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Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 13 January 2023
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 13 January 2023:
-Quarter of UK SMBs Hit by Ransomware in 2022
-Global Cyber Attack Volume Surges 38% in 2022
-1 in 3 Organisations Do Not Provide Any Cyber Security Training to Remote Workers Despite the Majority of Employees Having Access to Critical Data
-AI-Generated Phishing Attacks Are Becoming More Convincing
-Customer and Employee Data the Top Prize for Hackers
-Royal Mail hit by Ransomware Attack, Causes ‘Severe Disruption’ to Services
-The Guardian Confirms Personal Information Compromised in Ransomware Attack
-Ransomware Gang Releases Info Stolen from 14 UK Schools, Including Passport Scans
-The Dark Web’s Criminal Minds See Internet of Things as Next Big Hacking Prize
-Corrupted File to Blame for Computer Glitch which Grounded Every US Flight
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
Quarter of UK SMBs Hit by Ransomware in 2022
Over one in four (26%) British SMBs have been targeted by ransomware over the past year, with half (47%) of those compromised paying their extorters, according to new data from anti-virus provider Avast. The security vendor polled 1000 IT decision makers from UK SMBs back in October, to better understand the risk landscape over the previous 12 months.
More than two-thirds (68%) of respondents said they are more concerned about being attacked since the start of the war in Ukraine, fuelling concerns that have led to half (50%) investing in cyber-insurance. They’re wise to do so, considering that 41% of those hit by ransomware lost data, while 34% lost access to devices, according to Avast.
Given that SMBs comprise over 99% of private sector businesses in the country, it’s reassuring that cyber is now being viewed as a major business risk. Nearly half (48%) ranked it as one of the biggest threats they currently face, versus 66% who cited financial risk stemming from surging operational cost. More respondents cited cyber as a top threat than did physical security (35%) and supply chain disruption (33%).
Avast argued that SMBs are among the groups most vulnerable to cyber-threats as they often have very limited budget and resources, and many don’t have somebody on staff managing security holistically. As a result, not only are SMB’s lacking in their defence, but they’re also slower and less able to react to incidents.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/quarter-of-uk-smbs-hit-ransomware/
Global Cyber Attack Volume Surges 38% in 2022
The number of cyber attacks recorded last year was nearly two-fifths (38%) greater than the total volume observed in 2021, according to Check Point.
The security vendor claimed the increase was largely due to a surge in attacks on healthcare organisations, which saw the largest year-on-year (YoY) increase (74%), and the activities of smaller, more agile hacking groups.
Overall, attacks reached an all-time high in Q4 with an average of 1168 weekly attacks per organisation. The average weekly figures for the year were highest for education sector organisations (2314), government and military (1661) and healthcare (1463).
Threat actors appear to have capitalised on gaps in security created by the shift to remote working. The ransomware ecosystem is continuing to evolve and grow with smaller, more agile criminal groups that form to evade law enforcement. Hackers are also now increasingly widening their aim to target business collaboration tools such as Slack, Teams, OneDrive and Google Drive with phishing exploits. These make for a rich source of sensitive data given that most organisations’ employees continue to work remotely.
It is predicted that AI tools like ChatGPT would help to fuel a continued surge in attacks in 2023 by making it quicker and easier for bad actors to generate malicious code and emails.
Recorded cyber-attacks on US organisations grew 57% YoY in 2022, while the figure was even higher in the UK (77%). This chimes with data from UK ISP Beaming, which found that 2022 was the busiest year on record for attacks. It recorded 687,489 attempts to breach UK businesses in 2022 – the equivalent of one attack every 46 seconds.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/global-cyberattack-volume-surges/
1 in 3 Organisations Do Not Provide Any Cyber Security Training to Remote Workers Despite the Majority of Employees Having Access to Critical Data
New research from cyber security provider Hornetsecurity has found that 33% of companies are not providing any cyber security awareness training to users who work remotely.
The study also revealed nearly three-quarters (74%) of remote staff have access to critical data, which is creating more risk for companies in the new hybrid working world.
Despite the current lack of training and employees feeling ill-equipped, almost half (44%) of respondents said their organisation plans to increase the percentage of employees that work remotely. The popularity of hybrid work, and the associated risks, means that companies must prioritise training and education to make remote working safe.
Traditional methods of controlling and securing company data aren't as effective when employees are working in remote locations and greater responsibility falls on the individual. Companies must acknowledge the unique risks associated with remote work and activate relevant security management systems, as well as empower employees to deal with a certain level of risk.
The independent survey, which quizzed 925 IT professionals from a range of business types and sizes globally, highlighted the security management challenges and employee cyber security risk when working remotely. The research revealed two core problems causing risk: employees having access to critical data, and not enough training being provided on how to manage cyber security or how to reduce the risk of a cyber-attack or breach.
AI-Generated Phishing Attacks Are Becoming More Convincing
It's time for you and your colleagues to become more sceptical about what you read.
That's a takeaway from a series of experiments undertaken using GPT-3 AI text-generating interfaces to create malicious messages designed to spear-phish, scam, harass, and spread fake news.
Experts at WithSecure have described their investigations into just how easy it is to automate the creation of credible yet malicious content at incredible speed. Amongst the use cases explored by the research were the use of GPT-3 models to create:
Phishing content – emails or messages designed to trick a user into opening a malicious attachment or visiting a malicious link
Social opposition – social media messages designed to troll and harass individuals or to cause brand damage
Social validation – social media messages designed to advertise or sell, or to legitimise a scam
Fake news – research into how well GPT-3 can generate convincing fake news articles of events that weren’t part of its training set
All of these could, of course, be useful to cyber criminals hell-bent on scamming the unwary or spreading unrest.
Customer and Employee Data the Top Prize for Hackers
The theft of customer and employee data accounts for almost half (45%) of all stolen data between July 2021 and June 2022, according to a new report from cyber security solution provider Imperva.
The data is part of a 12-month analysis by Imperva Threat Research on the trends and threats related to data security in its report “More Lessons Learned from Analysing 100 Data Breaches”.
Their analysis found that theft of credit card information and password details dropped by 64% compared to 2021. The decline in stolen credit card and password data pointing to the uptake of basic security tactics like multi-factor authentication (MFA). However, in the long term, PII data is the most valuable data to cyber-criminals. With enough stolen PII, they can engage in full-on identity theft which is hugely profitable and very difficult to prevent. Credit cards and passwords can be changed the second there is a breach, but when PII is stolen, it can be years before it is weaponised by hackers.
The research also revealed the root causes of data breaches, with social engineering (17%) and unsecured databases (15%) two of the biggest culprits. Misconfigured applications were only responsible for 2% of data breaches, but Imperva said that businesses should expect this figure to rise in the near future, particularly with cloud-managed infrastructure where configuring for security requires significant expertise.
It’s really concerning that a third (32%) of data breaches are down to unsecured databases and social engineering attacks, since they’re both straightforward to mitigate. A publicly open database dramatically increases the risk of a breach and, all too often, they are left like this not out of a failure of security practices but rather the total absence of any security posture at all.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/customer-employee-data-hackers/
Royal Mail hit by Ransomware Attack, Causes ‘Severe Disruption’ to Services
Royal Mail experienced “severe service disruption” to its international export services following a ransomware attack, the company has announced. A statement said it was temporarily unable to despatch export items including letters and parcels to overseas destinations.
Royal Mail said: “We have asked customers temporarily to stop submitting any export items into the network while we work hard to resolve the issue” and advising that “Some customers may experience delay or disruption to items already shipped for export.”
The attack was later attributed to LockBit, a prolific ransomware gang with close ties to Russia. Both the NCSC and the NCA were involved in responding to the incident.
https://www.independent.co.uk/business/royal-mail-cyber-attack-exports-b2260308.html
The Guardian Confirms Personal Information Compromised in Ransomware Attack
British news organisation The Guardian has confirmed that personal information was compromised in a ransomware attack in December 2022.
The company fell victim to the attack just days before Christmas, when it instructed staff to work from home, announcing network disruptions that mostly impacted the print newspaper.
Right from the start, the Guardian said it suspected ransomware to have been involved in the incident, and this week the company confirmed that this was indeed the case. In an email to staff on Wednesday, The Guardian Media Group’s chief executive and the Guardian’s editor-in-chief said that the sophisticated cyber attack was likely the result of phishing.
They also announced that the personal information of UK staff members was compromised in the attack, but said that reader data and the information of US and Australia staff was not impacted. “We have seen no evidence that any data has been exposed online thus far and we continue to monitor this very closely,” the Guardian representatives said. While the attack forced the Guardian staff to work from home, online publishing has been unaffected, and production of daily newspapers has continued as well.
“We believe this was a criminal ransomware attack, and not the specific targeting of the Guardian as a media organisation,” the Guardian said.
The company continues to work on recovery and estimates that critical systems would be restored in the next two weeks. Staff, however, will continue to work from home until at least early February. “These attacks have become more frequent and sophisticated in the past three years, against organisations of all sizes, and kinds, in all countries,” the Guardian said.
https://www.securityweek.com/guardian-confirms-personal-information-compromised-ransomware-attack
Ransomware Gang Releases Info Stolen from 14 UK Schools, Including Passport Scans
Another month, another release of personal information stolen from a school system. This time, it's a group of 14 schools in the United Kingdom.
Once again, the perpetrator appears to be Vice Society, which is well known for targeting educational systems in the US. As the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) pointed out in a bulletin from Sept. 6, "K-12 institutions may be seen as particularly lucrative targets due to the amount of sensitive student data accessible through school systems or their managed service providers."
The UK hack may have turned up even more confidential information than the Los Angeles school system breach last year. As the BBC reported on Jan. 6, "One folder marked 'passports' contains passport scans for pupils and parents on school trips going back to 2011, whereas another marked 'contract' contains contractual offers made to staff alongside teaching documents on muscle contractions."
Some prominent school cyber attacks in the US include public school districts in Chicago, Baltimore, and Los Angeles. A new study from digital learning platform Clever claims that one in four schools experienced a cyber-incident over the past year, and according to a new report from security software vendor Emsisoft, at least 45 school districts and 44 higher learning institutions suffered ransomware attacks in 2022.
Schools are an attractive target as they are typically data-rich and resource-poor. Without proper resources in terms of dedicated staffing and the necessary tools and training to protect against cyber-attacks, schools can be a soft target. Many of the 14 schools hit by this latest leak are colleges and universities, but primary and secondary schools were also hit, according to the BBC's list.
The Dark Web’s Criminal Minds See Internet of Things as Next Big Hacking Prize
Cyber security experts say 2022 may have marked an inflection point due to the rapid proliferation of IoT (Internet of Things) devices.
Criminal groups buy and sell services, and one hot idea — a business model for a crime — can take off quickly when they realise that it works to do damage or to get people to pay. Attacks are evolving from those that shut down computers or stole data, to include those that could more directly wreak havoc on everyday life. IoT devices can be the entry points for attacks on parts of countries’ critical infrastructure, like electrical grids or pipelines, or they can be the specific targets of criminals, as in the case of cars or medical devices that contain software.
For the past decade, manufacturers, software companies and consumers have been rushing to the promise of Internet of Things devices. Now there are an estimated 17 billion in the world, from printers to garage door openers, each one packed with software (some of it open-source software) that can be easily hacked.
What many experts are anticipating is the day enterprising criminals or hackers affiliated with a nation-state figure out an easy-to-replicate scheme using IoT devices at scale. A group of criminals, perhaps connected to a foreign government, could figure out how to take control of many things at once – like cars, or medical devices. There have already been large-scale attacks using IoT, in the form of IoT botnets. In that case, actors leveraging unpatched vulnerabilities in IoT devices used control of those devices to carry out denial of service attacks against many targets. Those vulnerabilities are found regularly in ubiquitous products that are rarely updated.
In other words, the possibility already exists. It’s only a question of when a criminal or a nation decides to act in a way that targets the physical world at a large scale. There are a handful of companies, new regulatory approaches, a growing focus on cars as a particularly important area, and a new movement within the software engineering world to do a better job of incorporating cyber security from the beginning.
Corrupted File to Blame for Computer Glitch which Grounded Every US Flight
A corrupted file has been blamed for a glitch on the Federal Aviation Administration's computer system which saw every flight grounded across the US.
All outbound flights were grounded until around 9am Eastern Time (2pm GMT) on Wednesday as the FAA worked to restore its Notice to Air Missions (NOTAM) system, which alerts pilots of potential hazards along a flight route.
On Wednesday 4,948 flights within, into or out of the US had been delayed, according to flight tracker FlightAware.com, while 868 had been cancelled. Most delays were concentrated along the East Coast. Normal air traffic operations resumed gradually across the US following the outage to the NOTAM system that provides safety information to flight crews.
A corrupted file affected both the primary and the backup systems, a senior government official told NBC News on Wednesday night, adding that officials continue to investigate. Whilst Government officials said there was no evidence of a cyber attack, it shows the real world impacts that an outage or corrupted file can cause.
Threats
Ransomware, Extortion and Destructive Attacks
Royal Mail unable to despatch items abroad after 'cyber incident' | UK News | Sky News
Lorenz ransomware gang plants backdoors to use months later (bleepingcomputer.com)
Quarter of UK SMBs Hit by Ransomware in 2022 - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Worldwide Ransomware Attacks Trend (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
LastPass Faces Class-Action Lawsuit Over Password Vault Breach (pcmag.com)
Rackspace: Ransomware actor accessed 27 customers' data | TechTarget
Rackspace Ransomware Incident Highlights Risks of Relying on Mitigation Alone (darkreading.com)
Risk & Repeat: Analysing the Rackspace ransomware attack | TechTarget
Guardian confirms it was hit by ransomware attack | The Guardian | The Guardian
Post-ransomware attack, The Guardian warns staff their personal data was accessed • Graham Cluley
The Guardian Confirms Personal Information Compromised in Ransomware Attack | SecurityWeek.Com
Royal Mail cyber attack linked to LockBit ransomware operation (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hive Ransomware leaked 550 GB stolen from Consulate Health Care - Security Affairs
Iowa’s largest school district cancels classes after cyber attack (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers leak sensitive files after attack on San Francisco transit police (nbcnews.com)
Vice Society ransomware claims attack on Australian firefighting service (bleepingcomputer.com)
Ransomware attack at Hope Sentamu Learning Trust in York | York Press
Phishing & Email Based Attacks
AI-generated phishing emails just got much more convincing • The Register
Better Phishing, Easy Malicious Implants: How AI Could Change Cyber attacks (darkreading.com)
AI-generated phishing attacks are becoming more convincing | Tripwire
Twitter Data Leak: What the Exposure of 200 Million User Emails Means for You | WIRED
Phishing campaign targets government institution in Moldova - Security Affairs
Malware
Better Phishing, Easy Malicious Implants: How AI Could Change Cyber attacks (darkreading.com)
Turla, a Russian Espionage Group, Piggybacked on Other Hackers' USB Infections | WIRED
ChatGPT Used to Develop New Malicious Tools - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Russia’s Turla falls back on old malware C2 domains to avoid detection | Computer Weekly
Many of 13 New Mac Malware Families Discovered in 2022 Linked to China | SecurityWeek.Com
Dridex Malware Now Attacking macOS Systems with Novel Infection Method (thehackernews.com)
Over 1,300 fake AnyDesk sites push Vidar info-stealing malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Attackers abuse business-critical cloud apps to deliver malware - Help Net Security
New Analysis Reveals Raspberry Robin Can be Repurposed by Other Threat Actors (thehackernews.com)
6 PyPI Packages Detour Firewall Using Cloudflare Tunnels (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Microsoft: Kubernetes clusters hacked in malware campaign via PostgreSQL (bleepingcomputer.com)
Malicious PyPi packages create CloudFlare Tunnels to bypass firewalls (bleepingcomputer.com)
Gootkit Loader Actively Targets Australian Healthcare Industry (trendmicro.com)
Android TV box on Amazon came pre-installed with malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
VLC media player is being hiajcked to send out malware | TechRadar
RAT malware campaign tries to evade detection using polyglot files (bleepingcomputer.com)
Italian Users Warned of Malware Attack Targeting Sensitive Information (thehackernews.com)
Hackers push fake Pokemon NFT game to take over Windows devices (bleepingcomputer.com)
How to protect yourself from bot-driven account fraud - Help Net Security
Mobile
Android spyware strikes again targeting financial institutions and your money | Fox News
Messenger billed as better than Signal is riddled with vulnerabilities | Ars Technica
StrongPity hackers target Android users via trojanized Telegram app (bleepingcomputer.com)
Threema claims encryption flaws never had a real-world impact (bleepingcomputer.com)
Latest Firmware Flaws in Qualcomm Snapdragon Need Attention (darkreading.com)
Threat actors claim access to Telegram servers through insiders - Security Affairs
$20K Buys Insider Access to Telegram Servers, Dark Web Ad Claims (darkreading.com)
Denial of Service/DoS/DDOS
The most significant DDoS attacks in the past year - Help Net Security
Big Prizes, Cash on Offer for Joining 'DDosia' Anti-Ukraine Cyber attack Project (darkreading.com)
Internet of Things – IoT
The dark web's criminal minds see IoT as the next big hacking prize (cnbc.com)
Android TV box on Amazon came pre-installed with malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers can trick Wi-Fi devices into draining their own batteries | New Scientist
Data Breaches/Leaks
Twitter Data Leak: What the Exposure of 200 Million User Emails Means for You | WIRED
14 UK schools hit by cyber attack and documents leaked - BBC News
Air France and KLM notify customers of account hacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Vice Society Releases Info Stolen From 14 UK Schools, Including Passport Scans (darkreading.com)
Twitter's mushrooming data breach crisis could prove costly | CSO Online
Twitter Denies Hacking Claims, Assures Leaked User Data Not from its System (thehackernews.com)
CircleCI – code-building service suffers total credential compromise – Naked Security (sophos.com)
Aflac's Japan says US partner leaked cancer customer info • The Register
Data leak exposes information of 10,000 French social security beneficiaries | CSO Online
Chick-fil-A investigates reports of hacked customer accounts (bleepingcomputer.com)
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
JP Morgan must face suit over $272m cybertheft • The Register
Cyber criminals are already using ChatGPT to own you | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Russian Cyber Crew Targets Ukraine Financial Sector Via Infected USB Drives - MSSP Alert
2022 Was the Biggest Year Yet for Crypto, if You're a Crook (gizmodo.com)
Researchers Find 'Digital Crime Haven' While Investigating Magecart Activity (darkreading.com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking/NFTs/Blockchain
2022 Was the Biggest Year Yet for Crypto, if You're a Crook (gizmodo.com)
European police takes down call centres behind cryptocurrency scams (bleepingcomputer.com)
European cops shut down fake crypto call centres • The Register
Kinsing Crypto Malware Hits Kubernetes Clusters via Misconfigured PostgreSQL (thehackernews.com)
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
European police takes down call centres behind cryptocurrency scams (bleepingcomputer.com)
Nationwide warns ‘checking is important’ as thousands targeted in online scam | Personal Finance |
How to protect yourself from bot-driven account fraud - Help Net Security
Insurance
Insurance Co. Beazley Launches $45M 'Cyber Catastrophe Bond' (gizmodo.com)
Insurer Beazley launches first catastrophe bond for cyber threats | Financial Times (ft.com)
4 Cyber Insurance Requirement Predictions for 2023 (trendmicro.com)
Dark Web
Threat actors claim access to Telegram servers through insiders - Security Affairs
$20K Buys Insider Access to Telegram Servers, Dark Web Ad Claims (darkreading.com)
Pakistan tells government agencies to avoid the dark web • The Register
Software Supply Chain
Cloud/SaaS
Attackers abuse business-critical cloud apps to deliver malware - Help Net Security
Top SaaS Cyber security Threats in 2023: Are You Ready? (thehackernews.com)
Why Do User Permissions Matter for SaaS Security? (thehackernews.com)
Attack Surface Management
Why the atomized network is growing, and how to protect it - Help Net Security
Web 3.0 Shifts Attack Surface and Highlights Need for Continuous Security (darkreading.com)
Identity and Access Management
Encryption
RSA crypto cracked? Or perhaps not! – Naked Security (sophos.com)
What is Triple DES and why is it being disallowed? | TechTarget
Passwords, Credential Stuffing & Brute Force Attacks
A fifth of passwords used by federal agency cracked in security audit | Ars Technica
Why FIDO and passwordless authentication is the future - Help Net Security
'Copyright Infringement' Lure Used for Facebook Credential Harvesting (darkreading.com)
Why it might be time to consider using FIDO-based authentication devices | CSO Online
Social Media
Twitter Data Leak: What the Exposure of 200 Million User Emails Means for You | WIRED
Twitter's mushrooming data breach crisis could prove costly | CSO Online
Twitter Denies Hacking Claims, Assures Leaked User Data Not from its System (thehackernews.com)
If governments are banning TikTok, why is it still on your corporate devices? | CSO Online
'Copyright Infringement' Lure Used for Facebook Credential Harvesting (darkreading.com)
Training, Education and Awareness
Regulations, Fines and Legislation
Governance, Risk and Compliance
US cyber security director: The tech ecosystem has ‘become really unsafe’ (yahoo.com)
Global Cyber-Attack Volume Surges 38% in 2022 - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Global Risks Report: Understand the risk landscape in 2023 and beyond - Help Net Security
Why Analysing Past Incidents Helps Teams More Than Usual Security Metrics (darkreading.com)
Cyber security spending and economic headwinds in 2023 | CSO Online
Practical Risk Management - Beyond Certification (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
Vulnerable software, low incident reporting raises risks | TechTarget
Careers, Working in Cyber and Information Security
Law Enforcement Action and Take Downs
European cops shut down fake crypto call centres • The Register
European police takes down call centres behind cryptocurrency scams (bleepingcomputer.com)
Privacy, Surveillance and Mass Monitoring
Artificial Intelligence
AI-generated phishing emails just got much more convincing • The Register
ChatGPT: The infosec assistant that is jack of all trades, master of none - Help Net Security
Better Phishing, Easy Malicious Implants: How AI Could Change Cyber attacks (darkreading.com)
VALL-E AI can mimic a person’s voice from a 3-second snippet • The Register
ChatGPT Artificial Intelligence: An Upcoming Cyber security Threat? (darkreading.com)
Hackers Exploiting OpenAI’s ChatGPT to Deploy Malware (hackread.com)
Cyber criminals are already using ChatGPT to own you | SC Media (scmagazine.com)
Trojan Puzzle attack trains AI assistants into suggesting malicious code (bleepingcomputer.com)
ChatGPT Used to Develop New Malicious Tools - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
DHS, CISA plan AI-based cyber security analytics sandbox • The Register
Spyware, Cyber Espionage & Cyber Warfare, including Russian Invasion of Ukraine
Turla, a Russian Espionage Group, Piggybacked on Other Hackers' USB Infections | WIRED
Russia’s Turla falls back on old malware C2 domains to avoid detection | Computer Weekly
Exclusive: Russian hackers targeted U.S. nuclear scientists | Reuters
Russian cyber attacks on Ukraine halved with help from Amazon and Microsoft (telegraph.co.uk)
New Dark Pink APT group targets govt and military with custom malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Big Prizes, Cash on Offer for Joining 'DDosia' Anti-Ukraine Cyber attack Project (darkreading.com)
Phishing campaign targets government institution in Moldova - Security Affairs
Russian and Belarusian men charged with spying for Russian GRU - Security Affairs
Nation State Actors
Nation State Actors – Russia
Turla, a Russian Espionage Group, Piggybacked on Other Hackers' USB Infections | WIRED
Russia’s Turla falls back on old malware C2 domains to avoid detection | Computer Weekly
Exclusive: Russian hackers targeted U.S. nuclear scientists | Reuters
Russian cyber attacks on Ukraine halved with help from Amazon and Microsoft (telegraph.co.uk)
How Elon Musk’s Starlink has changed warfare | The Economist
Big Prizes, Cash on Offer for Joining 'DDosia' Anti-Ukraine Cyber attack Project (darkreading.com)
Phishing campaign targets government institution in Moldova - Security Affairs
Russian and Belarusian men charged with spying for Russian GRU - Security Affairs
Musk's Starlink Satellite's Role In Ukraine War Inspires Taiwan To Thwart Potential China Attack
Nation State Actors – China
Many of 13 New Mac Malware Families Discovered in 2022 Linked to China | SecurityWeek.Com
If governments are banning TikTok, why is it still on your corporate devices? | CSO Online
Musk's Starlink Satellite's Role In Ukraine War Inspires Taiwan To Thwart Potential China Attack
Nation State Actors – Iran
Nation State Actors – Misc
Vulnerability Management
Patch Where it Hurts: Effective Vulnerability Management in 2023 (thehackernews.com)
70% of apps contain at least one security flaw after 5 years in production - Help Net Security
Rackspace Ransomware Incident Highlights Risks of Relying on Mitigation Alone (darkreading.com)
Does a hybrid model for vulnerability management make sense? • Graham Cluley
Vulnerabilities
Microsoft Patch Tuesday: 97 Windows Vulns, 1 Exploited Zero-Day | SecurityWeek.Com
Microsoft plugs actively exploited zero-day hole (CVE-2023-21674) - Help Net Security
The Roadmap to Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) - MSSP Alert
Hundreds of SugarCRM servers infected with critical in-the-wild exploit | Ars Technica
Cyber criminals bypass Windows security with driver-vulnerability exploit | CSO Online
Attackers target govt networks exploiting Fortinet SSL-VPN CVE-2022-42475 - Security Affairs
Adobe Plugs Security Holes in Acrobat, Reader Software | SecurityWeek.Com
Zoom Patches High Risk Flaws on Windows, MacOS Platforms | SecurityWeek.Com
Cisco warns of auth bypass bug with public exploit in EoL routers (bleepingcomputer.com)
Swiss Threema messaging app found to have vulnerabilities • The Register
Fortinet says hackers exploited critical vulnerability to infect VPN customers | Ars Technica
Critical bug in Cisco Small Business Routers will receive no patch - Security Affairs
Severe Vulnerabilities Allow Hacking of Asus Gaming Router | SecurityWeek.Com
JsonWebToken Security Bug Opens Servers to RCE (darkreading.com)
Latest Firmware Flaws in Qualcomm Snapdragon Need Attention (darkreading.com)
Tools and Controls
How to prevent and detect lateral movement attacks | TechTarget
Data Loss Prevention Capability Guide (informationsecuritybuzz.com)
4 key shifts in the breach and attack simulation (BAS) market - Help Net Security
How to prioritize effectively with threat modeling • The Register
XDR and the Age-old Problem of Alert Fatigue | SecurityWeek.Com
Why FIDO and passwordless authentication is the future - Help Net Security
Why it might be time to consider using FIDO-based authentication devices | CSO Online
DHS, CISA plan AI-based cyber security analytics sandbox • The Register
ChatGPT: The infosec assistant that is jack of all trades, master of none - Help Net Security
Sector Specific
Industry specific threat intelligence reports are available.
Contact us to receive tailored reports specific to the industry/sector and geographies you operate in.
· Automotive
· Construction
· Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)
· Defence & Space
· Education & Academia
· Energy & Utilities
· Estate Agencies
· Financial Services
· FinTech
· Food & Agriculture
· Gaming & Gambling
· Government & Public Sector (including Law Enforcement)
· Health/Medical/Pharma
· Hotels & Hospitality
· Insurance
· Legal
· Manufacturing
· Maritime
· Oil, Gas & Mining
· OT, ICS, IIoT, SCADA & Cyber-Physical Systems
· Retail & eCommerce
· Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs)
· Startups
· Telecoms
· Third Sector & Charities
· Transport & Aviation
· Web3
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
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Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 07 January 2022
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 07 January 2022:
-Microsoft Sees Rampant Log4j Exploit Attempts, Testing
-Warning: Log4j Still Lurks Where Dependency Analysis Can’t Find It
-Hackers Sending Malware-Filled USB Sticks to Companies Disguised as Presents
-Patch Systems Vulnerable To Critical Log4j Flaws, UK And US Officials Warn
-‘Elephant Beetle’ Lurks For Months In Networks
-Sonicwall: Y2k22 Bug Hits Email Security, Firewall Products
-Hackers Use Video Player To Steal Credit Cards From Over 100 Sites
-Cyber World Is Starting 2022 In Crisis Mode With The Log4j Bug
-Everything You Need To Know About Ransomware Attacks and Gangs In 2022
-Why the Log4j Vulnerability Makes Endpoint Visibility and Zero Trust Security More Important Than Ever
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Microsoft Sees Rampant Log4j Exploit Attempts, Testing
Microsoft says it’s only going to get worse: It’s seen state-sponsored and cyber-criminal attackers probing systems for the Log4Shell flaw through the end of December.
No surprise here: The holidays bought no Log4Shell relief.
Threat actors vigorously launched exploit attempts and testing during the last weeks of December, Microsoft said on Monday, in the latest update to its landing page and guidance around the flaws in Apache’s Log4j logging library.
“We have observed many existing attackers adding exploits of these vulnerabilities in their existing malware kits and tactics, from coin miners to hands-on-keyboard attacks,” according to Microsoft.
https://threatpost.com/microsoft-rampant-log4j-exploits-testing/177358/
Warning: Log4j Still Lurks Where Dependency Analysis Can’t Find It
The best programming practice to include a third-party library in source code is to use the import command. It is the easiest way to do it, and it is also the way that most dependency analysis programs work to determine if a vulnerable library is in play. But any time code is included without calling it as an external package, traditional dependency analysis might not be enough to find it — including when Java coders use a common trick to resolve conflicting dependencies during the design process.
A new study by jFrog found that 400 packages on repository Maven Central used Log4j code without calling it as an external package. Around a third of that came from fat jars — jar files that include all external dependencies to make a more efficient product. The remainder came from directly inserting Log4j code into the source code, including shading, a work-around used when two or more dependencies call different versions of the same library in a way that might conflict.
While 400 may not seem like a lot for Maven Central, where Google found 17,000 packages implementing the vulnerable Log4j library, some of the 400 packages unearthed by JFrog are widely used.
Hackers Sending Malware-Filled USB Sticks to Companies Disguised as Presents
The "malicious USB stick" trick is old but apparently it's still wildly popular with the crooks.
Word to the wise: If a stranger ever offers you a random USB stick as a gift, best not to take it.
On Thursday, the FBI warned that a hacker group has been using the US mail to send malware-laden USB drives to companies in the defence, transportation and insurance industries. The criminals’ hope is that employees will be gullible enough to stick them into their computers, thus creating the opportunity for ransomware attacks or the deployment of other malicious software, The Record reports.
The hacker group behind this bad behaviour—a group called FIN7—has gone to great lengths to make their parcels appear innocuous. In some cases, packages were dressed up as if they were sent by the US Department of Health and Human Services, with notes explaining that the drives contained important information about COVID-19 guidelines. In other cases, they were delivered as if they had been sent via Amazon, along with a “decorative gift box containing a fraudulent thank you letter, counterfeit gift card, and a USB,” according to the FBI warning.
https://gizmodo.com/hackers-have-been-sending-malware-filled-usb-sticks-to-1848323578
Patch Systems Vulnerable To Critical Log4j Flaws, UK And US Officials Warn
One of the highest-severity vulnerabilities in years, Log4Shell remains under attack.
Criminals are actively exploiting the high-severity Log4Shell vulnerability on servers running VMware Horizon in an attempt to install malware that allows them to gain full control of affected systems, the UK’s publicly funded healthcare system is warning.
CVE-2021-44228 is one of the most severe vulnerabilities to come to light in the past few years. It resides in Log4J, a system-logging code library used in thousands if not millions of third-party applications and websites. That means there is a huge base of vulnerable systems. Additionally, the vulnerability is extremely easy to exploit and allows attackers to install Web shells, which provide a command window for executing highly privileged commands on hacked servers.
The remote-code execution flaw in Log4J came to light in December after exploit code was released before a patch was available. Malicious hackers quickly began actively exploiting CVE-2021-44228 to compromise sensitive systems.
‘Elephant Beetle’ Lurks For Months In Networks
The group blends into an environment before loading up trivial, thickly stacked, fraudulent financial transactions too tiny to be noticed but adding up to millions of dollars.
Researchers have identified a threat group that’s been quietly siphoning off millions of dollars from financial- and commerce-sector companies, spending months patiently studying their targets’ financial systems and slipping in fraudulent transactions amongst regular activity.
The Sygnia Incident Response team has been tracking the group, which it named Elephant Beetle, aka TG2003, for two years.
In a Wednesday report, the researchers called Elephant Beetle’s attack relentless, as the group has hidden “in plain sight” without the need to develop exploits.
https://threatpost.com/elephant-beetle-months-networks-financial/177393/
Sonicwall: Y2k22 Bug Hits Email Security, Firewall Products
SonicWall has confirmed today that some of its Email Security and firewall products have been hit by the Y2K22 bug, causing message log updates and junk box failures starting with January 1st, 2022.
The company says that email users and administrators will no longer be able to access the junk box or un-junk newly received emails on affected systems.
They will also no longer be able to trace incoming/outgoing emails using the message logs because they're no longer updated.
On January 2nd, SonicWall deployed updates to North American and European instances of Hosted Email Security, the company's cloud email security service.
It also released fixes for its on-premises Email Security Appliance (ES 10.0.15) and customers using firewalls with the Anti-Spam Junk Store functionality toggled on (Junk Store 7.6.9).
Hackers Use Video Player To Steal Credit Cards From Over 100 Sites
Hackers used a cloud video hosting service to perform a supply chain attack on over one hundred real estate sites that injected malicious scripts to steal information inputted in website forms.
These scripts are known as skimmers or formjackers and are commonly injected into hacked websites to steal sensitive information entered into forms. Skimmers are commonly used on checkout pages for online stores to steal payment information.
In a new supply chain attack discovered by Palo Alto Networks Unit42, threat actors abused a cloud video hosting feature to inject skimmer code into a video player. When a website embeds that player, it embeds the malicious script, causing the site to become infected.
Cyber World Is Starting 2022 In Crisis Mode With The Log4j Bug
The cyber security world is starting off 2022 in crisis mode.
The newest culprit is the log4j software bug, which cyber security and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) Director Jen Easterly called “the most serious vulnerability I have seen in my decades-long career.” It forced many cyber security pros to work through the holidays to protect computer systems at Big Tech firms, large and small companies and government agencies.
But crises like log4j have become the norm rather than the exception during the past few years.
Last year kicked off with the SolarWinds hack — a Russian government operation that compromised reams of sensitive information from U.S. government agencies and corporations.
Digital threats of all sorts are growing far faster than the capability to defend against them. If past is prologue, 2022 is likely to be a year of big hacks, big threats and plenty more crises.
“We’re always in crisis is the long and short of it,” Jake Williams, a former National Security Agency (NSA) cyber operator and founder of the firm Rendition Infosec, told me. “Anyone looking for calm rather than the storm in cyber is in the wrong field.”
Everything You Need To Know About Ransomware Attacks and Gangs In 2022
Ransomware is a lucrative business for criminals. It is paying off, and it is working.
According to a recent Trend Micro report, a staggering 84% of US organisations experienced either a phishing or ransomware attack in the last year. The average ransomware payment was over $500,000.
Bad actors want to keep cashing in. So they’re going as far as creating ransomware kits as a service (Ransomware as a Service) to be sold on the dark web and even setting up fake companies to recruit potential employees.
Many ransomware gangs function like real companies — with marketing teams, websites, software development, user documentation, support forums and media relations.
If the “companies” run by ransomware gangs can operate with minimal expenses and mind-blowing revenues, what’s stopping them from growing in number and size?
https://securityintelligence.com/articles/ransomware-attacks-gangs-2022/
Why the Log4j Vulnerability Makes Endpoint Visibility and Zero Trust Security More Important Than Ever
The Apache Log4j vulnerability is one of the most serious vulnerabilities in recent years—putting millions of devices at risk.
IT organisations worldwide are still reeling from the discovery of a major security vulnerability in Apache Log4j, an open-source logging utility embedded in countless internal and commercial applications.
By submitting a carefully constructed variable string to log4j, attackers can take control of any application that includes log4j. Suddenly, cyber criminals around the world have a blueprint for launching attacks on everything from retail store kiosks to mission-critical applications in hospitals.
If security teams overlook even one instance of log4j in their software, they give attackers an opportunity to issue system commands at will. Attackers can use those commands to install ransomware, exfiltrate data, shut down operations — the list goes on.
How should enterprises respond to this pervasive threat?
Threats
Ransomware
Night Sky Is The Latest Ransomware Targeting Corporate Networks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Counties In New Mexico, Arkansas Begin 2022 With Ransomware Attacks | ZDNet
Ransomware Attack Affects The Websites Of 5,000 Schools - CNNPolitics
Phishing
Google Docs Comments Weaponized in New Phishing Campaign (darkreading.com)
US Arrests Suspect Who Stole Unpublished Books In Phishing Attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)
Malware
FluBot Malware Now Targets Europe Posing As Flash Player App (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Mac Malware Samples Underscore Growing Threat (darkreading.com)
Purple Fox Rootkit Now Bundled With Telegram Installer | Malwarebytes Labs
‘Malsmoke’ Exploits Microsoft’s E-Signature Verification | Threatpost
Mobile
IoT
Data Breaches/Leaks
List Of Data Breaches And Cyber Attacks In December 2021 | 219M records (itgovernance.co.uk)
Have I Been Pwned Warns Of DatPiff Data Breach Impacting Millions (bleepingcomputer.com)
Morgan Stanley To Pay $60 Million To Resolve Data Security Lawsuit (Yahoo.Com)
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking
Report: $2.2 Billion In Cryptocurrency Stolen From DeFi Platforms In 2021 | ZDNet
UK Police Seize £322m of Cryptocurrency in Past Five Years - Infosecurity Magazine
Fraud, Scams & Financial Crime
DoS/DDoS
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
Should Businesses Be Concerned About APT-Style Attacks? - Help Net Security
MI6 Chief Thanks China For ‘Free Publicity’ After James Bond Spoof | China | The Guardian
Log4j Vulnerabilities: New Patches And Nation-State Exploitation. (thecyberwire.com)
North Korea-Linked Konni APT Targets Russian Diplomatic Bodies - Security Affairs
Privacy
Passwords & Credential Stuffing
Spyware and Espionage
Vulnerabilities
Emergency Windows Server Update Fixes Remote Desktop Issues (bleepingcomputer.com)
Microsoft Rolled Out Emergency Fix For Y2k22 Bug In Exchange Servers - Security Affairs
VMware Fixed CVE-2021-22045 Heap-Overflow In Workstation, Fusion and ESXi - Security Affairs
Latest WordPress Security Release Fixes XSS, SQL Injection Bugs | The Daily Swig (portswigger.net)
New Ubuntu Linux Kernel Security Updates Fix 9 Vulnerabilities, Patch Now - 9to5Linux
JFrog Researchers Find JNDI Vulnerability In H2 Database Consoles Similar To Log4Shell | ZDNet
Unpatched HomeKit Vulnerability Exposes iPhones, iPads to DoS Attacks | SecurityWeek.Com
Sector Specific
Defence
Health/Medical/Pharma Sector
Estate Agents
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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