fbpx
Frame-14

Privacy Ninja

        • DATA PROTECTION

        • CYBERSECURITY

        • Penetration Testing

          Secure your network against various threat points. VA starts at only S$1,000, while VAPT starts at S$4,000. With Price Beat Guarantee!

        • API Penetration Testing
        • Enhance your digital security posture with our approach that identifies and addresses vulnerabilities within your API framework, ensuring robust protection against cyber threats targeting your digital interfaces.

        • On-Prem & Cloud Network Penetration Testing
        • Boost your network’s resilience with our assessment that uncovers security gaps, so you can strengthen your defences against sophisticated cyber threats targeting your network

        • Web Penetration Testing
        • Fortify your web presence with our specialised web app penetration testing service, designed to uncover and address vulnerabilities, ensuring your website stands resilient against online threats

        • Mobile Penetration Testing
        • Strengthen your mobile ecosystem’s resilience with our in-depth penetration testing service. From applications to underlying systems, we meticulously probe for vulnerabilities

        • Cyber Hygiene Training
        • Empower your team with essential cybersecurity knowledge, covering the latest vulnerabilities, best practices, and proactive defence strategies

        • Thick Client Penetration Testing
        • Elevate your application’s security with our thorough thick client penetration testing service. From standalone desktop applications to complex client-server systems, we meticulously probe for vulnerabilities to fortify your software against potential cyber threats.

        • Source Code Review
        • Ensure the integrity and security of your codebase with our comprehensive service, meticulously analysing code quality, identifying vulnerabilities, and optimising performance for various types of applications, scripts, plugins, and more

        • Email Spoofing Prevention
        • Check if your organisation’s email is vulnerable to hackers and put a stop to it. Receive your free test today!

        • Email Phishing Excercise
        • Strengthen your defense against email threats via simulated attacks that test and educate your team on spotting malicious emails, reducing breach risks and boosting security.

        • Cyber Essentials Bundle
        • Equip your organisation with essential cyber protection through our packages, featuring quarterly breached accounts monitoring, email phishing campaigns, cyber hygiene training, and more. LAUNCHING SOON.

N3TW0RM Ransomware Emerges In Wave Of Cyberattacks In Israel

N3TW0RM Ransomware Emerges In Wave Of Cyberattacks In Israel

A new ransomware gang known as ‘N3TW0RM’ is targeting Israeli companies in a wave of cyberattacks starting last week.

Israeli media Haaretz reported that at least four Israeli companies and one nonprofit organization had been successfully breached in this wave of attacks.

Like other ransomware gangs, N3TW0RM has created a data leak site where they threaten to leak stolen files as a way to scare their victims into paying a ransom.

Two of the Israeli businesses, H&M Israel and Veritas Logistic’s networks, have already been listed on the ransomware gang’s data leak, with the threat actors already leaking data allegedly stolen during the attack on Veritas.

From the ransom notes seen by Israeli media and BleepingComputer, the ransomware gang has not been asking for particularly large ransom demands compared to other enterprise-targeting attacks.

Haaretz reports that Veritas’ ransom demand was three bitcoin, or approximately $173,000, while another ransom note shared with BleepingComputer shows a ransom demand of 4 bitcoins, or roughly $231,000.

N3TW0RM ransom note
Source: BleepingComputer

Also Read: 4 Best Practices On How To Use SkillsFuture Credit

A WhatsApp message shared among Israeli cybesrecurity researchers also states that the N3TW0RM ransomware shares some characteristics with the Pay2Key attacks conducted in November 2020 and February 2021.

WhatsApp message shared among security researchers

Pay2Key has been linked to an Iranian nation-state hacking group known as Fox Kitten, whose goal was to cause disruption and damage to Israeli interests rather than generate a ransom payment. 

The N3TW0RM attacks have not been attributed to any hacking groups at this time.

Due to the low ransom demands and lack of response to negotiations, one source in the Israeli cybersecurity industry has told BleepingComputer that they believe N3TW0RM is also being used for sowing chaos for Israeli interests.

However, Arik Nachmias, CEO of incident response firm Honey Badger Security, told BleepingComputer that he believes that in N3TW0RM’s case, the attacks are motivated by money.

Unusual client-server model to encryption

When encrypting a network, threat actors will usually distribute a standalone ransomware executable to every device they wish to encrypt.

N3TW0RM does it a bit differently by using a client-server model instead.

From samples [VirusTotal] of the ransomware seen by BleepingComputer and discussions with Nachmias, the N3TW0RM threat actors install a program on a victim’s server that will listen for connections from the workstations.

Nachmias states that the threat actors then use PAExec to deploy and execute the ‘slave.exe’ client executable on every device that the ransomware will encrypt. When encrypting files, the files will have the ‘.n3tw0rm‘ extension appended to their names.

While BleepingComputer does not have access to the server executable, we set up NetCat to listen and wait for connections on port 80. We then launched the slave.exe client, so it connects back to our IP address on that port.

As you can see below, when the client connects back to port 80 on our device running NetCat, it will send an RSA key to the server.

Sending an RSA key back to the N3TW0RM server
Source: BleepingComputer

Nachmias told BleepingComputer that the server component would save these keys in a file and then direct the clients to begin encrypting devices.

This approach allows the threat actor to keep all aspects of the ransomware operation within the victim’s network without being traced back to a remote command & control server.

Also Read: 3 Reasons Why You Must Take A PDPA Singapore Course

However, it also adds complexity to the attack and could allow a victim to recover their decryption keys if all of the files are not removed after an attack.

0 Comments

KEEP IN TOUCH

Subscribe to our mailing list to get free tips on Data Protection and Data Privacy updates weekly!

Personal Data Protection

REPORTING DATA BREACH TO PDPC?

We have assisted numerous companies to prepare proper and accurate reports to PDPC to minimise financial penalties.
×

Hello!

Click one of our contacts below to chat on WhatsApp

× Chat with us