Welcome to this week’s edition of the Threat Source newsletter.
I didn’t feel like I wanted to write anything special or witty this week given the current events in Israel and the Gaza Strip, but I will certainly advocate for any assistance readers would like to provide to the various organizations and helpers who are trying to do some good for Israeli and Palestinian civilians right now.
And since it’s still Cybersecurity Awareness Month, I also wanted to provide some links to various resources, blog posts and podcasts that I’ve found particularly helpful this month and I think you will, too.
- Countering the Rise of Ransomware (Cisco YouTube)
- Talos APJC Threat Update: How attackers are using AI
- The New Normal: How XDR is Tackling Social Engineering in Today’s World (Cisco Secure blog)
- CISA’s Secure Our World initiative
- Allied Against Hate: CISA resources for faith and community leaders
- Fact sheet: Improving Security of Open Source Software in Operational Technology and Industrial Control Systems
The one big thing
Many of the world’s largest cloud providers are warning of a vulnerability that attackers exploited in August to launch the largest distributed denial-of-service attack on record. CVE-2023-44487, a vulnerability in the HTTP/2 protocol, was recently used to launch intensive DDoS attacks against several targets. The problem lies in the way that HTTP/2 protocol handles request cancellations or resets. When a client issues a reset for an HTTP/2 request, this consumes resources on the server as it cancels the corresponding stream. However, after issuing a reset, the client can instantly open a new stream.
Why do I care?
Google said the attack in August was the heaviest DDoS assault it ever recorded at over 398 million requests per second, which the company said is more than seven times larger than any other its ever recorded. So, the sheer scale is certainly notable. If this type of attack was launched with a much larger botnet, the traffic volume could be orders of magnitude greater and have a much larger potential impact. As such, organizations are urged to patch or mitigate as quickly as possible.
So now what?
Users of any products using the vulnerable protocol — individual companies like F5 and Microsoft have released individual advisories about anything that was affected — should make sure patches are implemented immediately. However, this issue is largely about appropriate DDoS mitigation techniques on your environment. A newly released Snort rule, SID 62519, can detect activity associated with this vulnerability.
Top security headlines of the week
Attackers have published the personal information of almost one million people who have Ashkenazi Jew heritage after the adversaries breached genetic testing service 23AndMe. The list allegedly includes full names, sex and 23AndMe’s data on where their ancestry stems from. As of Wednesday morning, the company was still investigating the attackers’ claims but assumed it was authentic. Customers can learn more about their family’s heritage by providing identification data, health information, phenotype, photos and more to 23AndMe. A security researcher said the information looked authentic, and that it’s a sign that a data breach can be dangerous, even if attackers don’t end up manually breaking into a deeper layer of the network. (The Record by Recorded Future 23andMe scraping incident leaked data on 1.3 million users of Ashkenazi and Chinese descent)
Microsoft patched more than 100 vulnerabilities in its range of products as part of its monthly security update. This batch included two zero-day vulnerabilities that had already been exploited in the wild and nine critical issues in the Layer 2 tunneling protocol. Meanwhile, Apple also released a security update Tuesday to fix two critical vulnerabilities in its iOS mobile operating system that were also being exploited in the wild. CVE-2023-42724 in iOS and iPadOS, has been exploited by attackers to elevate their access on a local device. Back on the Microsoft side, the company also used Patch Tuesday as an opportunity to fix security holes in their products related to the high-profile HTTP/2 protocol used to launch massive, distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks earlier this year. (Talos, Krebs on Security)
The International Committee of the Red Cross published new guidelines this week, hoping hacktivist groups will follow during wartime to avoid affecting critical infrastructure and everyday civilians. An increasing number of civilian hackers have become involved in international conflicts hoping to make a difference, especially in the Russia-Ukraine war and now again in Israel. The Red Cross’ new guidelines urge these groups and individuals to obey national laws, if appropriate, and follow the same set of rules for kinetic warfare that international humanitarian law (IHL) provides, and which are aimed at safeguarding “civilians, and soldiers who are no longer able to fight, from some of the horrors of war.” Some of the objectives put forth include not targeting civilian objectives, deploying any malware that may target military and civilian targets indiscriminately and adhering to these rules even if the enemy does not. (Washington Post, SecurityWeek).
Can’t get enough Talos?
- Talos Takes Ep. #157: Cybersecurity Awareness Month: The best practices for implementing multi-factor authentication
- Qakbot hackers now pushing Cyclops/Ransom Knight ransomware, Cisco says
- Qakbot hackers are still spamming victims despite FBI takedown
- Qakbot Attackers Remain Alive and Quacking, Researchers Find
- Researcher Spotlight: How looking at decades of spam led Jaeson Schultz from Y2K to the metaverse and cryptocurrency
- Vulnerability Roundup: 10 zero-day vulnerabilities in industrial cell router could lead to code execution, buffer overflow
Upcoming events where you can find Talos
ATT&CKcon 4.0 (Oct. 24 - 25)
McLean, Virginia
Nicole Hoffman and James Nutland discuss the MIRE ATT&CK framework in “One Leg to Stand on: Adventures in Adversary Tracking with ATT&CK.” Even though ATT&CK has become an industry standard for cyber threat intelligence reporting, all too often, techniques are thrown at the bottoms of reports and blogs without any context never to be seen again after dissemination. This is not useful for intelligence producers or consumers. In this presentation, Nicole and James will show analysts how to use ATT&CK as a guideline for creating a contextual knowledge base for adversary tracking.
misecCON (Nov. 17)
Lansing, Michigan
Terryn Valikodath from Talos Incident Response will deliver a talk providing advice on the best ways to conduct analysis, learning from his years of experience (and mishaps). He will speak about the everyday tasks he and his Talos IR teammates must go through to properly perform analysis. This talk covers topics such as planning, finding evil, recording findings, correlation and creating your own timelines.
Most prevalent malware files from Talos telemetry over the past week
SHA 256: a31f222fc283227f5e7988d1ad9c0aecd66d58bb7b4d8518ae23e110308dbf91
MD5: 7bdbd180c081fa63ca94f9c22c457376
Typical Filename: c0dwjdi6a.dll
Claimed Product: N/A
Detection Name: Trojan.GenericKD.33515991
SHA 256: d5219579eec1819d52761730a72ce7a95ee3f598fcfd9a4b86d1010ea103e827
MD5: bf357485cf123a72a46cc896a5c4b62d
Typical Filename: bf357485cf123a72a46cc896a5c4b62d.virus
Claimed Product: N/A
Detection Name: W32.Auto:d5219579ee.in03.Talos
SHA 256: 975517668a3fe020f1dbb1caafde7180fd9216dcbf0ea147675ec287287f86aa
MD5: 9403425a34e0c78a919681a09e5c16da
Typical Filename: vincpsarzh.exe
Claimed Product: N/A
Detection Name: Win.Dropper.Scar::tpd
SHA 256: 4c3c7be970a08dd59e87de24590b938045f14e693a43a83b81ce8531127eb440
MD5: ef6ff172bf3e480f1d633a6c53f7a35e
Typical Filename: iizbpyilb.bat
Claimed Product: N/A
Detection Name: Trojan.Agent.DDOH
SHA 256: 7f66d4580871e3ee6a35c8fef6da7ab26a93ba36b80279625328aaf184435efa
MD5: e9a6b1346d1a2447cabb980f3cc5dd27
Typical Filename: профиль 10 класс.exe
Claimed Product: N/A
Detection Name: Application_Blocker