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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 08 March 2024
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 08 March 2024:
-FBI Reports Cyber Crime Losses Reached $12.5 billion in 2023, Ransomware Losses Surged by 74%, Average Ransomw Demand Reaching $600k
-Capita Plans £100 Million in Cost Cuts as it Continues to Grapple With 2023 Cyber Attack, Resulting in Significant Job Losses
-Employment Law Firm Sues IT Company Over Ransomware Attack
-Stolen Passwords are a Hacker Goldmine
-Phishing Attacks Up 40 Percent in 2023; Attackers Leverage Social Engineering for Greater Success
-Business Leaders Don’t Even Know They’ve Been Hacked
-Rising Cyber Security Risks: Insider Threat Main Concern Among Mid-Market Firms
-Security Risks Plague SMEs in Shift to Remote Working
-After Collecting $22 Million, Ransomware Group Stages FBI Takedown
-Cyber Attacks Remain Chief Concern for Businesses
-Two New Ransomware Groups Join Forces to Launch Joint 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
FBI Reports Cyber Crime Losses Reached $12.5 billion in 2023, Ransomware Losses Surged by 74%, Average Ransom Demand Reaching $600k
An FBI report into the cost of cyber crime has found that estimated losses in the US alone reached $12.5 billion in 2023. Ransomware accounted for $59.6 million, a 74% increase from the previous year’s report. Of note, the FBI report only deals with complaints made to the FBI; it therefore excludes other countries, and relies on the US organisations to identify that they have been impacted. It is therefore likely that the figure in the US, let alone globally, is significantly higher.
Sources: [Security Boulevard] [Security Week] [Infosecurity Magazine] [Tripwire] [Security Affairs]
Capita Plans £100 Million in Cost Cuts as it Continues to Grapple With 2023 Cyber Attack, Resulting in Significant Job Losses
In the aftermath of a significant cyber attack in 2023, Capita faces a steep financial hurdle with reported losses amounting to £106.6 million. Originally forecasted at £25 million, the revised figure underscores the substantial impact of the breach. Capita’s response strategy, including significant investments in recovery and cyber security bolstering, emphasises the escalating costs associated with data breaches. CEO Adolfo Hernandez announced plans for a substantial cost reduction of over £100 million, indicating the critical need for efficiency improvements to mitigate the financial strain. Capita’s experience serves as a potent reminder of the critical importance of robust cyber resilience strategies. These strategies are not just about preventing attacks, but also about mitigating the potentially devastating financial consequences should a breach occur.
Source: [ITPro]
Employment Law Firm Sues IT Company Over Ransomware Attack
A law firm in California has sued an IT solutions company, saying that after hiring the company to install a network system and server, the law firm suffered a ransomware attack. The law firm found that not long after the network was installed, they were unable to access their data, and when they had gone to retrieve a cloud backup, they had found this was already deleted, forcing them to pay the ransom to get their data back. The law firm is accusing the IT company of negligence and breach of contract and is seeking damages of at least $1 million.
Source: [Law360]
Stolen Passwords are a Hacker Goldmine
Passwords are not only crucial for organisational security, but they also come with significant costs and vulnerabilities. From the time spent by service desks on resets, to the expense of security incidents and breaches, the financial toll is substantial. Weak or reused passwords heighten the vulnerability, with breaches involving stolen credentials costing an average of $4.45 million. Cyber threats are evolving, with hackers increasingly favouring stolen user accounts over traditional malware. This shift, underscored by a notable 71% increase in attacks leveraging valid login credentials in 2023 as reported by CrowdStrike and IBM, highlights the repercussions of compromised credentials. Embracing technologies like multi-factor authentication (MFA) and single sign-on (SSO), along with employee education, can bolster security while alleviating financial strains. Robust identity management and zero-trust security frameworks are essential to mitigate risks further, especially in the face of rising cloud intrusions. Proactive investments in password security software such as password managers can help streamline operations and enhance overall organisational resilience against these evolving threats.
Sources: [Bleeping Computer] [Axios]
Phishing Attacks Up 40 Percent in 2023; Attackers Leverage Social Engineering for Greater Success
Kaspersky recently released their annual spam and phishing report in which they identified over 709 million attempts to access phishing and scam websites, a 40% increase from the previous year. It should be noted that this number is just related to Kaspersky’s identification; the figure is likely far greater. With reports identifying that 90% of phishing involves social engineering, it is important to understand how it is leveraged.
Phishing attacks generally include an element of trust; for example, a bad actor impersonating a reputable brand or providing details about an individual that makes the attack more credible. Often, social engineering will rely on human characteristics, such as urgency, emotion and habit to try to manipulate the target to perform particular actions. Whilst the tools may change, the basis is the same; a successful phish requires user interaction. To mitigate the impact of phishing in corporate environments, organisations must stay informed about the latest adversarial activity and prioritise security measures such as multi-factor authentication (MFA) and providing employee awareness and education training that goes beyond ticking boxes.
Sources: [Beta News] [CSO Online] [Security Boulevard] [DarkReading]
Business Leaders Don’t Even Know They’ve Been Hacked
A survey of over 10,000 business leaders across various industries has found that a number of business leaders know little when it comes to their organisation’s cyber security landscape, with 1 in 10, “unsure” and unable to provide a definitive answer as to whether their organisation has had a data breach in 2023. The report highlights that there are a number of leadership positions that are not receiving sufficient information about their organisation’s data security situation.
Receiving regular reports with metrics about the organisation’s cyber security posture is key to organisations achieving and maintaining a solid level of governance, something that is required in various standards and regulations.
Source: [Tech.Co]
Rising Cyber Security Risks: Insider Threat Main Concern Among Mid-Market Firms
According to the 2023 CyberArk Identity Security Threat Landscape Report, insider threats are on the rise, with 68% of organisations reporting an increased frequency in the past year. These threats, considered one of the top concerns over the next 12 months, stem from within an organisation where authorised employees exploit their access to steal or leak sensitive data. Factors such as flexible working, an increase in job transitions, workforce reductions, third-party relationships, economic uncertainties, and employee stress levels further compound these challenges. Negligence, accounting for 62% of insider incidents, plays a significant role; these threats aren’t always malicious but can also be negligent or accidental. As these threats evolve, the potential consequences, including revenue loss and reputational damage, are becoming more apparent to business leaders. To mitigate risks, companies must prioritise improving identity security, particularly in controlling privileged access, and embrace a Zero Trust approach. This ensures full visibility and control over access to sensitive data, safeguarding critical assets and enhancing cyber resilience in an increasingly volatile landscape. Other key identified threats include AI-related risks, ransomware, deep fakes, and malware.
Sources: [TechRadar] [Comms Business]
C-Suite Executives: An Attacker’s Dream?
Cyber criminals are increasingly focusing on high-value targets, particularly C-suite executives who hold extensive organisational access. These executives, often overlooked in security practices and training, have become vulnerable links. The cyber security landscape of 2023 saw significant advancements but also revealed vulnerabilities, exacerbated by global conflicts and strategic cyber attacks. Cyber actors are now targeting entities with high return potential, with ransomware attackers tailoring their strikes to maximise revenues, often from smaller organisations. Interestingly, while automation is on the rise, cyber criminals are opting for a human touch, with human operatives often behind attacks. A report last year showed a nearly 30% spike in fraud specifically targeting senior executives, highlighting the vulnerability of the C-suite. This emphasises the need for robust cyber resilience strategies to safeguard these high-value targets.
Source: [SecurityBrief New Zealand]
Security Risks Plague SMEs in Shift to Remote Working
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, remote working surged, offering businesses newfound flexibility and cost efficiencies. However, this paradigm shift comes with its own set of security challenges, particularly impacting startups and small businesses. The inherent flexibility of remote work exposes companies to risks like unauthorised access, IP theft, and malware. These threats are especially potent for SMEs, jeopardising their financial stability and reputation. Robust security measures include VPNs, enforcing regular software updates, and employee training to mitigate these risks. By embracing these strategies, SMEs can navigate the remote work landscape securely, unlocking its benefits while safeguarding against potential threats.
Source: [SecurityBrief New Zealand]
After Collecting $22 Million, Ransomware Group Stages FBI Takedown
The ransomware group responsible for facilitating a huge attack against a US prescription drug company for $22 million has gone dark, days after receiving the payment and standing accused of scamming their own affiliate out of their share of the gains. Days after the payment was made, AlphV’s public website started displaying a message saying it had been seized by the FBI as part of an international law enforcement action. Ransomware researchers have since said that it has not actually been seized, but appears to be a ploy to exit scam affiliates of the ransomware group. This proves the old adage that there really is no honour among thieves.
Source: [Ars Technica]
Cyber Attacks Remain Chief Concern for Businesses
A recent report has underscored the growing concern among UK corporate businesses regarding cyber attacks as the primary fraud threat in the upcoming year, with 73% of respondents expressing worry. As businesses grapple with the shift to hybrid and remote work models, ensuring robust counter-fraud measures and internal controls is imperative to safeguarding workforces regardless of location. This situation emphasises the critical importance of investing in employee training to combat evolving fraud threats. It highlights the far-reaching consequences that fraud can have on organisations and underscores the necessity of fostering an anti-fraud culture across all levels of the enterprise.
Source: [TheHRDirector]
Two New Ransomware Groups Join Forces to Launch Joint Attacks
Two ransomware groups, Ghostsec and Stormous, have joined forces to conduct double extortion ransomware attacks on various businesses across multiple countries. As part of this, their new ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) program, STMX_GhostLocker, provides various options for their affiliates. GhostSec is already part of a coalition called the five families, involving 4 other entities. The group ventured into RaaS last year, offering services for as little as $269.99 per month.
Source: [The Hacker News]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
FBI: Cyber Crime Losses Exceeded $12.5 Billion in 2023 - Security Week
1 in 10 Business Leaders Don’t Even Know They’ve Been Hacked (tech.co)
Cyber attacks remain chief concern for businesses | theHRD (thehrdirector.com)
What Cyber Security Chiefs Need From Their CEOs (darkreading.com)
Simply Human: Why HR Needs To Take The Lead In Cyber Security (forbes.com)
The Security Interviews: Cyber security is about managing risk effectively | Computer Weekly
NIST Cyber Framework 2.0: Doubling Down on Governance, Expanding Applicability | Law.com
CISOs Tackle Compliance With Cyber Guidelines (informationweek.com)
Are C-suite executives cyber security's weakest link? (securitybrief.co.nz
30 years of the CISO role – how things have changed since Steve Katz | CSO Online
How to create an efficient governance control program - Help Net Security
Demystifying the Maze: A Guide to Cyber Risk Quantification Methods (cybersaint.io)
Resilience is built on a solid framework | Professional Security
Research finds that cyber security leaders are taking on multiple roles | Security Magazine
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
ConnectWise ScreenConnect bug used in Play ransomware breach, MSP attack | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Employment Law Firm Sues IT Co. Over Ransomware Attack - Law360
Report: Average Initial Ransomware Demand in 2023 Reached $600K - Security Boulevard
What’s Fueling the Ransomware Epidemic? | Symantec Enterprise Blogs (security.com)
Banning ransomware payments back on the agenda | Computer Weekly
BlackCat Goes Dark After Ripping Off Change Healthcare Ransom (darkreading.com)
Uncle Sam intervenes in Change Healthcare ransomware fiasco • The Register
US cyber and law enforcement agencies warn of Phobos ransomware attacks (securityaffairs.com)
Experts echo calls for ransomware ban as LockBit rallies • The Register
Government urged to ban ransom payments to cyber criminals (computing.co.uk)
Ransomware spikes against critical infrastructure, says FBI • The Register
Major shifts in identity, ransomware, and critical infrastructure threat trends - Help Net Security
Government was third-largest ransomware target last year: FBI - Defense One
JetBrains TeamCity under attack by ransomware thugs • The Register
Ransomware Victims
A Deep Dive into the 2024 Prudential and LoanDepot Breaches - Security Boulevard
Employment Law Firm Sues IT Co. Over Ransomware Attack - Law360
After collecting $22 million, AlphV ransomware group stages FBI takedown | Ars Technica
Change Healthcare hack cripples payment systems across health providers - The Washington Post
Hackers Behind the Change Healthcare Ransomware Attack Just Received a $22 Million Payment | WIRED
Capita raises threat of further job cuts under plans to save another £100m | BelfastTelegraph.co.uk
First BofA, Now Fidelity: Same Vendor Behind Third-Party Breaches (darkreading.com)
UnitedHealth's cyber attack should be a 'wake-up call' for healthcare (yahoo.com)
Security leaders weigh in on the recent UnitedHealth cyber attack | Security Magazine
Canada's anti-money laundering agency offline after cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Uncle Sam intervenes in Change Healthcare ransomware fiasco • The RegisterFidelity Investments Notifying 28,000 People of Data Breach - Security Week
Duvel says it has "more than enough" beer after ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Thousands of Dutch passports stolen in ransomware attacks available on dark web | NL Times
Corporate Greed Made the Change Healthcare Cyber attack Worse (nymag.com)
Switzerland: Play ransomware leaked 65,000 government documents (bleepingcomputer.com)
Possible China link to Change Healthcare ransomware attack • The Register
Action needed to avoid repeat of Southern Water cyber attack - Utility Week
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Jamf says 9% of smartphone have fallen for phishing attacks (appleinsider.com)
How attackers leverage social engineering for greater scamming success | CSO Online
Cyber Criminals Spoof US Government Organisations in BEC, Phishing Attacks - Security Week
Annual State of Email Security by the Numbers - Security Boulevard
New Phishing Kit Leverages SMS, Voice Calls to Target Cryptocurrency Users (thehackernews.com)
Hackers target Coinbase, Binance staff with phishing clones of Gmail, iCloud (crypto.news)
AI worm that infects computers and reads emails created by researchers | The Independent
95% believe LLMs making phishing detection more challenging - Help Net Security
Other Social Engineering
How attackers leverage social engineering for greater scamming success | CSO Online
New Phishing Kit Leverages SMS, Voice Calls to Target Cryptocurrency Users (thehackernews.com)
The Rise of Social Engineering Fraud in Business Email Compromise (darkreading.com)
Artificial Intelligence
Over 225,000 Compromised ChatGPT Credentials Up for Sale on Dark Web Markets (thehackernews.com)
AI tools put companies at risk of data exfiltration - Help Net Security
Don't Give Your Business Data to AI Companies (darkreading.com)
Act now to stop WordPress and Tumblr selling your content to AI firms • Graham Cluley
GTPDOOR backdoor is designed to target telecom carrier networks (securityaffairs.com)
Political deepfakes are spreading like wildfire thanks to GenAI | TechCrunch
AI worm that infects computers and reads emails created by researchers | The Independent
95% believe LLMs making phishing detection more challenging - Help Net Security
Immediate AI risks and tomorrow's dangers - Help Net Security
Defence: Leonardo CEO says stupidity poses a bigger threat than AI (cnbc.com)
2FA/MFA
Malware
No “Apple magic” as 11% of macOS detections last year came from malware | Malwarebytes
Mobile banking malware growing rapidly, ThreatFabric warns | Biometric Update
GTPDOOR backdoor is designed to target telecom carrier networks (securityaffairs.com)
Watch Out for Spoofed Zoom, Skype, Google Meet Sites Delivering Malware (thehackernews.com)
Linux variant of BIFROSE RAT uses deceptive domain strategies (securityaffairs.com)
New Linux malware found targeting mobile networks across the world | TechRadar
ScreenConnect flaws exploited to drop new ToddleShark malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Malware is coming for your ChatGPT credentials • The Register
North Korea Hits ScreenConnect Bugs to Drop 'ToddleShark' Malware (darkreading.com)
Linux Malware Campaign Targets Misconfigured Cloud Servers - Security Week
AI worm that infects computers and reads emails created by researchers | The Independent
New WogRAT malware abuses online notepad service to store malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Snake, a new Info Stealer spreads through Facebook messages (securityaffairs.com)
Linux Variants of Bifrost Trojan Evade Detection via Typosquatting (darkreading.com)
Mobile
Jamf says 9% of smartphone have fallen for phishing attacks (appleinsider.com)
Mobile banking malware growing rapidly, ThreatFabric warns | Biometric Update
Apple warns of increased iPhone security risks | Computerworld
Android's March 2024 Update Patches Critical Vulnerabilities - Security Week
CISA Adds Android Pixel and Sunhillo Sureline Bugs to Its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog
The Importance of Cyber security for Your Smart Devices | HackerNoon
Phone hacking is a real danger. How to keep your data, location secure (usatoday.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
Internet of Things – IoT
Someone is hacking 3D printers to warn owners of a security flaw (bitdefender.com)
Popular doorbell camera brands contain security flaws, making them easy to hack: Report | The Hill
NCSC flags up cyber security for connected places | UKAuthority
The Importance of Cyber Security for Your Smart Devices | HackerNoon
Flipper Zero WiFi phishing attack can unlock and steal Tesla cars (bleepingcomputer.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
The State Of Cyber Security (Part One): Why Are There Still So Many Data Breaches? (forbes.com)
A leaky database spilled 2FA codes for the world’s tech giants | TechCrunch#
American Express credit cards exposed in third-party data breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Fidelity Investments Notifying 28,000 People of Data Breach - Security Week
AI tools put companies at risk of data exfiltration - Help Net Security
4 Instructive Postmortems on Data Downtime and Loss (thehackernews.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
FBI: Cyber Crime Losses Exceeded $12.5 Billion in 2023 - Security Week
$12.5 billion lost to cyber crime, amid tidal wave of crypto investment fraud | Tripwire
Germany takes down cyber crime market with over 180,000 users (bleepingcomputer.com)
Poorly paid cyber security staff risk ‘breaking bad’ on the dark web (techinformed.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
$12.5 billion lost to cyber crime, amid tidal wave of crypto investment fraud | Tripwire
Hackers target FCC, crypto firms in advanced Okta phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers target Coinbase, Binance staff with phishing clones of Gmail, iCloud (crypto.news)
New Phishing Kit Leverages SMS, Voice Calls to Target Cryptocurrency Users (thehackernews.com)
Crypto fraud in 2023: How can security teams fight (securityintelligence.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Comms Business - Insider threat main concern among mid-market firms
Current workforce trends feed into rising cyber security risks | TechRadar
Army Vet Spills National Secrets to Fake Ukrainian Girlfriend (darkreading.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Employment Law Firm Sues IT Co. Over Ransomware Attack - Law360
Capita plans £100 million in cost cuts as it continues to grapple with 2023 cyber attack | ITPro
First BofA, Now Fidelity: Same Vendor Behind Third-Party Breaches (darkreading.com)
American Express credit cards exposed in third-party data breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers target FCC, crypto firms in advanced Okta phishing attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Switzerland: Play ransomware leaked 65,000 government documents (bleepingcomputer.com)
Chinese State Hackers Target Tibetans with Supply Chain, Watering Hole Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Cloud/SaaS
10 Essential Processes for Reducing the Top 11 Cloud Risks (darkreading.com)
Hackers target Coinbase, Binance staff with phishing clones of Gmail, iCloud (crypto.news)
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
Linux and Open Source
Open source vulnerabilities dominated 2023, and this year looks no different | ITPro
Linux Malware Campaign Targets Misconfigured Cloud Servers - Security Week
Linux Variants of Bifrost Trojan Evade Detection via Typosquatting (darkreading.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Hacked WordPress sites use visitors' browsers to hack other sites (bleepingcomputer.com)
Over 225,000 Compromised ChatGPT Credentials Up for Sale on Dark Web Markets (thehackernews.com)
Malware is coming for your ChatGPT credentials • The Register
Stolen passwords are a hacker goldmine now, CrowdStrike and IBM find (axios.com)
Passwords are Costing Your Organisation Money - How to Minimize Those Costs (bleepingcomputer.com)
US State AGs tell Meta to fix rampant account takeovers • The Register
Social Media
Google and Meta users see their 2FA security codes leaked online - Root-Nation.com
“Technical Issue” Takes Facebook Offline, Offers No Cyber Security Reassurance | MSSP Alert
Facebook and Instagram Overrun by Account Hackers, States Warn (bloomberglaw.com)
Snake, a new Info Stealer spreads through Facebook messages (securityaffairs.com)
Meta Abandons Hacking Victims, Draining Law Enforcement Resources, Officials Say | WIRED
US State AGs tell Meta to fix rampant account takeovers • The Register
Training, Education and Awareness
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
EU council welcomes cyber solidarity act agreement (verdict.co.uk)
The modern CISO's guide to navigating new SEC cyber regulations (betanews.com)
Five Unintended Consequences of the New SEC Cyber Security Disclosure Rule - Security Boulevard
Navigating regulation challenges for protecting sensitive healthcare data - Help Net Security
Models, Frameworks and Standards
NIST Cyber Security Framework 2.0: 4 Steps to Get Started (darkreading.com)
NIST Cyber Framework 2.0: Doubling Down on Governance, Expanding Applicability | Law.com
Data Protection
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
11 Top Cyber Security Certifications to Consider In 2024 (datamation.com)
Poorly paid cyber security staff risk ‘breaking bad’ on the dark web (techinformed.com)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
Germany takes down cyber crime market with over 180,000 users (bleepingcomputer.com)
A cyber criminal is sentenced, will it make a difference? - Help Net Security
Nigerian National Pleads Guilty of Conspiracy in BEC Operation (darkreading.com)
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare, Cyber Espionage and Geopolitical Threats/Activity
Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Nation State Actors
China
Chinese nation state actors to ramp up cyber espionage attempts in 2024 - IT Security Guru
We’re Slowly Learning About China’s Extensive Hacking Network | Mind Matters
Taiwan's Biggest Telco Breached by Suspected Chinese Hackers (darkreading.com)
Possible China link to Change Healthcare ransomware attack • The Register
A New Wave of Cyber Attacks: Five Actions to Take Now | IndustryWeek
Chinese State Hackers Target Tibetans with Supply Chain, Watering Hole Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Russia
The Five Bears: Russia's Offensive Cyber Capabilities (greydynamics.com)
A Silent World War – Russia’s Cyberwar Against the West (kyivpost.com)
Germany Urged to Tighten Security After Russia Leaked Classified Information - Bloomberg
Germany to investigate Russia’s interception of military talks on Ukraine | Germany | The Guardian
Valuable Russian Military Documents Exposed: Report (newsweek.com)
Russian Hackers Target Ukraine Via A Disinformation Campaign - Security Boulevard
North Korea
Lazarus Group observed exploiting an admin-to-kernel Windows zero-day | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
North Korea Hits ScreenConnect Bugs to Drop 'ToddleShark' Malware (darkreading.com)
North Korea’s Kimsuky gang joins rush to exploit new ScreenConnect bugs | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
North Korea hacks two South Korean chip firms to steal engineering data (bleepingcomputer.com)
Other Nation State Actors, Hacktivism, Extremism, Terrorism and Other Geopolitical Threat Intelligence
Vulnerability Management
Firms Still Threatened by Old Vulnerabilities (govinfosecurity.com)
Open source vulnerabilities dominated 2023, and this year looks no different | ITPro
Organisations are knowingly releasing vulnerable applications - Help Net Security
Enhancing security through proactive patch management - Help Net Security
Vulnerabilities
Five Eyes alliance warns of attacks exploiting known Ivanti Gateway flaws (securityaffairs.com)
ConnectWise ScreenConnect bug used in Play ransomware breach, MSP attack | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
North Korea’s Kimsuky gang joins rush to exploit new ScreenConnect bugs | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
North Korea Hits ScreenConnect Bugs to Drop 'ToddleShark' Malware (darkreading.com)
Hackers exploited Windows 0-day for 6 months after Microsoft knew of it | Ars Technica
Urgent: Apple Issues Critical Updates for Actively Exploited Zero-Day Flaws (thehackernews.com)
VMware Issues Security Patches for ESXi, Workstation, and Fusion Flaws (thehackernews.com)
VMWare Urges Users to Uninstall EAP Immediately - Security Boulevard
Cisco Patches High-Severity Vulnerabilities in VPN Product - Security Week
Critical TeamCity flaw now widely exploited to create admin accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical TeamCity Bugs Endanger Software Supply Chain (darkreading.com)
Android's March 2024 Update Patches Critical Vulnerabilities - Security Week
CISA Warns of Pixel Phone Vulnerability Exploitation - Security Week
Tools and Controls
Why cyber maturity assessment should become standard practice - Help Net Security
1 in 10 Business Leaders Don’t Even Know They’ve Been Hacked (tech.co)
The Ultimate Guide to Threat Detection, Investigation, and Response (TDIR) (govinfosecurity.com)
The Security Interviews: Cyber security is about managing risk effectively | Computer Weekly
What Is A Cyber Incident Response Policy? - Security Boulevard
Cyber Criminals Using Novel DNS Hijacking Technique for Investment Scams (thehackernews.com)
Demystifying the Maze: A Guide to Cyber Risk Quantification Methods (cybersaint.io)
Resilience is built on a solid framework | Professional Security
Simply Human: Why HR Needs To Take The Lead In Cyber Security (forbes.com)
The critical role of DNS in cyber security and digital thriving | TechRadar
What is Advanced Threat Protection and How to Use It in Your Business - Security Boulevard
How To Close The DevSecOps Cyber Security Skills Gap And Boost Security (forbes.com)
Reports Published in the Last Week
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 13 October 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Intelligence Briefing 13 October 2023:
-Small Businesses Hit by Frequent Cyber Attacks as 90% of CISOs Faced at least One Attack Last Year
-The Most Effective Cyber Attacks Never Touch Your Organisation's Firewall, HR’s Role in Defending the Organisation
-Ransomware Infection Times Fall from 5 Days to 5 Hours
-80% of Security Leaders See AI as the Biggest Threat to Business
-Is Your Board Cyber-Ready?
-Cyber Security Should Be a Business Priority for CEOs
-The Looming Threat of a Single Phishing Click to Your Business
-40% of Organisations Leave Ransomware to IT
-Auditors Growing Concern About Cyber Security
-The Cyber Villains Are Getting Bolder: Businesses Need to Up Their Game
-Preparing for the Unexpected: A Proactive Approach to Operational Resilience
-Staggering Losses to Social Media and Social Engineering Since 21, as Victims Take $2.7 Billion Hit in US Alone
-Organisations Grapple with Detection and Response Despite Rising Security Budgets
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
Small Businesses Hit by Frequent Cyber Attacks, as 90% of CISOs of Larger Firms Faced at least One Attack Last Year
A survey by Payroll provider Sage found that nearly 48% of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) have experienced at least one cyber incident in the past year; of note, this is only based on SMEs self-reporting, and requires SMEs to have both the ability to detect an incident and to have actually identified an incident and then self-report it. The survey found that cyber security was a priority with 68% of respondents reporting that they would use a more expensive security control if it demonstrated better security.
In a separate report by Splunk, it was found that 90% of CISOs reported experiencing at least one disruptive attack in the past year. The difference in numbers could be because organisations who have a CISO are more likely to have tools in place to detect an incident.
Regardless, cyber criminals are showing that any size of organisation can be a victim of a cyber incident and in some cases, smaller organisations may not have the necessary budget and controls to prevent an attack.
Sources: [Security Magazine] [Insurance Times] [Infosecurity Magazine]
The Most Effective Cyber Attacks Never Touch Your Organisation’s Firewall, and HR’s Role in Defending the Organisation
In 2022, total spending on cyber security technologies increased to 71.1 billion USD, illustrating just how much effort goes into protecting companies, their data, and their customers. Regardless of all this spending, there remains a popular attack which can bypass this all: social engineering. Attackers know how much technology protection is placed in organisations, so they often try to bypass this and go straight through the employees.
Cyber security will never work if organisations do not go beyond IT; it is a business-wide issue and requires the engagement and input from across the business, including functions like Human Resources. Having effectively trained employees is a crucial part of creating a culture of security within an organisation, and this starts with HR. Employees will often have training as part of their onboarding and then regular training to ensure competencies; as part of HR’s role, this should include commissioning training on cyber security that is delivered by cyber security experts that understand what attackers are doing.
Source: [News Week] [Beta News]
Ransomware Infection Times Fall from 5 Days to 5 Hours
The amount of time it takes an attacker to infect a system with ransomware has fallen drastically over the last 12 months according to a recent report. The median dwell time (the time that an attacker spends in a victim’s network before being detected) was 5.5 days in 2021, reducing to 4.5 days in 2022, and this year it fell to less than 24 hours with, in 10% of cases, the time taken to deploy ransomware being within 5 hours. As threat actors continue to leverage Ransomware as a Service (RaaS) to execute attacks, dwell times will continue to decrease and the number of attacks will increase.
This coincides with a recent survey by Hornetsecurity that revealed that almost 60% of businesses are concerned about ransomware attacks. 92% of businesses are reported to be aware of ransomware’s potential negative impact, but just 54% of respondents say their leadership is actively involved in conversations and decision making to help prevent attacks.
The report highlights that ransomware is still at large, with the first half of 2023 seeing more ransomware victims than in the whole of 2022. Having good cyber security protection and hygiene is the key to ongoing success. Organisations cannot afford to become victims. Ongoing security awareness training and multi-layered ransomware protection are critical to help avoid insurmountable losses.
Sources: [Cision] [PC Mag] [Security Magazine]
80% of Security Leaders See AI as the Biggest Threat to Business
A report has found that a large majority of security leaders (80%) believe Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the biggest cyber threat to their business, and that the risks of AI outweigh the many advantages.
In a separate report, 58% agreed that AI is increasing the number of cyber attacks. The benefits of AI were also recognised however, with 73% reporting AI to be an increasingly important tool for security operations.
With AI finding itself both sides of the coin, it is important for organisations to effectively implement their AI solutions, so that they can improve their security whilst reducing the risk that AI presents to their organisation.
Sources: [Diginomica] [Infosecurity Magazine]
Is Your Board Cyber-Ready?
With the recent US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requirements entering effect, and the impending Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) requirements for Europe, there is yet another layer added to the complicated issues of managing cyber security risks. However, it is clear that strong corporate governance equips companies to address them efficiently and accurately.
Governance starts with the board, as it is responsible for the oversight of the organisation’s cyber security programs. For a board to do this effectively, the leadership team must be able to understand cyber security; yet despite this, a study found that only 12% of boards had a cyber expert. Black Arrow supports business leaders in organisations of all sizes to gain a strong practical understanding of the fundamentals of cyber security risk management, and to demonstrate governance in implementing their cyber security strategy by leveraging their existing internal and external resources.
Sources: [Harvard.edu] [JDSupra]
Cyber Security Should Be a Business Priority for CEOs
A recent report found that despite 96% of CEOs saying that cyber security is critical to organisational growth and stability, 74% of CEOs are concerned about their organisation’s ability to avert or minimise damage arising from a cyber attack. The report also highlighted that 60% of CEOs don’t incorporate cyber security into their business strategies, products or services from the beginning. 44% believe that cyber security requires episodic intervention rather than ongoing attention.
Adding to this reactive stance is the incorrect assumption by 54% of CEOs that the cost of implementing cyber security is higher than the cost of suffering a cyber attack, despite history showing otherwise. For instance, the report notes that a global shipping and logistics company breach resulted in a 20% drop in business volume, with losses hitting $300 million. In addition, despite 90% of CEOs saying cyber security is a differentiating factor for their products or services to help them build customer trust, only 15% have dedicated board meetings to discuss cyber security issues. This disconnect might be explained by the fact that 91% of CEOs said cyber security is a technical function that is the responsibility of the CIO or CISO.
Source: [HelpNet Security]
The Looming Threat of a Single Phishing Click to Your Business
A single click could be all it takes to get the ball rolling and allow an attacker entry into your organisation. From there, the possibilities are endless. Phishing impacts any employee within the organisation with an email account, phone number or access to the web.
Organisations can mitigate this risk however, by conducting training and awareness programmes, aimed at improving employees’ abilities to identify, report and avoid falling victim to phishing incidents. Such training should be held regularly to maintain their knowledge as well as adapting to the ever-changing landscape of cyber crime. Black Arrow supports organisations of all sizes in designing and delivering proportionate user education and awareness programmes, including in-person and online training as well as simulated phishing campaigns. Our programmes help secure employee engagement and build a cyber security culture to protect the organisation.
Source: [CMS-lawnow]
40% of Organisations Leave Ransomware to IT
A report found that 93% of respondents said they believe ransomware protection is “very” to “extremely” important in terms of IT priorities for their organisation, yet only 54% reported that the leadership were actively involved in conversations and decision-making around ransomware attacks, and 40% of total respondents were happy to leave the IT team to deal with ransomware attacks.
By only involving the IT team and excluding the leadership, organisations are at risk of not addressing regulatory requirements, or failing to manage such cyber incidents within a business context. This would also suggest a lack of an effective Incident Response Plan to ensure that considerations such as legal, communications, customers, employees and other stakeholders are not forgotten. Black Arrow works with organisations of all sizes and sectors to design and prepare for managing a cyber security incident; this can include an Incident Response Plan and an educational tabletop exercise for the leadership team that highlights the proportionate controls to help the organisation prevent and mitigate an incident.
Source: [MSSP Alert]
Auditors’ Growing Concern About Cyber Security
The majority of chief audit executives and information technology audit leaders consider cyber security to be a top risk over the next year. The survey found that found that nearly 75% of respondents, and an even higher percentage (82%) of technology audit leaders, consider cyber security to be a high-risk area over the next 12 months.
Source: [Accounting Today]
Preparing for the Unexpected: A Proactive Approach to Operational Resilience
Recent insights highlight a pressing need: ensuring operational resilience in financial firms. As the financial sector remains a prime target for cyber threats, the increasing interconnectedness presents evolving challenges. While cyber security aims to defend against attacks, operational resilience ensures the continuity of operations even when incidents occur.
Notably, the EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) stresses preparedness, providing a framework for the industry. Although business continuity practices exist, operational resilience offers a more proactive stance, ensuring system reliability that is crucial for global financial trust. Achieving this requires a comprehensive risk assessment, laying the groundwork for a resilient strategy tailored to a firm’s unique position in the financial landscape.
Source: [Dark Reading]
Staggering Losses to Social Media and Social Engineering Since 2021, as Victims Take $2.7 Billion Hit in US Alone
The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reports that Americans alone, have lost $2.7 billion to social media and social engineering scams since 2021. The losses were incurred through websites, phone calls and email.
It is important for organisations to consider that such scams could very well find themselves in the corporate environment. Already, there has been a significant rise in attacks on employees through LinkedIn. As such, it is important for organisations to provide education and awareness training to users.
Sources: [Bleeping Computer] [Infosecurity Magazine]
Organisations Grapple with Detection and Response Despite Rising Security Budgets
A study by EY found that only a fifth of cyber security leaders today are confident about their organisation’s cyber security approach, with only half trusting the training they provide in-house. CISO respondents reported an average annual spend of $35 million on cyber security, with the median cost of a breach jumping 12% to $2.5 million. The leaders said they anticipate the cost per breach to reach $4 million by the end of the year.
The report found that the biggest internal challenges to the organisation's cyber security approach were "too many potential attack surfaces" at 52%, and "difficulty balancing security and innovation speed" at 50%. The study also noted big discrepancies between the CISOs and other C-suite leaders when it came to their organisation's cyber security preparedness. While 60% of CISOs were confident about the C-suite integration of cyber security into key business decisions, only over half of other C-suite officers believed they were effective. There was also a significant gap (12%) between their satisfaction with the overall cyber security preparedness.
Source: [CSO Online]
Governance, Risk and Compliance
Auditors more worried about cyber security than AI risks | Accounting Today
Cyber Security Survey: 40% of Orgs “Leave” Ransomware to IT | MSSP Alert
Cyber attacks are only getting worse for business, so what are CISOs doing about it? | TechRadar
Warning as more businesses fall victim to cyber attacks | Insurance Times
PwC survey reveals rising concerns over cyber security and generative AI in 2024 - Reinsurance News
The Role of HR in Engaging the Workforce for Holistic Cyber Security (newsweek.com)
90% firms experienced cyber attacks; 83% opted to pay attackers: Report (business-standard.com)
The world was already horrifying — technology is making it more so - The Hustle
Cyber security is a mindset, not just a set of tools and technologies. (techuk.org)
Cyber security should be a business priority for CEOs - Help Net Security
Organisations grapple with detection and response despite rising security budgets | CSO Online
The undeniable benefits of making cyber resiliency the new standard | CSO Online
Preparing for the Unexpected: A Proactive Approach to Operational Resilience (darkreading.com)
Cyber insurance costs pressure business budgets - Help Net Security
C-suite weighs in on generative AI and security (securityintelligence.com)
Cyber security overtakes cloud as top area of investment - The Recycler - 10/10/2023
New Wave of Cyber Threats Challenges In-House Legal Departments (bloomberglaw.com)
Should businesses follow Google’s footsteps in cyber security? | TechRadar
Cyber security is booming but it comes at a human cost (betanews.com)
A Primer on Cyber Risk Acceptance and What it Means to Your Business (bleepingcomputer.com)
A Cyber security Risk Assessment Guide for Leaders (trendmicro.com)
Addressing a Breach Starts With Getting Everyone on the Same Page (darkreading.com)
Uber's Ex-CISO Appeals Conviction Over 2016 Data Breach (darkreading.com)
6 steps to getting the board on board with your cyber security program (welivesecurity.com)
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
First half of 2023 sees more ransomware victims than all of 2022 | Security Magazine
Cyber security Survey: 40% of Orgs “Leave” Ransomware to IT | MSSP Alert
Cyber criminals can go from click to compromise in less than a day - Help Net Security
Ransomware Infection Times Fall From 5 Days to 5 Hours (pcmag.com)
Ransomwared health insurer wasn't using anti-virus software • The Register
Everest searching for corporate insiders amid rare pivot • The Register
HelloKitty ransomware source code leaked on hacking forum (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to Prevent Ransomware as a Service (RaaS) Attacks (trendmicro.com)
SEC Investigating Progress Software Over MOVEit Hack - Security Week
Ransomware attacks now target unpatched WS_FTP servers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Attack on Hospitals Highlights Need to Ensure Continuity of Patient Care (fdd.org)
Ransomware Victims
Cyber attack victim Estes making ‘steady progress’ - FreightWaves
Caesars Offers Two Years of IDX Services to Compromised Data Victims - GamblingNews
Ransomwared health insurer wasn't using anti-virus software • The Register
BianLian extortion group claims recent Air Canada breach (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
The looming threat of a single phishing click to your business (cms-lawnow.com)
What to do if you’ve clicked on a phishing link or talked to scammers | Kaspersky official blog
LinkedIn Smart Links attacks return to target Microsoft accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing, the campaigns that are affecting Italy (securityaffairs.com)
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Other Social Engineering; Smishing, Vishing, etc
Artificial Intelligence
PwC survey reveals rising concerns over cyber security and generative AI in 2024 - Reinsurance News
'Really frightening': IT leaders on cyber security in the age of AI (computing.co.uk)
Cyber security pros predict rise of malicious AI - Help Net Security
Why 80% of CISOs see AI as the biggest threat to their business (diginomica.com)
C-suite weighs in on generative AI and security (securityintelligence.com)
68 percent of IT decision makers are worried about the rise of deepfakes (betanews.com)
US Space Force Pauses Generative AI Based on Security Concerns (bloomberglaw.com)
Generative AI Security: Preventing Microsoft Copilot Data Exposure (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to Guard Your Data from Exposure in ChatGPT (thehackernews.com)
2FA/MFA
Malware
Mirai DDoS malware variant expands targets with 13 router exploits (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft to kill off VBScript in Windows to block malware delivery (bleepingcomputer.com)
How Keyloggers Have Evolved From the Cold War to Today (darkreading.com)
Endpoint malware attacks decline as campaigns spread wider - Help Net Security
Mobile
Beware - GoldDigger malware will drain your bank accounts without you even realizing | TechRadar
China-based Supply Chain Cyber Attacks Hit Thousands of Android Devices | MSSP Alert
Android devices shipped with backdoored firmware as part of the BADBOX network (securityaffairs.com)
Operation Behind Predator Mobile Spyware Is 'Industrial Scale' (darkreading.com)
Hacktivists send fake nuclear attack warning via Israeli Red Alert app (bitdefender.com)
5 quick tips to strengthen your Android phone security today | ZDNET
Botnets
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
HTTP/2 Zero-Day Vulnerability Results in Record-Breaking DDoS Attacks (cloudflare.com)
Google, Amazon Face Massive Denial-of-Service Attack | MSSP Alert
Internet of Things – IoT
Automotive cyber security: A decade of progress and challenges - Help Net Security
Android TV malware case worsens: Tens of millions of devices infected - FlatpanelsHD
Have You Changed the Default Passwords on Your IoT Devices? (makeuseof.com)
Android devices shipped with backdoored firmware as part of the BADBOX network (securityaffairs.com)
Mirai Variant IZ1H9 Adds 13 Exploits to Arsenal - Security Week
Exposed security cameras in Israel and Palestine pose significant risks (securityaffairs.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
3.81 billion records compromised by cyber security incidents in September 2023 (itsecuritywire.com)
23andMe Cyberbreach Exposes DNA Data, Potential Family Ties (darkreading.com)
DC Board of Elections confirms voter data stolen in site hack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Lyca Mobile says customer data was stolen during cyber attack | TechCrunch
Third Flagstar Bank data breach since 2021 affects 800,000 customers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Caesars Offers Two Years of IDX Services to Compromised Data Victims - GamblingNews
Air Europa customers urged to cancel cards following hack on payment system (therecord.media)
Dymocks breach happened while changing providers | Information Age | ACS
Shadow PC warns of data breach as hacker tries to sell gamers' info (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
The cyber villains are getting bolder. Businesses need to up their game - Raconteur
Protecting your business against the cyber criminal enterprise (techuk.org)
Cyber attackers are combining attacks to bypass detection (siliconrepublic.com)
Hackers 'don't break in anymore, they log in,' expert explains (yahoo.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
‘I felt powerless’: how a crypto scam cost a finance boss £300,000 | Scams | The Guardian
Inside FTX’s All-Night Race to Stop a $1 Billion Crypto Heist | WIRED
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Everest searching for corporate insiders amid rare pivot • The Register
Former US soldier accused of trying to pass secrets to China • The Register
Understanding the human factor of digital safety | TechRadar
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
Fooled by cyber criminals: The humanitarian CEO scammed by hackers - GZERO Media
Global job scam to cause $100 mn in losses for over 1,000 companies: Report (odishatv.in)
FTC warns of ‘staggering’ losses to social media scams since 2021 (bleepingcomputer.com)
The dark side of solar panels – how crooks are exploiting net zero (telegraph.co.uk)
Chinese Criminals Backdoor Android Devices for Ad Fraud (govinfosecurity.com)
‘I felt powerless’: how a crypto scam cost a finance boss £300,000 | Scams | The Guardian
Inside FTX’s All-Night Race to Stop a $1 Billion Crypto Heist | WIRED
What to do if you’ve clicked on a phishing link or talked to scammers | Kaspersky official blog
Never click on bank-draining words if message pops up, expert warns (ladbible.com)
Boss of world’s largest cinema chain victim of catfish blackmail plot | Business | The Guardian
Deepfakes
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Insurance
Cyber insurance costs pressure business budgets - Help Net Security
Insurance industry faces growing concerns over cyber cat risk: Gallagher Re - Reinsurance News
Cyber Insurance Lessens the Sting of Corporate Cyber Attacks (bloomberglaw.com)
Keeping up with the demands of the cyber insurance market - Help Net Security
Insurance cover ‘sufficient’ for $100mn cyber attack hit: MGM (insuranceinsider.com)
Supply Chain and Third Parties
Software Supply Chain
Why open-source software supply chain attacks have tripled in a year | CSO Online
New One-Click Exploit Is a Supply Chain Risk for Linux OSes (darkreading.com)
Cloud/SaaS
The Need for Speed: When Cloud Attacks Take Only 10 Minutes (darkreading.com)
Microsoft and Cabinet Office issue government-wide security guidelines for M365 – PublicTechnology
Securely Moving Financial Services to the Cloud (darkreading.com)
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
New cryptographic protocol aims to bolster open-source software security | ZDNET
Linux Foundation Announces OpenPubkey Open Source Cryptographic Protocol - Security Week
API
Open Source and Linux
New cryptographic protocol aims to bolster open-source software security | ZDNET
Why open-source software supply chain attacks have tripled in a year | CSO Online
Linux Foundation Announces OpenPubkey Open Source Cryptographic Protocol - Security Week
Security Patch for Two New Flaws in Curl Library Arriving on October 11 (thehackernews.com)
Maintainers warn of vulnerability affecting foundational open-source tool (therecord.media)
New One-Click Exploit Is a Supply Chain Risk for Linux OSes (darkreading.com)
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
CISA publishes top 10 most common security misconfigurations • The Register
Have You Changed the Default Passwords on Your IoT Devices? (makeuseof.com)
Social Media
FTC warns of ‘staggering’ losses to social media scams since 2021 (bleepingcomputer.com)
LinkedIn Smart Links attacks return to target Microsoft accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Brands Beware: X's New Badge System Is a Ripe Cyber-Target (darkreading.com)
What should you do if your Facebook is hacked? (pocket-lint.com)
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Models, Frameworks and Standards
Data Protection
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Work-related stress “keeps cyber professionals up at night” | ITPro
Cyber security is booming but it comes at a human cost (betanews.com)
eBook: Cyber security career hacks for newcomers - Help Net Security
Turning military veterans into cyber security experts - Help Net Security
CISO Pay Increases Are Slowing – a Look Behind the Figures - Security Week
Skills-based Hiring Can Address Cyber Workforce Shortfalls (fdd.org)
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
European Police Hackathon Hunts Down Traffickers - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Misinformation, Disinformation and Propaganda
Nation State Actors, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), Cyber Warfare and Cyber Espionage
Misc Nation State/Cyber Warfare
Hacking Groups, Including Some Tied to Russia, Are Attacking Israeli Websites (insurancejournal.com)
Cyber Metamorphosis: Ukraine Conflict's Impact on the Threat Landscape (govinfosecurity.com)
Hackers For Hire Hit Both Sides in Israel-Hamas Conflict (darkreading.com)
Beyond the Front Lines: How the Israel-Hamas War Impacts the Cyber security Industry - Security Week
Hamas 'using social engineering attacks' in conflict with Israel (techmonitor.ai)
Could Middle Eastern Cyberwarfare Spill Into Health Sector? (inforisktoday.com)
The Cyberwar Between the East and the West Goes Through Africa (darkreading.com)
Hamas 'using social engineering attacks' in conflict with Israel (techmonitor.ai)
Russia
Dark Horse Ukraine Proves Resistant to Onslaught of Russian Cyber Attacks (kyivpost.com)
Kremlin-Linked Hacker Group Launches Cyber-Attack Against Israel (kyivpost.com)
Russian hacker group "Killnet" declares cyberwar on Israel | Al Bawaba
Gaza-linked hackers and Pro-Russia groups are targeting Israel (securityaffairs.com)
Hacking Groups, Including Some Tied to Russia, Are Attacking Israeli Websites (insurancejournal.com)
Cyber Metamorphosis: Ukraine Conflict's Impact on the Threat Landscape (govinfosecurity.com)
China
A Frontline Report of Chinese Threat Actor Tactics and Techniques (darkreading.com)
Why One Of The Largest Cyber-Attacks Is Still A Mystery (slashgear.com)
Chinese Hackers Target Semiconductor Firms in East Asia with Cobalt Strike (thehackernews.com)
Chinese Criminals Backdoor Android Devices for Ad Fraud (govinfosecurity.com)
China-based Supply Chain Cyber Attacks Hit Thousands of Android Devices | MSSP Alert
Former US soldier accused of trying to pass secrets to China • The Register
Researchers Uncover Grayling APT's Ongoing Attack Campaign Across Industries (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft: China's Behind Atlassian Confluence Attacks; PoCs Available (darkreading.com)
Iran
Escalation In Iranian Cyber Operations: A Shift Toward Espionage | Iran International (iranintl.com)
North Korea
Vulnerability Management
Developers take as long as one month to patch security flaws, Synopsys finds (axios.com)
Vulnerability Behind “Largest Attack in Internet History” Found | MSSP Alert
Vulnerabilities
Patch Now: Massive RCE Campaign Wrangles Routers Into Botnet (darkreading.com)
Patch Tuesday: Code Execution Flaws in Adobe Commerce, Photoshop - Security Week
Google Chrome 118 is a massive security update - gHacks Tech News
Security Patch for Two New Flaws in Curl Library Arriving on October 11 (thehackernews.com)
Adobe Acrobat Reader Vuln Now Under Attack (darkreading.com)
Ransomware attacks now target unpatched WS_FTP servers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical Zero-Day Bug in Atlassian Confluence Under Active Exploit (informationweek.com)
WhatsApp exploits commanding multi-million prices (computing.co.uk)
High-Severity Vulnerabilities Discovered in WebM Project’s Libraries (paloaltonetworks.com)
Credential Harvesting Campaign Targets Unpatched NetScaler Instances - Security Week
Over 17,000 WordPress sites hacked in Balada Injector attacks last month (bleepingcomputer.com)
Thousands of WordPress sites have been hacked through tagDiv plugin vulnerability | Ars Technica
New WordPress backdoor creates rogue admin to hijack websites (bleepingcomputer.com)
libcue Library Flaw Opens GNOME Linux Systems Vulnerable to RCE Attacks (thehackernews.com)
D-Link WiFi range extender vulnerable to command injection attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Maintainers warn of vulnerability affecting foundational open-source tool (therecord.media)
Apple releases iOS 16.7.1 to plug critical security holes | Macworld
The SEC is said to be investigating a Twitter security flaw from the pre-Musk era (engadget.com)
Microsoft: China's Behind Atlassian Confluence Attacks; PoCs Available (darkreading.com)
35 Squid proxy bugs still unpatched after 2 years • The Register
Fortinet Releases Security Updates for Multiple Products | CISA
Tools and Controls
Organisations grapple with detection and response despite rising security budgets | CSO Online
Preparing for the Unexpected: A Proactive Approach to Operational Resilience (darkreading.com)
A Primer on Cyber Risk Acceptance and What it Means to Your Business (bleepingcomputer.com)
Reassessing the Impacts of Risk Management With NIST Framework 2.0 (darkreading.com)
16 Essential Factors To Cover In A Disaster Recovery Plan (forbes.com)
A Cyber Security Risk Assessment Guide for Leaders (trendmicro.com)
Addressing a Breach Starts With Getting Everyone on the Same Page (darkreading.com)
Google, Yahoo Push DMARC, Forcing Companies to Catch Up (darkreading.com)
You can't avoid APIs, so you need to secure them (betanews.com)
What is External Attack Surface Management (EASM)? | UpGuard
Why You Should Phish In Your Own (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Why zero trust delivers even more resilience than you think - Help Net Security
Unmasking the limitations of yearly penetration tests - Help Net Security
Keeping up with the demands of the cyber insurance market - Help Net Security
Cyber attackers are combining attacks to bypass detection (siliconrepublic.com)
Keep on keeping your organisation informed to stay cyber secure (techuk.org)
Why identity infrastructure is the new cyberattack surface (siliconrepublic.com)
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Cyber security is a mindset, not just a set of tools and technologies. (techuk.org)
Large law firms experiencing two 'cyber incidents' a month - Legal Futures
Small businesses growing target for cyber criminals (planetradio.co.uk)
The world was already horrifying — technology is making it more so - The Hustle
Legions of Critical Infrastructure Devices Subject to Cyber Targeting (darkreading.com)
Subsea cable business seeks to plug its security holes (lightreading.com)
Old-School Attacks Are Still a Danger, Despite Newer Techniques (darkreading.com)
Protect Critical Infrastructure With Same Rigor as Classified Networks (darkreading.com)
Drug dealers hijack NHS, police and Crimestoppers websites to sell coke in plain sight - Daily Star
Proactive not reactive: adjusting the approach to cyber crime in education
Magecart Campaign Hijacks 404 Pages to Steal Data (darkreading.com)
As biohacking evolves, how vulnerable are we to cyber threats? - Help Net Security
Electric Power System Cyber Security Vulnerabilities (trendmicro.com)
Securing the Food Pipeline from Cyber Attacks (newswise.com)
US construction giant reports cyber security incident • The Register
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 05 August 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 05 August 2022
-Average Cost of Data Breaches Hits Record High of $4.35 Million: IBM
-Researchers Warns of Large-Scale Adversary-in-the-Middle (AiTM) Attacks Targeting Enterprise Users
-UK NHS Suffers Outage After Cyber Attack on Managed Service Provider
-A Third of Organisations Experience a Ransomware Attack Once a Week
-Ransomware Products, Services Ads on Dark Web Show Clues to Danger
-Wolf In Sheep’s Clothing, How Malware Tricks Users and Antivirus
-Microsoft Accounts Targeted with New MFA-Bypassing Phishing Kit
-Cyber Attack Prevention Is Cost-Effective, So Why Aren’t Businesses Investing to Protect?
-Securing Your Move to the Hybrid Cloud
-Lessons from the Russian Cyber Warfare Attacks
-Four Sneaky Attacker Evasion Techniques You Should Know About
-Zero-Day Defence: Tips for Defusing the Threat
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
Average Cost of Data Breaches Hits Record High of $4.35 Million: IBM
The global average cost of data breaches reached an all-time high of $4.35 million in 2022 compared with $4.24 million in 2021, according to a new IBM Security report. About 60% of the breached organisations raised product and services prices due to the breaches.
The annual report, conducted by Ponemon Institute and analysed and sponsored by IBM Security, is based on the analysis of real-world data breaches experienced by 550 organisations globally between March 2021 and March 2022.
According to the report, about 83% of the organisations have experienced more than one breach in their lifetime, with nearly half of the costs reported to be incurred more than a year after the breach.
The report revealed that ransomware and destructive attacks represented 28% of breaches among the critical infrastructure organisations studied, indicating that threat actors are specifically targeting the sector to disrupt global supply chains. The critical infrastructure sector includes financial services, industrial, transportation, and healthcare companies.
Researchers Warns of Large-Scale Adversary-in-the-Middle (AiTM) Attacks Targeting Enterprise Users
A new, large-scale phishing campaign has been observed using adversary-in-the-middle (AitM) techniques to get around security protections and compromise enterprise email accounts.
It uses a technique capable of bypassing multi-factor authentication. The campaign is specifically designed to reach end users in enterprises that use Microsoft's email services.
Prominent targets include fintech, lending, insurance, energy, manufacturing, and federal credit union verticals located in the US, UK, New Zealand, and Australia.
This is not the first time such a phishing attack has come to light. Last month, Microsoft disclosed that over 10,000 organisations had been targeted since September 2021 by means of AitM techniques to breach accounts secured with multi-factor authentication (MFA).
The ongoing campaign, effective June 2022, commences with an invoice-themed email sent to targets containing an HTML attachment, which includes a phishing URL embedded within it.
https://thehackernews.com/2022/08/researchers-warns-of-large-scale-aitm.html
UK NHS Suffers Outage After Cyber Attack on Managed Service Provider
The UK National Health Service (NHS) 111 emergency services were affected by a significant and ongoing outage triggered by a cyber attack that hit the systems of British managed service provider (MSP) Advanced.
Advanced's Adastra client patient management solution, which is used by 85% of NHS 111 services, was hit by a major outage together with several other services provided by the MSP, according to a status page.
"There was a major outage of a computer system that is used to refer patients from NHS 111 Wales to out-of-hours GP providers," the Welsh Ambulance Services said. "This system is used by Local Health Boards to coordinate these services for patients. The ongoing outage is significant and has been far-reaching, impacting each of the four nations in the UK."
The UK public was advised to access the NHS 111 emergency services using the online platform until the incident is resolved.
While no details were provided regarding the nature of the cyber attack, based on the wording, it is likely that this was a ransomware or data extortion attack.
A Third of Organisations Experience a Ransomware Attack Once a Week
Ransomware attacks show no sign of slowing. According to new research published by Menlo Security, a third of organisations experience a ransomware attack at least once a week, with one in 10 experiencing them more than once a day.
The research, conducted among 500+ IT security decision makers at US and UK organisations with more than 1,000 employees, highlights the impact this is having on security professionals’ own wellbeing. When asked what keeps them awake at night, 41% of respondents say they worry about ransomware attacks evolving beyond their team’s knowledge and skillset, while 39% worry about them evolving beyond their company’s security capabilities.
Their biggest concern, however, is the risk of employees ignoring corporate security advice and clicking on links or attachments containing malware (46%). Respondents worry more about this than they do their own job security, with just a quarter (26%) of respondents worried about losing their job.
According to the report, around half of organisations (61% US and 44% UK) have been the victim of a successful ransomware attack in the last 18 months, with customers and prospects the most likely entry point for an attack.
Partners/suppliers and employees/contractors are also seen as serious security risks, although one in 10 admit they are unable to identify how the attacks got in. The top three ransomware attack vectors are email (54%), web browsers via a desktop or laptop (49%) and mobile devices (39%).
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/08/04/organizations-experience-ransomware-attack/
Ransomware Products and Services Ads on Dark Web Show Clues to Danger
Why is ransomware’s destructive potential so daunting? Some clues are in the “for sale” ads. In an examination of some 35 million dark web URLs, a provider of machine identity management and a forensic specialist found some 475 web pages peddling sophisticated ransomware products and services with a number of high profile crews hawking ransomware-as-a-service.
The work is a joint effort between the Salt Lake City-based Venafi and Forensic Pathways, which took place between November 2021 and March 2022. Researchers used Forensic’s Dark Search Engine to carry out the investigation.
Here are some of the research findings:
87% of the ransomware found on the dark web has been delivered via malicious macros to infect targeted systems.
30 different “brands” of ransomware were identified within marketplace listings and forum discussions.
Many strains of ransomware being sold — such as Babuk, GoldenEye, Darkside/BlackCat, Egregor, HiddenTear and WannaCry — have been successfully used in high-profile attacks.
Ransomware strains used in high-profile attacks command a higher price for associated services. For example, the most expensive listing was $1,262 for a customised version of Darkside ransomware, which was used in the Colonial Pipeline ransomware attack.
Source code listings for well-known ransomware generally command higher price points. For example, Babuk source code is listed for $950 and Paradise source code is selling for $593.
Ransomware Sold for as Little as $1: In addition to a variety of ransomware at various price points, a wide range of services and tools that help make it easier for attackers with minimal technical skills to launch ransomware attacks are for sale on the dark web, Venafi said. Services with the greatest number of listings include those offering source code, build services, custom development services and ransomware packages that include step-by-step tutorials.
Wolf In Sheep’s Clothing: How Malware Tricks Users and Antivirus
One of the primary methods used by malware distributors to infect devices is by deceiving people into downloading and running malicious files, and to achieve this deception, malware authors are using a variety of tricks.
Some of these tricks include masquerading malware executables as legitimate applications, signing them with valid certificates, or compromising trustworthy sites to use them as distribution points.
According to VirusTotal, a security platform for scanning uploaded files for malware, some of these tricks are happening on a much larger scale than initially thought.
The platform has compiled a report presenting stats from January 2021 until July 2022, based on the submission of two million files daily, illustrating trends in how malware is distributed.
Abusing legitimate domains: Distributing malware through legitimate, popular, and high-ranking websites allows threat actors to evade IP-based blocklists, enjoy high availability, and provide a greater level of trust.
Using stolen code-signing certificates: Signing malware samples with valid certificates stolen from companies is a reliable way to evade AV detection and security warnings on the host. Of all the malicious samples uploaded to VirusTotal between January 2021 and April 2022, over a million were signed, and 87% used a valid certificate.
Disguised as popular software: Masquerading a malware executable as a legitimate, popular application has seen an upward trend in 2022. Victims download these files thinking they’re getting the applications they need, but upon running the installers, they infect their systems with malware. The most mimicked applications are Skype, Adobe Acrobat, VLC, and 7zip.
Lacing legitimate installers - Finally, there’s the trick of hiding malware inside legitimate application installers and running the infection process in the background while the real apps execute in the foreground. Based on VirusTotal stats, this practice also appears to be on the rise this year, using Google Chrome, Malwarebytes, Windows Updates, Zoom, Brave, Firefox, ProtonVPN, and Telegram as lures.
Microsoft Accounts Targeted with New MFA-Bypassing Phishing Kit
A new large-scale phishing campaign targeting credentials for Microsoft email services use a custom proxy-based phishing kit to bypass multi-factor authentication.
Researchers believe the campaign's goal is to breach corporate accounts to conduct BEC (business email compromise) attacks, diverting payments to bank accounts under their control using falsified documents.
The phishing campaign's targets include fin-tech, lending, accounting, insurance, and Federal Credit Union organisations in the US, UK, New Zealand, and Australia.
The campaign was discovered by Zscaler's ThreatLabz researchers, who report that the operation is still ongoing, and the phishing actors register new phishing domains almost daily.
Starting in June 2022, Zscaler's analysts noticed a spike in sophisticated phishing attempts against specific sectors and users of Microsoft email services.
Some of the newly registered domains used in the campaign are typo-squatted versions of legitimate domains.
Notably, many phishing emails originated from the accounts of executives working in these organisations, whom the threat actors most likely compromised earlier.
Cyber Attack Prevention Is Cost-Effective, So Why Aren’t Businesses Investing to Protect?
Cyber attacks like ransomware, BEC scams and data breaches are some of the key issues businesses are facing today, but despite the number of high-profile incidents, many boardrooms are reluctant to free up budget to invest in the cyber security measures necessary to avoid becoming the next victim.
In a Help Net Security interview, Former Pentagon Chief Strategy Officer Jonathan Reiber, VP Cyber security Strategy and Policy, AttackIQ, discusses how now, more than ever, companies need to protect themselves from cyber threat actors. He offers insight for CISOs, from talking to the Board to proper budget allocation.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/08/01/cyberattack-prevention-investing/
Securing Your Move to the Hybrid Cloud
The combination of private and public cloud infrastructure, which most organisations are already using, poses unique security challenges. There are many reasons why organisations adopt the public cloud, from enabling rapid growth without the burden of capacity planning to leveraging flexibility and agility in delivering customer-centric services. However, this use can leave companies open to threats.
Since regulatory requirements or other preferences dictate that certain applications remain on private (on-prem) infrastructure, many organisations choose to maintain a mix of private and public infrastructure. Additionally, organisations typically use multiple cloud providers simultaneously or preserve the option to move between providers. However, this hybrid approach presents unique and diverse security challenges. Different cloud providers and private cloud platforms may offer similar capabilities but different ways of implementing security controls, along with disparate management tools.
The question then becomes: How can an organisation maintain consistent governance, policy enforcement and controls across different clouds? And how can it ensure that it maintains its security posture when moving between them? Fortunately, there are steps professionals can take to ensure that applications are continuously secure, starting from the early stages of development and extending throughout the lifecycle.
https://threatpost.com/secure-move-cloud/180335/
Lessons from the Russian Cyber Warfare Attacks
Cyber warfare tactics may not involve tanks and bombs, but they often go hand-in-hand with real combat.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine is a prime example. Before Russian troops crossed the border, Russian hackers had already taken down Ukrainian government websites. And after the conflict started, the hacktivist group Anonymous turned the tables by hacking Russian media to shut down propaganda about the war.
In these unprecedented times of targeted attacks against governments and financial institutions, every organisation should be on heightened alert about protecting their critical infrastructure and digital attack surface.
With the Russia-Ukraine conflict as a backdrop, two Trend Micro security experts recently discussed cyber warfare techniques and how they’re an important reminder for every business to proactively manage cyber risk.
https://www.trendmicro.com/en_us/ciso/22/h/russian-cyber-warfare-attacks.html
Four Sneaky Attacker Evasion Techniques You Should Know About
Remember those portrayals of hackers in the 80s and 90s where you just knew when you got pwned? A blue screen of death, a scary message, a back-and-forth text exchange with a hacker—if you got pwned in a movie in the 80s and 90s, you knew it right off the bat.
What a shame that today’s hackers have learned to be quiet when infiltrating an environment. Sure, “loud” attacks like ransomware still exist, but threat actors have learned that if they keep themselves hidden, they can usually do far more damage. For hackers, a little stealth can go a long way. Some attack tactics are inherently quiet, making them arguably more dangerous as they can be harder to detect. Here are four of these attack tactics you should know about.
Trusted Application Abuse: Attackers know that many people have applications that they inherently trust, making those trusted applications the perfect launchpad for cyber attacks. Threat actors know that defenders and the tools they use are often on the hunt for new malware presenting itself in environments. What isn’t so easy to detect is when the malware masquerades under legitimate applications.
Trusted Infrastructure Abuse: Much like trusted application abuse, trusted infrastructure abuse is the act of using legitimate, publicly hosted services and toolsets (such as Dropbox or Google Drive) as part of the attack infrastructure. Threat actors know that people tend to trust Dropbox and Google Drive. As a result, this makes these tools a prime means for threat actors to carry out malicious activity. Threat actors often find trusted infrastructure abuse easy because these services aren’t usually blocked at an enterprise’s gateway. In turn, outbound communications can hide in plain sight.
Obfuscation: Although cyber security has more than its fair share of tedious acronyms, the good news is that many terms can be broken down by their generic dictionary definitions. According to dictionary.com, this is what obfuscate means: “To make something unclear, obscure or difficult to understand.” And that’s exactly what it means in cyber security: finding ways to conceal malicious behaviour. In turn, this makes it more difficult for analysts and the tools they use to flag suspicious or malicious activity.
Persistence: Imagine writing up documentation using your computer, something you may well do in your role. You’ve spent a ton of time doing the research required, finding the right sources and compiling all your information into a document. Now, imagine not hitting save on that document and losing it as soon as you reboot your computer. Sound like a nightmare—or perhaps a real anxiety-inducing experience you’ve been through before? Threat actors agree. And that’s why they establish persistence. They don’t want all of their hard work to get into your systems in the first place to be in vain just because you restart your computer. They establish persistence to make sure they can still hang around even after you reboot.
Zero-Day Defence: Tips for Defusing the Threat
Because they leave so little time to patch and defuse, zero-day threats require a proactive, multi-layered approach based on zero trust.
The recent Atlassian Confluence remote code execution bug is just the latest example of zero-day threats targeting critical vulnerabilities within major infrastructure providers. The specific threat, an Object-Graph Navigation Language (OGNL) injection, has been around for years but took on new significance given the scope of the Atlassian exploit. And OGNL attacks are on the rise.
Once bad actors find such a vulnerability, proof-of-concept exploits start knocking at the door, seeking unauthenticated access to create new admin accounts, execute remote commands, and take over servers. In the Atlassian case, Akamai's threat research team identified that the number of unique IP addresses attempting these exploits grew to more than 200 within just 24 hours.
Defending against these exploits becomes a race against time worthy of a 007 movie. The clock is ticking and you don't have much time to implement a patch and "defuse" the threat before it's too late. But first you need to know that an exploit is underway. That requires a proactive, multi-layered approach to online security based on zero trust.
What do these layers look like? There are a number of different practices that security teams — and their third-party Web application and infrastructure partners — should be aware of.
https://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/zero-day-defense-tips-for-defusing-the-threat
Threats
Ransomware
Reported ransomware attacks are just the tip of the iceberg. That's a problem for everyone | ZDNet
Initial Access Brokers - Key to Rise In Ransomware Attacks (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Ransomware gangs are hitting roadblocks, but aren't stopping (yet) - Help Net Security
LockBit Ransomware Abuses Windows Defender for Payload Loading | SecurityWeek.Com
German Chambers of Industry and Commerce hit by 'massive' cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware Task Force releases SMB blueprint for defence and mitigation (scmagazine.com)
German semiconductor giant Semikron says hackers encrypted its network | TechCrunch
Ransomware Hit on European Pipeline & Energy Supplier Encevo Linked to BlackCat (darkreading.com)
Luxembourg Energy Company Hit by Ransomware | SecurityWeek.Com
Spanish research agency still recovering after ransomware attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
Countdown Clock Puts Pressure on Phishing Targets - Infosecurity Magazine
The most impersonated brand in phishing attacks? Microsoft - Help Net Security
Open Redirect Flaw Snags Amex, Snapchat User Data | Threatpost
A new malware threat is spying on users' Gmail inbox — do this before you're next | Laptop Mag
Massive New Phishing Campaign Targets Microsoft Email Service Users (darkreading.com)
North Korean Hackers Use Browser Extension to Spy on Gmail and AOL Accounts - Infosecurity Magazine
Other Social Engineering; SMishing, Vishing, etc
Malware
VirusTotal Reveals Most Impersonated Software in Malware Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Gootkit Loader Resurfaces with Updated Tactic to Compromise Targeted Computers (thehackernews.com)
Woody RAT: A new feature-rich malware spotted in the wild | Malwarebytes Labs
New IoT RapperBot Malware Targeting Linux Servers via SSH Brute-Forcing Attack (thehackernews.com)
New Linux malware brute-forces SSH servers to breach networks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Attackers cause Discord discord with malicious npm packages • The Register
Gootkit AaaS malware is still active and uses updated tactics - Security Affairs
Mobile
Facebook finds new Android malware used by APT hackers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google Patches Critical Android Bluetooth Flaw in August Security Bulletin - Infosecurity Magazine
Banking trojan finds new routes to accounts by infiltrating Google Play Store (scmagazine.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
Nearly $200 Million Stolen from Cryptocurrency Bridge Nomad | SecurityWeek.Com
Crypto firm that promised security loses $200 million in 'frenzied free-for-all' hack | PC Gamer
Nomad to crooks: Keep 10% as a bounty, return the rest • The Register
Cyber attackers Drain Nearly $6M From Solana Crypto Wallets (darkreading.com)
Man robbed of $800,000 in cryptocurrency sues Google • The Register
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
UK Branded Europe’s “Capital of Card Fraud” - Infosecurity Magazine
Huge network of 11,000 fake investment sites targets Europe (bleepingcomputer.com)
Online payment fraud losses accelerate at an alarming rate - Help Net Security
COMMENT: 'Hi Mum, Hi Dad' Scams On The Rise - Britons Already (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Increase in Fake Tickets Being Sold by Cyber criminals on Social Media - IT Security Guru
AML/CFT/Sanctions
Dark Web
A Ransomware Explosion Fosters Thriving Dark Web Ecosystem (darkreading.com)
The popularity of Dark Utilities 'C2-as-a-Service' rapidly increases - Security Affairs
Software Supply Chain
Cloud/SaaS
Cyber attackers Increasingly Target Cloud IAM as a Weak Link (darkreading.com)
What Worries Security Teams About the Cloud? (darkreading.com)
Who Has Control: The SaaS App Admin Paradox (thehackernews.com)
Enterprises face a multitude of barriers to securing diverse cloud environments - Help Net Security
Open Source
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
Hackers stole passwords for accessing 140,000 payment terminals | TechCrunch
Credential Canaries Create Minefield for Attackers (darkreading.com)
5 reasons why businesses should never use consumer-grade password managers | TechRadar
Social Media
Hackers Exploit Twitter Vulnerability to Exposes 5.4 Million Accounts (thehackernews.com)
Parliament shuts down TikTok account over China data security concerns (telegraph.co.uk)
Over 3,200 Apps Leak Twitter API Keys, Some Allowing Account Hijacks (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Increase in Fake Tickets Being Sold by Cyber criminals on Social Media - IT Security Guru
Privacy
Cyber Bullying and Cyber Stalking
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Most companies are unprepared for CCPA and GDPR compliance - Help Net Security
Data privacy: Collect what you need, protect what you collect | CSO Online
India scraps data protection law, promises better successor • The Register
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Ukraine takes down 1,000,000 bots used for disinformation (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nancy Pelosi ties Chinese cyber-attacks to Taiwan visit • The Register
Spanish Research Center Suffers Cyber attack Linked to Russia | SecurityWeek.Com
Russian organisations attacked with new Woody RAT malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Greek intelligence spied on journalist with a surveillance spyware - Security Affairs
Rare Pegasus screenshots depict NSO Group's spyware capabilities | AppleInsider
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Nation State Actors – China
Chinese hackers use new Cobalt Strike-like attack framework (bleepingcomputer.com)
Massive China-Linked Disinformation Campaign Taps PR Firm for Help (darkreading.com)
Parliament shuts down TikTok account over China data security concerns (telegraph.co.uk)
Global network of fake news sites push Chinese propaganda, researchers find - CyberScoop
Taiwanese military reports DDoS in wake of US Speaker visit • The Register
Nation State Actors – North Korea
Nation State Actors – Iran
Nation State Actors – Misc APT
Vulnerabilities
VMware urges admins to patch critical auth bypass bug immediately (bleepingcomputer.com)
Critical RCE Bug in DrayTek Routers Opens SMBs to Zero-Click Attacks (darkreading.com)
Cisco fixes critical remote code execution bug in VPN routers (bleepingcomputer.com)
F5 Fixes 21 Vulnerabilities With Quarterly Security Patches | SecurityWeek.Com
High-Severity Bug in Kaspersky VPN Client Opens Door to PC Takeover (darkreading.com)
Slack Resets Passwords After a Bug Exposed Hashed Passwords for Some Users (thehackernews.com)
VMware Releases Patches for Several New Flaws Affecting Multiple Products (thehackernews.com)
Hackers are actively exploiting password-stealing flaw in Zimbra (bleepingcomputer.com)
Google fixed Critical Remote Code Execution flaw in Android - Security Affairs
CISA adds Zimbra bug to Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalogue - Security Affairs
Warning! Critical flaws found in US Emergency Alert System • The Register
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
Other News
APIs attacked in 94% of companies in past year - IT Security Guru
Over 60% of Organisations Expose SSH to the Internet - Infosecurity Magazine
How IT and security teams can work together to improve endpoint security - Microsoft Security Blog
Burnout and attrition impact tech teams sustaining modern digital systems - Help Net Security
Machine learning creates a new attack surface requiring specialized defences - Help Net Security
Cyber security lessons learned from COVID-19 pandemic (techtarget.com)
10 enterprise database security best practices (techtarget.com)
Resolving Availability vs. Security, a Constant Conflict in IT (thehackernews.com)
Tips to prevent RDP and other remote attacks on Microsoft networks | CSO Online
The Myth of Protection Online — and What Comes Next (darkreading.com)
The Importance of Data Security in the Enterprise (techtarget.com)
How IT Teams Can Use 'Harm Reduction' for Better Cyber security Outcomes (darkreading.com)
Businesses lack visibility into run-time threats against mobile apps and APIs - Help Net Security
Browser synchronization abuse: Bookmarks as a covert data exfiltration channel - Help Net Security
Threats emanating from digital ecosystems can be a blind spot for businesses - Help Net Security
Busting the Myths of Hardware Based Security - Security Affairs
New Traffic Light Protocol standard released after five years (bleepingcomputer.com)
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Cyber Weekly Flash Briefing 01 May 2020 – 50% of users feel vulnerable WFH, yet many have had no infosec training in last year, spear-phishing compromises execs in 150+ companies, Sophos zero-day
Cyber Weekly Flash Briefing for 01 May 2020 – Half of users feel vulnerable WFH and many have had no infosec training in last year, spear-phishing compromises execs in 150+ companies, Chrome vulns, Sophos firewall zero-day exploited
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.
If you’re pressed for time watch the 60 second video version:
Half of remote workers feel vulnerable to growing cyber attacks
New research has revealed that almost half (49%) of employees working remotely feel vulnerable online due to the insecurity of the company laptops and PCs they are using to connect to corporate networks.
1,550 UK employees working from home during the pandemic were surveyed to better understand the security issues they've faced while working remotely.
The survey found that 42 percent of respondents received suspicious emails while 18 percent have dealt with a security breach while working from home. Of those who suffered a cyberattack, over half (51%) believed it was because they clicked on a malicious link and 18 percent believed an infected attachment was responsible.
Additionally, 42 percent of respondents reported that someone else in their household had experienced a hack of their social media accounts during the lockdown.
Read more here: https://www.techradar.com/news/half-of-remote-workers-feel-vulnerable-to-growing-cyberattacks
Many remote workers given no cyber security training
Two in three remote workers have not received any cyber security training in the past 12 months, according to a new report.
Based on a poll of 2,000 remote workers in the UK, the report states that more than three quarters (77 percent) are unconcerned about cyber security. Further, more than six in ten said they use personal devices when working from home, which poses a distinct threat to business data.
The report highlights the dangers associated with working from home and the fact cyber criminals are capitalising on the coronavirus outbreak to infect unwitting victims with malware.
With most businesses transitioning to remote working in response to lockdown measures, IT and security teams have been left with a network of unsecured, often naive workers who are easy prey for various forms of attack - especially phishing.
Read the full article here: https://www.itproportal.com/news/many-remote-workers-given-no-cybersecurity-training/
Spear-phishing campaign compromises executives at 150+ companies
A cyber crime group operating since mid-2019 has breached the email accounts of high-ranking executives at more than 150 companies, cyber-security firm Group-IB reported today.
The group, codenamed PerSwaysion, appears to have targeted the financial sector primarily, which accounted for more than half of its victims; although, victims have been recorded at companies active across other verticals as well.
PerSwaysion operations were not sophisticated, but have been extremely successful, nonetheless. Group-IB says the hackers didn't use vulnerabilities or malware in their attacks but instead relied on a classic spear-phishing technique.
They sent boobytrapped emails to executives at targeted companies in the hope of tricking high-ranking executives into entering Office 365 credentials on fake login pages.
Read the full article here: https://www.zdnet.com/article/spear-phishing-campaign-compromises-executives-at-150-companies/
Microsoft: Ransomware gangs that don't threaten to leak your data steal it anyway
Just because ransomware attackers haven't threatened to leak your company's data, it doesn't mean they haven't stolen it, Microsoft warns.
And human-operated ransomware gangs – typically associated with multi-million dollar ransom demands – haven't halted activity during the global coronavirus pandemic.
In fact, they launched more of the file-encrypting malware on target networks in the first two weeks of April than in earlier periods, causing chaos at aid organizations, medical billing companies, manufacturing, transport, government institutions, and educational software providers, according to Microsoft.
Google Confirms New Security Threat For 2 Billion Chrome Users
Google has warned of yet more security vulnerabilities in Chrome 81, which was only launched three weeks ago.
Google has confirmed two new high-rated security vulnerabilities affecting Chrome, prompting yet another update since the release of Chrome 81 on April 7. These new security threats could enable an attacker to take control of an exploited system, which is why the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has advised users to apply that update now.
These popular antivirus tools share a major security flaw
More than two dozen popular antivirus solutions contain a flaw that could enable hackers to delete files, trigger crashes and install malware, according to a new report.
Popular antivirus solutions such as Microsoft Defender, McAfee Endpoint Security and Malwarebytes all feature the bug, which is described as “trivial” to abuse.
The report refers to the shared vulnerability as “symlink race” – the use of symbolic links and directory junctions to link malicious files to legitimate counterparts. This all occurs in the short space of time between an antivirus scanning and deleting a file.
"Make no mistake about it, exploiting these flaws was pretty trivial and seasoned malware authors will have no problem weaponising the tactics outlined in this blog post," said the report.
Read more: https://www.itproportal.com/news/these-popular-antivirus-tools-could-have-major-security-flaws/
Hackers are exploiting a Sophos firewall zero-day
Cyber-security firm Sophos has published an emergency security update on Saturday to patch a zero-day vulnerability in its XG enterprise firewall product that was being abused in the wild by hackers.
Sophos said it first learned of the zero-day on late Wednesday, April 22, after it received a report from one of its customers. The customer reported seeing "a suspicious field value visible in the management interface."
After investigating the report, Sophos determined this was an active attack and not an error in its product.
Read more: https://www.zdnet.com/article/hackers-are-exploiting-a-sophos-firewall-zero-day/
This sophisticated new Android trojan threatens hundreds of financial apps
Researchers have discovered a sophisticated new Android trojan that bypasses security measures and scrapes data from financial applications.
First identified in March, the EventBot banking trojan abuses Android’s accessibility features to harvest financial data and intercept SMS messages, allowing the malware to circumvent two-factor authentication.
According to the firm responsible for the discovery, EventBot targets over 200 financial applications, spanning banking, money transfer and cryptocurrency wallet services.
Affected applications include those operated by major players such as HSBC, Barclays, Revolut, Paypal and TransferWise - but many more are thought to be at risk.
Microsoft Office 365: US issues security alert over rushed remote deployments
The US Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has published security advice for organizations that may have rushed out Office 365 deployments to support remote working during the coronavirus pandemic.
CISA warns that it continues to see organizations that have failed to implement security best practices for their Office 365 implementation. It is concerned that hurried deployments may have lead to important security configuration oversights that could be exploited by attackers.
"In recent weeks, organizations have been forced to change their collaboration methods to support a full 'work from home' workforce," CISA notes in the new alert.
Financial sector is seeing more credential stuffing than DDoS attacks
The financial sector has seen more brute-force attacks and credential stuffing incidents than DDoS attacks in the past three years according to a report published this week.
Statistics about attacks carried out against banks, credit unions, brokers, insurance, and the wide range of organizations that serve them, such as payment processors and financial Software as a Service (Saas).
The report's findings dispel the notion that DDoS attacks are one of today's most prevalent threats against the financial vertical.
The report states that brute force attacks, credential stuffing, and all the other account takeover (ATO) attacks have been a much bigger threat to the financial sector between 2017 and 2019. This includes all the ATO variations such as:
· Brute-force attacks - attackers try common or weak username/passwords pairs (from a preset list) to brute-force their way into an account
· Credential stuffing - attackers try username/password pairs leaked at other sites
· Password spraying - attackers try the same password, but against different usernames
Read more here: https://www.zdnet.com/article/financial-sector-has-been-seeing-more-credential-stuffing-than-ddos-attacks-in-recent-years/
This buggy WordPress plugin allows hackers to lace websites with malicious code
Security researchers have identified a flaw in the Real-Time Find and Replace WordPress plugin that could allow hackers to lace websites with malicious code.
The affected plugin affords WordPress users the ability to edit website code and text content in real-time, without having to go into the backend - and reportedly features on over 100,000 sites.
The exploit manipulates a Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) flaw in the plugin, which the hacker can use to push infected content to the website and create new admin accounts.
Read more here: https://www.techradar.com/news/this-buggy-wordpress-plugin-allows-hackers-to-lace-websites-with-malicious-code
Zoom Gets Stuffed: Here’s How Hackers Got Hold Of 500,000 Passwords
At the start of April, the news broke that 500,000 stolen Zoom passwords were up for sale. Here's how the hackers got hold of them.
More than half a million Zoom account credentials, usernames and passwords were made available in dark web crime forums earlier this month. Some were given away for free while others were sold for as low as a penny each.
Researchers at a threat intelligence provider obtained multiple databases containing Zoom credentials and got to work analysing exactly how the hackers got hold of them in the first place.
Read more here: https://www.forbes.com/sites/daveywinder/2020/04/28/zoom-gets-stuffed-heres-how-hackers-got-hold-of-500000-passwords/#6586d7be5cdc
Sophisticated Android Spyware Attack Spreads via Google Play
The PhantomLance espionage campaign is targeting specific victims, mainly in Southeast Asia — and could be the work of the OceanLotus APT.
A sophisticated, ongoing espionage campaign aimed at Android users in Asia is likely the work of the OceanLotus advanced persistent threat (APT) actor, researchers said this week.
Dubbed PhantomLance by Kaspersky, the campaign is centered around a complex spyware that’s distributed via dozens of apps within the Google Play official market, as well as other outlets like the third-party marketplace known as APKpure.
The effort, though first spotted last year, stretches back to at least 2016, according to findings released at the SAS@home virtual security conference on Tuesday.
Read more here: https://threatpost.com/sophisticated-android-spyware-google-play/155202/
Skype phishing attack targets remote workers
Remote workers have been warned to take extra care when using video conferencing software after a new phishing scam was uncovered.
Researchers from a security firm have revealed hackers are using emails pretending to be from Skype, the popular Microsoft-owned video calling tool, in order to trick home workers into handing over their login details.
Criminals could then use these logins to access corporate networks to spread malware or steal valuable information.
Read more here: https://www.techradar.com/news/skype-phishing-attack-targets-remote-workers