FortiGuard Labs is aware that the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) released the updated indicators of compromise (IOCs) for RagnarLocker (Ragnar_Locker) Ransomware on March 8th, 2022. The report states “As of January 2022, the FBI has identified at least 52 entities across 10 critical infrastructure sectors affected by RagnarLocker ransomware, including entities in the critical manufacturing, energy, financial services, government, and information technology sectors.”The first sighting of the ransomware goes back to at least February, 2020. RagnarLocker ransomware employs triple extortion tactics: it demands ransom after encrypting files, threatens to publicize stolen data and to stop DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attack against the victim.Why is this Significant?This is significant because the FBI is aware that more than 50 organizations across 10 critical infrastructure sectors were affected by RagnarLocker ransomware. The fact the FBI has made additional IOCs available to the public insinuates that RagnarLocker will continue to be active and will likely produce more victims.What is RagnarLocker Ransomware?The first report of RagnarLocker (Ragnar_Locker) ransomware dates back to as early as February 2020.Just like any other ransomware, RagnarLocker encrypts files on the compromised machine and steals valuable data. It also deletes all Volume Shadow Copies, which prevents recovery of the encrypted files. Although there are some exceptions, files encrypted by RagnarLocker ransomware generally have a file extension that starts with .ragnar_ or ragn@r_ followed by random characters.On top of usual ransom demand to decrypt the files it encrypted, the ransomware threatens to publicize the data it stole from the victim if the ransom demand is not met. The RagnarLocker threat actors also adds pressure to the victim to pay the ransom by performing DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attack against the victim.One notable thing about this ransomware is that it has code to check the location of the computer before encryption process starts. If the computer belongs Russia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine, the ransomware terminates itself. What are the Mitigations for RagnarLocker Ransomware?The following are the mitigations recommended by FBI:Back-up critical data offline.Ensure copies of critical data are in the cloud or on an external hard drive or storage device. This information should not be accessible from the compromised network.Secure your back-ups and ensure data is not accessible for modification or deletion from the system where the data resides.Use multi-factor authentication with strong passwords, including for remote access services.Keep computers, devices, and applications patched and up-to-date.Monitor cyber threat reporting regarding the publication of compromised VPN login credentials and change passwords and settings.Consider adding an email banner to emails received from outside your organization.Disable unused remote access/Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) ports and monitor remote access/RDP logs.Audit user accounts with administrative privileges and configure access controls with least privilege in mind.Implement network segmentation.What is the Status of Coverage?FortiGuard Labs provide the following AV coverage against RagnarLocker ransomware:Linux/Filecoder_RagnarLocker.A!trW32/RagnarLocker.43B7!tr.ransomW32/Filecoder_RagnarLocker.A!trW32/RagnarLocker.A!tr.ransomW32/RagnarLocker.C!trW32/RagnarLocker.B!tr.ransomW32/RagnarLocker.4C9D!tr.ransomW32/Filecoder_RagnarLocker.A!tr.ransomW32/RagnarLocker.C!tr.ransomW32/Filecoder_RagnarLocker.C!trW32/Filecoder.94BA!tr.ransomW32/Filecoder.OAH!tr.ransomAll network IOCs are blocked by the WebFiltering client.
MicroBackdoor Used in Attacks Against Ukraine Organizations
FortiGuard Labs is aware of a report from CERT-UA that Ukrainian organizations are under cyberattacks that aim to install a publicly available backdoor named “MicroBackdoor.” The cyberattacks are attributed to APT group “UAC-0051”, also known as unc1151, who has reportedly acted for Belarusian government’s interests in the past.Why is this Significant?This is significant because, according to CERT-UA, Ukraine organizations were attacked by an APT group whose past activities are said to be aligned with Belarusian government’s interests.What’s the Detail of the Attack?Unfortunately, the initial attack vector is unknown. What’s known is that the victims received “dovidka.zip”, which contains “dovidka.chm”. The CHM file contains two files. An image.jpg is an image file used as a decoy. Another file is file.htm, which creates “ignit.vbs”. The VBS file decodes three files: “core.dll,” “desktop.ini” and “Windows Prefetch.lnk.” The LNK file launches the INI file using wscript.exe. Then, the INI file runs the DLL using regasm.exe. The core.dll is a .NET loader that decodes and executes MicroBackdoor on the compromised machine.What is MicroBackdoor?MicroBackdoor is a publicly available backdoor that receives commands from a Command and Control (C2) server and performs various activities.According to the description on the MicroBackdoor repository”Micro Backdoor client supports 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1, 10, Server 2003, Server 2003 R2, Server 2008, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012, Server 2012 R2, Server 2016 and Server 2019 of any editions, languages and service packs.”What is the Status of Coverage?FortiGuard Labs provide the following AV coverage against available files involved in the attack:PossibleThreat.PALLAS.HVBS/Agent.OVE!trLNK/Agent.7AB4!trAll network IOCs are blocked by the WebFiltering client.
DSA-5098 tryton-server – security update
Jeremy Mousset discovered two XML parsing vulnerabilities in the Tryton
application platform, which may result in information disclosure or
denial of service.
DSA-5099 tryton-proteus – security update
Jeremy Mousset discovered two XML parsing vulnerabilities in the Tryton
application platform, which may result in information disclosure or
denial of service.
CVE-2021-22783
A CWE-200: Information Exposure vulnerability exists which could allow a session hijack when the door panel is communicating with the door. Affected Product: Ritto Wiser Door (All versions)
Consumers Worried About Digital Banking Security
Study finds most consumers prefer to bank online, but are concerned about potential fraud
New Zealand Identifies 90,000 CSAM Trading Accounts
Two-year investigation results in safeguarding of 146 children internationally
Romanian Extradited to US to Face Cybercrime Charge
Defendant accused of selling stolen credit card data obtained using malware
High-impact DDoS attacks target zero-day exploit in Mitel systems
Security researchers, network operators and security vendors have detected a new reflection/amplification distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) vulnerability actively being exploited to launch multiple high-impact DDoS attacks. TP240PhoneHome (CVE-2022-26143) has a record-breaking potential amplification ratio of 4,294,967,296:1 and can be targeted to abuse collaboration systems produced by Mitel with the potential to cause significant collateral impact to businesses.
Attacks have been observed on broadband access ISPs, financial institutions, logistics companies, gaming companies, and organizations in other vertical markets. Mitel has released patched software that disables the abusable test facility whilst attacks can be mitigated using standard DDoS-defense techniques. The findings come from a collaborative research and mitigation task force effort with contributors including NETSCOUT, Akamai, Cloudflare and Mitel.
Microsoft Patch Tuesday, March 2022 Edition
Microsoft on Tuesday released software updates to plug at least 70 security holes in its Windows operating systems and related software. For the second month running, there are no scary zero-day threats looming for Windows users, and relatively few “critical” fixes. And yet we know from experience that attackers are already trying to work out how to turn these patches into a roadmap for exploiting the flaws they fix. Here’s a look at the security weaknesses Microsoft says are most likely to be targeted first.
Greg Wiseman, product manager at Rapid7, notes that three vulnerabilities fixed this month have been previously disclosed, potentially giving attackers a head start in working out how to exploit them. Those include remote code execution bugs CVE-2022-24512, affecting .NET and Visual Studio, and CVE-2022-21990, affecting Remote Desktop Client. CVE-2022-24459 is a vulnerability in the Windows Fax and Scan service. All three publicly disclosed vulnerabilities are rated “Important” by Microsoft.
Just three of the fixes this month earned Microsoft’s most-dire “Critical” rating, which Redmond assigns to bugs that can be exploited to remotely compromise a Windows PC with little to no help from users. Two of those critical flaws involve Windows video codecs. Perhaps the most concerning critical bug quashed this month is CVE-2022-23277, a remote code execution flaw affecting Microsoft Exchange Server.
“Thankfully, this is a post-authentication vulnerability, meaning attackers need credentials to exploit it,” Wiseman said. “Although passwords can be obtained via phishing and other means, this one shouldn’t be as rampantly exploited as the deluge of Exchange vulnerabilities we saw throughout 2021. Exchange administrators should still patch as soon as reasonably possible.”
CVE-2022-24508 is a remote code execution bug affecting Windows SMBv3, the technology that handles file sharing in Windows environments.
“This has potential for widespread exploitation, assuming an attacker can put together a suitable exploit,” Wiseman said. “Luckily, like this month’s Exchange vulnerabilities, this, too, requires authentication.”
Kevin Breen, director of cyber threat research at Immersive Labs, called attention to a trio of bugs fixed this month in the Windows Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), which is a favorite target of ransomware groups.
“CVE-2022-23285, CVE-2022-21990 and CVE-2022-24503 are a potential concern especially as this infection vector is commonly used by ransomware actors,” Breen said. “While exploitation is not trivial, requiring an attacker to set up bespoke infrastructure, it still presents enough of a risk to be a priority.”
March’s Patch Tuesday also brings an unusual update (CVE-2022-21967) that might just be the first security patch involving Microsoft’s Xbox device.
“This appears to be the first security patch impacting Xbox specifically,” said Dustin Childs from Trend Micro’s Zero Day Initiative. “There was an advisory for an inadvertently disclosed Xbox Live certificate back in 2015, but this seems to be the first security-specific update for the device itself.”
Also on Tuesday, Adobe released updates addressing six vulnerabilities in Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator and After Effects.
For a complete rundown of all patches released by Microsoft today and indexed by severity and other metrics, check out the always-useful Patch Tuesday roundup from the SANS Internet Storm Center. And it’s not a bad idea to hold off updating for a few days until Microsoft works out any kinks in the updates: AskWoody.com usually has the lowdown on any patches that may be causing problems for Windows users.
As always, please consider backing up your system or at least your important documents and data before applying system updates. And if you run into any problems with these patches, please drop a note about it here in the comments.