Malware
Phishing drops IceXLoader malware on thousands of home, corporate devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
Cloud9 Malware Offers a Paradise of Cyber attack Methods (darkreading.com)
More malware is being hidden in PNG images, so watch out | TechRadar
Attackers Using IPFS for Distributed, Bulletproof Malware Hosting | SecurityWeek.Com
Malicious extension lets attackers control Google Chrome remotely (bleepingcomputer.com)
New hacking group uses custom 'Symatic' Cobalt Strike loaders (bleepingcomputer.com)
New StrelaStealer malware steals your Outlook, Thunderbird accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
5 Common Smartphone Security Myths, Debunked (makeuseof.com)
Oh, look: More malware in the Google Play store • The Register
Malicious app in the Play Store spotted distributing Xenomorph Banking Trojan - Security Affairs
Malicious droppers on Google Play deliver banking malware to victims - Help Net Security
Samsung phones are being targeted by some seriously shady zero-days | TechRadar
New BadBazaar Android malware linked to Chinese cyber spies (bleepingcomputer.com)
Worok hackers hide new malware in PNGs using steganography (bleepingcomputer.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
An initial access broker claims to have hacked Deutsche Bank - Security Affairs
Cyber crime costs to hit $10.5tn by 2025 hears Saudi forum - Arabian Business
Cyber crime Group OPERA1ER Stole $11M From 16 African Businesses (darkreading.com)
Instagram star gets 11 years for $300m BEC conspiracy • The Register
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
FTX says it is probing ‘abnormal transactions’ after potential hack | Financial Times
Kraken's CSO Claims To Have Identified The $600 Million FTX Hacker (coingape.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Fifth Of 18 To 34-year-olds Have Fallen Victim To Financial Scams – Information Security Buzz
Ukrainian Cyber Cops Bust $200m Fraud Ring - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Retail Sector Prepares for Annual Holiday Cyber crime Onslaught (darkreading.com)
US seized 18 web domains used for recruiting money mules (bleepingcomputer.com)
Insurance
Rising cost of cyber attacks sends insurance policy charges soaring | Financial Times (ft.com)
Just 25% of businesses are insured against cyber attacks. Here's why (theconversation.com)
Re-Focusing Cyber Insurance with Security Validation (thehackernews.com)
Swiss Re: Cyber-Insurance Industry Must Reform - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Dark Web
DoJ seizes $3.36B Bitcoin from Silk Road hacker - Security Affairs
Silk Road drugs market hacker pleads guilty, faces 20 years inside – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Hybrid Working
Attack Surface Management
Identity and Access Management
API
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Microsoft Password Hacking Increase – Information Security Buzz
False sense of safety undermines good password hygiene - Help Net Security
Password-hacking attacks are on the rise. Here's how to stop your accounts from being stolen | ZDNET
Social Media
Twitter blue check unavailable after impostor accounts erupt on platform | Twitter | The Guardian
Twitter chief information security officer Lea Kissner departs | TechCrunch
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
World Cup apps pose a data security and privacy nightmare • The Register
Surveillance 'Existential' Danger of Tech: Signal Boss | SecurityWeek.Com
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Three million empty seats: What can we do about the cyber skills shortage? (computerweekly.com)
Cyber security, cloud and coding: Why these three skills will lead demand in 2023 | ZDNET
Cyber security leaders want to quit. Here's what is pushing them to leave | ZDNET
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Red Cross seeks digital equivalent of its emblems • The Register
Russia’s New Cyberwarfare in Ukraine Is Fast, Dirty, and Relentless | WIRED
EU calls for joint cyber defence in response to Russia • The Register
Nation-State Hacker Attacks on Critical Infrastructure Soar: Microsoft | SecurityWeek.Com
What Ukraine’s cyber defence tactics can teach other nations | Financial Times (ft.com)
Russia-linked IRIDIUM APT linked to Prestige ransomware attacks against Ukraine - Security Affairs
APT29 abused Windows Credential Roaming in attacks - Security Affairs
Dutch MEP says illegal spyware ‘a grave threat to democracy’ | European Commission | The Guardian
Greece Is Banning Spyware After Predator Phone-Tapping Scandal (gizmodo.com)
British embassy security guard David Smith admits spying for Russia - BBC News
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
EU calls for joint cyber defence in response to Russia • The Register
Ukraine war: Russians kept in the dark by internet search - BBC News
Microsoft links Russia’s military to cyber attacks in Poland and Ukraine | Ars Technica
Putin ally Yevgeny Prigozhin admits interfering in US elections | Russia | The Guardian
Russia-linked IRIDIUM APT linked to Prestige ransomware attacks against Ukraine - Security Affairs
Nation State Actors – China
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerability Management
Why CVE Management as a Primary Strategy Doesn't Work (darkreading.com)
Why it's time to review your Microsoft patch management options | CSO Online
Risk-Based Vulnerability Management: Understanding the RBVM Trend (darkreading.com)
How can CISOs catch up with the security demands of their ever-growing networks? - Help Net Security
Microsoft: Nation-state threats, zero-day attacks increasing (techtarget.com)
Types of vulnerability scanning and when to use each (techtarget.com)
Vulnerabilities
Microsoft November 2022 Patch Tuesday fixes 6 exploited zero-days, 68 flaws (bleepingcomputer.com)
VMware fixes three critical auth bypass bugs in remote access tool (bleepingcomputer.com)
Citrix ADC and Citrix Gateway are affected by a critical auth bypass - Security Affairs
Cisco Patches 33 Vulnerabilities in Enterprise Firewall Products | SecurityWeek.Com
Microsoft Patches MotW Zero-Day Exploited for Malware Delivery | SecurityWeek.Com
Apple out-of-band patches fix RCE bugs in iOS and macOS - Security Affairs
Microsoft fixes ProxyNotShell Exchange zero-days exploited in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
SAP Patches Critical Vulnerabilities in BusinessObjects, SAPUI5 | SecurityWeek.Com
Lenovo driver goof poses security risk for users of 25 notebook models | Ars Technica
Foxit Patches Several Code Execution Vulnerabilities in PDF Reader | SecurityWeek.Com
LiteSpeed Vulnerabilities Can Lead to Complete Web Server Takeover | SecurityWeek.Com
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
What Is Threat Hunting? A Definition for MSPs and Channel Partners - MSSP Alert
Cyber security: These are the new things to worry about in 2023 | ZDNET
What We Really Mean When We Talk About ‘Cyber security’ (darkreading.com)
Personal cyber security is now a company problem - Help Net Security
History of Computer Viruses & Malware | What Was Their Impact? (esecurityplanet.com)
5 Reasons to Consolidate Your Tech Stack (thehackernews.com)
Cookies for MFA Bypass Gain Traction Among Cyber attackers (darkreading.com)
Common lateral movement techniques and how to prevent them (techtarget.com)
Beyond the Pen Test: How to Protect Against Sophisticated Cyber criminals (darkreading.com)
5 ways to overcome multifactor authentication vulnerabilities (techtarget.com)
15,000 sites hacked for massive Google SEO poisoning campaign (bleepingcomputer.com)
Unencrypted Traffic Still Undermining Wi-Fi Security (darkreading.com)
Researchers Devise Wi-Peep Drone That Can 'See Through Walls' (gizmodo.com)
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
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