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Cybersecurity

Security Awareness – New Phishing Campaign Detected in National Grid Utilities

Phishing defense firm Cofense has observed a new phishing campaign targeting national grid utility infrastructure. The new campaign includes what appears to be a PDF attachment, but is actually a jpg file with an embedded malicious hyperlink directing users to a malicious webpage that downloads Adwind RAT (also known as jRAT, AlienSpy, JSocket, etc.). Adwind RAT evades most antivirus and antimalware detection and foils sandbox analysis.

Cyber Insurance – You Better Shop Around

Cyber insurance policies are not new, but until recent years they lacked maturity. While cyber insurance is still evolving, it is becoming a necessity in cybersecurity resilience strategy. Cisco Talos Intelligence Group published a post covering some key points all businesses should know about cyber insurance. It is important to understand that not all cyber policies are created equal, and it is likely no two policies are the same. Cyber policies are not plug ’n play like traditional vehicle insurance policies and each policy is customized on a case-by-case basis.

CISA’s Insights on the Ransomware Outbreak

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has published a one-page document addressing considerations in light of the outbreak of ransomware attacks against the nation’s networks. CISA observes that the ransomware infections being reported and discussed in the news are just part of the picture, as many more incidents are not being disclosed.

Microsoft Releases Security Update for Windows Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability

Microsoft has released a security update to address an elevation of privilege vulnerability (CVE-2019-1162) in Windows. An attacker could exploit this vulnerability to take control of an affected system. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) encourages users and administrators to review the Microsoft Security Advisory and apply the necessary update.

Security Awareness – Use Caution with Malware Scanning Services

Back in the day, data found in malware was much more generic, or at least much less specific. Today, with phishing-based scams, BEC, and CEO-fraud leading the pack of cyber attack techniques, the malware samples being uploaded to free malware scanning services reveal far more specific company data than they used to. The Register posted a reminder about the dangers of uploading malware to public online sandbox services. Malware samples certainly provide valuable data for cyber analysts, but malicious actors also view the data.

Fuji Electric Alpha5 Smart Loader (ICSA-19-227-02)

The NCCIC has published an advisory on a stack-based buffer overflow vulnerability in Fuji Electric Alpha5 Smart Loader. All versions prior to 4.2 are affected. Successful exploitation of this vulnerability could allow an attacker to execute code under the privileges of the application. Fuji Electric has released version 4.2 of the Alpha Loader software. The NCCIC also recommends a series of measures to mitigate the vulnerabilities. Read the advisory at CISA.

Johnson Controls Metasys (ICSA-19-227-01)

The NCCIC has published an advisory on reusing a nonce, key pair in encryption and on the use of hard-coded cryptographic key vulnerabilities in Johnson Controls Metasys. Versions prior to 9.0 are affected. Successful exploitation of these vulnerabilities could be leveraged by an attacker to decrypt captured network traffic. Johnson Controls recommends users upgrade to version 9.0 or later and configure sites with trusted certificates. The NCCIC also recommends a series of measures to mitigate the vulnerabilities.

Microsoft Releases Security Updates to Address Remote Code Execution Vulnerabilities

Microsoft has released security updates to address two remote code execution vulnerabilities, CVE-2019-1181 and CVE-2019-1182, in its operating systems. An attacker could exploit these vulnerabilities to take control of an affected system. Similar to CVE-2019-0708 - dubbed BlueKeep - these vulnerabilities are considered “wormable” because malware exploiting these vulnerabilities on a system could propagate to other vulnerable systems.

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