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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 20 August 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 20 August 2021:
-Third of Global Companies Have Experienced Ransomware Attack, Survey Finds
-Company Size Is A Nonissue With Automated Cyberattack Tools
-60% Of Employees Reuse Passwords Across Business And Personal Accounts
-LockBit 2.0 Ransomware Proliferates Globally
-Secret Terrorist Watchlist With 2 Million Records Exposed Online
-Phishing Costs Quadruple Over 6 Years
-Security Teams Report Rise In Cyber Risk
-Phishing Attacks Increase In H1 2021, Sharp Jump In Crypto Attacks
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
A Third of Global Companies Have Experienced Ransomware Attack, Survey Finds
Roughly a third of large international companies have faced a ransomware attack or other data breach in the last 12 months, according to a new survey.
Analysts surveyed almost 800 companies and found 37% of international companies experienced ransomware attacks this past year. The survey focused on companies with more than 500 employees.
Company Size Is A Nonissue With Automated Cyber Attack Tools
Even with plenty of old problems to contend with, firms need to get ready for new and more powerful automated ransomware tools.
Cyber criminals are constantly looking for the best return on their investment and solutions that lower the chance of being caught. Sadly, that appears to mean small businesses are their current target of opportunity.
Tech media and cyber pundits have been sounding the alarm and offering small businesses specific cybersecurity solutions for a few years now, but it seems to no avail.
https://www.techrepublic.com/article/company-size-is-a-nonissue-with-automated-cyberattack-tools/
Over 60% Of Employees Reuse Passwords Across Business And Personal Accounts
Nearly two thirds of employees are using personal passwords to protect corporate data, and vice versa, with even more business leaders concerned about this very issue. Surprisingly, 97% of employees know what constitutes a strong password, yet over half (53%) admit to not always using one.
http://hrnews.co.uk/over-60-of-employees-reuse-passwords-across-business-and-personal/
LockBit 2.0 Ransomware Proliferates Globally
Fresh attacks target companies’ employees, promising millions of dollars in exchange for valid account credentials for initial access.
The LockBit ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) gang has ramped up its targeted attacks, researchers said, with attempts against organizations in Chile, Italy, Taiwan and the U.K. using version 2.0 of its malware.
https://threatpost.com/lockbit-ransomware-proliferates-globally/168746/
Secret Terrorist Watchlist With 2 Million Records Exposed Online
A secret terrorist watchlist with 1.9 million records, including classified "no-fly" records was exposed on the internet.
The list was left accessible on an Elasticsearch cluster that had no password on it.
Phishing Costs Nearly Quadrupled Over 6 Years
Lost productivity & mopping up after the costly attacks that follow phishing – BEC & ransomware in particular – eat up most costs, not pay-outs to crooks.
Research shows that the cost of phishing attacks has nearly quadrupled over the past six years: Large US companies are now losing, on average, $14.8 million annually, or $1,500 per employee.
That’s up sharply from 2015’s figure of $3.8 million, according to a new study from Ponemon Institute that was sponsored by Proofpoint.
According to the study, released Tuesday, phishing leads to some of the costliest cyber attacks.
https://threatpost.com/phishing-costs-quadrupled/168716/
Security Teams Report Rise In Cyber Risk
A recent report shows declining confidence in many organisations’ security function to address today’s threats.
80% of respondents to the Trend Micro’s biannual Cyber Risk Index (CRI) report said they expect to experience a data breach that compromises customer data in the next 12 months.
The report surveyed more than 3,600 businesses of all sizes and industries across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America for their thoughts on cyber risk. Despite an increased focus on security due to high-profile ransomware and other attacks in the past year, respondents reported a rise in risk due to inadequate security processes like backing up key assets.
Organisations are overwhelmed as they pivot from traditional to distributed networks. Pandemic-driven work-from-home growth is potentially how businesses will be run going forward. That distributed network means that it’s harder for IT staff to know what assets are under their control and what security controls should be in place. With the line blurring between corporate and personal assets, organizations are overwhelmed with the pace of change.
https://www.csoonline.com/article/3629477/security-teams-report-rise-in-cyber-risk.html
Organisations Aware Of The Importance Of Zero Trust, Yet Still Relying On Passwords
Organisations have become more security conscious over the course of the pandemic, leading them to invest heavily in zero trust, according to a new study.
The report surveyed over 600 global security leaders about their initiatives and found that remote work has led to a change in how organizations view the importance of zero trust, with financial services, healthcare organisations and the software industry seeing the most significant progress.
78% of companies globally say that zero trust has increased in priority and nearly 90% are currently working on a zero trust initiative, up from just 41% a year ago.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/08/11/importance-of-zero-trust/
Reliance On Third Party Workers Making Companies More Vulnerable To Cyber Attacks
A new survey revealed 83% of respondents agree that because organisations increasingly rely on contractors, freelancers, and other third party workers, their data systems have become more vulnerable to cyber attacks.
Further, 88% of people say organisations and government entities must have better data security systems in place to protect them from the increase in third party remote attacks.
Recent high-profile breaches, including SolarWinds, Colonial Pipeline, and JBS Foods, have exposed how vulnerable organisations are to cyber crime and in particular ransomware attacks. Of note with recent attacks is how data breaches can quickly affect aspects of everyday life, such as the ability to fill a car with petrol or buy meat at the supermarket.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/08/16/reliance-on-third-party-workers/
The Cyber Security Skills Gap Persists For The Fifth Year Running
Most organisations are still lacking talent, according to a new report, but experts think expanding the definition of a cybersecurity professional can help.
T-Mobile Hack Is A Return To The Roots Of Cyber Crime
In the world of cyber crime, ransomware attacks might be the sophisticated bank heists. The hack of T-Mobile is more akin to smashing a window, grabbing merchandise, and running.
The attack that exposed the personal information of millions of T-Mobile customers spotlights a common type of cyber threat that can inflict significant damage to consumers, much like the recent rash of ransomware attacks hitting companies.
The breach exposed the data of more than 40 million people, T-Mobile confirmed Wednesday, including customer’s full names and driver’s license information. A hacker posted about the stolen information on a cyber crime forum late last week, offering to sell the information to buyers for the price of six bitcoin, or about $270,000.
This type of attack, in which hackers worm their way into companies’ systems, steal data and try to sell it online, has been a common tactic for years, cyber security experts say. Unlike the high-profile ransomware attacks that have disrupted fuel supplies, hospital systems and food production in recent months, these data exfiltration hacks do not lock down computer systems.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/08/19/tmobile-breach-data-hacks/
Phishing Attacks Increase In H1 2021, Sharp Jump In Crypto Attacks
The first half of 2021 shows a 22 percent increase in the volume of phishing attacks over the same time period last year, a new report reveals. Notably, however, phishing volume in June dipped dramatically for the first time in six months, immediately following a very high-volume in May.
Bad actors continue to utilise phishing to fleece proprietary information, and are developing more sophisticated ways to do so based on growth in areas such as cryptocurrency and sites that use single-sign-on.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/08/19/phishing-attacks-h1-2021/
Connected Devices Increasingly At Risk As New Ransomware Attacks Are Reported Almost Daily
A new report has shined a light on the state of connected devices. The number of agentless and un-agentable devices increased to 42% in this year’s report (compared to 32% of agentless or un-agentable devices in 2020). These devices include medical and manufacturing devices that are critical to business operations along with network devices, IP phones, video surveillance cameras and facility devices (such as badge readers) that are not designed with security in mind, cannot be patched, and cannot support endpoint security agents.
With almost half of devices in the network that are either agentless or un-agentable, organisations need to complement their endpoint security strategy with a network-based security approach to discover and secure these devices.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/08/12/connected-devices-risks/
Threats
Ransomware
John Oliver On Ransomware Attacks: ‘It’s In Everyone’s Interest To Tet This Under Control’
Device Complexity Leaving Schools At Heightened Risk Of Ransomware Attacks
This Ransomware Has Returned With New Techniques To Make Attacks More Effective
Diavol Ransomware Sample Shows Stronger Connection To TrickBot Gang
Ransomware Criminals' Demands Rise As Aggressive Tactics Pay Off
BEC
Phishing
Other Social Engineering
Malware
Malware Campaign Uses Clever 'Captcha' To Bypass Browser Warning
Malware Dev Infects Own PC And Data Ends Up On Intel Platform
Researchers Discover New AdLoad Malware Campaigns Targeting Macs And Apple Products
Mobile
IOT
Vulnerabilities
Multiple Flaws Affecting Realtek Wi-Fi SDKs Impact Nearly A Million IoT Devices
Unpatched Remote Hacking Flaw Disclosed In Fortinet's FortiWeb WAF
65 Vendors Affected By Severe Vulnerabilities In Realtek Chips
Eight-Year-Old Bug In Microsoft's 64-Bit VBA Prompts Complaints Of Neglect
Cisco Won’t Fix Zero-Day RCE Vulnerability In End-Of-Life VPN Routers
Data Breaches/Leaks
Chase Bank Accidentally Leaked Customer Info To Other Customers
Colonial Pipeline Reports Data Breach After May Ransomware Attack
Ford Bug Exposed Customer And Employee Records From Internal Systems
Dark Web
Dark Web Blockchain Analysis Tool Suspended After Flurry Of Media Coverage
Dark Web Drug Dealer Indicted For Laundering $137 Million In Bitcoin From Prison
Dark Web Criminals Have Built A Tool That Checks For Dirty Bitcoin
Supply Chain
DoS/DDoS
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
Cloud
Other News
Threat Actors Hacked US Census Bureau In 2020 By Exploiting A Citrix Flaw
Cyber Security Is Top Priority For Enterprises As They Shift To Digital-First Operating Models
SMEs Awareness Of GDPR Is High, But Few Adhere To Its Legal Requirements
Hacker Finds A Way To Steal Windows 365 User Names And Passwords
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 18 June 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 18 June 2021: Ransomware Now Ranks As UK’s Top Cyber Security Danger; 54% of all employees reuse passwords across accounts; Most Firms Face Second Ransomware Attack After Paying Off First; Bad Cyber Security Behaviours Plaguing The Remote Workforce; VPN Attacks Up Nearly 2000% As Companies Embrace A Hybrid Workplace; Over 65,000 Ransomware Attacks Expected In 2021; Business Leaders Now Feel More Vulnerable To Cyber Attacks
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Ransomware Now Ranks As UK’s Top Cyber Security Danger
Ransomware hackers are now the biggest cyber security threat in the UK for the majority of individuals and businesses in the region, Lindy Cameron, chief executive of the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), said in a speech. “For the vast majority of UK citizens and businesses, and indeed for the vast majority of critical national infrastructure providers and government service providers, the primary key threat is not state actors but cyber criminals,” Cameron said in the speech at the second annual cyber security meeting at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), the oldest independent defense and security think tank worldwide.
54% of all employees reuse passwords across multiple work accounts
Results of a study into current attitudes and adaptability to at-home corporate cyber security, employee training, and support in the current global hybrid working era revealed some interesting results. The report surveyed 3,006 employees, business owners, and C-suite executives at large organisations (250+ employees), who have worked from home and use work issued devices in the UK, France and Germany.
According to the findings 54% of all employees use the same passwords across multiple work accounts. 22% of respondents still keep track of passwords by writing them down, including 41% of business owners and 32% of C-level executives.
42% of respondents admit to using work-issued devices for personal reasons daily while working from home. Of these, 29% are using work devices for banking and shopping, and 7% admit to watching illegal streaming services. Senior workers are among the biggest offenders, as 44% of business owners and 39% of C-level executives admit to performing personal tasks on work-issued devices every day since working from home, with 23% of business owners and 15% of C-level respondents using them for illegal streaming/watching TV.
A year after the pandemic began and work-from-home policies were implemented, 37% of all employees across all sectors are yet to receive cyber security training to work from home, leaving businesses largely exposed to evolving risks. 43% of all employees suggest that cyber security isn’t the responsibility of the workforce, with 60% believing this should be handled by IT teams.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/06/10/employees-reuse-passwords-across-multiple-work-accounts/
VPN Attacks Up Nearly 2000% As Companies Embrace A Hybrid Workplace
In Q1 2021, there was a 1,916% increase in attacks against Fortinet’s SSL-VPN and a 1,527% increase in Pulse Connect Secure VPN. These vulnerabilities allow a threat actor to gain access to a network. Once they are in, they can exfiltrate information and deploy ransomware. “2020 was the era of remote work and as the workforce adjusted, information technology professionals scrambled to support this level of remote activity by enabling a wide variety of remote connectivity methods,” said J.R. Cunningham, CSO at Nuspire. “This added multiple new attack vectors that enabled threat actors to prey on organisations, which is what we started to see in Q1 and are continuing to see today.”
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/06/15/vpn-attacks-up/
Most Firms Face Second Ransomware Attack After Paying Off First
Most businesses that choose to pay to regain access to their encrypted systems experience a subsequent ransomware attack. And almost half of those that pay up say some or all their data retrieved were corrupted. Some 80% of organisations that paid ransom demands experienced a second attack, of which 46% believed the subsequent ransomware to be caused by the same hackers. Amongst those that paid to regain access to their systems, 46% said at least some of their data was corrupted, according to a survey released Wednesday. The study polled 1,263 security professionals in seven markets worldwide, including 100 in Singapore, as well as respondents in Germany, France, the US, and UK.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/most-firms-face-second-ransomware-attack-after-paying-off-first/
Over 65,000 Ransomware Attacks Expected In 2021: Former Cisco CEO
U.S. companies are expected to endure over 65,000 ransomware attacks this year — and that's “a conservative number,” according to John Chambers, former CEO of Cisco Systems. With McDonald’s, JBS, and Colonial Pipeline Co. all recently coming under cyber attacks, Chambers does not foresee an end to the onslaught of cyber security threats anytime soon. He estimated that the number of ransomware attacks in 2021 could end up being as high as 100,000, with each one costing companies an average of $170,000. In the case of Colonial, just one password was needed for hackers to compromise the entire company’s IT infrastructure. This led to Colonial and JBS paying a combined $15 million in ransom against FBI advice.
Business Leaders Now Feel More Vulnerable To Cyber Attacks
Geographically speaking, 55% of US and 49% of UK respondents have experienced the most severe impact to their network security due to these attacks (suggesting that their businesses are more of a target than those in continental Europe) which, in turn, has resulted in a clear majority of respondents (60%) increasing their investment in this area. A sizeable 68% of leaders said their company has experienced a DDoS attack in the last 12 months with the UK (76%) and the US (73%) experiencing a significantly higher proportion compared to 59% of their German and 56% French counterparts. Additionally, over half of the leaders who participated in the survey confirmed that they specifically experienced a DDoS ransom or extortion attack in that time, with a large number of them (65%) targeted at UK companies, compared with the relatively low number in France (38%).
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/06/14/business-leaders-feel-vulnerable-cyber-attacks/
Ransomware Gang Turns To Revenge Porn
At least one ransomware gang has taken a rare and highly invasive step in order to convince its victims to pay: leaking nude images allegedly uncovered as part of their hack of a target company. The news presents an escalation in the world of ransomware and digital extortion, and comes as the U.S. government and other countries discuss new measures to curb the spike in ransomware incidents. Ransomware groups have recently targeted, and in some cases extracted payment from, the Colonial Pipeline Company, meat producer JBS, and the Irish healthcare system. Locking down computers with ransomware can already have a substantial impact on business operations; leaking information on top of that can present victims with another risk. But posting nude images publicly on the internet threatens to make extortion of organisations a much more personal matter.
https://www.vice.com/en/article/z3xzby/ransomware-gang-revenge-porn-leaks-nude-images
Bank Of America Spends Over $1 Billion Per Year On Cyber Security
Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan said Monday that the company has ramped its cyber security spending to over $1 billion a year. “I became CEO 11 and a half years ago, and we probably spent three to $400 million [per year] and we’re up over a billion now,” Moynihan said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” “The institutions around us, other institutions and my peers, spend like amounts, and our contracting parties spend like amounts,” he added. “In other words, we cause spending in third parties that provide services to us to protect us in the same way. So there’s a lot of money being spend on this, and I think one of the things our industry has done a great job of is work together.”
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/14/bank-of-america-spends-over-1-billion-per-year-on-cybersecurity.html
Bad Cyber Security Behaviours Plaguing The Remote Workforce
According to the report, younger employees are most likely to admit they cut cyber security corners, with 51% of 16-24 year olds and 46% of 25-34 year olds reporting they’ve used security workarounds. In addition, 39% say the cyber security behaviours they practice while working from home differ from those practiced in the office, with half admitting it’s because they feel they were being watched by IT departments. IT leaders are optimistic about the return to office, with 70% believing staff will more likely follow company security policies around data protection and privacy. However, only 57% of employees think the same.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/06/16/cybersecurity-behaviors/
Threats
Ransomware
Why Backups Are Not The Panacea For Recovery From A Ransomware Attack
Ryuk Ransomware Recovery Cost Us $8.1m And Counting, Says Baltimore School Authority
Experts Shed Light On Distinctive Tactics Used By Hades Ransomware
The latest Revil Ransomware Victim? Sol Oriens. Oh, A US Nuclear Weapons Contractor
BEC
Phishing
Malware
Vulnerabilities
Update Your Chrome Browser To Patch Yet Another 0-Day Exploited In-The-Wild
Vulnerability In Microsoft Teams Granted Attackers Access To Emails, Messages, And Personal Files
Critical Remote Code Execution Flaw In Thousands Of VMWare vCenter Servers Remains Unpatched
Data Breaches
UK Listed Law Firm Gateley Admits Client Data Lost Through Cyber Attack
Alibaba Suffers Billion-Item Data Leak Of Usernames And Mobile Numbers
Maritime Firm HMM Suffers Security Breach And Cyber Attack On Its Email Systems
Mensa Data Spillage Was Due to 'Unauthorised Internal Download'
Volkswagen, Audi Disclose Data Breach Impacting Over 3.3 Million Customers, Interested Buyers
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency
Supply Chain
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
Biden Says He Told Putin U.S. Will Hack Back Against Future Russian Cyber Attacks
Little-Noticed Cyber Spying Campaign Blamed On China Was Much Wider Than Thought
Denial of Service
Cloud
Privacy
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.