This blog continues our previous article, The Resurgence of Major Data Breaches, where we discussed the alarming increase infostealers in data breaches orchestrated by the notorious ShinyHunters group. In this part, we delve into the role of infostealers in these breaches and how they contribute to the rising wave of cyberattacks.
Lately, we have noticed an alarming increase in the number of major data breaches, with millions of records being exposed and shared on dark web forums. This resurgence has been driven in large part by the spread of infostealers – malicious software designed to gradually and unobtrusively steal sensitive information from infected devices without the victim’s awareness. This wave of cyberattacks, along with the resurgence of the names of these former hacking groups/users, raises the question of whether we are entering another “golden age” of mass leaks, similar to what we experienced a few years ago.
The potential reason behind these significant breaches could be the mass leakage of credentials due to infections from various infostealers. Infostealers infiltrate systems through phishing emails, malicious downloads, or compromised websites, extracting valuable data such as usernames, passwords, and other personal information. Once collected, this data is sold or shared on dark websites, providing cybercriminals with the tools they need to conduct further attacks.
Analysis of how infostealers operate reveals that their modus operandi typically involves certain threat actors developing these tools as a service. Other actors then pay to use that infostealer infrastructure, allowing them to simply steal sensitive information from victims easily and efficiently. Let us take a brief look at some of the most infamous infostealer families that are currently wreaking havoc:
A recent analysis conducted by Constella has detected thousands, even millions, of credentials from companies whose employees might be infected by these info stealers. This compromised data includes not only personal information but also access credentials to corporate networks and cloud services. Such widespread exposure significantly increases the risk of large-scale data breaches similar to those we have seen in recent weeks.
Certain cloud service companies have had between 100k and more than 1M credentials exposed in infostealer infections. This wide range of exposed credentials underscores the pervasive threat posed by infostealers across various cloud services, indicating a high likelihood that both employees and customers are exposed on a daily basis, thus increasing the risk that these credentials will increasingly be used maliciously by threat actors.
Given the current landscape, it is crucial for individuals and employees to take specific measures to protect against infostealer infections and subsequent data breaches:
By following these targeted recommendations, users and employees can better protect their personal and corporate information from infostealer infections. The fight against these threats is ongoing, but with the right precautions, we can mitigate their impact and safeguard our data and privacy.
*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Constella Intelligence authored by Alberto Casares. Read the original post at: https://constella.ai/infostealers-on-the-rise-a-new-wave-of-major-data-breaches/