CVE-2022-36326

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An uncontrolled resource consumption vulnerability issue that could arise by sending crafted requests to a service to consume a large amount of memory, eventually resulting in the service being stopped and restarted was discovered in Western Digital My Cloud Home, My Cloud Home Duo, SanDisk ibi and Western Digital My Cloud OS 5 devices. This issue requires the attacker to already have root privileges in order to exploit this vulnerability.This issue affects My Cloud Home and My Cloud Home Duo: before 9.4.0-191; ibi: before 9.4.0-191; My Cloud OS 5: before 5.26.202.

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Camaro Dragon APT Targets Foreign Affairs Organizations with Horse Shell Implants

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What is Camaro Dragon?

Camaro Dragon is an alleged Chinese threat actor that has a keen interest in the foreign affairs of organizations within Europe. Their activities show similarities with the Chinese “Mustang Panda” APT group.

What is the Attack?

Camaro Dragon targeted European foreign affairs organizations using the Horse Shell backdoor malware hidden in modified firmware for TP-Link routers. While the initial infection vector has not been identified, the threat actor likely exploited vulnerabilities in TP-Link routers or leveraged weak passwords.
The Horse Shell backdoor is capable of performing variety of tasks such as collecting system information and sending it to Command-and-Control (C2) servers, as well as – upload, download, create and delete files, and enumerate directories.

Why is this Significant?

This is significant because the alleged China-based “Camaro Dragon” APT group that share similarities with the infamous Mustang Panda group, targeted various European foreign affairs organizations using TP-Link routers unknowingly installed with Horse Shell backdoor.

What is the Vendor Solution?

While initial infection vector has not been identified, the APT group likely exploited vulnerabilities in TP-Link routers or abused weak credentials. All available patches should be applied and login passwords to routers should be updated to stronger less vulnerable and easily guessed passwords.

What FortiGuard Coverage is available?

FortiGuard Labs has the following AV signatures available for the malicious Horse Shell components called out in the report:
Linux/HorseShell.A!tr

Network IOCs in the report are blocked by Webfiltering.

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#StopRansomware: BianLian Ransomware

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What is BianLian Ransomware?

BianLian is a ransomware threat actor whose modus operandi is to add victims to its own data leak site in June 2022. BianLian also refers to the file encryptor (ransomware) used by the threat actor. Victims reportedly include critical infrastructure organizations in the U.S. and Australia.

FortiGuard Labs previously reported BianLian in a Ransomware Roundup blog published on September 2nd, 2022.

What is the Attack?

The BianLian ransom threat actor leverages stolen and leaked Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) credentials for initial access, FTP, Rclone, PowerShell scripts and a public could storage for data exfiltration, and abuses Impacket tools and PsExec for lateral movements. Furthermore, it installs Go-based backdoors and legitimate Remote Access software to establish external communications and persistence. Such activities are typically done prior to deploying a Go-based BianLian encryptor to the victims’ networks for data encryption. It adds a “.bianlian” file extension to files encrypted and leaves a ransom note labeled “Files encrypted by BianLian encryptor have a “.bianlian” file extension.” The group was recently reported to have abandoned file encryption and focused only on data exfiltration, potentially because a free file decryptor was publicly made available.

Why is this Significant?

This is significant because CISA released a new ransomware advisory for BianLian ransomware on May 16th, 2023, as part of their #StopRansomware effort.
Organizations compromised by the BianLian ransomware threat actor likely will experience loss of data due to exfiltration, unwanted downtime, and ultimately, but not limited to – damage to an organization’s reputation.

What FortiGuard Coverage is available?

FortiGuard Labs has the following AV signatures available for known BianLian ransomware samples:
MSIL/BianLian.A!tr.ransom
W64/BianLian.A!tr.ransom
W32/BianLian.c7ec!tr.ransom
W32/BianLian.7abe!tr.ransom
W64/Filecoder.BT!tr.ransom
W32/Filecoder.BT!tr
W32/RANSOM.HR!tr

The following AV signatures may cover files and malware related to BianLian activities:
W64/Filecoder.GG!tr
W64/Agent.RA!tr
W64/Agent.FEDE!tr
W64/Agent.FCF9!tr
W64/Agent.ED2A!tr
W64/Agent.538F!tr
W64/Agent.6D96!tr
W64/Agent.9A59!tr
W64/Agent.7D10!tr
W32/PossibleThreat
PossibleThreat.PALLAS.M
PossibleThreat.PALLAS.H
Malicious_Behavior.SB

FortiGuard Labs Guidance

Due to the ease of disruption, damage to daily operations, potential impact to an organization’s reputation, and the unwanted destruction or release of personally identifiable information (PII), etc., it is vital to keep all AV and IPS signatures up to date.

Organizations will need to make foundational changes to the frequency, location, and security of their data backups to effectively deal with the evolving and rapidly expanding risk of ransomware. When coupled with digital supply chain compromise and a workforce telecommuting into the network, there is a real risk that attacks can originate from anywhere. Cloud-based security solutions, such as SASE, to protect off-network devices; advanced endpoint security, such as EDR (endpoint detection and response) solutions that can disrupt malware mid-attack; and Zero Trust Access and network segmentation strategies that restrict access to applications and resources based on policy and context, should all be investigated to minimize risk and to reduce the impact of a successful ransomware attack.

As part of the industry’s leading fully integrated Security Fabric, delivering native synergy and automation across your security ecosystem, Fortinet also provides an extensive portfolio of technology and human-based as-a-service offerings. These services are powered by our global FortiGuard team of seasoned cybersecurity experts.

Organizations such as CISA, NCSC, the FBI, and HHS caution ransomware victims against paying a ransom partly because payment does not guarantee that files will be recovered. According to a U.S. Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) advisory, ransom payments may also embolden adversaries to target additional organizations, encourage other criminal actors to distribute ransomware, and/or fund illicit activities that could potentially be illegal. For organizations and individuals affected by ransomware, the FBI has a Ransomware Complaint page where victims can submit samples of ransomware activity via their Internet Crimes Complaint Center (IC3).

FortiGuard Labs’ Emergency Incident Response Service provides rapid and effective response when an incident is detected. And our Incident Readiness Subscription Service provides tools and guidance to help you better prepare for a cyber incident through readiness assessments, IR playbook development, and IR playbook testing (tabletop exercises).

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Organizations reporting cyber resilience are hardly resilient: Study

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While most organizations have a cyber resilience program in place, more than half of them lack a comprehensive approach to assessing resilience, according to a study by Immersive Labs.

The study aimed at understanding business preparedness amidst growing incidents found a strong intent to strengthen cybersecurity capabilities driven by external threats.

“Rules of engagement for cyberthreat actors are constantly innovating to cause catastrophic and unavoidable situations,” said Michael Sampson, analyst at Osterman Research and author of the survey whitepaper. “Hence while cyber resilience is a hope for most organizations, the practices of building, testing, and improving cyber resilience are still immature at most organizations.”

To read this article in full, please click here

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vim-9.0.1562-1.fc37

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FEDORA-2023-99d2eaac80

Packages in this update:

vim-9.0.1562-1.fc37

Update description:

The newest upstream commit

Security fixes for CVE-2023-2426, CVE-2023-2609, CVE-2023-2610

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Aviatrix is transforming cloud network security with distributed firewalling

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Cloud networking solutions provider Aviatrix has launched a distributed cloud firewall offering in a bid to strengthen network security for application traffic on multicloud environments.

The offering is targeted at distributing both inspection and policy enforcement into the original path of application traffic, eliminating the need to redirect traffic to centralized firewalls or other network security services.

“Aviatrix is the first to deliver a distributed cloud firewall,” said Rod Stuhlmuller, vice president of solutions marketing at Aviatrix. “Customers are no longer constrained by last-generation firewall architectures in the cloud. This changes the game and allows enterprises to both reduce cloud infrastructure costs and improve security immediately across all their public cloud environments.”

To read this article in full, please click here

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