Weekly Threat Report 5th May 2017

Google and Facebook were victims of Business Email Compromise (BEC) or ‘CEO Fraud’

Google and Facebook have been identified as the victims of an email phishing attack for which a Lithuanian man was charged in March 2017.

The attack relied upon social engineering methods rather than technical intrusion techniques. However, the individual was still able to trick the organisations into transferring over $100 million between 2013-2015, highlighting how cyber-enabled social…

Link: Weekly Threat Report 5th May 2017
Source: NCSC Reports

Weekly Threat Report 13th January 2017

The year of ransomware…

…is how 2016 has been widely described in the cyber security media.

There has been numerous UK incidents targeting academia, Government departments, industry, CNI sectors and individual users.  Using ransomware as an attack technique has become popular because it is easy to carry out and can be financially lucrative.

Ransomware can infect a system via  unpatched software vulnerabilities or duping unsuspecting users into installing the ransomware…

Link: Weekly Threat Report 13th January 2017
Source: NCSC Reports

Turla group malware

Introduction

The NCSC has produced technical analysis on the Turla group, a prevalent cyber threat group targeting the UK. The report contains indicators of compromise for tools used by the group, and signatures that will enable the information security community to search for the intrusions on their networks.
 

Background

The NCSC has observed the Turla group using the Neuron and Nautilus malicious tools designed to operate on Microsoft Windows platforms, primarily targeting mail…

Link: Turla group malware
Source: NCSC Alerts

Weekly Threat Report 9th March 2018

Largest reported DDoS attacks mitigated 

The largest ever reported Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) occurred in early March 2018, according to Netscout Arbor. A peak of 1.7 Terabits per second (Tbps) was recorded, although the attack was mitigated. This followed a recent attack against GitHub on 28 February, with a peak of 1.35 Tbps. The largest known attack previously took place in 2016 against the US DNS provider DYN, which peaked at 1.2 Tbps.

The method used for these attacks is…

Link: Weekly Threat Report 9th March 2018
Source: NCSC Reports

Apple QuickTime for Windows

Summary

QuickTime for Microsoft Windows is no longer supported by Apple and the current advice is to remove it from all Windows OS Devices devices.

The removal instructions can be found here https://support.apple.com/HT205771

QuickTime for Mac OSX is unaffected, can be considered to still be supported, and subject to security patches as required.

Further details

Two vulnerabilities have been found and published by the TippingPoint Zero Day Initiative (ZDI) and, as per their rules,…

Link: Apple QuickTime for Windows
Source: NCSC Alerts

Weekly Threat Report 18th August 2017

Hotels targeted across Europe and the Middle-East

Recent media reporting has highlighted a campaign targeting the hospitality sector.

The campaign, which reportedly started in July 2017 and may be linked to a similar campaign carried out during the autumn of 2016, is allegedly being carried out by Fancy Bear, also known as APT28. The group has also been implicated in the hack-and-leak campaign against the Democratic National Committee (DNC) during the 2016 US Presidential Elections.

Using…

Link: Weekly Threat Report 18th August 2017
Source: NCSC Reports

Weekly Threat Report 28th April 2017

Increase in Homographic Phishing Attacks

Recent media reporting highlights a threefold increase in homographic phishing attacks over the past fourteen months.

Homographic attacks have been widely known about for many years, and rely on the fact there are visual similarities between many different Unicode characters to spoof well-known web addresses using similar-looking Punycode domains. For example, by registering the Unicode domain “www.xn--googl-z8a.com” an attacker would be in…

Link: Weekly Threat Report 28th April 2017
Source: NCSC Reports

Weekly Threat Report 6th January 2017

Vulnerabilities in travel booking systems

Security researchers presented findings at a recent cyber security conference highlighting a range of vulnerabilities in travel bookings systems known as Global Distribution Systems (GDS). GDS are databases used by a range of companies, including travel agencies, airlines, hotels and car hire companies, to hold the travel information collectively known as the Passenger Name Record (PNR).

Researchers noted that GDS can be accessed in many cases with…

Link: Weekly Threat Report 6th January 2017
Source: NCSC Reports

Weekly Threat Report 24th November 2017

Black Friday online seasonal scams

Although ostensibly a US tradition of the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, Black Friday has been adopted in the UK by many retailers who heavily discount goods to kick start the Christmas shopping season. The surge of bargain hunters seeking good deals on the high street and online inevitably attracts criminals looking to exploit this seasonal activity.

Last year, victims reported losing nearly £16 million to Christmas shopping fraudsters, increasing…

Link: Weekly Threat Report 24th November 2017
Source: NCSC Reports

Weekly Threat Report 16th March 2018

CCleaner update

Cyber security company Avast continues to investigate the 2017 supply chain attacks involving clean-up tool CCleaner. For a month last summer, Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) attackers are reported to have maliciously modified versions of CCleaner and CCleaner Cloud at source, before being downloaded by 2.27 million customers worldwide. The attackers then selected a small number of high profile technology and telecommunications companies to receive a secondary payload.

Avast…

Link: Weekly Threat Report 16th March 2018
Source: NCSC Reports