BforeAI Launches PreCrime™ Guarantee Program for Seamless Cyber Risk Coverage
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The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) today said they arrested the alleged operator of 911 S5, a ten-year-old online anonymity service that was powered by what the director of the FBI called “likely the world’s largest botnet ever.” The arrest coincided with the seizure of the 911 S5 website and supporting infrastructure, which the government says turned computers running various “free VPN” products into Internet traffic relays that facilitated billions of dollars in online fraud and cybercrime.
The Cloud Router homepage, which was seized by the FBI this past weekend. Cloud Router was previously called 911 S5.
On May 24, authorities in Singapore arrested the alleged creator and operator of 911 S5, a 35-year-old Chinese national named YunHe Wang. In a statement on his arrest today, the DOJ said 911 S5 enabled cybercriminals to bypass financial fraud detection systems and steal billions of dollars from financial institutions, credit card issuers, and federal lending programs.
For example, the government estimates that 560,000 fraudulent unemployment insurance claims originated from compromised Internet addresses, resulting in a confirmed fraudulent loss exceeding $5.9 billion.
“Additionally, in evaluating suspected fraud loss to the Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) program, the United States estimates that more than 47,000 EIDL applications originated from IP addresses compromised by 911 S5,” the DOJ wrote. “Millions of dollars more were similarly identified by financial institutions in the United States as loss originating from IP addresses compromised by 911 S5.”
From 2015 to July 2022, 911 S5 sold access to hundreds of thousands of Microsoft Windows computers daily, as “proxies” that allowed customers to route their Internet traffic through PCs in virtually any country or city around the globe — but predominantly in the United States.
911 S5 built its proxy network mainly by offering “free” virtual private networking (VPN) services. 911’s VPN performed largely as advertised for the user — allowing them to surf the web anonymously — but it also quietly turned the user’s computer into a traffic relay for paying 911 S5 customers.
911 S5’s reliability and extremely low prices quickly made it one of the most popular services among denizens of the cybercrime underground, and the service became almost shorthand for connecting to that “last mile” of cybercrime. Namely, the ability to route one’s malicious traffic through a computer that is geographically close to the consumer whose stolen credit card is about to be used, or whose bank account is about to be emptied.
The prices page for 911 S5, circa July 2022. $28 would let users cycle through 150 proxies on this popular service.
KrebsOnSecurity first identified Mr. Wang as the proprietor of the popular service in a deep dive on 911 S5 published in July 2022. That story showed that 911 S5 had a history of paying people to install its software by secretly bundling it with other software — including fake security updates for common programs like Flash Player, and “cracked” or pirated commercial software distributed on file-sharing networks.
Ten days later, 911 S5 closed up shop, claiming it had been hacked. But experts soon tracked the reemergence of the proxy network by another name: Cloud Router.
The announcement of Wang’s arrest came less than 24 hours after the U.S. Department of the Treasury sanctioned Wang and two associates, as well as several companies the men allegedly used to launder the nearly $100 million in proceeds from 911 S5 and Cloud Router customers.
Cloud Router’s homepage now features a notice saying the domain has been seized by the U.S. government. In addition, the DOJ says it worked with authorities in Singapore, Thailand and Germany to search residences tied to the defendant, and seized approximately $30 million in assets.
The Cloud Router homepage now features a seizure notice from the FBI in multiple languages.
Those assets included a 2022 Ferrari F8 Spider S-A, a BMW i8, a BMW X7 M50d, a Rolls Royce, more than a dozen domestic and international bank accounts, over two dozen cryptocurrency wallets, several luxury wristwatches, and 21 residential or investment properties.
The government says Wang is charged with conspiracy to commit computer fraud, substantive computer fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. If convicted on all counts, he faces a maximum penalty of 65 years in prison.
Brett Leatherman, deputy assistant director of the FBI’s Cyber Division, said the DOJ is working with the Singaporean government on extraditing Wang to face charges in the United States.
Leatherman encouraged Internet users to visit a new FBI webpage that can help people determine whether their computers may be part of the 911 S5 botnet, which the government says spanned more than 19 million individual computers in at least 190 countries.
Leatherman said 911 S5 and Cloud Router used several “free VPN” brands to lure consumers into installing the proxy service, including MaskVPN, DewVPN, PaladinVPN, Proxygate, Shield VPN, and ShineVPN.
“American citizens who didn’t know that their IP space was being utilized to attack US businesses or defraud the U.S. government, they were unaware,” Leatherman said. “But these kind of operations breed that awareness.”
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The political consultant who wrote the script and paid for the deepfake audio used in robocalls was fined $6 million by the FCC.
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Cybersecurity researchers have warned of a new malicious Python package that has been discovered in the Python Package Index (PyPI) repository to facilitate cryptocurrency theft as part of a broader campaign.
The package in question is pytoileur, which has been downloaded 316 times as of writing. Interestingly, the package author, who goes by the name PhilipsPY, has uploaded a new version of the
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Corporate admins should patch the max-severity CVE-2024-23108 immediately, which allows unauthenticated command injection.
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The number of software vulnerabilities discovered annually continues to grow, with total vulnerabilities discovered in a year fast approaching the 30,000 mark. But it’s important for cybersecurity teams to identify precisely which vulnerabilities attackers are actually exploiting. Changes in the list of criminals’ favorite vulnerabilities greatly influence which updates or countermeasures should be prioritized. That’s why we regularly monitor these changes. Thus, here are the conclusions that can be drawn from our Exploit and Vulnerability Report for Q1 2024.
Thanks to bug bounty programs and automation, vulnerability hunting has increased significantly in scale. This means vulnerabilities are discovered more frequently, and when researchers find an interesting attack vector, the first identified vulnerability is often followed by a whole series of others — as we recently saw with Ivanti solutions. 2023 set a five-year record for the number of critical vulnerabilities found. At the same time, vulnerabilities are becoming increasingly accessible to an ever-wider range of attackers and defenders — for more than 12% of discovered vulnerabilities’ proofs of concept (PoC) became publicly available shortly after.
Although the myth that “no one attacks Linux” has already been dispelled, many specialists still underestimate the scale of Linux threats. Over the last year, the number of exploited CVEs in Linux and popular Linux applications increased more than threefold. The lion’s share of exploitation attempts target servers, as well as various devices based on *nix systems.
A striking example of the interest of attackers in Linux was the multi-year operation to compromise the XZ library and utilities in order to create an SSH backdoor in popular Linux distributions.
Operating systems were found to contain the most critical vulnerabilities with available exploits; however, critical defects in OSs are rarely useful for initially penetrating an organization’s information infrastructure. Therefore, if you look at the top vulnerabilities actually exploited in APT cyberattacks, the picture changes significantly.
In 2023, the top spot in the exploited vulnerabilities list changed: after many years of its being MS Office, WinRAR took its place with CVE-2023-38831 — used by many espionage and criminal groups to deliver malware. However, the second, third, and fifth places in 2023 were still occupied by Office flaws, with the infamous Log4shell joining them in fourth place. Two vulnerabilities in MS Exchange were also among the most frequently exploited.
In first quarter of 2024, the situation has changed completely: very convenient security holes in internet-accessible services have opened up for attackers, allowing mass exploitation — namely in the MSP application ConnectWise, and also Ivanti’s Connect Secure and Policy Secure. In the popularity ranking, WinRAR has dropped to third place, and Office has disappeared from the top altogether.
Only three vulnerabilities from the top 10 last year were discovered in 2023. The rest of the actively exploited CVEs date back to 2022, 2020, and even 2017. This means that a significant number of companies either selectively update their IT systems or leave some issues unaddressed for several years without applying countermeasures at all. IT departments can rarely allocate enough resources to patch everything on time, so a smart medium-term solution is to invest in products for automatic detection of vulnerable objects in IT infrastructure and software updating.
Attackers try to take full advantage of newly published vulnerabilities, so the first weeks after an exploit appears see the most activity. This should be considered when planning update cycles. It’s essential to have a response plan in case a critical vulnerability appears that directly affects your IT infrastructure and requires immediate patching. Of course, the automation tools mentioned above greatly assist in this.
You can’t focus only on office applications and “peripheral” services. Depending on an organization’s IT infrastructure, significant risks can arise from the exploitation of other vectors — less popular but very effective for achieving specific malicious goals. Besides the already mentioned CVE-2024-3094 in XZ Utils, other vulnerabilities of interest to attackers include CVE-2024-21626 in runc — allowing escape from a container, and CVE-2024-27198 in the CI/CD tool TeamCity — providing access to software developer systems.
Maintain an up-to-date and in-depth understanding of the company’s IT assets, keeping detailed records of existing servers, services, accounts, and applications.
Implement an update management system that ensures the prompt identification of vulnerable software and patching. The Kaspersky Vulnerability Assessment and Patch Management solution combined with the Kaspersky Vulnerability Data Feed is ideal for this.
Use security solutions capable of both preventing the launch of malware and detecting and stopping attempts to exploit known vulnerabilities on all computers and servers in your organization.
Implement a comprehensive multi-level protection system that can detect anomalies in the infrastructure and targeted attacks on your organization, including attempts to exploit vulnerabilities and the use of legitimate software by attackers. For this, the Kaspersky Symphony solution, which can be adapted to the needs of companies of varying size, is perfectly suited.
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Check Point is warning of a zero-day vulnerability in its Network Security gateway products that threat actors have exploited in the wild.
Tracked as CVE-2024-24919, the issue impacts CloudGuard Network, Quantum Maestro, Quantum Scalable Chassis, Quantum Security Gateways, and Quantum Spark appliances.
“The vulnerability potentially allows an attacker to read certain information on
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By Waqas
Cybersecurity researchers at Bitdefender have found a surge in malware and phishing attacks on Discord, noting 50,000 malicious…
This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: Surge in Discord Malware Attacks as 50,000 Malicious Links Uncovered
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