Phil Quade, Chief Information
Security Officer, Fortinet
“We, unfortunately, continue to see the cybercriminal community
mirror the strategies and methodologies of nation-state actors, and the evolving devices and networks they are
targeting. Organizations need to rethink their
strategy to better future proof and manage cyber risks. An important first step involves treating cybersecurity more
like a science – doing the fundamentals really well – which requires leveraging the cyberspace fundamentals of speed
and connectivity for defense. Embracing a fabric
approach to security, micro and macro segmentation, and leveraging machine
learning and automation as the building blocks of AI, can provide tremendous
opportunity to force our adversaries back to square one.”
News Summary:
Fortinet(R) (NASDAQ: FTNT), a global leader in broad,
integrated, and automated cybersecurity solutions, today announced the findings
of its latest quarterly Global Threat Landscape Report. The research reveals that cybercriminals continue to evolve the
sophistication of their attack methods, from tailored ransomware and custom
coding for some attacks, to living-off-the-land (LoTL) or sharing infrastructure to
maximize their opportunities. For a detailed
view of the Threat Landscape Index and subindices for exploits, malware, and
botnets, as well as some important takeaways for CISOs read the blog. Highlights of the report follow:
Pre- and Post-Compromise Traffic: Research to see if threat actors carry out phases of their
attacks on different days of the week demonstrates that cybercriminals are
always looking to maximize opportunity to their benefit. When comparing Web filtering volume for two cyber kill chain
phases during weekdays and weekends, pre-compromise activity is roughly three times more likely to occur
during the work week, while post-compromise traffic
shows less differentiation in that regard. This is primarily because exploitation activity often requires
someone to take an action such as clicking on a phishing email. In contrast, command-and-control (C2) activity does not have this requirement and can occur anytime. Cybercriminals understand this and will work to maximize
opportunity during the week when Internet activity is the most prevalent. Differentiating between weekday and weekend Web filtering
practices is important to fully understand the kill chain of various attacks.
Majority of Threats
Share Infrastructure: The degree to which different
threats share infrastructure shows some valuable trends. Some threats leverage community-use infrastructure to a greater degree than unique or dedicated
infrastructure. Nearly 60% of threats shared at least one domain indicating the majority of
botnets leverage established infrastructure. IcedID is an example of this “why buy or build when you can borrow” behavior. In addition, when threats share
infrastructure they tend to do so within the same stage in the kill chain. It is unusual for a threat to leverage a domain for exploitation
and then later leverage it for C2 traffic. This suggests infrastructure plays a particular role or function
when used for malicious campaigns. Understanding what
threats share infrastructure and at what points of the attack chain enables
organizations to predict potential evolutionary points for malware or botnets in
the future.
Content Management
Needs Constant Management: Adversaries tend
to move from one opportunity to the next in clusters, targeting successfully
exploited vulnerabilities and technologies that are on the upswing, to quickly
maximize opportunity. An example of new technologies
getting a lot of attention from cybercriminals recently are Web platforms that
make it easier for consumers and businesses to build Web presences. They continue to be targeted, even associated third party
plugins. This reinforces the fact that it is
critical that patches be applied immediately and to fully understand the
constantly evolving world of exploits to stay ahead of the curve.
Ransomware Far From
Gone: In general, previous high rates of
ransomware have been replaced with more targeted attacks, but ransomware is far
from gone. Instead, multiple attacks
demonstrate it is being customized for high-value targets and to give the attacker privileged access to the
network. LockerGoga is an example of a targeted
ransomware conducted in a multi-stage attack. There is little about LockerGoga that sets it apart from other
ransomware in terms of functional sophistication, but while most ransomware
tools use some level of obfuscation to avoid detection, there was little of it
used when analyzed. This suggests the targeted nature of
the attack and a predetermination that the malware would not be easily detected. In addition, like most other ransomware, the main goal of
Anatova is to encrypt as many files as possible on the victim system, except
that it systematically avoids encrypting anything that can impact the stability
of the system it is infecting. It also avoids
infecting computers that look like they are being used for malware analysis or
as honeypots. Both of these ransomware variants
demonstrate that security leaders need to remain focused on patching and
backups against commodity ransomware, but targeted threats require more
tailored defenses to protect against their unique attack methods.
Tools and Tricks
for Living Off the Land: Because threat actors operate using
the same business models as their victims, to maximize their efforts, attack
methods often continue to develop even after gaining an initial entry. To accomplish this, threat actors increasingly leverage dual-use tools or tools that are already pre-installed on targeted systems to carry out cyberattacks. This “living off the
land” (LoTL) tactic allows hackers to hide their activities in legitimate
processes and makes it harder for defenders to detect them. These tools also make attack attribution much harder. Unfortunately, adversaries can use a wide range of legitimate
tools to accomplish their goals and hide in plain sight. Smart defenders will need to limit access to sanctioned administrative
tools and log use in their environments.
The Need for
Dynamic and Proactive Threat Intelligence
Improving an
organization’s ability to not only properly defend against current threat
trends, but also prepare for the evolution and automation of attacks over time
requires threat intelligence that is dynamic, proactive, and available
throughout the distributed network. This knowledge can
help identify trends showing the evolution of attack methods targeting the
digital attack surface and to pinpoint cyber hygiene priorities based on where
bad actors are focusing their efforts. The value and ability to take action on threat intelligence is
severely diminished if it cannot be actionable in real time across each
security device. Only a security fabric that is
broad, integrated, and automated can provide protection for the entire
networked environment, from IoT to the edge, network core and to multi-clouds at speed and scale.
Report and Index
Overview
The latest Fortinet
Threat Landscape Report is a quarterly view that represents the collective
intelligence of FortiGuard Labs, drawn from Fortinet’s vast array of global
sensors during Q1 2019. Research data covers global and
regional perspectives. Also included in the report is the
Fortinet Threat Landscape Index (TLI), comprised of individual indices for three central and
complementary aspects of that landscape which are exploits, malware, and
botnets, showing prevalence and volume in a given quarter.
For Thailand, the
report finds that the exploits offers a view into attacker reconnaissance
activities to identify vulnerable systems and attempts to exploit those
vulnerabilities. The top prevalent exploit targeted
are attacks related to JavaScript-based cryptomining
scripts, followed by attacks on a vulnerability in ntpsec (NTPsec.ntpd.ctl_getitem.Out.of.Bounds.Read) that was publicly disclosed in
January 2019. Next are attacks targeting
vulnerable Apache Struts 2 servers related to the infamous 2017 Equifax security
breach incident, vulnerable AVTech IP cameras and attacks targeting a DoS
vulnerability in Foxit Quick PDF library.
Malware represents the weaponization or delivery stages of an attack. The top 5 most prevalent malware is related to riskware,
malicious Windows 32-bit executables and JavaScript-based cryptominers.
Botnet represents
command-and-control (C2) traffic between compromised internal systems and malicious
external hosts. The top prevalent botnet is
Bladabindi, a notorious remote access trojan that has been around for a few
years. This is followed by Andromeda, Gh0st.RAT, Sality and Necurs botnets.