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Black Arrow January Sale: Cyber Security training for £700 per session*
Black Arrow January Sale: Cyber Security training for £700 per session*
Relying only on your IT protection is leaving you exposed to significant cyber risks.
When your technology allows that malicious email to reach your employees, you need your staff to enforce your people and operational controls. It is your last opportunity to stop an incident.
Our January Sale is an exceptional opportunity to learn from world class qualified experts in managing Cyber Security across people, operations and technology.
You will be trained by experts who support clients in incident management and strategy implementation.
Relying only on your IT protection is leaving you exposed to significant cyber risks.
When your technology allows that malicious email to reach your employees, you need your staff to enforce your people and operational controls. It is your last opportunity to stop an incident.
Our January Sale is an exceptional opportunity to learn from world class qualified experts in managing Cyber Security across people, operations and technology.
You will be trained by experts who support clients in incident management and strategy implementation.
Feedback from our customers on our training
•The training was great. I liked how they used real life examples.
•They were able to explain in a way that made sense and avoided the usual IT gibberish that some companies use.
•It was well run, interesting and informative, and I didn’t yawn once!
* One interactive training event for up to 20 employees/contractors, delivered by video due to Covid restrictions; in-person training will resume when possible. Training paid before end January 2022 and delivered by June 2022.
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.
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 31 December 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 31 December 2021
-The Log4j Flaw Will Take Years to be Fully Addressed
-Copycat And Fad Hackers Will Be The Bane Of Supply Chain Security In 2022
-This Nightmare Incident Shows Why You Really Shouldn't Store Passwords In Your Browser
-Kaspersky Research: 47% of Incident Response Requests Linked to Ransomware
-Global Cyber Attacks from Nation-State Actors Posing Greater Threats
-Y2k22 Bug Is Causing Microsoft Exchange Server To Fail Worldwide: FIP-FS Scan Engine Failed To Load
-External Attackers Can Penetrate Most Local Company Networks
-The Have I Been Pwned Service Now Includes 441K Accounts Stolen By RedLine Malware
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
The Log4j Flaw Will Take Years to be Fully Addressed
More than 80% of Java packages affected by the vulnerability in the Apache Log4j library cannot be updated directly, and will require coordination between different project teams to address the flaw.
Shortly after the first vulnerability in the Apache Log4j library (CVE-2021-44228) was disclosed, Google's Open Source Insights Team surveyed all the Java packages in the Maven Central Repository "to determine the scope of the issue in the open source ecosystem of JVM based languages, and to track the ongoing efforts to mitigate the affected packages," say team members James Wetter and Nicky Ringland. The team estimates it could take years before the vulnerability is fully addressed within the Java ecosystem.
A significant part of the problem has to do with indirect dependencies. Direct dependencies, or the cases where package explicitly pulls log4j into the code, are relatively straightforward to fix, as the developer or project owner just has to update log4j to the latest version.
https://www.darkreading.com/tech-trends/the-log4j-flaw-will-take-years-to-be-fully-addressed
Copycat And Fad Hackers Will Be The Bane Of Supply Chain Security In 2022
Replicable attacks and a low barrier to entry will ensure the rate of supply chain attacks increases next year, cyber security researchers have warned.
The supply chain is a consistent attack vector for threat actors today. By compromising a centralized service, platform, or software, attackers can then either conduct widespread infiltration of the customers and clients of the original -- singular -- victim or may choose to cherry-pick from the most valuable potential targets.
This can save cyber criminals time and money, as one successful attack can open the door to potentially thousands of victims at once.
A ransomware attack levied against Kaseya in 2021 highlighted the disruption a supply chain-based attack can cause. Ransomware was deployed by exploiting a vulnerability in Kaseya's VSA software, leading to the compromise of multiple managed service providers (MSP) in Kaseya's customer base.
This Nightmare Incident Shows Why You Really Shouldn't Store Passwords In Your Browser
An infostealer is scooping up passwords stored in browsers, experts warn
An unnamed company was recently breached after an employee stored their corporate account password in their web browser, a new report suggests.
According to research from security company AhnLab, the employee was working from home on a device shared with other household members, which was already infected with Redline Stealer, an infostealing malware.
Although the computer was equipped with antivirus software, the malware was able to evade detection, before stealing the passwords stored in the victim's browser.
Kaspersky Research: 47% of Incident Response Requests Linked to Ransomware
This year — 2021 — marked a “new era of ransomware,” said Vladimir Kuskov, head of threat exploration at Russian cyber security company Kaspersky. This is reflected in security incident requests handled by Kaspersky’s Global Emergency Response Team (GERT) between January and November 2021.
Kaspersky reported 46.7 percent of the security incidents that GERT handled in the first 11 months of 2021 were related to ransomware. Comparatively, Kaspersky attributed ransomware to 37.9 percent of security incidents that GERT handled for all of 2020 and 34 percent for 2019.
In addition, the government and industrial sectors have been the most common targets for ransomware attacks in 2021 to date, Kaspersky indicated. These industries accounted for nearly 50 percent of ransomware-related incident response requests that GERT has handled.
Global Cyber Attacks from Nation-State Actors Posing Greater Threats
Casey Ellis, CTO at Bugcrowd, outlines how international relations have deteriorated into a new sort of Cold War, with espionage playing out in the cyber-domain.
The macro-trend I’m most alarmed by today is the fact that attackers don’t seem to care about getting caught anymore. We have seen an increase in temerity of attacks by nation-states, such as the Russian attack on SolarWinds, and seen their attack tactics shift from targeted, stealthy operations into opportunistic hacks for potential future uses, such as the attacks attributed to Hafnium.
Such a brazen approach hasn’t been a common tactic of nation-states in the past, but now seems to be the status quo. In part, this trend may also be due to a destabilization of the international relations climate stemming from COVID-19, as well as work-from-home forcing core business services out onto the internet to facilitate employee access.
Broadly speaking, we should see China as a rising cyber security threat on the international stage. That has been the case for some time in terms of their economic, defense and military posture, but 2021 has quite clearly demonstrated that the relationship has deteriorated into a sort of Cold War, with espionage playing out in the cyber-domain.
https://threatpost.com/global-cyberattacks-nation-state-threats/177253/
Y2k22 Bug Is Causing Microsoft Exchange Server To Fail Worldwide: FIP-FS Scan Engine Failed To Load
Company admins are having their New Year’s celebrations interrupted by reports that their Exchange Servers are failing with the error “FIP-FS Scan Engine failed to load – Can’t Convert “2201010001” to long (2022/01/01 00:00 UTC)“.
The issue appears to be due to Microsoft using the first two numbers of the update version to denote the year of the update, which caused the “long” version of the date to overflow.
At present, it seems the main workaround is to disable the anti-malware scanner on the Exchange Server by using Set-MalwareFilteringServer -BypassFiltering $True -identity <server name> and restarting the Microsoft Exchange Transport service.
It appears Microsoft has not acknowledged the issue yet, but if you are affected some peer support is available at Reddit here.
Update: Microsoft has now acknowledged the issue and is working on a fix
https://mspoweruser.com/y2k22-bug-is-causing-microsoft-exchange-server-to-fail-worldwide/
External Attackers Can Penetrate Most Local Company Networks
In 93% of cases, external attackers can breach the organisation’s network perimeter and gain access to local network resources, and it takes an average of two days to penetrate the company’s internal network. In 100% of companies analysed, an insider can gain full control over the infrastructure.
These are the results of a new research report by Positive Technologies, analyzing results of the company’s penetration testing projects carried out in the second half of 2020 and first half of 2021.
The study was conducted among financial organizations (29%), fuel and energy organizations (18%), government (16%), industrial (16%), IT companies (13%), and other sectors.
During the assessment of protection against external attacks, Positive Technologies experts managed to breach the network perimeter in 93% of cases. According to the company’s researchers, this figure has remained high for many years, confirming that criminals are able to breach almost any corporate infrastructure.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/12/28/external-attackers-local-company-networks/
The Have I Been Pwned Service Now Includes 441K Accounts Stolen By RedLine Malware
The Have I Been Pwned data breach notification service now allows victims of the RedLine malware to check if their credentials have been stolen. The service now includes credentials for 441K accounts stolen by the popular info-stealer.
The RedLine malware allows operators to steal several information, including credentials, credit card data, cookies, autocomplete information stored in browsers, cryptocurrency wallets, credentials stored in VPN clients and FTP clients. The malicious code can also act as a first-stage malware.
Stolen data are stored in an archive (logs) before being uploaded to a server under the control of the attackers.
A few days ago the data breach hunter Bob Diachenko discovered an unsecured server exposing over 6 million RedLine logs containing data harvested between August and September 2021. The server is still accessible, but the researchers pointed out that threat actors abandoned it because the the number of logs is not increasing.
https://securityaffairs.co/wordpress/126186/malware/redline-malware-hibp.html
Threats
Ransomware
Organisations Targeted With Babuk-Based Rook Ransomware | SecurityWeek.Com
QNAP NAS Devices Hit With Surge Of Ransomware Attacks | TechRadar
Shutterfly Hit By A Conti Ransomware Attack - Security Affairs
Malware
Threat Actor Uses HP iLO Rootkit To Wipe Servers - The Record by Recorded Future
New Malware Uses SSD Over-Provisioning to Bypass Security Measures | Tom's Hardware
Threat Actors Are Abusing MSBuild To Implant Cobalt Strike Beacons - Security Affairs
Data Breaches/Leaks
LastPass Says No Passwords Were Compromised Following Breach Scare - The Verge
T-Mobile Welcomed Christmas With Its Second Data Breach In Less Than Six Months - Phonearena
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Scams, Fraud & Financial Crime
Nation State Actors
China-linked BlackTech APT Uses New Flagpro Malware In Recent Attacks - Security Affairs
APT ‘Aquatic Panda’ Targets Universities with Log4Shell Exploit Tools | Threatpost
Passwords
Other News
What the Rise in Cyber-Recon Means for Your Security Strategy | Threatpost
Most Companies Struggling To Achieve Observability Despite Investing In Tools - Help Net Security
A New Year Will Bring New Targets: What to Look for in 2022 | SecurityWeek.Com
University Loses 77TB Of Research Data Due To Backup Error (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 weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 24 December 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 24 December 2021
-Cyber Criminals Shifting Focus: IT Sector Most Targeted In 2021
-Log4j Flaw: Attackers Are 'Actively Scanning Networks' Warns New Guidance, Joint Advisory from Cyber Agencies in US, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom
-New Ransomware Variants Flourish Amid Law Enforcement Actions
-93% of Tested Networks Vulnerable to Breach, Pen Testers Find
-Dridex Malware Trolls Employees With Fake Job Termination Emails
-More Than 35,000 Java Packages Impacted By Log4j Flaw, Google Warns
-Conti Ransomware Gang Has Full Log4Shell Attack Chain
-Second Ransomware Family Exploiting Log4j Spotted In US, Europe
-Threat actors steal $80 million per month with fake giveaways, surveys
-Microsoft Teams might have a few serious security issues
-The Future of Work Has Changed, and Your Security Mindset Needs to Follow
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Cyber Criminals Shifting Focus: IT Sector Most Targeted In 2021
Darktrace reported that the IT and communications sector was globally the most targeted industry by cybercriminals in 2021.
Darktrace’s data is developed by ‘early indicator analysis’ that looks at the breadcrumbs of potential cyber-attacks at several stages before they are attributed to any particular actor and before they escalate into a full-blown crisis. Findings show that its artificial intelligence autonomously interrupted an average of 150,000 threats per week against the sector in 2021.
The IT and communications sector includes telecommunications providers, software developers, and managed security service providers, amongst others. There was also a growing trend of hackers targeting backup servers in an attempt to deliberately disable or corrupt backup files by deleting a single index file that would render all backups inaccessible. Attackers could then launch ransomware attacks against the clients of the backup vendor, preventing recovery and forcing payment.
In 2020, the most attacked industry was the financial and insurance sector, showing that cyber-criminals have shifted their focus over the last 12 months.
Over the last 12 months, it is clear that attackers are relentlessly trying to access the networks of trusted suppliers in the IT and communications sector. Quite simply, it is a better return on investment than, for example, going after one company in the financial services sector. SolarWinds and Kaseya are just two well-known and recent examples of this. Sadly, there is likely to be more in the near term.
The findings of this research mark one year since the compromise of US software company SolarWinds rattled the security industry. This landmark supply-chain attack made thousands of organisations vulnerable to infiltration by inserting malicious code into the Orion system. Over the last 12 months, there has been a continued spate of attacks against the IT and communications sector, including the high-profile attacks on Kaseya and Gitlab.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/12/22/cybercriminals-it-sector/
New Ransomware Variants Flourish Amid Law Enforcement Actions
Ransomware groups continue to evolve their tactics and techniques to deploy file-encrypting malware on compromised systems, notwithstanding law enforcement's disruptive actions against the cyber crime gangs to prevent them from victimizing additional companies.
"Be it due to law enforcement, infighting amongst groups or people abandoning variants altogether, the RaaS [ransomware-as-a-service] groups dominating the ecosystem at this point in time are completely different than just a few months ago," Intel 471 researchers said in a report published this month. "Yet, even with the shift in the variants, ransomware incidents as a whole are still on the rise."
Sweeping law enforcement operations undertaken by government agencies in recent months have brought about rapid shifts in the RaaS landscape and turned the tables on ransomware syndicates like Avaddon, BlackMatter, Cl0p, DarkSide, Egregor, and REvil, forcing the actors to slow down or shut down their businesses altogether.
https://thehackernews.com/2021/12/new-ransomware-variants-flourish-amid.html
93% of Tested Networks Vulnerable to Breach, Pen Testers Find
Data from dozens of penetration tests and security assessments suggest nearly every organisation can be infiltrated by cyber attackers.
The vast majority of businesses can be compromised within a month by a motivated attacker using common techniques, such as compromising credential, exploiting known vulnerabilities in software and Web applications, or taking advantage of configuration flaws, according to an analysis of security assessments by Positive Technologies.
In 93% of cases, an external attacker could breach a target company's network and gain access to local devices and systems, the company's security service professionals found. In 71% of cases, the attacker could affect the businesses in a way deemed "unacceptable." For example, every bank tested by the security firm could be attacked in a way that disrupted business processes and reduced the quality of their service.
Dridex Malware Trolls Employees With Fake Job Termination Emails
A new Dridex malware phishing campaign is using fake employee termination emails as a lure to open a malicious Excel document, which then trolls the victim with a season's greeting message.
Dridex is a banking malware spread through malicious emails that was initially developed to steal online banking credentials. Over time, the developers evolved the malware to use different modules that provide additional malicious behaviour, such as installing other malware payloads, providing remote access to threat actors, or spreading to other devices on the network.
This malware was created by a hacking group known as Evil Corp, which is behind various ransomware operations, such as BitPaymer, DoppelPaymer, WastedLocker variants, and Grief. Due to this, Dridex infections are known to lead to ransomware attacks on compromised networks.
More Than 35,000 Java Packages Impacted By Log4j Flaw, Google Warns
The Google Open Source Team scanned the Maven Central Java package repository and found that 35,863 packages (8% of the total) were using versions of the Apache Log4j library vulnerable to Log4Shell exploit and to the CVE-2021-45046 RCE.
“More than 35,000 Java packages, amounting to over 8% of the Maven Central repository (the most significant Java package repository), have been impacted by the recently disclosed log4j vulnerabilities (1, 2), with widespread fallout across the software industry.” reads the report published by Google. “As far as ecosystem impact goes, 8% is enormous.”
The Google experts used the Open Source Insights, a project used to determine open source dependencies, to assess all versions of all artifacts in the Maven Central Repository.
The experts pointed out that the direct dependencies account for around 7,000 of the affected packages. Most of the affected artifacts are related to indirect dependencies.
Since the vulnerability was disclosed, 13% of all vulnerable packages have been fixed (4,620).
https://securityaffairs.co/wordpress/125845/security/log4j-java-packages-flaws.html
Log4j Flaw: Attackers Are 'Actively Scanning Networks' Warns New Guidance, Joint Advisory from Cyber Agencies in US, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom
A new informational Log4J advisory has been issued by cybersecurity leaders from the US, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. The guide includes technical details, mitigations and resources to address known vulnerabilities in the Apache Log4j software library.
The project is a joint effort by the US' Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), FBI and NSA, as well as the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC), Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (CCCS), Computer Emergency Response Team New Zealand (CERT NZ), New Zealand National Cyber Secure Centre (NZ NCSC), and the United Kingdom's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-UK).
The organisations said they issued the advisory in response to "active, worldwide exploitation by numerous threat actors, including malicious cyber threat actors." Numerous groups from North Korea, Iran, Turkey and China have been seen exploiting the vulnerability alongside a slate of ransomware groups and cybercriminal organisations.
Conti Ransomware Gang Has Full Log4Shell Attack Chain
The Conti gang was the first professional-grade, sophisticated ransomware group to weaponise Log4j2, now with a full attack chain.
The Conti ransomware gang, which last week became the first professional crimeware outfit to adopt and weaponize the Log4Shell vulnerability, has now built up a holistic attack chain.
The sophisticated Russia-based Conti group – which Palo Alto Networks has called “one of the most ruthless” of dozens of ransomware groups currently known to be active – was in the right place at the right time with the right tools when Log4Shell hit the scene 10 days ago, security firm Advanced Intelligence (AdvIntel) said in a report shared with Threatpost on Thursday.
As of Monday the attack chain has taken the following form, AdvIntel’s Yelisey Boguslavskiy told Threatpost: Emotet -> Cobalt Strike -> Human Exploitation -> (no ADMIN$ share) -> Kerberoast -> vCenter ESXi with log4shell scan for vCenter.
https://threatpost.com/conti-ransomware-gang-has-full-log4shell-attack-chain/177173/
Second Ransomware Family Exploiting Log4j Spotted In US, Europe
This was quickly followed by a second ransomware group when researchers found a second family of ransomware has been growing in usage for attack attempts that exploit the critical vulnerability in Apache Log4j, including in the US and Europe.
A number of researchers, including at cybersecurity giant Sophos, have now said they’ve observed the attempted deployment of a ransomware family known as TellYouThePass. Researchers have described TellYouThePass as an older and largely inactive ransomware family — which has been revived following the discovery of the vulnerability in the widely used Log4j logging software.
https://venturebeat.com/2021/12/21/second-ransomware-family-exploiting-log4j-spotted-in-u-s-europe/
Threat actors steal $80 million per month with fake giveaways, surveys
Scammers are estimated to have made $80 million per month by impersonating popular brands asking people to participate in fake surveys or giveaways.
Researchers warn of this new trend in global fraud schemes involving targeted links to make investigation and take-down increasingly challenging.
According to current estimates, these massive campaigns resulted in an estimated $80,000,000 per month, stolen from 10 million people in 91 countries.
The scam themes are the typical and "trustworthy" fake surveys and giveaways from popular brands with the holiday season making targets more susceptible to fraudulent gift offerings.
According to a report by Group-IB, there are currently 60 known scam networks that use targeted links in their campaigns, impersonating 121 brands in false giveaways.
Each network uses an average of 70 different Internet domain names as part of their campaigns, but some find great success with fewer domains, which indicates that quality beats quantity when it comes to scams.
Microsoft Teams might have a few serious security issues
Security researchers have discovered four separate vulnerabilities in Microsoft Teams that could be exploited by an attacker to spoof link previews, leak IP addresses and even access the software giant's internal services.
These discoveries were made by researchers at Positive Security who “stumbled upon” them while looking for a way to bypass the Same-Origin Policy (SOP) in Teams and Electron according to a new blog post. For those unfamiliar, SOP is a security mechanism found in browsers that helps stop websites from attacking one another.
During their investigation into the matter, the researchers found that they could bypass the SOP in Teams by abusing the link preview feature in Microsoft's video conferencing software by allowing the client to generate a link preview for the target page and then using either summary text or optical character recognition (OCR) on the preview image to extract information.
https://www.techradar.com/news/microsoft-teams-might-have-a-few-serious-security-issues
The Future of Work Has Changed, and Your Security Mindset Needs to Follow
VPNs have become a vulnerability that puts organisations at risk of cyber attacks.
When businesses first sent employees to work from home in March 2020 — thinking it'd only be for two weeks — they turned to quick fixes that would enable remote work for large numbers of people as quickly as possible. While these solutions solved the short-term challenge of allowing distributed workforces to connect to a company's network from anywhere, they're now becoming a security vulnerability that is putting organisations at risk of growing cyberattacks.
Now that almost two years have passed and work has fundamentally shifted, with fully or hybrid remote environments here to stay, business and security leaders need solutions that better fit their unique and increasingly complex needs. In fact, a new survey from Menlo Security has found that 75% of organisations are re-evaluating their security strategies for remote employees, exemplifying that accommodating remote work is a top priority for the majority of business leaders.
To successfully manage the risks that distributed workforces entail, leaders must shift their mindset away from the hub-and-spoke approach of providing connectivity to the entire network, instead segmenting access by each individual private application, wherever it is deployed, as threats of cyberattacks loom across all industries. As organisations grapple with the added security challenges that remote and hybrid work environments bring, adopting a zero-trust approach will be critical for end-to-end network and endpoint protection.
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware Threat Just as Urgent as Terrorism, Say Two-Thirds of IT Pros - Infosecurity Magazine
PYSA Emerges as Top Ransomware Actor in November | Threatpost
AvosLocker Ransomware Reboots In Safe Mode To Bypass Security Tools (bleepingcomputer.com)
Rook Ransomware Is Yet Another Spawn Of The Leaked Babuk Code (bleepingcomputer.com)
PYSA Ransomware Behind Most Double Extortion Attacks In November (bleepingcomputer.com)
This Ransomware Strain Just Started Targeting Lots More Businesses | ZDNet
Phishing
How Likely Are Employees To Fall Prey To A Phishing Attack? - Help Net Security
Dridex Omicron Phishing Taunts With Funeral Helpline Number (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Phishing Campaign Claims $80m Per Month - IT Security Guru
Malware
Log4j Vulnerability Now Used To Install Dridex Banking Malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
New BLISTER Malware Using Code Signing Certificates to Evade Detection (thehackernews.com)
IoT
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking
Example Of How Attackers Are Trying To Push Crypto Miners Via Log4Shell - SANS Internet Storm Center
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Scams, Fraud & Financial Crime
Insurance
Dark Web
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Lights Out: Cyber Attacks Shut Down Building Automation Systems (darkreading.com)
Walk-Through Metal Detectors Can Be Hacked, New Research Finds (gizmodo.com)
Nation State Actors
Passwords
Parental Controls and Child Safety
Vulnerabilities
Microsoft Teams Bug Allowing Phishing Unpatched Since March (bleepingcomputer.com)
FBI: Another Zoho ManageEngine Zero-Day Under Active Attack | Threatpost
Active Directory Bugs Could Let hackers Take Over Windows Domain Controllers (thehackernews.com)
All in One SEO Plugin Bug Threatens 3M Websites with Takeovers | Threatpost
Researchers Disclose Unpatched Vulnerabilities in Microsoft Teams Software (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft Admits To Azure App Service Source Code Leak Bug • The Register
Expert Details macOS Bug That Could Let Malware Bypass Gatekeeper Security (thehackernews.com)
New Dell BIOS Updates Cause Laptops And Desktops Not To Boot (bleepingcomputer.com)
Western Digital Warns Customers To Update Their My Cloud Devices (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
New Mobile Network Vulnerabilities Affect All Cellular Generations Since 2G (thehackernews.com)
Sector Specific
Health/Medical/Pharma Sector
Retail
Transport and Aviation
Other News
How Confident Can Organisations Be In Their Managed Services Security? - Help Net Security
Experts Discover Backdoor Deployed on the US Federal Agency's Network (thehackernews.com)
Half-Billion Compromised Credentials Lurking on Open Cloud Server | Threatpost
New Log4J Flaw Caps Year of Relentless Cyber Security Crises - WSJ
Log4Shell Is A Dumpster Fire That Should Have Been Avoided - Help Net Security
7 of the Most Impactful Cyber Security Incidents of 2021 (darkreading.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 weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 17 December 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 17 December 2021:
-Employees Think They’re Safe From Cyber Threats On Company Devices
-Internet Is Scrambling To Fix Log4shell, The Worst Hack In History
-Apache Log4j Flaw: A Fukushima Moment for the Cyber Security Industry
-60% of UK Workers Have Been Victim of a Cyber-Attack, Yet Awareness Remains Low
-Ransomware in 2022: We're All Screwed
-Attacks on UK Firms Increase Five-Fold During Pandemic
-The Log4J Software Flaw Is ‘Christmas Come Early’ for Cyber Criminals
-Why Cloud Storage Isn't Immune to Ransomware
-400 Banks’ Customers Targeted with Anubis Trojan
-Sites Hacked With Credit Card Stealers Undetected For Months
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
Employees Think They’re Safe From Cyber Threats On Company Devices
A research launched by Menlo Security reveals increased cyber security risks posed to employees and organisations during the 2021 holiday shopping season.
The research – which surveyed 2,000 employed people in the United States and the United Kingdom – found that while employees are concerned about threats and are taking some measures to mitigate them, they often have false confidence in their security posture.
There are now more threats to corporate devices and networks than ever as hybrid work models blur the boundaries between work and home. More than half of respondents (56% US; 53% UK) reported performing non-work-related tasks – such as online shopping – on company devices.
Furthermore, the survey found that 65% of people in the US (63% UK) are doing more online holiday shopping in 2021 compared to previous years, and nearly half of respondents (48% US; 45% UK), reported shopping for gifts this holiday season on a work-issued device such as a laptop or mobile phone.
Workers are also noticing a rise in cyber threats this holiday season, with 58% of respondents in the US (48% UK) observing an increase in scams and fraudulent messages, exemplifying that threats are rampant worldwide. This is worrying many people, as the vast majority of respondents (80% US & UK) report being somewhat to very concerned about their personal data being stolen while online shopping.
However, despite workers’ recognition and concern of cyber threats, 60% of people (65% UK) still believe they’re secure from cyberthreats if they’re using a company device.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/12/14/employees-cybersecurity-risks/
Internet Is Scrambling To Fix Log4shell, The Worst Hack In History
Massive data breaches have become so common that we’ve gotten numb to reports detailing another hack or 0-day exploit. That doesn’t reduce the risk of such events happening, as the cat-and-mouse game between security experts and hackers continues. As some vulnerabilities get fixed, others pop up requiring attention from product and service providers. The newest one has a name that will not mean anything to most people. They call the hack Log4Shell in security briefings, which doesn’t sound very scary. But the new 0-day attack is so significant that some people see it as the worst internet hack in history.
Malicious individuals are already exploiting the Log4Shell attack, which allows them to get into computer systems and servers without a password. Security experts have seen Log4Shell in action in Minecraft, the popular game that Microsoft owns. A few lines of text passed around in a chat might be enough to penetrate the defences of a target computer. The same ease of access would allow hackers to go after any computer out there using the Log4J open-sourced java-based logging utility.
https://bgr.com/tech/internet-is-scrambling-to-fix-log4shell-the-worst-hack-in-history/
Apache Log4j Flaw: A Fukushima Moment for the Cyber Security Industry
Organisations around the world will be dealing with the long-tail consequences of this vulnerability, known as Log4Shell, for years to come.
The discovery of a critical flaw in the Apache Log4j software is nothing short of a Fukushima moment for the cybersecurity industry.
Ten years ago, an earthquake and subsequent tidal wave triggered the meltdown of the Fukushima nuclear power plant that continues to plague the region today. Similarly, the early exploitation of Log4j, during which attackers will go after the low-hanging fruit exposed by the vulnerability, will evolve over time to take the form of more complex attacks on more sensitive systems that have less exposure to the internet. And, just as Fukushima brought to light significant issues with longstanding processes in place at the plant, so too does the Log4j vulnerability, known as Log4Shell, highlight two crucial practices of concern:
· How organisations capture and protect their massive troves of log data; and
· The use of open-source code libraries as the building blocks for major enterprise applications.
The paradox of Log4j: the more you log, the worse it gets
We’re discovering new apps every minute which use Log4j in one way or another. It affects not only the code you build, but also the third-party systems you have in place. Everything from the new printer you’ve bought for the office to the ticketing system you’ve just deployed is potentially affected by this flaw. Some affected systems may be on premises, others may be hosted in the cloud but no matter where they are, the flaw is likely to have an impact.
https://www.theregister.com/2021/12/17/vmware_criticial_uem_flaw/
60% of UK Workers Have Been Victim of a Cyber-Attack, Yet Awareness Remains Low
There is a “dangerous” lack of awareness among UK workers towards cybersecurity, leaving businesses at risk of attacks, according to a new study by Armis. This is despite 60% of workers admitting they have fallen victim to a cyber-attack.
The nationwide survey of 2000 UK employees found that only around a quarter (27%) are aware of the associated cyber risks, while one in 10 (11%) don’t worry about them at all.
Even more worryingly, just one in five people said they paid for online security, putting businesses at high risk of attacks amid the shift to remote working during COVID-19.
The most prevalent types of attacks experienced by workers or their organisations were phishing (27%), data breaches (23%) and malware (20%).
The study also revealed growing concerns about the scale of the cyber-threats facing the UK. A large-scale cyber-attack was ranked as the fourth biggest future concern (21%) among the respondents, equal to the UK going to war. Two-fifths (40%) said they would like to see a minister for cyber security installed to ensure the issue is focused on more at a government level.
Russian-backed cyber-criminals were considered the biggest threat to the UK’s cybersecurity (20%) by the respondents, followed by financially motivated cyber-criminals (17%) and Chinese-backed cyber-criminals (16%).
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/uk-workers-victim-cyber-attack/
Ransomware in 2022: We're All Screwed
Ransomware is now a primary threat for businesses, and with the past year or so considered the "golden era" for operators, cybersecurity experts believe this criminal enterprise will reach new heights in the future.
Kronos. Colonial Pipeline. JBS. Kaseya. These are only a handful of 2021's high-profile victims of threat groups including DarkSide, REvil, and BlackMatter.
According to Kela's analysis of dark web forum activity, the "perfect" prospective ransomware victim in the US will have a minimum annual revenue of $100 million and preferred access purchases include domain admin rights, as well as entry into Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) and Virtual Private Network (VPN) services.
Over the past few years, we've seen ransomware operators evolve from disorganised splinter groups and individuals to highly sophisticated operations, with separate teams collaborating to target everything from SMBs to software supply chains.
Ransomware infection is no longer an end goal of a cyberattack. Instead, malware families in this arena -- including WannaCry, NotPetya, Ryuk, Cerber, and Cryptolocker -- can be one component of attacks designed to elicit a blackmail payment from a victim organisation.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ransomware-in-2022-were-all-screwed/
Attacks on UK Firms Increase Five-Fold During Pandemic
Attacks on UK firms surged five-fold during the pandemic and now cost way more than the global average, according to Accenture.
The global consultancy polled 500 UK executives to compile its State of Cybersecurity Resilience 2021 study.
It found that large organisations experienced 885 attempted cyber-attacks in 2020 – up from 156 the previous year and more than triple the global average of 270.
They’re also more expensive than elsewhere. Accenture calculated that incidents and breaches cost over £1.3m a year – £350,000 more than the global average.
Over 80% of respondents said the cost of staying ahead of cyber-criminals is unsustainable, a fifth more than the previous year, and a quarter said they’ve been forced to increase cybersecurity budgets by 10% or more.
Worryingly, supply chain attacks accounted for 64% of breaches in the UK last year, up by a quarter (26%) from the previous year.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/attacks-on-uk-firms-increase/
The Log4J Software Flaw Is ‘Christmas Come Early’ for Cyber Criminals
Researchers have just identified a security flaw in a software program called Log4J, widely used by a host of private, commercial and government entities to record details ranging from usernames and passwords to credit card transactions. Since the glitch was found last weekend, the cybersecurity community has been scrambling to protect applications, services, infrastructure and even Internet of Things devices from criminals—who are already taking advantage of the vulnerability.
“For cybercriminals this is Christmas come early, because the sky’s the limit,” says Theresa Payton, a former White House chief information officer and the CEO of Fortalice Solutions, a cybersecurity consulting company. “They’re really only limited by their imagination, their technical know-how and their own ability to exploit this flaw.” Payton spoke with Scientific American about what Log4J does, how criminals can use its newly discovered weakness, and what it will take to repair the problem.
Why Cloud Storage Isn't Immune to Ransomware
Ransomware is the flavour of the month for cybercriminals. The FBI reports that ransomware attacks rose 20% and losses almost tripled in 2020. And our increased use of the cloud may have played a part in that spike. A survey of CISOs conducted by IDC earlier this year found that 98% of their companies suffered at least one cloud data breach in the previous 18 months as opposed to 79% last year, and numbers got worse the more exposure they had to the cloud.
Organisations now use hundreds of cloud-based apps, which adds thousands of new identities logging in to their systems. This opens almost unlimited possibilities for hackers. Even if cloud vendors have their own identity and access management controls, vulnerabilities will emerge. In fact, recent research into cloud security found that over 70% of organisations had machines open to the public that were linked to identities whose permissions were vulnerable, under the right conditions, to being exploited to launch ransomware attacks.
A number of reasons could explain why security falls through the cracks of many cloud systems, and leaves them more vulnerable to ransomware attacks.
https://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/why-cloud-storage-isn-t-immune-to-ransomware
400 Banks’ Customers Targeted with Anubis Trojan
Customers of Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Capital One, along with nearly 400 other financial institutions, are being targeted by a malicious app disguised to look like the official account management platform for French telecom company Orange S.A.
Researchers say this is just the beginning.
Once downloaded, the malware – a variant of banking trojan Anubis – steals the user’s personal data to rip them off, researchers at Lookout warned in a new report. And it’s not just customers of big banks at risk, the researchers added: Virtual payment platforms and crypto wallets are also being targeted.
“As a banking trojan malware, Anubis’ goal is to collect significant data about the victim from their mobile device for financial gain,” the Lookout report said. “This is done by intercepting SMSs, keylogging, file exfiltration, screen monitoring, GPS data collection and abuse of the device’s accessibility services.”
https://threatpost.com/400-banks-targeted-anubis-trojan/177038/
Sites Hacked With Credit Card Stealers Undetected For Months
Threat actors are gearing up for the holidays with credit card skimming attacks remaining undetected for months as payment information is stolen from customers.
Magecart skimming is an attack that involves the injection of malicious JavaScript code on a target website, which runs when the visitor is at the checkout page.
The code can steal payment details such as credit card number, holder name, addresses, and CVV, and send them to the actor.
Threat actors may then use this information for purchasing goods online or sold to other actors on underground forums and dark web marketplaces known as "carding" sites.
Threats
Ransomware
Why Ransomware Attacks Happen Out Of Hours Or During The Holidays • The Register
Conti Ransomware Gang Exploits Log4Shell Bug In Its Operations - Security Affairs
Hackers Exploit Log4j Vulnerability to Infect Computers with Khonsari Ransomware (thehackernews.com)
HR Management Firm Kronos Needs Weeks to Recover From Ransomware Attack | SecurityWeek.Com
Ransomware Affiliate Arrested In Romania - The Record By Recorded Future
Police Arrests Ransomware Affiliate Behind High-Profile Attacks (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
All Change at the Top as New Ransomware Groups Emerge - Infosecurity Magazine
Hive Ransomware Enters Big League With Hundreds Breached In Four Months (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Ransomware Suspect Arrested Over Attacks On 'High-Profile' Organisations | Zdnet
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Phishing
How A Phishing Campaign Is Able To Exploit Microsoft Outlook - Techrepublic
Phishing Campaign Uses PowerPoint Macros To Drop Agent Tesla (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
New Microsoft Exchange Credential Stealing Malware Could Be Worse Than Phishing - TechRepublic
Other Social Engineering
Malware
Hackers Start Pushing Malware In Worldwide Log4shell Attacks (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Hackers’ Log4Shell Malware Attacks Shuts Down Thousands of Government Websites | Tech Times
A Practical and Detailed Look at Cobalt Strike Threat Actors - MSSP Alert
New Fileless Malware Uses Windows Registry as Storage to Evade Detection (thehackernews.com)
‘DarkWatchman’ RAT Shows Evolution in Fileless Malware | Threatpost
New PseudoManuscrypt Malware Infected Over 35,000 Computers in 2021 (thehackernews.com)
Mobile
China: Man Lifts Sleeping Ex's Eyelids, Unlocks Phone, Steals $24k (insider.com)
Malicious Joker App Scores Half-Million Downloads on Google Play | Threatpost
Apple Patches 42 Security Flaws in Latest iOS Refresh | SecurityWeek.Com
IoT
Modern Cars: A Growing Bundle Of Security Vulnerabilities - Help Net Security
Are Your Home Security Cameras Vulnerable To Hacking? - cnet
Data Breaches/Leaks
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptomining/Cryptojacking
Log4j Attackers Switch To Injecting Monero Miners Via RMI (bleepingcomputer.com)
Hackers Are Using the Blockchain to Make Bulletproof Botnets (gizmodo.com)
Botnet Steals Half A Million Dollars In Cryptocurrency From Victims - Techrepublic
Hackers Steal $140 Million From Users of Crypto Gaming Company (vice.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud & Financial Crime
“Sadistic” Online Extortionist Jailed for 32 Years - Infosecurity Magazine
Experts: Public Should Freeze Credit Post-Breach - Infosecurity Magazine
Nation State Actors
China, Iran Among Those Exploiting Apache Cyber Vulnerability, Researchers Say (Yahoo.Com)
Documents Link Huawei To Uyghur Surveillance Projects, Report Claims | Huawei | The Guardian
Russian Cyberspy Groups Start Exploiting Log4Shell Vulnerability | SecurityWeek.Com
Cloud
Privacy
Spyware and Espionage
Vulnerabilities
4 Ways To Properly Mitigate The Log4j Vulnerabilities (And 4 To Skip) | CSO Online
Hackers Begin Exploiting Second Log4j Vulnerability as a Third Flaw Emerges (thehackernews.com)
New Local Attack Vector Expands the Attack Surface of Log4j Vulnerability (thehackernews.com)
Patching Isn't Enough For December's Patch Tuesday | Computerworld
Windows 10 Patch Tuesday (Kb5008212) Is Out — Here's What's New And What's Broken - Neowin
Microsoft Issues Windows Update to Patch 0-Day Used to Spread Emotet Malware (thehackernews.com)
Adobe Addresses Over 60 Vulnerabilities In Multiple Products - Security Affairs
Hackers Launch More Than 1.2m Attacks Through Log4J Flaw | Financial Times (ft.com)
Google Pushes Emergency Chrome Update To Fix Zero-Day Used In Attacks (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Over Log4j? VMware Has Another Critical Flaw For You To Fix - The Register
CISA Urges VMware Admins To Patch Critical Flaw In Workspace ONE UEM (bleepingcomputer.com)
Sector Specific
SMBs – Small and Medium Businesses
What the Log4Shell Bug Means for SMBs: Experts Weigh In | Threatpost
Security Priorities Are Geared Toward Ongoing Remote And Hybrid Work - Help Net Security
Transport and Aviation
Nation State Threat Group Targets Airline with Aclip Backdoor (securityintelligence.com)
Other News
Why Tech Companies Must Come Clean About The Latest Cyber Security Crisis | Fortune
“Worst-Case Scenario” Exploit Travels the Globe - Infosecurity Magazine
Log4j Hack Raises Serious Questions About Open-Source Software | Financial Times
Why Log4j Mitigation Is Fraught With Challenges (darkreading.com)
Security Flaws Found In A Popular Guest Wi-Fi System Used In Hundreds Of Hotels | TechCrunch
Experts: Log4j Bug Could Be Exploited for “Years” - Infosecurity Magazine
2022: Supply-Chain Chronic Pain & SaaS Security Meltdowns | Threatpost
Researchers Uncover New Coexistence Attacks On Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Chips (thehackernews.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 weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
‘Don’t get scammed online this Christmas’ - Guernsey Press 17 December 2021
‘Don’t get scammed online this Christmas’ - Guernsey Press 17 December 2021
‘Don’t get scammed online this Christmas’
https://guernseypress.com/news/2021/12/17/dont-get-scammed-online-this-christmas/
Bruce McDougall, a director at local firm Black Arrow Cyber Consulting, pictured, said online shopping was the norm for many people and that trend had been further accelerated due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
But he urged people to take care when shopping online.
‘People accessing and buying from websites that they do not know run a greater chance of being the victim of an attack,’ said Mr McDougall.
‘Some websites give you the opportunity to sign in using your Google or Facebook account, but that is sometimes a fake screen that allows the attacker to skim off your credentials and then use them maliciously.’
A lot of people also use the same email address and password for different sites – which means that if an attacker knows a person’s log-on details for Facebook, they could try to use those same credentials to access that individual’s email account or Amazon account.
He said that there were three simple actions that could help increase security online.
‘Use multi-factor authentication. This is where you have to enter more than one piece of information to confirm your identity. For example, in addition to entering your username and password, you would enter a code that is generated from your phone.
‘If you have to use your fingerprint to access the phone that will give you the code, then that is an even greater level of security.
‘So, even if the attacker has harvested your username and password, they cannot access your account because they do not have your phone with the code.’
Using a different password for each website and account is also important.
‘Never recycle passwords. Follow the current best practice, which is to use a string of three random words, but make sure this is not text from a song or other well-known phrase.
‘Surprisingly, it can take years for a computer to crack a password made up of three random words. The problem is that many people try to create a complicated password themselves but in reality they are following a predictable pattern that attackers already know.’
Finally, Mr McDougall said that when making payments online, people should use their credit card rather than their debit card to get better buyer protection.
‘Some providers can give you a disposable single-use virtual credit card that you can use for purchases online, which means that even if the card number falls into the wrong hands, they cannot use the number to extract money from you.’
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory – Java Log4Shell Vulnerability – The Maximum Severity Christmas Humbug Likely To Affect Businesses
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory – Java Log4Shell Vulnerability – The Maximum Severity Christmas Humbug Like To Affect Every Business
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory – Java Log4Shell Vulnerability – The Maximum Severity Christmas Humbug
Executive Summary
Log4Shell, a critical zero-day actively exploited in the wild, has been found after a series of Minecraft servers fell victim. The bug impacts Java, an almost ubiquitous software that’s found in billions of devices across the globe, from the enterprise to the home. In an extremely rare but warranted move, Log4Shell has been given a 10 out of 10 on the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) scale, owing to its ability to be remotely executed and the potential for pandemic level damage.
What’s the risk to my business?
Java report their use on billions of devices, from computers, printers, routers and mobile phones to cash machines, ticket machines and credit card readers – the list is endless. The likelihood of a device running Java in your environment somewhere is high.
What can I do?
Discuss with your Managed Service Provider (MSP) whether any of your devices or services are impacted, and when they can expect to be patched. Equally, keeping devices at home or elsewhere up to date is an important step to mitigation, both for your professional and private life.
Technical Summary
The bug, tracked as CVE-2021-44228, was first discovered when a remote-code attack compromised a series of Minecraft servers, one of the most popular Java-based games of all time. The source of the bug was Log4J, a logging utility used by millions of applets across billions of devices. Using the vulnerability, threat actors can craft a request to force the applet to interpret a log as a URL, which is then fetched and executed with full privileges. The exploit can be triggered inside text using “${}”, allowing for their injection in commonly logged attributes like user agents.
Need help understanding your gaps, or just want some advice? Get in touch with us.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 10 December 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 10 December 2021
-Beware Of Ransomware Attacks Between Christmas and New Year’s!
-Why Holidays Put Your Company at Risk of Cyber Attack (And How to Take Precautions)
-Security Experts Sound Alarm on Zero-Day in Widely Used Log4j Tool
-SolarWinds Attackers Spotted Using New Tactics, Malware
-Cyber Crime Supply Chain: Fueling The Rise In Ransomware
-Weak Passwords Caused 30% Of Security Breaches
-Work-from-Anywhere Requires "Work-from-Anywhere Security"
-Just 3% of UK Firms Escaped a Supply Chain Breach in 2021
-Critical Flaw In ManageEngine Desktop Central MSP Tool Exploited In The Wild
-New Financial Services Industry Report Reveals Major Gaps in Storage and Backup Security
-UK’s Poor Cyber Risk Planning Could “Wreak Havoc”
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
Beware Of Ransomware Attacks Between Christmas And New Year’s!
Darktrace reported that its security researchers discovered a 30% increase in the average number of attempted ransomware attacks globally over the holiday season in every consecutive year from 2018 to 2020 compared to the monthly average.
The researchers also observed a 70% average increase in attempted ransomware attacks in November and December compared to January and February. Following a record number of ransomware attacks this year, the company expects the spike to be higher over the 2021 holiday period.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/12/09/ransomware-attacks-holiday/
Why Holidays Put Your Company at Risk of Cyber Attack (And How to Take Precautions)
It is a time when many are thinking of their families and loved ones, time off work, and gift-giving – the holidays. However, while many have their minds outside the realm of work during the holiday season, often, this is when attackers plan their most sinister attacks.
So how can you take precautions to protect your organisation during these times?
Attackers today do not have a soft spot for businesses and give companies a break at any time of the year, especially not during holidays. On the contrary, any time of the year where companies may be less prepared to fend off a cyberattack is an opportunity for successful compromise. As a result, the holidays put your company at a higher risk of cyberattack.
https://thehackernews.com/2021/12/why-holidays-put-your-company-at-risk.html
Security Experts Sound Alarm on Zero-Day in Widely Used Log4j Tool
Security experts are sounding the equivalent of a five-alarm fire on a critical new zero-day vulnerability in Log4j, a logging framework that is ubiquitously present in Java software.
The flaw (CVE-2021-44228) could allow remote attackers to run arbitrary code on any application that uses Log4j and is already being actively exploited. Some vendors have observed mass scanning activity — presumably by threat actors — for vulnerable applications, and there are some reports of exploit activity against organisations. Attacks against the flaw take little skill to execute and are being fueled by proof-of-concept code in the wild.
SolarWinds Attackers Spotted Using New Tactics, Malware
One year after the disruptive supply-chain attacks, researchers have observed two new clusters of activity from the Russia-based actors that signal a significant threat may be brewing.
One year after the notorious and far-reaching SolarWinds supply-chain attacks, its orchestrators are on the offensive again. Researchers said they’ve seen the threat group – which Microsoft refers to as “Nobelium” and which is linked to Russia’s spy agency – compromising global business and government targets with novel tactics and custom malware, stealing data and moving laterally across networks.
https://threatpost.com/solarwinds-attackers-new-tactics-malware/176818/
Cyber Crime Supply Chain: Fuelling The Rise In Ransomware
Trend Micro released a research detailing the murky cybercrime supply chain behind much of the recent surge in ransomware attacks. Demand has increased so much over the past two years that many cybercriminal markets now have their own “Access-as-a-Service” sections.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/12/06/cybercrime-supply-chain/
Weak Passwords Caused 30% Of Security Breaches
A recent survey assessed the risk factors associated with password management and how to safeguard them from attacks or breaches. The results revealed that 30% of respondents reported password leaks and security breaches as a result of poor password practices. Respondees admitted to making poor password choices, such as sharing them with colleagues, family members or friends; writing them on sticky notes, papers, planners; re-using passwords across multiple sites and only changing them when prompted.
Consequently, researchers revealed some of the best password practices to create unhackable passwords. These practices include using secure VPNs, two-factor authentication, using a password management software and creating unique passwords that aren’t easily deduced .
https://www.itsecurityguru.org/2021/12/10/weak-passwords-caused-30-of-security-breaches/
Work-from-Anywhere Requires "Work-from-Anywhere Security"
Securing today's expanding networks often includes adding additional technologies to an already overburdened security environment. With organisations already struggling to manage an average of 45 security tools, with each incident requiring coordination across 19 different devices, adding new technologies to the mix may be the straw that breaks the camel's back.
The most recent example of the rapid expansion of the network's attack surface has been remote work. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the need for a work-from-anywhere (WFA) strategy. And now, as workers begin to return to the office, a hybrid approach to work has become the new status quo. According to Accenture, 83% of workers prefer a hybrid work model that allows them to work remotely between 25% and 75% of the time. And businesses are listening. 63% of high-revenue growth companies have already enabled productivity anywhere workforce models.
One of the biggest security challenges of a hybrid workforce is that employees need to move seamlessly between the corporate office, their home network, and other remote locations. Applications, whether deployed in the data centre, SaaS, or cloud, not only need to be available from anywhere, but user experience—and security—needs to be consistent from any location as well.
https://www.securityweek.com/work-anywhere-requires-work-anywhere-security
Just 3% of UK Firms Escaped a Supply Chain Breach in 2021
Some 97% of UK organisations suffered a supply chain breach over the past year, up from 82% in 2020 and the second highest figure globally, according to BlueVoyant.
The security firm polled 1200 C-level executives with responsibility for managing risk in supply chains, across the UK, US, Singapore, Canada, Germany and the Netherlands.
UK firms also experienced a higher-than-average percentage of breaches: 59% suffered between two and five supply chain incidents compared to an overall average of 49%. The average number of breaches in the country grew from 2.64 in 2020 to 3.57 in 2021.
Perhaps unsurprisingly given these figures, only a quarter (27%) of UK respondents said they consider third-party cyber risk a key priority versus a 42% global average.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/just-3-uk-firms-escaped-supply/
Critical Flaw In ManageEngine Desktop Central MSP Tool Exploited In The Wild
News of this latest zero-day vulnerability comes after hackers exploited at least two other flaws in ManageEngine products this year. Attacks against MSPs and their tools have seen a rise over the past several years due to hackers realizing that compromising such organisations can provide an easy way into the networks of thousands of businesses that rely on them to manage their IT assets.
News of this latest zero-day vulnerability comes after hackers exploited at least two other flaws in ManageEngine products this year. Attacks against MSPs and their tools have seen a rise over the past several years due to hackers realizing that compromising such organisations can provide an easy way into the networks of thousands of businesses that rely on them to manage their IT assets.
New Financial Services Industry Report Reveals Major Gaps in Storage and Backup Security
Continuity™, the first dedicated storage and backup security provider, this week announced findings from its Security Intelligence Report: Analysis of Storage and Backup Security in the Financial Services & Banking Sector. This extensive study – the first of its kind – explores the security posture of storage and backup environments in the global financial services industry.
The survey of 200 financial services firms and banks from 45 countries revealed that most of these organisations have not yet reached a satisfactory level of storage and backup maturity. Notably, more than half (52%) of the respondents were not strongly confident about their storage and backup security, and a quarter (25%) noted they were significantly concerned (low or no confidence).
UK’s Poor Cyber Risk Planning Could “Wreak Havoc”
The UK’s long-term risk planning is under-powered and could expose the nation if it is struck by a serious cyber-threat, a new House of Lords (HoL) report has found.
The study, Preparing for Extreme Risks: Building a Resilient Society, was produced by the upper chamber’s Select Committee on Risk Assessment and Risk Planning after interviews with 85 expert witnesses.
It claimed that the government spends too much of its time reacting to crises and emergencies, neglecting the kind of long-term planning which would have prepared the country better for the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The UK’s unpreparedness to manage the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus was and is clear. More broadly, our inquiry has analyzed the UK’s risk assessment process and found that our current system is deficient at assessing and addressing future threats and hazards,” it argued.
“However, pandemics are only one of a number of extreme risks facing the UK. Severe space weather events could render smart technologies on which much of society relies inoperable for weeks or longer; this would include GPS, the internet, communications systems and power supplies. A cyber or physical attack on our critical national infrastructure could wreak havoc.”
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/uks-poor-cyber-risk-planning-could/
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware Attacks Soar, Hackers Set To Become More Aggressive | Reuters
Emotet’s Behaviour & Spread Are Omens of Ransomware Attacks | Threatpost
Ireland Conti Ransomware Attack Vector Was Spam Email • The Register
Crackdown On Crypto Firms Needed To ‘Wreck’ Ransomware, Says Ex-GCHQ Boss (telegraph.co.uk)
Companies Linked to Russian Ransomware Hide in Plain Sight - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
New 'Karakurt' Cyber Crime Gang Focuses On Data Theft And Extortion - Security Affairs
More Than 300 Spar Shops In North Of England Hit By Cyber Attack | Hacking | The Guardian
New Cerber Ransomware Targets Confluence And GitLab Servers (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Ransomware Attack Locks Hotel Guests Out Of Rooms - IT Security Guru
BlackCat: A New Rust-based Ransomware Malware Spotted in the Wild (thehackernews.com)
ALPHV BlackCat - This Year's Most Sophisticated Ransomware (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Phishing
Microsoft, Google OAuth Flaws Can Be Abused In Phishing Attacks (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Researchers Explore Microsoft Outlook Phishing Techniques (darkreading.com)
Convincing Microsoft Phishing Uses Fake Office 365 Spam Alerts (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Study: Most Phishing Pages Are Abandoned Or Disappear In A Matter Of Days - Techrepublic
Phishing Attacks Use QR Codes To Steal Banking Credentials (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Malware
Emotet Is Back and More Dangerous Than Before (darkreading.com)
Malicious Notepad++ Installers Push StrongPity Malware (bleepingcomputer.com)
Mobile
IOT
IoT Under Attack: Security Is Still Not Good Enough On These Edge Devices | ZDNet
Three-Quarters of Firms Admit to Sub-Optimal IoT Security - Infosecurity Magazine
Data Breaches/Leaks
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Microsoft Seizes 42 Malicious Web Domains Used By Chinese Hackers (thehackernews.com)
Google Disrupts Massive Glupteba Botnet, Sues Russian Operators (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Cyber Criminals Are Using Fake Advertising To Distribute Malware | Techspot
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
Hackers Are Minting Their Own Crypto To Use In Elaborate Phishing Scams | Techradar
Tor2Mine Cryptominer Is Warning Sign Of Network Exploitation • The Register
QNAP Warns Users Of Bitcoin Miner Targeting Their NAS Devices (Bleepingcomputer.com)
Insider Risk and Insider Threats
Fraud & Financial Crime
Dark Web
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
UK Spy Chief Raises Fears Over China’s Digital Renminbi | Financial Times (FT.com)
Russia Blocks Tor Privacy Service in Latest Censorship Move (thehackernews.com)
Cloud
Vulnerabilities
Your Microsoft Network Is Only As Secure As Your Oldest Server | CSO Online
Lack of Patching Leaves 300,000 Routers at Risk for Attack (darkreading.com)
Vulnerability In Windows 10 URI Handler Leads To Remote Code Execution | Malwarebytes Labs
Dark Mirai Botnet Targeting RCE On Popular TP-Link Router (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Sprawling Active Attack Aims to Take Over 1.6M WordPress Sites | Threatpost
Sector Specific
Financial Services Sector
US Bank Regulator Urges Vigilance As Ransomware Attacks On The Rise | Reuters
Israel Leads 10-Country Simulation Of Major Cyber Attack On World Markets | The Times Of Israel
Health/Medical/Pharma Sector
Retail
Fueled by Pandemic Realities, Grinchbots Aggressively Surge in Activity | Threatpost
Hackers Infect Random WordPress Plugins To Steal Credit Cards (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Transport and Aviation
Other News
Google, Microsoft: Internet Whac-a-Mole vs. Cyber Criminals - MSSP Alert
Are You Guilty of These 8 Network-Security Bad Practices? | Threatpost
1.6 Million WordPress Sites Under Cyber Attack From Over 16,000 IP Addresses (thehackernews.com)
Next-Gen Maldocs & How to Solve the Human Vulnerability | Threatpost
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory – Critical SonicWall VPN Bug Allows Remote Unauthenticated Takeover
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory – Critical SonicWall VPN Bug Allows Remote Unauthenticated Takeover
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory – Critical SonicWall VPN Bug Allows Remote Unauthenticated Takeover
Executive Summary
SonicWall, a security vendor best known for their hardware appliances, is the subject of a critical advisory relating to its Secure Mobile Access (SMA) 100 series VPN appliances. The SMA 100 series provides secured end-to-end remote access to corporate networks and resources in a variety of environments, such as on-premises, hybrid or cloud infrastructure. The SMA 100 also provides policy driven access control, based on trusted users and devices.
The bug, rated a 9.8 out of 10 on the CVSS scale, allows a remote attacker to authenticate as “nobody”, effectively granting them the lowest level of access to the device. As such, an attacker would be able to modify policies, alter security settings or launch additional attacks from the compromised device.
What’s the risk to my business?
If you or your IT provider use the SonicWall SMA 100 appliance, the risk could be high. CVSS scores of 9.0 and higher carry a “fix immediately” flag, as any attack capable of remote execution provides an attractive target to bad actors. As firewalls and other perimeter security devices generally form the first line of defence, and protect a huge quantity of assets, compromising one can facilitate any number of additional attacks.
What can I do?
Speak to your IT service provider or IT team to find out if the SMA 100 is used in your environment. SonicWall have urged users to patch and continue to patch their devices, as SonicWall have been the subject of numerous attacks in recent years.
Technical Summary
The vulnerability – CVE-2021-20038 – has been found in the string concatenate function strcat(), which is used when handling environment variables in a HTTP GET method. The bug runs under the Apache httpd server, allowing attackers to run a stack-based buffer overflow to result in code execution.
A complete list of impacted devices can be found on SonicWall’s website.
Need help understanding your gaps, or just want some advice? Get in touch with us.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 03 December 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 03 December 2021
-Double Extortion Ransomware Victims Soar 935%
-MI6 Boss: Digital Attack Surface Growing "Exponentially"
-How Phishing Kits Are Enabling A New Legion Of Pro Phishers
-Crooks Are Selling Access To Hacked Networks. Ransomware Gangs Are Their Biggest Customers
-Omicron Phishing Scam Already Spotted in UK
-Phishing Remains the Most Common Cause of Data Breaches, Survey Says
-Ransomware Victims Increase Security Budgets Due To Surge In Attacks
-Control Failures Are Behind A Growing Number Of Cyber Security Incidents
-MI6 Spy Chief Says China, Russia, Iran Top UK Threat List
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
Double Extortion Ransomware Victims Soar 935%
Researchers have recorded a 935% year-on-year increase in double extortion attacks, with data from over 2300 companies posted onto ransomware extortion sites.
Group-IB’s Hi-Tech Crime Trends 2021/2022 report covers the period from the second half of 2020 to the first half of 2021.
During that time, an “unholy alliance” of initial access brokers and ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) affiliate programs has led to a surge in breaches, it claimed.
In total, the number of breach victims on ransomware data leak sites surged from 229 in the previous reporting period to 2371, Group-IB noted. During the same period, the number of leak sites more than doubled to 28, and the number of RaaS affiliates increased 19%, with 21 new groups discovered.
Group-IB warned that, even if victim organisations pay the ransom, their data often end up on these sites.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/double-extortion-ransomware-soar/
MI6 Boss: Digital Attack Surface Growing "Exponentially"
Head of the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), Richard Moore, explained in a rare speech this week that, unlike the character Q from the James Bond films, even MI6 cannot source all of its tech capabilities in-house.
New partners and tech capabilities will help address MI6’s four key priorities: Russia, China, Iran and global terrorism. It’s a challenge made more acute as technology rapidly advances, he said.
“The ‘digital attack surface’ that criminals, terrorists and hostile states threats seek to exploit against us is growing exponentially. We may experience more technological progress in the next ten years than in the last century, with a disruptive impact equal to the industrial revolution,” Moore argued.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/mi6-digital-attack-surface-growing/
How Phishing Kits Are Enabling A New Legion Of Pro Phishers
Some cybercriminals are motivated by political ideals, others by malice or mischief, but most are only interested in cold, hard cash. To ensure their criminal endeavours are profitable, they need to balance the potential payday against the time, resources and risk required.
It’s no wonder then that so many use phishing as their default attack method. Malicious emails can be used to reach many targets with relative ease, and criminals can purchase ready-made phishing kits that bundle together everything they need for a lucrative campaign.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/12/02/phishing-kits-pro/
Crooks Are Selling Access To Hacked Networks. Ransomware Gangs Are Their Biggest Customers
Dark web forum posts offering compromised VPN, RDP credentials and other ways into networks have tripled in the last year.
There's been a surge in cyber criminals selling access to compromised corporate networks as hackers look to cash in on the demand for vulnerable networks from gangs looking to initiate ransomware attacks.
Researchers at cybersecurity company Group-IB analysed activity on underground forums and said there's been a sharp increase in the number of offers to sell access to compromised corporate networks, with the number of posts offering access tripling between 2020 and 2021
Omicron Phishing Scam Already Spotted in UK
The global pandemic has provided cover for all sorts of phishing scams over the past couple of years, and the rise in alarm over the spread of the latest COVID-19 variant, Omicron, is no exception.
As public health professionals across the globe grapple with what they fear could be an even more dangerous COVID-19 variant than Delta, threat actors have grabbed the opportunity to turn uncertainty into cash.
UK consumer watchdog “Which?” has raised the alarm that a new phishing scam, doctored up to look like official communications from the National Health Service (NHS), is targeting people with fraud offers for free PCR tests for the COVID-19 Omicron variant
https://threatpost.com/omicron-phishing-scam-uk/176771/
Phishing Remains the Most Common Cause of Data Breaches, Survey Says
Phishing, malware, and denial-of-service attacks remained the most common causes for data breaches in 2021. Data from Dark Reading’s latest Strategic Security Survey shows that more companies experienced a data breach over the past year due to phishing than any other cause. The percentage of organisations reporting a phishing-related breach is slightly higher in the 2021 survey (53%) than in the 2020 survey (51%). The survey found that malware was the second biggest cause of data breaches over the past year, as 41% of the respondents said they experienced a data breach where malware was the primary vector.
Ransomware Victims Increase Security Budgets Due To Surge In Attacks
As the end of 2021 approaches, there’s no doubt ransomware became a top cybersecurity concern across multiple industries. Successful ransomware attacks like the Colonial Pipeline, which took down critical US infrastructure, and Kaseya, which hit over 1,500 companies in a single attack, became a popular topic in the news.
Research conducted by Cymulate, however, shows that despite the increase in the number of attacks this past year, overall victims suffered limited damage in both severity and duration. Potential victims have improved their level of preparedness, with 70% reporting an increase of awareness at the boardroom and business management level. The majority (55%) undertook proactive measures to prevent ransomware attacks before they could cause any significant damage, and many of those respondents (38%) prevented attacks even before they could cause any serious downtime. Only 14% of respondents that experienced an attack were down for a week or more.
Control Failures Are Behind A Growing Number Of Cyber Security Incidents
Data from a survey of 1,200 enterprise security leaders reveals that an increase in tools and manual reporting combined with control failures are contributing to the success of threats such as ransomware, which costs organisations an average of $1.85 million in recovery, according to Panaseer.
Currently, only 36% of security leaders feel very confident in their ability to prove controls were working as intended. This is despite 99% of respondents believing it’s valuable to know that all controls are fully deployed and operating within policy, and cybersecurity control failures are currently being listed as the top emerging risk in the latest Gartner Emerging Risks Monitor Report. Attacks only succeed when they hit systems that haven’t been patched or don’t have security controls monitoring them.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/12/01/control-failures-cybersecurity/
MI6 Spy Chief Says China, Russia, Iran Top UK Threat List
China, Russia and Iran pose three of the biggest threats to the U.K. in a fast-changing, unstable world, the head of Britain’s foreign intelligence agency said Tuesday.
MI6 chief Richard Moore said the three countries and international terrorism make up the “big four” security issues confronting Britain’s spies.
In his first public speech since becoming head of the Secret Intelligence Service, also known as MI6, in October 2020, Moore said China is the intelligence agency’s “single greatest priority” as the country’s leadership increasingly backs “bold and decisive action” to further its interests.
Calling China “an authoritarian state with different values than ours,” he said Beijing conducts “large-scale espionage operations” against the U.K. and its allies, tries to ”distort public discourse and political decision-making” and exports technology that enables a “web of authoritarian control” around the world.
Moore said the U.K. also continues “to face an acute threat from Russia.” He said Moscow has sponsored killing attempts, such as the poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal in England in 2018, mounts cyber attacks and attempts to interfere in other countries’ democratic processes.
https://www.securityweek.com/mi6-spy-chief-says-china-russia-iran-top-uk-threat-list
Threats
Ransomware
Microsoft Exchange Servers Hacked To Deploy BlackByte Ransomware (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
New Ransomware Variant Could Become Next Big Threat (darkreading.com)
Yanluowang Ransomware Tied to Thieflock Threat Actor | Threatpost
Yanluowang Ransomware Operation Matures With Experienced Affiliates (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Ransomware Attack On Planned Parenthood Exposes 400,000 Patients' Personal Data - CNN
Phishing
APT Groups Adopt New Phishing Method. Will Cybercriminals Follow? (darkreading.com)
Hackers Increasingly Using RTF Template Injection Technique in Phishing Attacks (thehackernews.com)
Malware
Emotet Now Spreads Via Fake Adobe Windows App Installer Packages (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
New Malvertising Campaigns Spreading Backdoors, Malicious Chrome Extensions (thehackernews.com)
Password-Stealing And Keylogging Malware Is Being Spread Through Fake Downloads | ZDNet
Malware Variants In 2021: Harder To Detect And Respond To - Help Net Security
Mobile
Surge Of Info-Stealing Android Malware FluBot Detected Again • The Register
Fake Support Agents Call Victims To Install Android Banking Malware (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Multi-Platform Spyware Tracks Users Across Windows And Android | Techradar
IOT
Vulnerabilities
Pretty Much All Wi-Fi Routers Are Vulnerable To Attack, Study Finds | Techradar
Warning: Yet Another Zoho ManageEngine Product Found Under Active Attacks (thehackernews.com)
New Ubuntu Linux Kernel Security Patches Address 6 Vulnerabilities, Update Now - 9to5Linux
Netgear Router Vulnerabilities Affecting SME Products Fixed • The Register
Data Breaches/Leaks
UK Government Fined £500,000 For New Year Honours Data Breach - BBC News
Panasonic Discloses Four-Months-Long Data Breach - The Record By Recorded Future
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
Iranians Charged for Cryptojacking After U.S. Firm Gets $760,000 Cloud Bill | SecurityWeek.Com
Threat Actors Stole $120 M In Crypto From BadgerDAO DeFi Platform - Security Affairs
Vulnerabilities Exploited for Monero Mining Malware Delivered via GitHub, Netlify (trendmicro.com)
How Do Criminals Exploit Cryptocurrencies? | Financial Times (ft.com)
Insider Threats
Fraud & Financial Crime
Insurance
Lloyd’s Carves Out Cyber-Insurance Exclusions for State-Sponsored Attacks | Threatpost
Cyber War Victims Might Not Get Payouts – Insurer • The Register
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
MI6 Spy Chief Says China, Russia, Iran Top UK Threat List | SecurityWeek.Com
Lloyd’s Carves Out Cyber-Insurance Exclusions for State-Sponsored Attacks | Threatpost
Jumping The Air Gap: 15 Years Of Nation‑State Effort | WeLiveSecurity
Israel and Iran Broaden Cyberwar to Attack Civilian Targets - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
North Korea-Linked Zinc APT Posed As Samsung Recruiters To Target Security Firms - Security Affairs
Cloud
Parental Controls
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 26 November 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 26 November 2021
-70% Of IT Pros Say Security Hygiene Has Gotten Harder Over Past Two Years
-As Digital Shopping Surges, Researchers Predict 8 Million Daily Attacks
-More Ransomware Attacks Up to September Than Whole of 2020
-Ransomware Warning: Hackers See Holidays And Weekends As A Great Time To Attack
-Suspect Arrested In 'Ransom Your Employer' Criminal Scheme
-The Newer Cyber Crime Triad: Trickbot-Emotet-Conti
-Threat Actors Find And Compromise Exposed Services In 24 Hours
-Does Your Company Employ A CISO? Many Are Operating Without Security Leadership
-New Malware Is Capable Of Evading Almost All Antivirus Products
-Interpol Arrests Over 1,000 Suspects Linked To Cyber Crime
-Researchers Warn Of Severe Risks From ‘Printjack’ Printer 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
70% Of IT Pros Say Security Hygiene Has Got Harder Over Past Two Years
A new report from Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG) and JupiterOne warns of inadequate security hygiene and posture management practices at many organizations. The research found that 86% of organizations believe they follow best practices for security hygiene and posture management. However, 70% of organizations said they use more than ten security tools to manage security hygiene and posture management, which raises concerns about data management and operations overhead.
In addition, 73% of security professionals admitted that they still depend on spreadsheets to manage security hygiene and posture at their organizations. As a result, 70% of respondents said that security hygiene and posture management had become more difficult over the past two years as their attack surfaces have grown.
As Digital Shopping Surges, Researchers Predict 8 Million Daily Attacks
Arkose Labs released new data on the latest fraud trends, revealing increased threats during the holidays, rising bot attacks, and a resurgence in attacks on travel companies. As shoppers fill their online carts, account takeover (ATO) attacks and gift-card fraud remain persistent.
The report shares the top six fraud-fighting trends from the previous 3 months and provides data highlighting that no digital business is immune from attack. Financial industries saw 32 percent more attacks than in the first half of 2021.
Retail and travel attacks increased 63 percent in Q3, and gaming saw a spate of fake new accounts being set up for fraudulent purposes. Media and streaming businesses saw 60 percent of malicious activity targeting logins, and 20 percent of these attacks originating from human fraud farms.
Technology platforms see 91 percent of all attacks powered by bots. Overall, attacks are increasing in every industry, and they are growing more sophisticated.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/22/threats-during-holidays/
More Ransomware Attacks Up to September Than Whole of 2020
Most UK business leaders expect cyber-threats to surge next year, with ransomware, business email compromise (BEC), cloud and supply chain attacks all predicted to increase, according to PwC.
The findings come from the consulting giant’s 2022 Global Digital Trust Insights Survey and were distilled from interviews with 257 business and technology executives in the UK.
Although most (63%) respondents said they expect security budgets to increase next year, even more (66%) predicted cyber-threats would rise. Ransomware (61%), BEC (61%), malware via software updates (63%), and cloud compromise (64%) were among the most notable.
Bobbie Ramsden-Knowles, crisis and resilience partner at PwC UK, claimed the firm’s threat intelligence team has tracked more ransomware incidents globally up to September this year than for the whole of 2020.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/more-ransomware-attacks-september/
Ransomware Warning: Hackers See Holidays And Weekends As A Great Time To Attack
Just because you're taking a break, that doesn't mean hackers will be too.
Ahead of the holidays cyber agencies have released a warning to stay vigilant on holidays and weekends, because hackers don't plan on taking a holiday break.
Warnings remind organisations that ransomware attackers often choose to launch attacks on holidays and weekends, specifically when businesses are likely to be closed.
Recent history tells us that this could be a time when these persistent cyber actors halfway across the world are looking for ways—big and small—to disrupt the critical networks and systems belonging to organizations, businesses, and critical infrastructure.
Some of the worst ransomware attacks happened on holidays and weekends.
Suspect Arrested In 'Ransom Your Employer' Criminal Scheme
A Nigerian man has been arrested in connection to a scheme attempting to lure insiders to deploy ransomware on employer systems.
On November 22, security expert Brian Krebs reported that the man, Oluwaseun Medayedupin, was arrested by Nigerian authorities on Friday.
The suspect is allegedly linked to a 'ransom your employer' scheme investigated by Abnormal Security in August.
Customers of the cybersecurity firm were sent emails with the subject "Partnership affiliate offer," requesting that the recipient considered becoming an accomplice in a cyberattack.
The emails offered a 40% cut of an anticipated $2.5 million ransomware payment in Bitcoin (BTC), made after the recipients installed the DemonWare ransomware on their employer's systems.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/suspect-arrested-in-ransom-your-employer-criminal-scheme/
The Newer Cyber Crime Triad: Trickbot-Emotet-Conti
Advanced Intelligence researchers argue that the restarting of the Emotet botnet was driven by Conti ransomware gang.
Early this year, law enforcement and judicial authorities worldwide conducted a joint operation, named Operation Ladybird, which disrupted the EMOTET botnet. At the time the investigators have taken control of its infrastructure in an international coordinated action.
This operation was the result of a joint effort between authorities in the Netherlands, Germany, the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Lithuania, Canada and Ukraine, with international activity coordinated by Europol and Eurojust.
The law enforcement agency was able to take over at least 700 servers used as part of the Emotet botnet’s infrastructure. The FBI collected millions of email addresses used by Emotet operators in their malware campaigns as part of the cleanup operation.
The Emotet banking trojan has been active at least since 2014, the botnet is operated by a threat actor tracked as TA542. The infamous banking trojan was also used to deliver other malicious code, such as Trickbot and QBot trojans, or ransomware such as Conti, ProLock, Ryuk, and Egregor.
https://securityaffairs.co/wordpress/124807/cyber-crime/trickbot-emotet-conti-triad.html
Threat Actors Find And Compromise Exposed Services In 24 Hours
Researchers set up 320 honeypots to see how quickly threat actors would target exposed cloud services and report that 80% of them were compromised in under 24 hours.
Malicious actors are constantly scanning the Internet for exposed services that could be exploited to access internal networks or perform other malicious activity.
To track what software and services are targeted by threat actors, researchers create publicly accessible honeypots. Honeypots are servers configured to appear as if they are running various software as lures to monitor threat actors' tactics.
Does Your Company Employ A CISO? Many Are Operating Without Security Leadership
45% of companies do not employ a Chief Information Security Officer (CISO), a Navisite research found. Of this group, 58% think their company should hire a CISO.
Only 40% of respondents stated their cybersecurity strategy was developed by a CISO or member of the security team, with 60% relying on other parts of their organization, including IT, executive leadership and compliance.
130 security, IT and compliance professionals were polled in the US to determine their perceptions on the state of cybersecurity leadership and readiness within their organizations. More than 80% of respondents described their job title as either executive leadership or management, with more than 60% of respondents coming from mid-sized organizations between 100-5,000 employees.
Why you should employ a CISO?
· 21% of respondents admit their company does not have a dedicated person or staff whose sole responsibility is security/cybersecurity.
· 75% of respondents said their company experienced an increase in overall cybersecurity threat volume in the last year.
· 80% of respondents felt their company exhibited strong cybersecurity leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic.
· 70% of respondents expressed confidence in the effectiveness of their cybersecurity program—but that confidence dropped to 58% for companies without a CISO.
· 47% of survey takers believe their company spends too little on cybersecurity.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/23/employ-ciso/
New Malware Is Capable Of Evading Almost All Antivirus Products
There’s a new JavaScript downloader on the prowl that not only distributes eight different Remote Access Trojans (RATs), keyloggers and information stealers, but is also able to bypass detection by a majority of security tools, experts have warned.
Cyber security researchers at HP Wolf Security named the malware RATDispenser, noting that while JavaScript downloaders typically have a lower detection rate than other downloaders, this particular malware is more dangerous since it employs several techniques to evade detection.
“It’s particularly concerning to see RATDispenser only being detected by about 11% of antivirus systems, resulting in this stealthy malware successfully deploying on victims’ endpoints in most cases,” noted Patrick Schlapfer, Malware Analyst at HP.
https://www.techradar.com/news/new-malware-is-capable-of-evading-almost-all-antivirus-products
Interpol Arrests Over 1,000 Suspects Linked To Cyber Crime
Interpol has coordinated the arrest of 1,003 individuals linked to various cyber-crimes such as romance scams, investment frauds, online money laundering, and illegal online gambling.
This crackdown results from a four-month action codenamed ‘Operation HAEICHI-II,’ which took place in twenty countries between June and September 2021.
These were Angola, Brunei, Cambodia, Colombia, China, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Japan, Korea (Rep. of), Laos, Malaysia, Maldives, Philippines, Romania, Singapore, Slovenia, Spain, Thailand, and Vietnam.
On the financial aspect of the operation, the authorities have also intercepted nearly $27,000,000 and froze 2,350 banking accounts linked to various online crimes.
As the Interpol announcement details, at least ten new criminal modus operandi were identified in HAEICHI-II, indicative of the evolving nature of cyber-crime.
Researchers Warn Of Severe Risks From ‘Printjack’ Printer Attacks
A team of Italian researchers has compiled a set of three attacks called 'Printjack,' warning users of the significant consequences of over-trusting their printer.
The attacks include recruiting the printers in DDoS swarms, imposing a paper DoS state, and performing privacy breaches.
As the researchers point out, modern printers are still vulnerable to elementary flaws and lag behind other IoT and electronic devices that are starting to conform with cybersecurity and data privacy requirements.
By evaluating the attack potential and the risk levels, the researchers found non-compliance with GDPR requirements and the ISO/IEC 27005:2018 (framework for managing cyber-risks).
This lack of in-built security is particularly problematic when considering how omnipresent printers are, being deployed in critical environments, companies, and organizations of all sizes.
Threats
Ransomware
Defense Contractors Are Highly Susceptible To Ransomware Attacks - Help Net Security
Holidays Don't Mean Much To Ransomware Attackers - Help Net Security
BEC – Business Email Compromise
Phishing
Malware
Crooks Compromise Microsoft Exchange Servers To Hijack Internal Email Chains - Security Affairs
Hackers Using Microsoft MSHTML Flaw to Spy on Targeted PCs with Malware (thehackernews.com)
Malicious Python Packages Employ Advanced Detection Evasion Techniques - Help Net Security
Stealthy New JavaScript Malware Infects Windows PCs with RATs (bleepingcomputer.com)
New Golang-based Linux Malware Targeting eCommerce Websites (thehackernews.com)
Mobile
Spyware Alert! 23 Apps Found Spying On Android Users Via Mobile Camera | techgig
MediaTek Chip Flaw Could Have Let Attackers Spy on Android Phones (darkreading.com)
Over 9 Million Android Phones Running Malware Apps from Huawei's AppGallery (thehackernews.com)
IOT
Hikvision Security Cameras Potentially Exposed to Remote Code Execution (sans.edu)
Some Tesla Owners Unable To Unlock Cars Due To Server Errors (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Vulnerabilities
All Versions of Windows Are Vulnerable to a New Zero-Day Exploit (pcmag.com)
Attackers Hijack Email Using Proxy Logon/Proxyshell Flaws | Threatpost
Expert Discloses Details Of Flaws In Oracle VirtualBox - Security Affairs
VMware Warns of Newly Discovered Vulnerabilities in vSphere Web Client (thehackernews.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
Fraud & Financial Crime
Insurance
Nation State Actors
NCSC Warns Industry, Academia Of Foreign Threats To Their Intellectual Property | CSO Online
North Korean Hackers Found Behind a Range of Credential Theft Campaigns (thehackernews.com)
US Bans Chinese Firms For Feeding Tech To The Military • The Register
Cloud
Passwords
Parental Controls
Sector Specific
Financial Services Sector
SMBs – Small and Medium Businesses
Defence
Health/Medical/Pharma Sector
Devious ‘Tardigrade’ Malware Hits Biomanufacturing Facilities | WIRED
Preventing a Cyber Pandemic in Healthcare | SecurityWeek.Com
Healthcare Organisations At Risk: The Attack Surface Is Expanding - Help Net Security
ENISA - The Need For Incident Response Capabilities In The Health Sector - Security Affairs
Philips Working on Patches for Vulnerabilities Found in Medical Products | SecurityWeek.Com
Transport and Aviation
Maritime
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
As Digital Shopping Surges, Researchers Predict 8 Million Daily Attacks - Help Net Security
Rising Cyber Crime Demands Laws And Users Keep Up | The Seattle Times
IKEA Email Systems Hit By Ongoing Cyber Attack (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
UK and German Police Take Down 21 Jihadist Websites - Infosecurity Magazine
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 19 November 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 19 November 2021
-Insurers Run From Ransomware Cover As Losses Mount
-The Ransomware Threat Is Getting Worse. But Businesses Still Aren't Taking It Seriously
-Ransomware Is Now A Giant Black Hole That Is Sucking In All Other Forms Of Cyber Crime
-52% Of SMBs Have Experienced A Cyber Attack In The Last Year
-Ransomware Phishing Emails Sneak Through SEGs
-Reality Check: Your Security Hygiene Is Worse Than You Think It Is
-The Covid-19 Crisis Has Fueled The Increase Of Cyber Crime In All Its Forms
-Ransomware Attacks Are Getting More Complex And Even Harder To Prevent
-Most Ransomware Attacks Rely On Exploiting Older, Unpatched Vulnerabilities
-Out-Of-Hours Ransomware Attacks Have A Greater Impact On Revenue
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
Insurers Run From Ransomware Cover As Losses Mount
Insurers have halved the amount of cyber cover they provide to customers after the pandemic and home-working drove a surge in ransomware attacks that left them smarting from hefty payouts.
Faced with increased demand, major European and US insurers and syndicates operating in the Lloyd's of London market have been able to charge higher premium rates to cover ransoms, the repair of hacked networks, business interruption losses and even PR fees to mend reputational damage.
But the increase in ransomware attacks and the growing sophistication of attackers have made insurers wary. Insurers say some attackers may even check whether potential victims have policies that would make them more likely to pay out.
"Insurers are changing their appetites, limits, coverage and pricing," Caspar Stops, head of cyber at insurance firm Optio, said. "Limits have halved – where people were offering 10 million pounds ($13.50 million), nearly everyone has reduced to five."
Lloyd's of London, which has around a fifth of the global cyber market, has discouraged its 100-odd syndicate members from taking on cyber business next year, industry sources say on condition of anonymity. Lloyd's declined to comment.
https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/insurers-run-ransomware-cover-losses-mount-2021-11-19/
The Ransomware Threat Is Getting Worse. But Businesses Still Aren't Taking It Seriously
Ransomware is the most significant cybersecurity threat facing the country today, but many businesses still aren't taking the threat as seriously as they should be, the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) has warned.
In its newly published annual review, the NCSC – the cybersecurity arm of intelligence agency GCHQ – details the incidents and threats the UK has faced during the past 12 months, including cyberattacks against the health service and vaccine developers during the coronavirus pandemic, state-sponsored cyber-espionage campaigns, phishing scams and more.
But, because of the likely impact a successful attack could have on essential services or critical national infrastructure, it's ransomware that is viewed as the most dangerous cyber threat – and one that more leadership teams need to think about.
Ransomware Is Now A Giant Black Hole That Is Sucking In All Other Forms Of Cyber Crime
File-encrypting malware is where the money is -- and that's changing the whole online crime ecosystem.
Ransomware is so lucrative for the gangs involved that other parts of the cybercrime ecosystem are being repurposed into a system for delivering potential victims.
"The gravitational force of ransomware's black hole is pulling in other cyberthreats to form one massive, interconnected ransomware delivery system -- with significant implications for IT security," said security company Sophos in a report.
Ransomware is considered by many experts to be most pressing security risk facing businesses -- and its extremely lucrative for the gangs involved, with ransom payouts increasing significantly.
52% Of SMBs Have Experienced A Cyber Attack In The Last Year
The consequences of a breach have never been more severe, with global cybercrime collectively totalling $16.4 billion each day, a Devolutions survey reveals.
A recent study by IBM revealed that organizations with fewer than 500 employees had an average data breach cost of $2.98 million per incident in 2021. As has been reported, approximately 60% of SMBs go out of business within six months of getting hacked.
Smaller companies are not exempt from cyberattacks; in fact, it’s quite the opposite. Yet many of the tools and resources that larger companies have at their disposal to protect them from cyber attacks are not befitting for smaller companies. There is a gap in the market.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/19/smbs-cyberattack/
Ransomware Phishing Emails Sneak Through SEGs
Secure email gateway (SEG) protections aren’t necessarily enough to stop phishing emails from delivering ransomware to employees, especially if the cybercrooks are using legitimate cloud services to host malicious pages.
Researchers are raising the alarm over a phishing email kicking off a Halloween-themed MICROP ransomware offensive, which they observed making its way to a target’s inbox despite its being secured by an SEG.
https://threatpost.com/ransomware-phishing-emails-segs/176470/
Reality Check: Your Security Hygiene Is Worse Than You Think It Is
Sevco Security published a report which explores the gap between perceptions and realities of security hygiene and asset management. Leveraging findings from ESG’s “Security Hygiene and Posture Management Survey,” Sevco’s report addresses five unfounded perceptions that many security teams assume to be true and the realities that unveil alarming security risks.
The report reveals that the perception of good security hygiene often leads to gaps in asset inventory that leave organizations open to security incidents. One such gap is the assumption that organizations have an accurate understanding of asset inventory. The reality is that on average, organizations discover 20-30% previously unknown devices once various inventory sources have been analysed and reconciled.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/18/perception-good-security-hygiene/
The Covid-19 Crisis Has Fueled The Increase Of Cyber Crime In All Its Forms
The accelerated digitalization related to the COVID-19 pandemic has significantly influenced the development of a number of cyber threats, according to the new edition of Europol’s Internet Organised Crime Threat Assessment.
Criminals have been quick to abuse the current circumstances to increase profits, spreading their tentacles to various areas and exposing vulnerabilities, connected to systems, hospitals or individuals.
While ransomware groups have taken advantage of widespread teleworking, scammers have abused COVID-19 fears and the fruitless search for cures online to defraud victims or gain access to their bank accounts. The increase of online shopping in general has attracted more fraudsters. With children spending a lot more time online, especially during lockdowns, grooming and dissemination of self-produced explicit material have increased significantly.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/18/covid-19-cybercrime/
Ransomware Attacks Are Getting More Complex And Even Harder To Prevent
Ransomware attackers are probing known common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVEs) for weaknesses and quickly capitalizing on them, launching attacks faster than vendor teams can patch them. Unfortunately, ransomware attackers are also making attacks more complex, costly, and challenging to identify and stop, acting on potential targets’ weaknesses faster than enterprises can react.
Two recent research studies — Ivanti’s latest ransomware report, conducted with Cyber Security Works and Cyware, and a second study by Forrester Consulting on behalf of Cyware — show there’s a widening gap between how quickly enterprises can identify a ransomware threat versus the quickness of a cyberattack. Both studies provide a stark assessment of how far behind enterprises are on identifying and stopping ransomware attacks.
Most Ransomware Attacks Rely On Exploiting Older, Unpatched Vulnerabilities
Ransomware attackers exploited a dozen new vulnerabilities in campaigns in Q3 2021, bringing the total number of vulnerabilities associated with ransomware to 278, claims a new report.
Compiled by cybersecurity vendor Ivanti, the report reveals that ransomware groups are continuing to grow in sophistication, boldness, and volume, with numbers up across the board since Q2 2021.
It tracked a 4.5% increase in CVEs associated with ransomware in Q3 2021, along with a similar increase in actively exploited and trending vulnerabilities, along with a 3.4% increase in ransomware families, as compared to Q2 2021.
Out-Of-Hours Ransomware Attacks Have A Greater Impact On Revenue
Ransomware attacks at weekends and holidays are throwing victims into disarray, according to a study released by security company Cybereason.
The report, “Organizations at Risk: Ransomware Attackers Don’t Take Holidays,” surveyed security professionals whose organizations suffered a ransomware attack during a holiday or weekend in the last 12 months. It found 86% of them reported missing holiday or weekend activities with friends and family when responding to these attacks.
Of those surveyed, 60% take longer to assess the scope of an attack that happened over the weekend or on a holiday. Half said out-of-hours attacks led to a slower response overall.
One problem was assembling the right team, with just over a third reporting difficulties in getting the necessary people together. When those people do clock in unexpectedly, they might not be fully fit for duty. In fact, 70% were intoxicated when called in to address the attack, the report added.
Threats
Ransomware
UK Fighting Hacking Epidemic As Russian Ransomware Attacks Increase | Cybercrime | The Guardian
Ransomware Gangs Are Now Rich Enough To Buy Zero-Day Flaws, Say Researchers | ZDNet
Russian Ransomware Gangs Start Collaborating With Chinese Hackers (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Exchange Exploit Leads to Domain Wide Ransomware (thedfirreport.com)
New Memento Ransomware Switches To Winrar After Failing At Encryption (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
ProxyShell, QBot, and Conti Ransomware Combined in a Series of Cyber Attacks - Truesec
Fake Ransomware Warnings Hit Wordpress Sites: How To Stay Safe - Malwarebytes Labs
MosesStaff Locks Up Targets, with No Ransom Demand, No Decryption | Threatpost
BEC - Business Email Compromise
Phishing
Malware
Emotet Malware Is Back And Rebuilding Its Botnet Via TrickBot (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
New Mac Malware Raises More Questions About Apple's Security Patching - Malwarebytes Labs
Mobile
New Banking Trojan SharkBot Makes Waves Across Europe, US | ZDNet
Android Malware BrazKing Returns As A Stealthier Banking Trojan (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Android Malware That Spies On Your Phone Identified With 23 Apps. (livemint.com)
Vulnerabilities
Intel Vulnerabilities: Bios Bugs Put Cars, Laptops, Devices at Risk to Hackers - MSSP Alert
Microsoft Informs Users of High-Severity Vulnerability in Azure AD | SecurityWeek.Com
New Secret-Spilling Hole In Intel CPUs Sends Company Patching (Again) | Ars Technica
Netgear Fixes Code Execution Flaw In Many SOHO Devices - Security Affairs
Six Million Sky Routers Exposed To Takeover Attacks For 17 Months (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
WordPress Template Plugin Vulnerability Hits +1 Million Sites (searchenginejournal.com)
10,000+ Websites And Apps Are Vulnerable To Magecart - Help Net Security
Linux Has A Serious Security Problem That Once Again Enables DNS Cache Poisoning | Ars Technica
Data Breaches/Leaks
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Russian Cyber Crime Forums Throw Doors Open to Chinese-Speakers - Infosecurity Magazine
A Canadian Teen Was Arrested in a $36.5M SIM-Swap Heist | WIRED
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
Cyber Criminals Increasingly Employ Crypto-Mixers to Launder Stolen Profits (darkreading.com)
Chinese Communist Party Official Expelled For Mining Crypto • The Register
Supply Chain
New Type of Supply Chain Attack Could Put Popular Admin Tools at Risk (intezer.com)
Hackers Are Threatening The Global Supply Chain | OilPrice.com
DoS/DDoS
Nation State Actors
Cyber War’s Global Players—It’s Not Always Russia Or China | CSO Online
FBI Warns Of APT Group Exploiting FatPipe VPN Zero-Day Since May (Bleepingcomputer.com)
Iranian Targeting Of IT Sector On The Rise - Microsoft Security Blog
Iranians Charged in Cyber Attacks Against US 2020 Election | Threatpost
Microsoft Warns about 6 Iranian Hacking Groups Turning to Ransomware (thehackernews.com)
Cloud
Cyber Criminals Target Alibaba Cloud for Cryptomining, Malware | Threatpost
Cloud Compliance: Falling Out Of It Could Spell Doom - Help Net Security
Financial Services Sector
Health Sector
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 12 November 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 12 November 2021:
-Covid Impact Heightens Risk Of Cyber Security Breaches
-81% of Organisations Experienced Increased Cyber-Threats During COVID-19
-Phishing Attacks Grow 31.5% Over 2020, Social Media Attacks Continue To Climb
-Threat from Organised Cybercrime Syndicates Is Rising
-Ransomware Gangs Are Using These 'Ruthless' Tactics As They Aim For Bigger Payouts
-Firms Will Struggle to Secure Extended Attack Surface in 2022
-Millions Of Home Wi-Fi Routers Threatened By Malware — What To Do
-Vulnerabilities Associated With Ransomware Increased 4.5% In Q3 2021
-80% Of Organisations Experienced Employees Misusing And Abusing Access To Business Apps
-Gen Z Is Behaving Recklessly Online - And Will Live To Regret It
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
Covid Impact Heightens Risk Of Cyber Security Breaches
CYBER SECURITY breaches are the biggest staff-related risk as Covid-19 and recruitment difficulties continue to impact workplaces, according to a survey of Channel Island employers.
Seven out of ten senior HR professionals and business leaders saw a cyber security breach as the greatest staff-related risk for a regulated financial services business – way ahead of employees leaving (16%) and employees working from home (10%). Some 57% of employers said Covid-19 had changed their policies, procedures and systems ‘moderately’, with 29.5% reporting ‘significant’ changes, according to the research undertaken at a virtual employment conference organised by Walkers last month.
https://guernseypress.com/news/2021/11/12/covid-impact-heightens-risk-of-cyber-security-breaches/
81% of Organisations Experienced Increased Cyber Threats During COVID-19
More than four in five (81%) organisations experienced increased cyber-threats during the COVD-19 pandemic, according to a new study by McAfee and FireEye.
The global survey of 1451 IT and line of business decision-makers found that close to half (43%) have suffered from downtime due to a cyber concern. This resulted in costs of $100,000 for some organisations.
Despite the increased threat landscape and the fact that over half (57%) of organisations saw a rise in online/web activity, 24% of respondents revealed they have had their technology and security budgets reduced over this period.
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/81-orgs-cyber-threats-covid19/
Phishing Attacks Grow 31.5% Over 2020, Social Media Attacks Continue To Climb
Phishing remains the dominant attack vector for bad actors, growing 31.5 percent over 2020, according to a PhishLabs report. Notably, attacks in September 2021 were more than twice as high as the previous year.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/11/phishing-attacks-grow-2020/
Threat from Organised Cyber Crime Syndicates Is Rising
Europol reports that criminal groups are undermining the EU’s economy and its society, offering everything from murder-for-hire to kidnapping, torture and mutilation.
From encrypting communications to fencing ill-gotten gains on underground sites, organised crime is cashing in on the digital revolution.
The latest organised crime threat assessment from Europol issues a dire warning about the corrosive effect the rising influence of criminal syndicates is having on both the economy and society of the European Union. And it’s all happening online.
https://threatpost.com/organised-cybercrime-syndicates-europol/176326/
Ransomware Gangs Are Using These 'Ruthless' Tactics As They Aim For Bigger Payouts
More sophisticated ransomware attacks are on the way as cyber criminals tailor campaigns to raise the chances of a ransom payment.
Ransomware attacks are becoming more sophisticated as cyber criminals continue to develop new techniques to make campaigns more effective and increase their chances of successfully demanding a ransom payment.
According to the European law enforcement agency Europol there was a 300% increase in the number of ransom payments between 2019 and 2020 alone – and that doesn't account for 2021 being another bumper year for cyber criminals launching ransomware attacks, as they've taken advantage of security vulnerabilities presented by the rise in remote working.
Europol's Internet Organised Crime Threat Assessment (IOCT) shows that while cybercrime, including malware and DDoS attacks, continues to evolve, it's ransomware attacks that have been a significant amount of disruption over the course of the past year.
Firms Will Struggle to Secure Extended Attack Surface in 2022
Companies are relying more heavily on third parties, remote employees, and partners, expanding their attack surface area beyond traditional boundaries.
In 2022, much of cybersecurity will boil down to managing the security of relationships, as companies adapt to the post-pandemic remote workforce and the increased use of third-party providers, a panel of analysts stated at the Forrester Research Security & Risk 2021 Conference.
Among five predictions for the coming year, the analysts argued that companies' attempts to manage remote employees would stray into intrusive territory, causing workers to push back and hampering security-focused monitoring, such as that for insider threats. Other predictions maintain that 60% of security incidents in the next year will come from issues with third parties, while the cybersecurity workforce will suffer from burnout and join what's been called the "Great Resignation," the recent trend of workers leaving the workforce.
https://www.darkreading.com/risk/firms-will-struggle-to-secure-extended-attack-surface-in-2022
Millions Of Home Wi-Fi Routers Threatened By Malware — What To Do
Netgear, Linksys, D-Link routers among those targeted
There's a nasty new piece of malware out there targeting Wi-Fi routers, and you'll want to make sure yours is fully updated so it doesn't get infected.
The AT&T researchers who discovered the malware are calling it BotenaGo, and it's apparently different from the Mirai botnet malware that's been attacking routers since 2016. BotenaGo packs in exploits for 33 different known vulnerabilities in 12 different router brands, including D-Link, Linksys, Netgear, Tenda, Totolink, Zyxel and ZTE. A full list is on the AT&T Cybersecurity blog post.
To avoid infection, ensure you update your router with the latest firmware.
https://www.tomsguide.com/uk/news/botenago-router-malware
Vulnerabilities Associated With Ransomware Increased 4.5% In Q3 2021
Ransomware groups are continuing to grow in sophistication, boldness, and volume, with numbers up across the board since Q2 2021, a report by Ivanti, Cyber Security Works and Cyware reveals.
This last quarter saw a 4.5% increase in CVEs associated with ransomware, a 4.5% increase in actively exploited and trending vulnerabilities, a 3.4% increase in ransomware families, and a 1.2% increase in older vulnerabilities tied to ransomware compared to Q2 2021.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/10/vulnerabilities-associated-with-ransomware/
80% Of Organisations Experienced Employees Misusing And Abusing Access To Business Apps
Organisations continue to operate with limited visibility into user activity and sessions associated with web applications, despite the ever-present risk of insider threats and credential theft, a CyberArk research reveals.
While the adoption of web applications has brought flexibility and increased productivity, organisations often lag in implementing the security controls necessary to mitigate risk of human error or malicious intent.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/08/user-activity-visibility/
Gen Z Is Behaving Recklessly Online - And Will Live To Regret It
Handing out personal information could be a slippery slope
Members of Generation Z, the cohort of people born in the first decade of the 21st century, care about digital privacy, but their desire for online fame and popularity is greater, a new study from ExpressVPN suggests.
The VPN provider surveyed 1,500 young adults from the US to evaluate their online habits and attitudes towards social media, and identified a troubling pattern that could have dire consequences.
The survey found that Generation Z isn’t trusting of the social media platforms they frequent, expressing concern that platforms may be using their images for facial recognition (67%) and wariness about oversharing personal information (66%).
https://www.techradar.com/news/gen-z-is-behaving-recklessly-online-and-will-live-to-regret-it
Threats
Ransomware
Average Ransomware Payment For US Victims More Than $6 Million, Survey Says | ZDNet
Ransomware Disrupted Store Operations In The Netherlands And Germany - Security Affairs
Toronto’s Transit Agency Cyber Attack Exposes 25,000 Employees’ Data | Techcrunch
Comic Book Distributor Struggling With Shipments After Ransomware Attack | ZDNet
Ransomware Attack Hits UK Fertility Clinic - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Spanish Brewery “Paralyzed” by Cyber-Attack - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
TrickBot Teams Up With Shatak Phishers For Conti Ransomware Attacks (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
BEC
Interpol Closes in on Global BEC Gang - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Tiny Font Size Fools Email Filters in BEC Phishing | Threatpost
Phishing
How Cyber Criminals Use Bait Attacks To Gather Info About Their Intended Victims - TechRepublic
Microsoft Warns Of Surge In HTML Smuggling Phishing Attacks (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Shadow IT Makes People More Vulnerable to Phishing (sans.edu)
Gmail Accounts Are Used In 91% Of All Baiting Email Attacks (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Other Social Engineering
Malware
QAKBOT Loader Returns With New Techniques and Tools (trendmicro.com)
Abcbot — A New Evolving Wormable Botnet Malware Targeting Linux (thehackernews.com)
GravityRAT Returns Disguised As An End-To-End Encrypted Chat App - Security Affairs
Report: 57% Of All Ecommerce Cyber Attacks Are Bot-Driven | Venturebeat
New BazarBackdoor Attack Discovered - Infosecurity Magazine (infosecurity-magazine.com)
Mobile
IOT
BotenaGo Botnet Targets Millions Of IoT Devices With 33 Exploits (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Why the NSA Wants To Protect You From Your Toothbrush (msnbc.com)
Vulnerabilities
Intel And AMD Address High Severity Vulnerabilities In Products And Drivers - Security Affairs
Samba Update Patches Plaintext Passwork Plundering Problem – Naked Security (Sophos.Com)
Palo Alto Networks Patches Zero-Day Affecting Firewalls Using GlobalProtect Portal VPN | ZDNet
Researchers Wait 12 Months To Report Vulnerability With 9.8 Out Of 10 Severity Rating | Ars Technica
Google Warns Hackers Used MacOS Zero-Day Flaw, Could Capture Keystrokes, Screengrabs | ZDNet
Data Breaches/Leaks
Robinhood Discloses Data Breach Impacting 7 Million Customers (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
This Top VPN Provider May Have Leaked Millions Of User Details | Techradar
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
UK Recorded 1.8m Computer Misuse Crimes During 2019 • The Register
These Are The Top-Level Domains Threat Actors Like The Most (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Aleksandr Zhukov, Self-Described 'King Of Fraud,' Is Sentenced To 10 Years - Cyberscoop
Cyber-Mercenary Group Void Balaur Attacks High-Profile Targets for Cash | Threatpost
Humanizing Hackers: Entering The Minds Of Those Behind The Attacks - Help Net Security
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
Insider Threats
DoS/DDoS
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
State Hackers Breach Defence, Energy, Healthcare Orgs Worldwide (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
China’s next generation of hackers won’t be criminals. That’s a problem. | TechCrunch
Russian Cyber Crime Group Exploits SolarWinds Serv-U Vulnerability | SecurityWeek.Com
North Korean Hackers Target The South's Think Tanks Through Blog Posts | ZDNet
Iranian Threat Actors Attempt To Buy Stolen Data Of US Orgs, FBI Warns - Security Affairs
'Lyceum' Threat Group Broadens Focus to ISPs (darkreading.com)
Cloud
Privacy
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Booking.com Was Reportedly Hacked By A Us Intel Agency But Never Told Customers | Ars Technica
Younger Generations Care Little About Cybersecurity - Help Net Security
The Rising Threat Stemming From Identity Sprawl | SecurityWeek.Com
Playstation 5 Hacked—Twice! - Malwarebytes Labs | Malwarebytes Labs
Hong Kong Cyber Attack Reveals That Apple Favours Latest OS Versions For Security Updates | Techspot
Unique Challenges to Cyber-Security in Healthcare and How to Address Them (thehackernews.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 weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 05 November 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 05 November 2021
-500 Million Attempted Ransomware Attacks (So Far) in 2021, With No Sign Of Slowing
-Top 10 Ways Attackers Are Increasing Pressure On Their Ransomware Victims To Pay
-40% Of Organisations Suffered A Cloud-Based Data Breach In The Past 12 Months
-Midsize Business Cyber Attacks: A Security Reality Check
-70% Of Dev Teams Admit To Skipping Security Steps
-79% Of IT Teams Have Seen Increase In Endpoint Security Breaches
-Enterprises With Subsidiaries More Prone To Cyber Attacks, Study Says
-Cisco Talos Reports New Variant Of Babuk Ransomware Targeting Exchange Servers
-Ransomware Gangs Target Corporate Financial Activities
-Web Of Deceit: The Rising Threat Of Ransomware
-While Businesses Are Ramping Up Their Risk Mitigation Efforts, They Could Be Doing More
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
500 Million Attempted Ransomware Attacks (So Far) in 2021, With No Sign Of Slowing
So far, 2021 is stacking up to be the most costly and dangerous year on record for the volume of ransomware attacks, SonicWall said in a new report.
The security provider has logged nearly 500 million attempted ransomware attacks through September, 2021, with 1,748 attempts per customer in that nine-month period. The overall total of 495 million to date amounts to a 148 percent surge as compared to the same period last year. SonicWall expects to record 714 million attempted ransomware attacks by the close of 2021, a 134 percent skyrocket over last year’s totals. https://www.msspalert.com/cybersecurity-research/500-million-attempted-ransomware-attacks-so-far-in-2021/
Top 10 Ways Attackers Are Increasing Pressure On Their Ransomware Victims To Pay
Sophos researchers have detailed how ransomware attackers are implementing a wide range of ruthless pressure tactics to persuade victims to pay the ransom.
Their research is based on evidence and insight from a team of 24/7 incident responders who help organisations under active cyberattack. It highlights the shift in ransomware pressure techniques from solely encrypting data to including other pain points, such as harassing employees.
Since organisations have become better at backing up their data and restoring encrypted files from backups, attackers are supplementing their ransom demands with additional extortion measures that increase the pressure to pay.
For example, the Sophos Rapid Response team has seen cases where attackers email or phone a victim’s employees, calling them by their name and sharing personal details they’ve stolen – such as any disciplinary actions or passport information – with the aim of scaring them into demanding their employer pays the ransom. This kind of behavior shows how ransomware has shifted from a purely technical attack targeting systems and data into one that also targets people. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/04/attackers-pressure-ransomware-victims/
40% Of Organisations Suffered A Cloud-Based Data Breach In The Past 12 Months
Despite increasing cyber attacks targeting data in the cloud, 83% of businesses are still failing to encrypt half of the sensitive data they store in the cloud, raising even greater concerns as to the impact cyber criminals can have. 40% of organisations have experienced a cloud-based data breach in the past 12 months, according to a study conducted by 451 Research.
Cloud adoption is on the rise and businesses are continuing to diversify the way they use cloud solutions. Globally, 57% of respondents reported they make use of two or more cloud infrastructure providers, whilst 24% of organisations flagged that the majority of their workloads and data now reside in the cloud. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/02/experienced-cloud-based-data-breach/
Midsize Business Cyber Attacks: A Security Reality Check
Ransomware bombshells hit large enterprises. Carpet-bomb cyberattacks target MSP software supply chains and their small business customers. But what’s the state of cybersecurity among midsize businesses?
Actually, that landscape also faces its share of digital bombshells. Indeed, nearly two in three midsize organisations have suffered a ransomware attack in the past 18 months and 20 percent of them spent at least $250,000 to recover from it, according to research by UncommonX, an MSSP that leans heavily on its own SaaS-based solutions..
The Chicago-based MSSP’s newly released State of Cybersecurity for Midsize Organisations found that smaller companies are often not properly prepared to fend off a cyber attack nor do they engage in adequate network monitoring. In short, cybersecurity is often not enough of a priority within midsize companies. https://www.msspalert.com/cybersecurity-news/midsize-business-cyberattacks-a-security-reality-check/
70% Of Dev Teams Admit To Skipping Security Steps
According to a new study by Invicti Security, 70% of development teams always or frequently skip security steps due to time pressures when completing projects. This explains why, in the average organisation, 33% of security issues in remediation at any given time come from production code.
Security and development teams spend every day inside a catch-22: relentless demand for continued digital innovation amid increasing security threats to a sprawling attack surface. While there are some bright spots emerging on the road to secure innovation, these professionals are stressed — and too often make bad choices. https://venturebeat.com/2021/10/27/report-70-of-dev-teams-admit-to-skipping-security-steps/
79% Of IT Teams Have Seen Increase In Endpoint Security Breaches
According to a new report by HP Wolf Security, 79% of IT teams have seen an increase in rebuild rates, indicating that hackers are becoming more successful at breaching the endpoint and compromising organisations’ devices and data.
This sudden increase in rebuild rates is particularly affecting enterprises with 1,000 employees or more — organisations of this kind have the highest average number of rebuilds per month at 67.3. The study also highlights that employees are clicking on more malicious emails. Whether this is because people are less vigilant working from home or because they find it harder to determine what is safe to open, the rising number of rebuilds suggests that hackers have become more successful at breaching the endpoint through malicious links. https://venturebeat.com/2021/10/28/report-79-of-it-teams-have-seen-increase-in-endpoint-security-breaches/
Enterprises With Subsidiaries More Prone To Cyber Attacks, Study Says
Global enterprises with multiple subsidiaries are more exposed to cybersecurity threats and have more difficulty managing risk than companies with no, or fewer, subsidiaries, according to an Osterman Research report commissioned by CyCognito.
The study surveyed 201 organisations with at least 10 subsidiaries and at least 3,000 employees or $1 billion in annual revenue.
Despite being extremely confident about running effective subsidiary risk management, about 67% of respondents said their organisations had either experienced a cyberattack where the attack chain included a subsidiary, or that they lacked the ability or information to rule out the possibility.
About half of the respondents acknowledged that they wouldn't be surprised if a cyberbreach were to occur "tomorrow." https://www.csoonline.com/article/3639014/enterprises-with-subsidiaries-more-prone-to-cyberattacks-study-says.html
Cisco Talos Reports New Variant Of Babuk Ransomware Targeting Exchange Servers
Cisco Talos has a warning out for companies about a new variant of the Babuk ransomware. The security researchers discovered the campaign in mid-October and think that the variant has been active since July 2021. The new element in this attack is an unusual infection chain technique.
The researchers think that the initial infection vector is an exploitation of ProxyShell vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange Server through the deployment of China Chopper web shell.
Babuk can affect several hardware and software platforms but this version is targeting Windows. The ransomware encrypts the target's machine, interrupts the system backup process and deletes the volume shadow copies. https://www.techrepublic.com/article/cisco-talos-reports-new-variant-of-babuk-ransomware-targeting-exchange-servers/
Ransomware Gangs Target Corporate Financial Activities
The FBI is warning about a fresh extortion tactic: threatening to tank share prices for publicly held companies.
Ransomware gangs are zeroing in on publicly held companies with the threat of financial exposure in an effort to encourage ransom payments, the FBI is warning.
In an alert issued this week the Bureau said that activity over the course of the past year shows a trend toward targeting companies when they’re coming up to “significant, time-sensitive financial events,” such as quarterly earnings reports and mandated SEC filings, initial public offerings, M&A activity, and so on. The idea is to ratchet up the extortion thumb-screws by threatening to leak stolen information relevant to these events if the target doesn’t pay up.
Impending events that could affect a victim’s stock value, such as announcements [or] mergers and acquisitions, encourage ransomware actors to target a network or adjust their timeline for extortion. https://threatpost.com/ransomware-corporate-financial/175940/
Web Of Deceit: The Rising Threat Of Ransomware
With payouts of almost £260m last year alone, it has become the biggest – and easiest – money-earner available to hackers.
Heists at famous jewellers usually involve masked men, guns, shouting and terrified staff and customers. That was indeed the scene in August 2009 at the London branch of Graff, the famous diamond merchants, when a gang stole around £40million worth of jewels. They were caught not long after.
But the latest heist on Graff, revealed recently, was quieter. No guns, no masks, no shouting. Instead the company – which supplies a dizzying parade of top-name stars such as the Beckhams, Tom Hanks and Tamara Ecclestone – faced a demand, displayed on a computer screen, for millions of pounds, payable to a group of Russian hackers.
Graff, like hundreds of companies around the world, had been hit by “ransomware”: an attachment to an email delivered a malicious program which let in hackers, who scrambled all the files on its computer systems using an uncrackable computer code, for which they had the digital “key”.
They’d hand it over in exchange for a payment worth millions of pounds in untraceable cryptocurrency such as bitcoin, where transactions are made between digital “wallets” that do not pass through any bank and are not tied to any identity.
Without the key, the systems are useless. The option is to restore the system from backups – but frequently the hackers will have targeted those too. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/11/06/web-deceit-rising-threat-ransomware/
While Businesses Are Ramping Up Their Risk Mitigation Efforts, They Could Be Doing More
Zurich North America and Advisen have released a survey of corporate risk managers and insurance buyers revealing current views about information security and cyber risk management.
The survey results indicate that risk professionals are increasingly aware of their intensifying cyber risks and the need to manage them using risk mitigation and risk transfer. However, a deeper dive into the numbers found that there is much room for improvement in building cyber resilience.
Sixty-five percent of respondents have invested in cyber security solutions to mitigate risk, which means that 35 percent of respondents still have not. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/11/03/gaps-risk-mitigation-efforts/
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware Attacks Increased 148% In Q3 2021, Showing No Sign Of Slowing - Help Net Security
Babuk Ransomware Seen Exploiting ProxyShell Vulnerabilities | SecurityWeek.Com
Toronto Subways Hit By Ransomware As US Lawmakers Slam 'Burdensome' Cyber Security rules | ZDNet
BlackMatter Ransomware Moves Victims To LockBit After Shutdown (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Phishing
Phishing Attack Blends Spoofed Amazon Order and Fraudulent Customer Service Agents (darkreading.com)
Other Social Engineering
Malware
Stealthier Version Of Mekotio Banking Trojan Spotted In The Wild (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
77% Of Rootkits Are Used For Espionage Purposes - Help Net Security
Mobile
Why You Should Delete Google Chrome On Your Phone (forbes.com)
Android Patches Actively Exploited Zero-Day Kernel Bug | Threatpost
Stealthy Trojan That Roots Android Devices Makes Its Way On App Stores | CSO Online
Vulnerabilities
Apple macOS Flaw Allows Kernel-Level Compromise | Threatpost
BrakTooth Bluetooth Bugs Bite: Exploit Code, PoC Released | Threatpost
Get Patching: Cisco Warns Of These Critical Product Vulnerabilities | ZDNet
50% Of Internet-Facing Gitlab Installations Are Still Affected By A RCE Flaw - Security Affairs
Critical RCE Vulnerability Reported in Linux Kernel's TIPC Module (thehackernews.com)
Data Breaches/Leaks
UK Labour Party Blames Breach Of Members’ Data On Third-Party Cyber Attack | Techcrunch
Medical School Exposes Personal Data Of Thousands Of Students | ZDNet
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
Squid Game Crypto Scammers Rip Off Investors for Millions | Threatpost
Threat Actors Stole $55m Worth Of Cryptocurrency From bZx DeFi Platform - Security Affairs
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Privacy
Parental Controls
Other News
Another Cyber Security Awareness Month Has Passed and Little Has Changed | SecurityWeek.Com
Magecart Credit Card Skimmer Avoids VMs to Fly Under the Radar | Threatpost
Organisations Seldom Prioritize Cyber Security Over Business Outcomes - Help Net Security
Are Your Passwords On The Dark Web? How To Check What Leaked After A Data Breach - CNET
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 29 October 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 29 October 2021
-Protect Your Passwords, Warns Spy Chief, As Ransomware Cyber Attacks Double
-Graff Multinational Jeweller Hit by Conti Gang, Data of its Rich Clients Are At Risk
-Business Email Compromise (BEC) Costs UK Firms £140M Over Past Year
-Ransomware: It's A 'Golden Era' For Cyber Criminals - And It Could Get Worse Before It Gets Better
-Despite Increased Cyber Threats, Many Organisations Have No Defence Plans In Place
-Serious Warning Issued For Millions Of Apple iPhone Users
-Ransomware Attacks Are Evolving. Your Security Strategy Should, Too
-Solarwinds Hackers Are Targeting The Global It Supply Chain, Microsoft Says
-Defenders Worry Orgs Are More Vulnerable Than Last Year
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
Protect Your Passwords, Warns Spy Chief, As Ransomware Cyber Attacks Double
Ransomware cyber attacks doubled in the past year, the chief of GCHQ has revealed - as he warned Britain must “pay attention” to attacks from China.
Sir Jeremy Fleming, director of the cyber spy agency, called for more action to "sort out" ransomware attacks across the UK, adding it was not "rocket science".
He said such attacks have doubled in the last year, with hackers using software to lock files on computers and stop victims from accessing their own data.
This essentially holds them hostage until the hackers receive payment and then give a decryption key to the victim, so they can regain access.
‘Criminals are making very good money from it’
Sir Jeremy said ransomware "just pays" and added that "criminals are making very good money from it and are often feeling that that's largely uncontested".
While cautious of “keeping up” with security challenges alongside European partners, he said the immediate priority was tackling “links between criminal and state actors” to defeat ransomware, which he said “is no mean feat in itself”. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/10/25/ransomware-cyber-attacks-double-year-reveals-spy-chief/
Graff Multinational Jeweller Hit by Conti Gang. Data of its Rich Clients Are At Risk, Including Trump and Beckham, as the Gang Threaten to Release Private Details of World Leaders, Actors and Tycoons
The latest attack of the Conti ransomware gang makes the headlines, the threat actors hit high society jeweller Graff and asked the payment of a multi-million ransom to avoid leaking details of world leaders, actors and tycoons.
The customers of the company are the richest people on the globe, including Donald Trump, David Beckham, Tom Hanks, Samuel L Jackson, Alec Baldwin, and Sir Philip Green.
As proof of the hack, the group already published on its leak site files related to purchases made by David Beckham, Oprah, and Donald Trump.
The Conti gang has already leaked 69,000 confidential documents, leaked files include customer lists, invoices, receipts, and credit notes. https://securityaffairs.co/wordpress/123980/cyber-crime/conti-ransomware-graff-jeweller.html
Business Email Compromise (BEC) Costs UK Firms £140M Over Past Year
Reported business email compromise (BEC) incidents have hit 4600 cases over the past 12 months, costing individuals and businesses £138m in losses, according to new figures from the UK’s National Economic Crime Centre (NECC).
The government body is working with the National Crime Agency (NCA), City of London Police, banking group UK Finance and fraud prevention non-profit Cifas on a new campaign to raise awareness of the crime, also dubbed “mandate fraud” or “payment diversion fraud.”
It claimed that the average amount lost over those 4600 cases was £30,000, with criminals typically impersonating others and creating or amending invoices to trick victims into diverting money to accounts under their control. https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/bec-costs-uk-firms-140m-past-year/
Ransomware: It's A 'Golden Era' For Cyber Criminals - And It Could Get Worse Before It Gets Better
Ransomware is the most significant cybersecurity threat facing organisations today as increasingly professional and sophisticated cyber criminals follow the money in order to maximise the profit from illicit campaigns.
ENISNA, the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity, has released the latest edition of the ENISA Threat Landscape (ETL) report, which analyses cyber-criminal activity between April 2020 and July 2021. It warns of a surge in cyber criminality, much of it driven by the monetisation of ransomware attacks.
Although the paper warns that many different cybersecurity threats are on the rise, ransomware represents the 'prime threat' faced by organisations today, with a 150% rise in ransomware attacks during the reporting period. And there are fears that despite the problem of ransomware attracting the attention of world leaders, the problem will get worse before it gets better. https://www.zdnet.com/article/ransomware-its-a-golden-era-for-cyber-criminals-and-it-could-get-worse-before-it-gets-better/
Despite Increased Cyber Threats, Many Organisations Have No Defence Plans In Place
98% of US executives report that their organisations experienced at least one cyber event in the past year, compared to a slightly lower rate of 84% in non-US executives, according to a Deloitte survey.
Further, COVID-19 pandemic disruption led to increased cyber threats to US executives’ organisations (86%) at a considerably higher rate than non-US executives experienced (63%). Yet, 14% of US executives say their organisations have no cyber threat defence plans, a rate more than double that of non-US executives (6%).
The biggest fallout US execs report from cyber incidents or breaches at their organisations during the past year include operational disruption (28%), share price drop (24%), leadership change (23%), intellectual property theft (22%) and loss of customer trust (22%).
Increases in data management, perimeter and complexities (38%), inability to match rapid technology changes (35%) and a need for better prioritization of cyber risk across the enterprise (31%) all pose obstacles to US executives’ organisation-wide cybersecurity management programs.
“No CISO or CSO ever wants to tell organisational stakeholders that efforts to manage cyber risk aren’t keeping-up with the speed of digital transformations made, or bad actors’ improving tactics”. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/28/threat-defence-plans/
Serious Warning Issued For Millions Of Apple iPhone Users
While iPhone 13 sales continue to soar, iPhones owners have faced growing security threats, multiple App Store scams, potential privacy violations and zero day hacks. Now a shocking account of extreme iPhone hacking has been revealed.
In a remarkable report, New York Times senior reporter Ben Hubbard has revealed how his iPhone was hacked multiple times over a period of several years, and without any human interaction or knowledge the attacks were taking place. And the experience results in a stark warning: “the spyware used against me makes us all vulnerable”.
“It’s like being robbed by a ghost,” explains Hubbard, recounting the experience. “I didn’t even have to click on a link for my phone to be infected.” https://www.forbes.com/sites/gordonkelly/2021/10/27/apple-iphone-warning-pegasus-hack-upgrade-ios-15-security/
Ransomware Attacks Are Evolving. Your Security Strategy Should, Too
Ransomware is an intensifying problem for all organisations, and it’s only going to get worse. What started as a floppy disk-based attack with a $189 ransom demands has grown from a minor inconvenience for organisations into a multi-billion dollar cyber crime industry.
The organisational threat of these types of attacks goes well beyond encryption of sensitive or mission-critical data – for many companies, the thought of a breach and data becoming publicly available on the internet makes a high ransom seem worth it. No wonder ransomware is on the rise: Organisations pay an average of $220,298 and suffer 23 days of downtime following an attack. https://threatpost.com/ransomware-attacks-evolving-security-strategy/175835/
Solarwinds Hackers Are Targeting The Global IT Supply Chain, Microsoft Says
The Russian-linked hacking group that’s been blamed for an attack on the US government and a significant number of private US companies last year is targeting key players in the global technology supply chain, according to cybersecurity experts at Microsoft.
Nobelium, as the hacking group is known, is infamous for the SolarWinds hack.
On Monday, Tom Burt, Microsoft corporate vice president of customer security and trust, said Nobelium has “been attempting to replicate the approach it has used in past attacks by targeting organisations integral to the global IT supply chain.”
“This time, it is attacking a different part of the supply chain: resellers and other technology service providers that customize, deploy and manage cloud services and other technologies on behalf of their customers” https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/25/solarwinds-hackers-targeting-global-it-supply-chain-microsoft-says.html
Defenders Worry Orgs Are More Vulnerable Than Last Year
Enterprise security defenders find themselves in a rough spot: The number of threats against their organisations is growing and that they're vulnerable to attacks. Data from Dark Reading's 2021 Strategic Security Survey suggest that even though most IT and security leaders are confident about the security defences they have implemented, they also believe their organisations are more vulnerable to attacks compared with a year ago.
The reasons for this pessimism vary. For 67% of respondents, the biggest concern lies in the fact that there are more attacks this year than there were last year. However, 56% say the increased sophistication of the threats they are facing is why their organisations are more vulnerable to compromise. Other reasons include the surge in ransomware attacks and shortage of skilled security professionals to detect and respond to threats. https://www.darkreading.com/edge-threat-monitor/defenders-worry-orgs-are-more-vulnerable-than-last-year
Threats
Ransomware
These Companies Are Most at Risk for Ransomware Attacks | PCMag
As Fewer Victims Pay Ransoms, Conti Gang Looks To Sell Victim Data | Sc Media (Scmagazine.Com)
Europol Announces “Targeting” Of 12 Suspects In Ransomware Attacks – Naked Security (Sophos.Com)
Police Arrest Suspected Ransomware Hackers Behind 1,800 Attacks Worldwide (thehackernews.com)
SEO Poisoning Used to Distribute Ransomware (darkreading.com)
FBI Warns Of Ranzy Locker Ransomware Threat, As Over 30 Companies Hit (Tripwire.Com)
Ransomware Has Disrupted Almost 1,000 Schools in the US This Year (vice.com)
Chaos Ransomware Targets Gamers Via Fake Minecraft Alt Lists (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Phishing
Phishing as a Ransomware Precursor - MSP Insights - MSSP Alert
Teen Rakes in $2.74M Worth of Bitcoin in Phishing Scam | Threatpost
Other Social Engineering
Malware
Squid Game Malware Might Be The Scariest Thing You See This Halloween | Techradar
TA575 Criminal Group Using 'Squid Game' Lures For Dridex Malware | ZDNet
Snake Malware Biting Hard On 50 Apps For Only $25 (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
New WSlink Malware Loader Runs as a Server and Executes Modules in Memory (thehackernews.com)
Mobile
6 Ways Your Cell Phone Can Be Hacked—Are You Safe? (makeuseof.com)
Millions Of Android Users Targeted In Subscription Fraud Campaign (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
New AbstractEmu Malware Roots Android Devices, Evades Detection (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
IOT
Vulnerabilities
All Windows Versions Impacted By New LPE Zero-Day Vulnerability (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Google Releases Urgent Chrome Update to Patch 2 Actively Exploited 0-Day Bugs (thehackernews.com)
Adobe's Surprise Security Bulletin Dominated by Critical Patches | Threatpost
WordPress Plugin Bug Lets Subscribers Wipe Sites | Threatpost
Over 1 Million WordPress Sites Affected by OptinMonster Plugin Flaws - Security Affairs
Cisco SD-WAN Flaw Could Lead To Arbitrary Code Execution, Patch It Now! Security Affairs
Data Breaches/Leaks
Millions Of Healthcare Records Reportedly Exposed In Mega Data Breach | Techradar
Location Data Collection Firm Admits Privacy Breach - BBC News
HIV Scotland Reveals Patient-Advocates' Names In Email Fail • The Register
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Dark Web
Supply Chain
The SolarWinds Hackers Are Looking for Their Next Big Score | WIRED
North Korean Lazarus Attackers Turn to the IT Supply Chain | Threatpost
6 Eye-Opening Statistics About Software Supply Chain Security (darkreading.com)
Nation State Actors
Other News
All Sectors Are Now Prey as Cyber Threats Expand Targeting | Threatpost
Microsoft Warns Over Uptick In Password Spraying Attacks | ZDNet
Increased Risk Tolerances Are Making Digital Transformation Programs Vulnerable - Help Net Security
MITRE and CISA Publish The 2021 List of Most Common Hardware Weaknesses - Security Affairs
Enterprises Allocating More IT Dollars on Cybersecurity (darkreading.com)
Threat Actor Leaks Mercedes-Benz Platform’s Source Code | CyberNews
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory – Targeted Attacks on Managed IT Service Providers - What You Need to Know
Black Arrow Cyber Advisory – Targeted Attacks on Managed IT Service Providers - What You Need to Know.
Executive Summary
The Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center (MSTIC) have reported increased activity from state-sponsored threat actors, with a particular focus on NOBELIUM. NOBELIUM, a Russian-backed group, have emerged as a prominent threat due to their choice of target – managed IT service providers (MSPs). The activity, observed across the United States and Europe, seeks to exploit the trust and delegated administrative privileges used to manage clients. Much like the SolarWinds compromise of 2020, this new threat shares all the hallmarks of NOBELIUM’s “compromise-one-compromise-many” approach.
What’s the risk to my business?
Delegated admin privileges – allowing MSPs administrative control of your estate for support purposes – presents as an attractive target to bad actors, particularly as the MSPs will often hold the keys to multiple businesses. Should attackers compromise an account with these delegated privileges, access to the managed estates underneath becomes trivial.
What can I do?
Revoking administrative privileges is not realistic as part of a managed service. While the requirement remains, businesses are recommended to gain visibility and understand why and where these accounts might exist for their managed estate. Where these relationships do exist, businesses should look to review the effectiveness of controls and the security practices on any accounts with delegated admin access.
Need help understanding your gaps, or just want some advice? Get in touch with us.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 22 October 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 22 October 2021
-Many Organisations Lack Basic Cyber Hygiene Despite High Confidence In Their Cyber Defences
-83% Of Ransomware Victims Paid Ransom: Survey
-Report: Ransomware Affected 72% Of Organizations In Past Year
-Ransomware: Looking For Weaknesses In Your Own Network Is Key To Stopping Attacks
-A Hacker Warns: Give Up Trying To Keep Me Out — And Focus On Your Data
-Cyber Risk Trends Driving The Surge In Ransomware Incidents
-US Ransomware Victims Paid $600 Million to Hackers in 1H of 2021
-Hacking Group Created Fake Cyber Security Companies To Hire Experts And Involve Them In Ransomware Attacks Tricking Them Of Conducting A Pentest
-Nearly Three-Quarters of Organizations Victimized by DNS Attacks in Past 12 Months
-Cyber Crime Matures As Hackers Are Forced To Work Smarter
-Hackers Stealing Browser Cookies to Hijack High-Profile YouTube Accounts
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
Many Organisations Lack Basic Cyber Hygiene Despite High Confidence In Their Cyber Defences
A new report released this week analysed IT security leaders’ perceived threat of ransomware attacks and the maturity of their cyber security defences. The report found that while 81% of those surveyed consider their security to be above average or exceptional, many lack basic cyber hygiene – 41% lack a password complexity requirement, one of the cheapest, easiest forms of protection, and only 55.6% have implemented multi-factor authentication (MFA). https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/21/organizations-cyber-hygiene/
83% Of Ransomware Victims Paid Ransom
A new survey of 300 US-based IT decision-makers found that 64% have been victims of a ransomware attack in the last 12 months, and 83% of those attack victims paid the ransom demand.
Cybersecurity company ThycoticCentrify released its "2021 State of Ransomware Survey & Report" on Tuesday, featuring the insights of IT leaders who have dealt with ransomware attacks over the last year. https://www.zdnet.com/article/83-of-ransomware-victims-paid-ransom-survey/
Ransomware Affected 72% Of Organisations In Past Year
72% of organisations were affected by ransomware at least once within the past twelve months, with 18% impacted more than six times in the past year. Organizations of all sizes were affected nearly to the same extent, with the exception of those with more than 25,000 employees. https://venturebeat.com/2021/10/20/report-ransomware-affected-72-of-organizations-in-past-year/
Ransomware: Looking For Weaknesses In Your Own Network Is Key To Stopping Attacks
Ransomware is a major cybersecurity threat to organisations around the world, but it's possible to reduce the impact of an attack if you have a thorough understanding of your own network and the correct protections are in place.
While the best form of defence is to stop ransomware infiltrating the network in the first place, thinking about how the network is put together can help slow down or stop the spread of an attack, even if the intruders have successfully breached the perimeter. https://www.zdnet.com/article/ransomware-looking-for-weaknesses-in-your-own-network-is-key-to-stopping-attacks/
A Hacker Warns: Give Up Trying To Keep Me Out — And Focus On Your Data
There is a misconceived notion that the security arena is a battlefield. It is not. It is a chess board and requires foresight and calculated pawn placement to protect the king — your data. If your main focus lies on keeping hackers out of your environment, then it’s already check mate. Your mission should be to buy time, slow hackers down and ultimately contain an attack.
Businesses must therefore make it as hard as possible for adversaries to exploit the relationships that allow them to move laterally through the corporate network. They can do this by distrusting anyone within their data’s environment and repeatedly corroborating that all users are who they say they are, and that they act like it too. That last part is crucial, because while identities are easy to compromise and imitate, behaviours are not. https://www.ft.com/content/93cec8b6-3fe9-4e9e-800a-62e13a0e2eac
Cyber Risk Trends Driving The Surge In Ransomware Incidents
During the COVID-19 crisis, another outbreak took place in the cyber space: a digital pandemic driven by ransomware. In a recent report, Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty (AGCS) analyzes the latest risk developments around ransomware and outlines how companies can strengthen their defenses with good cyber hygiene and IT security practices
The increasing frequency and severity of ransomware incidents is driven by several factors:
· Growing number of different attack patterns such as double and triple extortion campaigns
· Criminal business model around ‘ransomware as a service’ and cryptocurrencies
· Recent skyrocketing of ransom demands
· Rise of supply chain attacks.
Not all attacks are targeted. Criminals also adopt a scattergun approach to exploit those businesses that aren’t addressing or understanding the vulnerabilities they may have. Businesses must understand the need to strengthen their controls.
Cyber intrusion activity globally jumped 125% in the first half of 2021 compared to the previous year, according to Accenture, with ransomware and extortion operations one of the major contributors behind this increase. According to the FBI, there was a 62% increase in ransomware incidents in the US in the same period that followed an increase of 20% for the full year 2020. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/18/five-ransomware-trends/
US Ransomware Victims Paid $600 Million to Hackers in 1H of 2021
US Ransomware victims coughed up nearly $600 million to cyber hijackers in the first six months of 2021, further stamping cyber extortionists as an “increasing threat” to the U.S. financial, business and public sectors, a recent report released by the Treasury Department said.
Data gathered by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) derived from financial institutions’ Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) revealed that the 635 reports filed for the first six months of this year is already 30 percent greater than the 487 filed for all of last year. Some 458 financial transitions have been reported as of June 30, 2021 with the total value of suspicious activity reported in ransomware-related SARs during the first six months of 2021 amounting to $590 million, or 42 percent more than the $416 million filed for all of 2020. https://www.msspalert.com/cybersecurity-research/victims-paid-600-millon-1h-2021/
Hacking Group Created Fake Cyber Security Companies To Hire Experts And Involve Them In Ransomware Attacks Tricking Them Of Conducting A Pentest
The FIN7 hacking group is attempting to enter in the ransomware business and is doing it with an interesting technique. The gang is creating fake cyber security companies that hire experts requesting them to carry out pen testing attacks under the guise of pentesting activities.
FIN7 is a Russian criminal group that has been active since mid-2015, it focuses on restaurants, gambling, and hospitality industries in the US to harvest financial information that was used in attacks or sold in cybercrime marketplaces.
One of the companies created by the cyber criminal organizations with this purpose is Combi Security, but researchers from Gemini Advisory discovered other similar organizations by analyzing the site of another fake cybersecurity company named Bastion Security. https://securityaffairs.co/wordpress/123673/cyber-crime/fin7-fake-cybersecurity-firm.html
Nearly Three-Quarters of Organisations Victimized by DNS Attacks in Past 12 Months
Domain name system (DNS) attacks are impacting organizations at worrisome rates. According to a new survey from the Neustar International Security Council (NISC) conducted in September 2021, 72% of study participants reported experiencing a DNS attack within the last 12 months. Among those targeted, 61% have seen multiple attacks and 11% said they have been victimized regularly. While one-third of respondents recovered within minutes, 58% saw their businesses disrupted for more than an hour, and 14% took several hours to recover. https://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/nearly-three-quarters-of-organizations-victimized-by-dns-attacks-in-past-12-months
Cyber Crime Matures As Hackers Are Forced To Work Smarter
An analysis of 500 hacking incidents across a wide range of industries has revealed trends that characterize a maturity in the way hacking groups operate today.
Researchers at Kaspersky have focused on the Russian cybercrime underground, which is currently one of the most prolific ecosystems, but many elements in their findings are common denominators for all hackers groups worldwide.
One key finding of the study is that the level of security on office software, web services, email platforms, etc., is getting better, browser vulnerabilities have reduced in numbers, and websites are not as easy to compromise and use as infection vectors today.
This has resulted in making web infections too difficult to pursue for non-sophisticated threat groups.
The case is similar with vulnerabilities, which are fewer and more expensive to discover.
Instead, hacking groups are waiting for a PoC or patch to be released, and then use that information to create their own exploits. https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/cybercrime-matures-as-hackers-are-forced-to-work-smarter/
Hackers Stealing Browser Cookies to Hijack High-Profile YouTube Accounts
Since at least late 2019, a network of hackers-for-hire have been hijacking the channels of YouTube creators, luring them with bogus collaboration opportunities to broadcast cryptocurrency scams or sell the accounts to the highest bidder.
That's according to a new report published by Google's Threat Analysis Group (TAG), which said it disrupted financially motivated phishing campaigns targeting the video platform with cookie theft malware. The actors behind the infiltration have been attributed to a group of hackers recruited in a Russian-speaking forum. https://thehackernews.com/2021/10/hackers-stealing-browser-cookies-to.html
Threats
Ransomware
2021 Ransomware Transactions Already Exceed 2020 Numbers, Treasury Department Says - CyberScoop
DarkSide Ransomware Rushes To Cash Out $7 Million In Bitcoin (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Gigabyte Allegedly Hit by AvosLocker Ransomware | Threatpost
Evil Corp Demands $40 Million In New Macaw Ransomware Attacks (Bleepingcomputer.com)
Olympus US Hack Tied To Sanctioned Russian Ransomware Group | Techcrunch
81% of UK Healthcare Organizations Hit by Ransomware in Last Year - Infosecurity Magazine
BEC
Phishing
Malware
Cyber Criminals Have Found A Way To Get Their Malware Certified By Microsoft | Techradar
Minecraft Declared The Most Malware-Infected Game (Hackread.Com)
Mobile
Vulnerabilities
Update Now! Chrome Fixes More Security Issues - Malwarebytes Labs
A Flaw In WinRAR Could Lead To Remote Code Execution - Security Affairs
SQL Is The Top Critical Risk In The Web Application Layer In Q3, 2021 - IT Security Guru
Data Breaches/Leaks
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Insider Threats
Dark Web
The Dark Web Has Become Darker And Busier, Cyber Crime Services Cost Less Than $500 | Techspot
Increased Activity Surrounding Stolen Data On The Dark Web - Help Net Security
The Truth About The Dark Web's Secret Red Rooms (grunge.com)
Supply Chain
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
State-Backed Hackers Breach Telcos With Custom Malware (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Suspected Chinese Hackers Behind Attacks On Ten Israeli Hospitals (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Cloud
Privacy
Over 80% of Brits Deluged with Scam Calls and Texts - Infosecurity Magazine
How mobile devices can be tracked via Bluetooth analysis • The Register
Brave Ditches Google For Its Own Privacy-Centric Search Engine (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
A Massive ‘Stalkerware’ Leak Puts The Phone Data Of Thousands At Risk | Techcrunch
Reports Published in the Last Week
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 15 October 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 15 October 2021
-The Human Element Is the Weakest Link
-Ransomware is the Biggest Cyber Threat to Business: Most Firms Still Aren't Ready for It
-Most Known Ransomware Targets Windows Devices
-67% of Organisations Have Been Hit by Ransomware at Least Once
-Russian Cyber Crime Gang Targets Finance Firms With Stealthy Macros
-70% of Businesses Can’t Ensure the Same Level of Protection for Every Endpoint
-Over 90% of Firms Suffered Supply Chain Breaches Last Year
-Ransomware Attacks Preparedness Lagging, Despite Organisations Being Aware of The Risks
-6 Things to Know About 'Killware,' Cyber Security's Next Big 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
The Human Element Is the Weakest Link
Within the last week, Facebook has become the subject of a whistleblowing campaign featuring thousands of documents alleging malpractice. Despite their size and expected security controls, these documents have been exfiltrated without detection, lending credence to the idea of the insider threat. https://www.darkreading.com/risk/the-human-element-is-the-weakest-link
Ransomware is the Biggest Cyber Threat to Business But Most Firms Still Aren't Ready for It
Ransomware is still the most significant cyber security threat facing organisations – ranging from critical national infrastructure providers and large enterprises to schools and local businesses – but it's a threat that can be countered. https://www.zdnet.com/article/ransomware-is-now-the-most-urgent-cyber-threat-to-business-but-most-firms-arent-ready-for-it/
Most Known Ransomware Targets Windows Devices
Recently conducted research shows that 95% of identified ransomware is targeting Windows machines. Furthermore, the stats show that Israel are submitting by far the most ransomware samples, followed by South Korea, Vietnam, and China, with the UK in 10th place. https://www.theregister.com/2021/10/14/googles_virustotal_malware/
67% of Organisations Have Been Hit by Ransomware at Least Once
A recent report found that two-thirds of surveyed organizations have suffered a ransomware attack, with about half having been hit multiple times, and 16% having been hit three or more times. https://threatpost.com/podcast-67-percent-orgs-ransomware/175339/
Russian Cyber Crime Gang Targets Finance Firms With Stealthy Macros
A new phishing campaign dubbed MirrorBlast is deploying weaponized Excel documents that are extremely difficult to detect to compromise financial service organizations. The most notable feature of MirrorBlast is the low detection rates of the campaign's malicious Excel documents by security software, putting firms that rely solely upon detection tools at high risk. https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/russian-cybercrime-gang-targets-finance-firms-with-stealthy-macros/
70% of Businesses Can’t Ensure the Same Level of Protection for Every Endpoint
Recent research found that 86% of UK respondents believe it is not possible to fully prevent ransomware and malware attacks from compromising their organisations. It also found that the rise in the number of endpoints that businesses need to protect continues to be a key source of risk exposure. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/15/endpoint-protection-level/
Over 90% of Firms Suffered Supply Chain Breaches Last Year
A recent survey polled 1200 IT and procurement leaders responsible for supply chain and cyber risk management. Those polled came from global companies with 1,000+ employees and were used to compile its report: Managing Cyber Risk Across the Extended Vendor Ecosystem. The report revealed the average number of breaches experienced in the past 12 months grew from 2.7 in 2020 to 3.7 in 2021 – a 37% year-on-year increase. https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/90-firms-supply-chain-breaches/
Cyber Security Shortcomings Exposed By The Pandemic
According to a survey by SecureAge, 48% of businesses have experienced a cyber breach during the COVID-19 pandemic and another 8% ‘were not sure’. In addition, 16% of employees said they personally had to deal with a cyber security incident during the same period. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/13/cybersecurity-shortcomings/
6 Things to Know About 'Killware,' Cyber Security's Next Big Threat
Threat actors are adopting a “killware” cyber model, which launches attacks on critical infrastructure with the intent to cause harm. Alejandro Mayorkas, secretary for Homeland Security, told USA Today he is worried about killware because it has the potential to kill. Hackers breached a water system in February this year, which was considered an unsuccessful attempt to distribute contaminated water to residents of Florida. "[The] attack was not for financial gain but rather purely to do harm,” he said. https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/cybersecurity/6-things-to-know-about-killware-cybersecurity-s-next-big-threat.html
2021 Nastiest Malware: Here to Stay and Ever Evolving
This year was yet another year with COVID-19 and malware running rampant in the headlines. Be it in person or online, the world is still struggling in the fight against viruses. This year took another turn for the worse when attacks on critical infrastructure and supply chains became a hot trend. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/12/nastiest-malware-2021/
Threats
Ransomware
Since 2020, At Least 130 Different Ransomware Families Have Been Active
This New Ransomware Encrypts Your Data And Makes Some Nasty Threats, Too
UK Cyber Head Says Russia Responsible For 'Devastating' Ransomware Attacks
US Ransomware Law Would Require Victims To Disclose Ransom Payments Within 48 Hours
Ransomware: Cyber Criminals Are Still Exploiting These Old Vulnerabilities, So Patch Now
BEC
Phishing
Malware
FontOnLake Malware Strikes Linux Systems In Targeted Attacks
Hackers Use Stealthy ShellClient Malware On Aerospace, Telco Firms
Vulnerabilities
NSA Warns Of Alpaca TLS Attack, Use Of Wildcard TLS Certificates[RP1]
Update Your Windows PCs Immediately To Patch New 0-Day Under Active Attack
Windows Zero-Day Actively Exploited In Widespread Espionage Campaign
Chinese Hackers Use Windows Zero-Day To Attack Defense, IT Firms
Apple Releases Urgent iPhone And iPad Updates To Patch New Zero-Day Vulnerability
Apache Patch Proves Patchy – Now You Need To Patch The Patch
Data Breaches/Leaks
Organised Crime & Criminal Actors
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
CryptoRom Scam Rakes In $1.4m By Exploiting Apple Enterprise Features
Hackers Are Hijacking Copy And Paste To Steal Millions Of Dollars In Crypto Currency
Dark Web
Supply Chain
DoS/DDoS
Microsoft Says Azure Fended Off What Might Just Be The World's Biggest-Ever DDoS Attack
Ukrainian Police Arrest DDoS Operator Controlling 100,000 Bots
OT, ICS, IIoT and SCADA
Nation State Actors
Google: We're Tracking 270 State-Sponsored Hacker Groups From Over 50 Countries
Google Sent 50,000 Warnings Of State-Sponsored Attacks In 2021
How Shape-Shifting Threat Actors Complicate Attack Attribution
Google Warns Some Users That Fancybear’s Been Prowling Around
Microsoft: Iran-Linked Hackers Breached Office 365 Customer Accounts
We’re Not In Competition With China; We’re At War, Argues A Provocative New Book
Privacy
Amazon's Ring Doorbell Can Violate Your Neighbour’s Privacy, A UK Judge Rules
Amnesty International Links Cyber Security Firm To Spyware Operation
Study Reveals Android Phones Constantly Snoop On Their Users
Other News
Cyber Attack Shuts Down Ecuador's Largest Bank, Banco Pichincha[RP2]
30 Mins Or Less: Rapid Attacks Extort Orgs Without Ransomware
University Of Sunderland Is Latest To Be Hit By Cyber Attack
Russia Excluded From 30-Country Meeting To Fight Ransomware And Cyber Crime
Zero-Day Hunters Seek Laws To Prevent Vendors Suing Them For Helping Out And Doing Their Jobs
Google To Give Security Keys To ‘High Risk’ Users Targeted By Government Hackers
As usual, contact us to help assess where your risks lie and to ensure you are doing all you can do to keep you and your business secure.
Look out for our weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 08 October 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 08 October 2021
-Half of Regulated Firms See Pandemic Spike in Financial Crime
-Large Ransom Demands And Password-Guessing Attacks Escalate
-How Insurers Play a Big Role in Spurring Cyber Crime
-How Fraudsters Can Use The Forgotten Details Of Your Online Life To Reel You In
-Malicious Hackers Are Exploiting Known Vulnerabilities Because Organisations Aren’t Quick Enough To Patch – Report
-Ransomware: Cyber Criminals Are Still Exploiting These Old Vulnerabilities, So Patch Now
-Why Today’s Cyber Security Threats Are More Dangerous
-One In Three IT Security Managers Don’t Have A Formal Cybersecurity Incident Response Plan
-Cyber Security Best Practices Lagging, Despite People Being Aware Of The Risks
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
Half of Regulated Firms See Pandemic Spike in Financial Crime
Around half of firms in the financial services, property and legal sectors have reported rising levels of financial crime over the past 12 months, according to new data from an anti-money laundering (AML) specialist which polled 500 regulated businesses in the UK to better understand the levels of risk facing players in each vertical.
Overall, 48% of respondents said they’d seen a rise in financial crime, and a quarter (26%) admitted they’d been a victim of attacks. Legal firms, including conveyancers, experienced the most significant number of compromises, with a third (33%) saying they had been a victim of financial crime.
The sector is an increasingly attractive target for both state-backed and financially motivated cyber-criminals, given the wealth of sensitive client information that legal practices typically hold. https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/half-firms-pandemic-spike/
Large Ransom Demands And Password-Guessing Attacks Escalate
ESET released a report that summarizes key statistics from its detection systems and highlights notable examples of its cyber security research.
The latest issue of the report highlights several concerning trends that were recorded by ESET telemetry, including increasingly aggressive ransomware tactics, intensifying brute-force attacks, and deceptive phishing campaigns targeting people working from home who have gotten used to performing many administrative tasks remotely.
Ransomware, showing three major detection spikes during T2, saw the largest ransom demands to date. The attack shutting down the operations of Colonial Pipeline – the largest pipeline company in the US – and the supply-chain attack leveraging a vulnerability in the Kaseya VSA IT management software, sent shockwaves that were felt far beyond the cybersecurity industry. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/05/large-ransom-demands/
Malicious Hackers Are Exploiting Known Vulnerabilities Because Organizations Aren’t Quick Enough To Patch – Report
Organizations are urged to be more proactive when it comes to protecting against vulnerabilities, after a report found that malicious attackers routinely exploit unpatched systems.
The 2021 Trustwave SpiderLabs Telemetry Report, released this week, found that a huge number of companies are falling foul to cyber-attacks despite having ready access to suitable fixes.
This is happening because malicious actors are using Shodan to scan for networks that are exposed to known vulnerabilities and exploit them before the victim can apply the patch. https://portswigger.net/daily-swig/malicious-hackers-are-exploiting-known-vulnerabilities-because-organizations-arent-quick-enough-to-patch-report
Ransomware: Cyber Criminals Are Still Exploiting These Old Vulnerabilities, So Patch Now
Some of the cyber security vulnerabilities most commonly exploited by cybercriminals to help distribute ransomware are years old -- but attackers are still able to take advantage of them because security updates aren't being applied.
Cybersecurity researchers at Qualys examined the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs) most used in ransomware attacks in recent years. They found that some of these vulnerabilities have been known for almost a decade and had vendor patches available. But because many organizations still haven't applied the available security updates, they remain vulnerable to ransomware attacks. https://www.zdnet.com/article/ransomware-cyber-criminals-are-still-exploiting-years-old-vulnerabilities-to-launch-attacks/
How Insurers Play a Big Role in Spurring Cyber Crime
Ransomware extracted $18 billion in payments last year, and it’s expected there will be an attack every 11 seconds by this year’s end, a problem that some security experts and academic researchers say is exacerbated by the system meant to protect against cybercrime: the insurance industry.
Organizations with cyber insurance are more than twice as likely to pay ransoms as those without, according to a global survey commissioned by UK-based cyber security and software firm Sophos of 1,823 companies, governments, health systems, and other organizations that had been hit by ransomware. This is one of the first times such data have been gathered that show the extent of the relationship between cyber insurance and ransomware payments. Critics say that relationship helps fuel a ransomware economy that the federal government estimates causes $445 billion in damages to the global economy every year. https://www.barrons.com/articles/ransomware-attack-cyber-insurance-industry-51633075202
Why Today’s Cyber Security Threats Are More Dangerous
Over the past two years, the rise of big-ticket ransomware attacks and revelations of harmful software supply chain infections have elevated cyber security to the top of governments’ and corporate agendas.
The opportunities for threat actors are growing faster than firms are able to mitigate them.
Unlike 20 years ago, when even extensive IT systems were comparatively standalone and straightforward, the interdependencies of systems now make dealing with and defending against threats a much more difficult proposition. The core problems being complexity and interdependence and neither are going away because that is what is providing organisations with the flexibility, functionality and all these other critical functions that they need. https://www.csoonline.com/article/3635097/why-today-s-cybersecurity-threats-are-more-dangerous.html
How Fraudsters Can Use The Forgotten Details Of Your Online Life To Reel You In
You may think you’ve been careful, but a determined scammer can probably find enough to manipulate you. https://www.theguardian.com/money/2021/oct/03/how-fraudsters-can-use-the-forgotten-details-of-your-online-life-to-reel-you-in
One In Three IT Security Managers Don’t Have A Formal Cybersecurity Incident Response Plan
Regardless of industry, information security incidents have become more of a targeted threat for businesses, increasing in amount and efficacy, according to a new report.
Of all the security incidents identified by over 900 surveyed employees at U.S. businesses, the three most threatening incidents were: increasingly severe ransomware attacks, more effective phishing schemes, and rampant reusing of passwords.
· Respondents reported phishing emails have nearly tripled in effectiveness over the past two years. Phishing emails are rapidly becoming more difficult to spot and thus far more destructive.
· Over the past year, ransomware attacks have increased by 25%. Ransom demands were significantly higher than average for businesses in specific industries, such as banking and financial services and construction, with higher payouts.
· The report found that password reuse is strongly associated with higher incidences of security breaches. Reported account takeovers were three times as common among people who reuse passwords as those who don’t.
Alarmingly, 23% of the IT security managers surveyed say their company doesn’t have protocols in place to report a suspected cyberattack and 33% don’t have a formal cybersecurity incident response plan. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/06/response-plan-cybersecurity/
Cyber Security Best Practices Lagging, Despite People Being Aware Of The Risks
The National Cybersecurity Alliance and CybSafe announced the release of a report which polled 2,000 individuals across the U.S. and UK. The report examined key cybersecurity trends, attitudes, and behaviours ahead of Cybersecurity Awareness Month this month.
The daily headlines of data breaches and ransomware attacks is a testament to the problem getting worse, yet most people aren’t aware of the simple steps they can take to be a part of the solution. It’s critical to have a deeper understanding of both the challenges we face and the prevailing attitudes and behaviors among the public.
Too often people are forgotten in cybersecurity conversations and this is borne out by cyber crime being more common among Millenials and Gen Z, and the public not embracing cyber security best practices.
The report also found that many users had limited access to cyber training, with 64% of respondents having no access to cybersecurity training, while 27% of those who do have access choose not to use it. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/07/cybersecurity-best-practices-lagging/
Threats
Ransomware
Ransomware: Cyber Criminals Are Still Exploiting These Old Vulnerabilities, So Patch Now | ZDNet
Revil Alone Accounts For A Significant Portion Of Q2 2021 Ransomware Attacks | Techspot
Behind the Crypto Broker Accused of Enabling Ransomware Hackers - Bloomberg
Atom Silo ransomware actors use Confluence exploit, DLL side-load for stealthy attack – Sophos News
US Ransomware Law Would Require Victims To Disclose Ransom Payments Within 48 Hours | ZDNet
Ransomware Group FIN12 Aggressively Going After Healthcare Targets (thehackernews.com)
Other Social Engineering
Malware
Researchers Discover UEFI Bootkit Targeting Windows Computers Since 2012 (thehackernews.com)
91.5% Of Malware Arrived Over Encrypted Connections During Q2 2021 - Help Net Security
IOT
BYOD
Vulnerabilities
Data Breaches/Leaks
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
Insider Threats
Dark Web
Nation State Actors
Chinese Hackers Used a New Rootkit to Spy on Targeted Windows 10 Users (thehackernews.com)
Microsoft: 58% of Nation-State Cyber Attacks Come From Russia (darkreading.com)
Google Warns 14,000 Gmail Users Targeted By Russian Hackers (Bleepingcomputer.Com)
Solarwinds Hack Saw Russia Steal Us Anti-Spy Probe Details • The Register
A New APT Hacking Group Targeting Fuel, Energy, and Aviation Industries (thehackernews.com)
New Study Links Seemingly Disparate Malware Attacks to Chinese Hackers (thehackernews.com)
Iranian APT Targets Aerospace And Telecom Firms With Stealthy ShellClient Trojan | CSO Online
Cloud
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
The Cyber Security Issues Organizations Deal With Remain Complex And Numerous - Help Net Security
Company That Routes SMS For All Major US Carriers Was Hacked For Five Years | Ars Technica
New £5 Billion GCHQ Digital Warfare Centre Capable Of 'Cyber Attacks' Set For Lancashire - Lancslive
Superhero Passwords Pose Serious Risk to Personal, Enterprise Accounts | SecurityWeek.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 weekly ‘Cyber Tip Tuesday’ video blog and on our YouTube channel.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Links to articles are for interest and awareness and linking to or reposting external content does not endorse any service or product, likewise we are not responsible for the security of external links.
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 01 October 2021
Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing 01 October 2021:
-Cyber Second Only To Climate Change As Biggest Global Risk
-Businesses Unsure Which Tech Is Essential Against Ransomware
-Cyber Crime Awareness Heightened, Yet People Still Engage In Risky Online Behaviours
-Attacks Against Remote Desktop Protocol Endpoints Have Exploded This Year
-Ransomware Attacks Up 1,070% Year Over Year
-Baby’s Death Alleged To Be Linked To Ransomware
-Ransomware Shame: More Than Half Of Business Owners Conceal Cyber-Breach
-More Than 90% Of Q2 Malware Was Hidden In Encrypted Traffic
-Cyber Attack Floors British Payroll Firm
-GriftHorse Malware Infected More Than 10 Million Android Phones From 70 Countries
-50% Of Servers Have Weak Security Long After Patches Are Released
Welcome to this week’s Black Arrow Cyber Threat Briefing – a weekly digest, collated and curated by our cyber experts to provide senior and middle management with an easy to digest round up of the most notable threats, vulnerabilities, and cyber related news from the last week.
Top Cyber Stories of the Last Week
Cyber Second Only To Climate Change As Biggest Global Risk
Cyber security has been ranked as the second largest threat to our way of life in a major new survey of 23,000 people, comprised of both experts and members of the public. Cyber came second only to climate change on the world stage, but was ranked as the number one risk in the Americas and second in Asia, Africa, and Europe. https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cyber-second-biggest-global-risk/
Businesses Unsure Which Tech Is Essential Against Ransomware
As ransomware attacks grow in number, a new report finds that many organisations are under the impression they have things in hand but most are unsure what protections they should have in place. The report, based on a survey of 455 business leaders and cyber security professionals, claims businesses are on top of employee training, risk assessments and cyber insurance. Where firms fall flat however is their “clear gap” in thinking, in what many respondents see as “essential tech” in the fight against ransomware – nearly half of respondents (49%) thought paying up was their best option. https://www.techradar.com/news/businesses-unsure-which-tech-is-essential-against-ransomware
Cyber Crime Awareness Heightened, Yet People Still Engage In Risky Online Behaviours
A survey of over 2,000 adults suggests that 76% of respondents recognise the severity of data breaches. This heightened awareness may be driven by constant news of major consumer, enterprise and infrastructural breaches over the last year alone. https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2021/10/01/risky-online-behaviors/
Attacks Against Remote Desktop Protocol Endpoints Have Exploded This Year
A recent report warns of a huge increase in attacks on the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), an almost universal protocol used by nearly every business in operation today. The figures show attacks on RDP have jumped 103.9% since its T1 report in June and represents around 55 billion devices. The RDP protocol is leveraged by threat actors to deploy ransomware and has become a popular target due to both heavy use by IT service providers and common misconfigurations. https://www.theregister.com/2021/09/30/eset_threat_report/
Ransomware Attacks Up 1,070% Year Over Year
The prevalence of ransomware is growing rapidly, according to the 2021 Ransomware Survey Report. The report shockingly found many of the ransom demands are paid, and comes as a result in the rise of “ransomware as-a-service”. The report found 94% of businesses are concerned about ransomware, with 49% stating they would simply pay the ransom outright. Respondents in Europe were more concerned than those in North America, and around 67% felt they had already been the target of ransomware. https://www.msspalert.com/cybersecurity-research/fortinet-report-ransomware-attacks-up-1070-year-over-year/
Baby’s Death Alleged To Be Linked To Ransomware
A US hospital paralyzed by ransomware in 2019 will be defending itself in court this November over the death of a newborn. The baby was born amid the hospital’s eighth day of fending off the attack. Court filings show the hospital – Springhill Medical Center in Alabama – believes wireless tracking systems and heartbeat monitoring equipment were compromised by the ransomware, leading to the death.
https://threatpost.com/babys-death-linked-ransomware/175232/
Ransomware Shame: More Than Half Of Business Owners Conceal Cyber-Breach
Around a third (32%) of enterprises experienced a six-figure breach last year, but well over half (61%) admitted to concealing it. The findings come as a global survey of 1,400 decision makers in cyber is released. https://www.foxbusiness.com/technology/ransomware-cyber-breach-concealed
More Than 90% Of Q2 Malware Was Hidden In Encrypted Traffic
Around 91.5% of malware detections in Q1 2021 were concealed in HTTPS-encrypted connections. A ubiquitous protocol – used to secure traffic any time you open a web page – only 20% of organisations have mechanisms in place to scan the arriving HTTPS traffic. The terrifying result found that most firms are missing over nine-tenths of malware hitting their networks every day. https://www.darkreading.com/perimeter/more-than-90-of-q2-malware-was-hidden-in-encrypted-traffic
Cyber Attack Floors British Payroll Firm
A "sophisticated" cyber attack has forced a British payroll company to shut down its entire network, leaving some contractors without pay. Giant Group confirmed on September 24 that it had taken its network, fully integrated IT infrastructure, phone, and email systems offline last Wednesday after detecting suspicious activity. https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cyberattack-floors-british-payroll/#.YVQiuXlCjOA.twitter
GriftHorse Malware Infected More Than 10 Million Android Phones From 70 Countries
A malicious trojan has been making its way through the Google Play Store since at least November of 2020. The app, purportedly harmless on the surface, hijacks payments on the victim device, resulting in a series of hidden charges and a nasty surprise at the end of the month. Researchers who discovered the malware estimate its impact to be over 10 million victims in 70 countries, and several hundreds of millions of Euros in losses. https://securityaffairs.co/wordpress/122730/malware/grifthorse-malware-campaign.html
50% Of Servers Have Weak Security Long After Patches Are Released
Over 50% of servers scanned still have weak security, a new study suggests, even after patches have been issued. Researchers found that servers were still vulnerable weeks and even months after critical updates, leaving many businesses wide open to attack. https://www.darkreading.com/vulnerabilities-threats/50-of-servers-have-weak-security-long-after-patches-are-released
Threats
Ransomware
United Health Centres Reportedly Compromised By Ransomware Attack
JVCKenwood Hit By Conti Ransomware Claiming Theft Of 1.5TB Data
Ransomware Gangs Are Complaining That Other Crooks Are Stealing Their Ransoms
United Health Centers Reportedly Compromised By Ransomware Attack
REvil Customers Complain Ransomware Gang Uses Backdoors To Filch Ransoms
The Biggest Problem With Ransomware Is Not Encryption, But Credentials
Phishing
Other Social Engineering
Malware
Thousands Of Online Gaming Accounts Hit In Major Cyber Attack
Microsoft Warns of FoggyWeb Malware Targeting Active Directory FS Servers
New Malware Steals Steam, Epic Games Store, And EA Origin Accounts
Vulnerabilities
Threat Actors Use Recently Discovered CVE-2021-26084 Atlassian Confluence
New Azure AD Bug Lets Hackers Brute-Force Passwords Without Getting Caught
Thousands of University Wi-Fi Networks Expose Log-In Credentials
Exploit Released For VMware Vulnerability After CISA Warning
Outsourced Software Poses Greater Risks to Enterprise Application Security
Working Exploit Is Out for VMware vCenter CVE-2021-22005 Flaw
Apple Responds To Security Researcher Who Found Multiple iOS 15 Zero-Day Flaws
Windows 10 Emergency Update Resolves KB5005565 App Freezes, Crashes
Cyber Security Vulnerability Could Affect Millions Of Hikvision Cameras
Data Breaches/Leaks
Anonymous: We've Leaked Disk Images Stolen From Far-Right-Friendly Web Host Epik
3.8 Billion Users’ Combined Clubhouse, Facebook Data Up for Sale
Emails, Chat Logs, More Leaked Online From Far-Right Militia Linked To US Capitol Riot
Cryptocurrency/Cryptojacking
Ethereum Dev Admits Helping North Korea Mine Crypto-Bucks, Faces 20 Years Jail
China Says All Crypto Currency-Related Transactions Are Illegal And Must Be Banned
Insider Threats
Dark Web
DoS/DDoS
Nation State Actors
APT Focus: ‘Noisy’ Russian Hacking Crews Are Among The World’s Most Sophisticated
APT29 Targets Active Directory Federation Services With Stealthy Backdoor
Nation-State Attacks Fears Grow, Execs Don’t Trust Governments To Protect Them From Cyber Threats
APT focus: ‘Noisy’ Russian hacking crews are among the world’s most sophisticated
Cloud
Huawei Cloud Services: U.S. Lawmakers Express Security Concerns
Why CEOs Should Absolutely Concern Themselves With Cloud Security
Cloud Security: Report Finds 68% of Malware Delivered From Cloud Apps
Privacy
Reports Published in the Last Week
Other News
Revealed: How To Steal Money From Victims' Contactless Apple Pay Wallets
Threat Actors Weaponize Telegram Bots to Compromise PayPal Accounts
Report Highlights Cyber Security Dangers Of Elastic Stack Implementation Mistakes
Russian Authorities Arrest Cyber Security Giant Group-IB’s CEO On Treason Charges
Corporate Attack Surface Exploding As A Result Of Remote Work
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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