-
7 votes
-
Ransomware actor abuses Genshin Impact anti-cheat driver to kill antivirus
9 votes -
Hardening SSH
4 votes -
Harden your Linux server using SSH keys (and turn off password auth)
8 votes -
Hertzbleed - a new family of frequency side channel attacks on x86 processors
13 votes -
Improved Process Isolation in Firefox 100
11 votes -
GitHub will require two-factor authentication (2FA) for all users who contribute code by the end of 2023
14 votes -
The right thing for the wrong reasons: FLOSS doesn't imply security
7 votes -
A bug lurking for 12 years gives attackers root on every major Linux distro
13 votes -
We desperately need a way to rapidly notify people of high-impact vulnerabilities, so I built one: BugAlert.org
9 votes -
Log4Shell Update: Second log4j Vulnerability Published (CVE-2021-44228 + CVE-2021-45046)
20 votes -
To secure the supply chain, you must properly fund it
8 votes -
Microsoft unveils 'Super Duper Secure Mode' in latest version of Edge
6 votes -
"We do not maintain databases"
11 votes -
Linux (In)security
10 votes -
Disclosure of three 0-day iOS vulnerabilities and critique of Apple Security Bounty program
9 votes -
McDonald's leaks password for Monopoly VIP database to winners
16 votes -
Zoom zero-click RCE from Pwn2Own 2021 - Technical write-up describing the process of discovering and exploiting the vulnerability
6 votes -
Introduction to Cross-Site Scripting (XSS)
4 votes -
Linux Privilege Escalation - Three Easy Ways to Get a Root Shell
9 votes -
From stolen laptop to inside the company network
12 votes -
Remote code execution vulnerability in the cdnjs Javascript CDN run by Cloudflare, which could have enabled tampering with over 10% of all websites
18 votes -
Kaspersky Password Manager had multiple problems in its password-generator, resulting in its passwords being predictable and easily brute-forced
21 votes -
Using John the Ripper To Crack Password Hashes
3 votes -
On password managers
11 votes -
Pwned Passwords is now open-sourced via the .NET Foundation, and will be provided compromised passwords by the FBI
13 votes -
Cloudflare introduces Cryptographic Attestation of Personhood, an experiment intended to replace CAPTCHAs
19 votes -
Battlestar Galactica Lessons from Ransomware to the Pandemic
4 votes -
Linux bans the University of Minnesota for sending intentionally buggy patches in the name of research
58 votes -
Disclosure of a vulnerability in AI Dungeon that enabled accessing all users' private adventures, scenarios, and posts via its GraphQL API
16 votes -
An update on the UMN affair
10 votes -
Introduction to SQL Injection - SQLi for Beginners
10 votes -
Finding and fixing a rare race-condition in GitHub's session handling
6 votes -
Exploiting machine learning models distributed as Python pickle files, and introducing Fickling: a new tool for analyzing and modifying pickle bytecode
3 votes -
Introduction to Malware Analysis — Malware Explained
4 votes -
The lead developer of curl analyzed its known security vulnerabilities and determined that half of them are related to it being written in C
12 votes -
Friday Security Briefing
Friday Security Briefing Hello there! I hope you're all looking forward to something this weekend. Today's briefing will cover a captivating tale of scheming against financial centers, woes of...
Friday Security Briefing
Hello there! I hope you're all looking forward to something this weekend. Today's briefing will cover a captivating tale of scheming against financial centers, woes of virtual networking, and the possibility of Russia behaving quite unnecessarily.
"Listen, or your tongue will make you deaf." ~ Unattributed proverb
Wall Street targeted by new Capital Call investment email scammers
The tactic of exploiting enterprise email systems remains a successful and active attack vector for bad actors. The emerging development is the use of "capital call" style scam, wherein scammers pretend to have investor or insurance business with the business.
"In an example shared by the researchers, the scam email attached a Capital Call Notice for US $970,357.00 to be deposited into a bank account under the fraudsters’ control."
"If the targeted investor was duped into wiring the funds, then it is likely that money would be quickly moved into other accounts and withdrawn by mules to prevent the payment from being returned to the victim."
The flexibility that cryptocurrencies provide to discreetly rearrange money may actually be disadvantageous for banks in certain situations.
Source: Tripwire, Wall Street targeted by new Capital Call investment email scammers
High severity Linux network security holes found, fixed
(CVE-2021-26708) Alexander Popov of London has discovered five security holes in the Linux kernel's virtual socket implementation. This is concerning, my personal use of virtual networking systems could be a lot more thought out. I do tend to keep my use of libvirt to a minimum but ideally I would be running my virtualization workstation on a separate box optimized for safe practices.
"These holes entered Linux when virtual socket multi-transport support was added. This networking transport facilitates communication between virtual machines (VM) and their host. It's commonly used by guest agents and hypervisor services that need a communications channel that is independent of the VM network configuration. As such, people who are running VMs on the cloud, which is pretty much everyone these days, are especially vulnerable."
Source: ZDNet, High severity Linux network security holes found, fixed
Ukraine: DDoS attacks on govt sites originated from Russia
Ukraine is proposing that information on the threat actors responsible for a DDoS on Ukrainian government websites originated from Russian domains.
However, they did not claim that the threat actors were affiliated with the Russian state.
I am curious about the motivations if this was sanctioned by Russia. Are they testing their capabilities against a softer target in order to learn from the European and American Cyber-Defense response? Perhaps this was a way for Russia to demonstrate it's competency at cyber warfare.
"The National Coordination Center for Cybersecurity (NCCC) at the NSDC states that these DDoS attacks have been massive and have targeted government websites in the defense and security sector."
Possible retaliation?
"Last week, news leaked that Ukrainian law enforcement, in cooperation with the US and French police, arrested alleged Egregor ransomware operation members.
Three days later, the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) issued a press release about the Egregor arrests and seizing the ransomware group's equipment."
Source: Bleeping Computer, Ukraine: DDoS attacks on govt sites originated from Russia
8 votes -
Bitsquatting windows.com with fourteen domains that are one bitflip away
18 votes -
Researcher hacks over 35 tech firms via package/dependency managers
13 votes -
A detailed look into the Stack Exchange network's May 2019 security incident
9 votes -
Finding vulnerabilities in the calling state machines of video/audio messaging platforms
3 votes -
Becoming physically immune to brute-force attacks
11 votes -
Overthewire: Learn Hacking By Playing Games
9 votes -
Steam's login method is kinda interesting
27 votes -
Sunday Security Brief
Sunday Security Brief This brief covered a unique attack vector, information on a broad campaign using DNS attacks, a case relating to technology law, and a few advisories that either stuck me as...
Sunday Security Brief
This brief covered a unique attack vector, information on a broad campaign using DNS attacks, a case relating to technology law, and a few advisories that either stuck me as important or curious.
What happened last night can happen again ~ fortune
Topics:
- IDN Homograph Attack
- A Deep Dive on DNS Hijacking Attacks
- Law enforcement has seized the domains and infrastructure of three VPN services being used for cybercrime
- Advisories
IDN Homograph Attack
This particular exploit is interesting. It takes advantage of the fact that many different characters look alike to mislead people from their desired domain to a malicious one. I wonder what practices could help avoid this issue. The obvious step is to be concious of limiting the links that you click on from websites like Tildes, Hacker News, Reddit, or where anywhere can share a link with you via text. For example, if you see a Reddit thread about PayPal where someone includes a link to the PayPal Customer Service Center... Don't click it, just Google "PayPal Customer Service". This will be far safer in ensuring that you're going to the domain that you meant to!
Another thing to note is the importance of realizing how your trust online and how that changes your behavior. I know that I have a general sense of trust for people here that removes a lot of doubt when it comes to clicking random stuff you all share here. That trust could potentially work against you.
"The internationalized domain name (IDN) homograph attack is a way a malicious party may deceive computer users about what remote system they are communicating with, by exploiting the fact that many different characters look alike"
"The registration of homographic domain names is akin to typosquatting ~ Wikipedia, in that both forms of attacks use a similar-looking name to a more established domain to fool a user. The major difference is that in typosquatting the perpetrator attracts victims by relying on natural typographical errors commonly made when manually entering a URL, while in homograph spoofing the perpetrator deceives the victims by presenting visually indistinguishable hyperlinks."
IDN homograph attack ~ Wikipedia
A Deep Dive on DNS Hijacking Attacks
The article covered is a few months old, but still relavant as ever. The U.S. government alongside private security personnel issued information of a complex system that allowed suspected Iranian hackers to obtain a huge amount of email credentials, sensitive government and corporate information. The specifics of how this attack occured are not publicly available but Cisco's Talos research has a write up of how DNS Attacks work, the relavant snippets are below.
"Talos said the perpetrators of DNSpionage were able to steal email and other login credentials from a number of government and private sector entities in Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates by hijacking the DNS servers for these targets, so that all email and virtual private networking (VPN) traffic was redirected to an Internet address controlled by the attackers."
"Talos reported that these DNS hijacks also paved the way for the attackers to obtain SSL encryption certificates for the targeted domains (e.g. webmail.finance.gov.lb), which allowed them to decrypt the intercepted email and VPN credentials and view them in plain text."
"A Deep Dive on the Recent Widespread DNS Hijacking Attacks" ~ Krebs on Security
Law enforcement has seized the domains and infrastructure of three VPN services being used for cybercrime
The balance between allowing autonomy and protecting our collective interests comes to my mind. This seems like a worthy example of when stopping people from victimizing others overshadows the benefits of free action.
"Law enforcement agencies from the US, Germany, France, Switzerland, and the Netherlands have seized this week the web domains and server infrastructure of three VPN services that provided a safe haven for cybercriminals to attack their victims."
"... described the three as "bulletproof hosting services," a term typically used to describe web companies that don't take down criminal content, despite repeated requests."
"According to the US Department of Justice and Europol, the three companies' servers were often used to mask the real identities of ransomware gangs, web skimmer (Magecart) groups, online phishers, and hackers involved in account takeovers, allowing them to operate from behind a proxy network up to five layers deep."
Law enforcement take down three bulletproof VPN providers ~ Zdnet
Advisories
-
Debian, DSA-4824-1 chromium security update. Source
-
Arch, CVE-2020-25637 libvirt. Source
-
CentOS, CESA-2020-5437, Important CentOS 7 kernel. Source
-
RedHat, RHSA-2020:5665, Important: mariadb:10.3 security, bug fix, and enhancement update. Source
-
Windows, If you know of a good tracker for Windows securities advisories, please let me know. I was considering just drawing from the Microsoft Security Response Center Blog.
11 votes -
Saturday Security Brief
Saturday Security Brief Topics: Attack Surface Management, Active iMessage exploit targetting journalists, Academic research on unique EM attack vectors for air-gapped systems. Any feedback or...
Saturday Security Brief
Topics: Attack Surface Management, Active iMessage exploit targetting journalists, Academic research on unique EM attack vectors for air-gapped systems.
Any feedback or thoughts on the experience of receiving and discussing news through this brief or in general are welcome. I'm curious about this form of staying informed so I want to experiment. (Thanks again for the suggestion to post the topics as comments.)
Attack Surface Management
This concept is about ensuring that your network is equipped to handle the many issues that arise from accommodating various "Servers, IoT devices, old VPSs, forgotten environments, misconfigured services and unknown exposed assets" with an enterprise environment. Some of the wisdom here can be applied better think about protecting our personal networks as well. Outdated phones, computers, wifi extenders, and more can be a foothold for outside attackers to retain persistant access. Consider taking steps to migigate and avoid potential harm from untamed devices.
Consider putting certain devices on the guest network if your router supports doing so and has extra rules for devices on that network so they can't cause damage to your other devices directly.
"A report from 2016 predicted that 30% of all data breaches by 2020 will be the result of shadow IT resources: systems, devices, software, apps and services that aren’t approved, and in use without the organization’s security team’s knowledge. But shadow IT isn’t the only area where security and IT teams face issues with tracking and visibility."
Attack Surface Management: You Can’t Secure What You Can’t See ~ Security Trails
Multiple Journalists Hacked with ‘Zero-Click’ iMessage Exploit
Mobile spyware is continuing to evolve and tend towards professional solutions. Recently this technology has been abused to conduct espionage on journalists of major networks. Where once these exploits typically required some mistaken click from the user, new developments are allowing their activities without any trace or requiring interaction from the target.
"NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware is a mobile phone surveillance solution that enables customers to remotely exploit and monitor devices. The company is a prolific seller of surveillance technology to governments around the world, and its products have been regularly linked to surveillance abuses."
"In July and August 2020, government operatives used NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware to hack 36 personal phones belonging to journalists, producers, anchors, and executives at Al Jazeera. The personal phone of a journalist at London-based Al Araby TV was also hacked."
"The journalists were hacked by four Pegasus operators, including one operator MONARCHY that we attribute to Saudi Arabia, and one operator SNEAKY KESTREL that we attribute to the United Arab Emirates."
"More recently, NSO Group is shifting towards zero-click exploits and network-based attacks that allow its government clients to break into phones without any interaction from the target, and without leaving any visible traces."
Security researchers exfiltrate data from air-gapped systems by measuring the vibrations made by PC fans.
Besides this potential exploit the article mentions past research done by Guri and his team which is worth checking out, like:
-
LED-it-Go - exfiltrate data from air-gapped systems via an HDD's activity LED
-
AirHopper - use the local GPU card to emit electromagnetic signals to a nearby mobile phone, also used to steal data
-
MAGNETO & ODINI - steal data from Faraday cage-protected systems
-
PowerHammer - steal data from air-gapped systems using power lines
-
BRIGHTNESS - steal data from air-gapped systems using screen brightness variations
"Academics from an Israeli university have proven the feasibility of using fans installed inside a computer to create controlled vibrations that can be used to steal data from air-gapped systems."
Academics steal data from air-gapped systems using PC fan vibrations ~ Zdnet
Good Practices
"Hundreds of popular websites now offer some form of multi-factor authentication (MFA), which can help users safeguard access to accounts when their password is breached or stolen. But people who don’t take advantage of these added safeguards may find it far more difficult to regain access when their account gets hacked, because increasingly thieves will enable multi-factor options and tie the account to a device they control. Here’s the story of one such incident."
16 votes -
-
Friday Security Brief
Friday Security Brief This release is trial for a weekly security brief compiled from trusted sources that encourage a general awareness of cyber security issues. I'm still not sure about how to...
Friday Security Brief
This release is trial for a weekly security brief compiled from trusted sources that encourage a general awareness of cyber security issues. I'm still not sure about how to do this so any thoughts or feedback will be appreciated.
Brexit deal mandates a limit to security standards
"In what is surely an unthinking cut-and-paste issue, page 921 of the Brexit deal mandates the use of SHA-1 and 1024-bit RSA:"
Brexit Deal Mandates Old Insecure Crypto Algorithms ~ Schneier on Security
FBI Warns of Hijacked Security Devices being exploited for Swatting
"Stolen email passwords are being used to hijack smart home security systems to “swat” unsuspecting users, the Federal Bureau of Investigation warned this week. The announcement comes after concerned device manufacturers alerted law enforcement about the issue."
FBI Warn Hackers are Using Hijacked Home Security Devices for Swatting ~ Threatpost
A look back at some email attacks of 2020
"In 2020, our spam folders bulged with malware-laced emails, phishing lures linking to ransomware schemes, impersonation attacks, spoofed brand and fake domain missives, and dubious requests from legit-sounding companies. So, what defined 2020 in spam?"
Inbox Attacks: The Miserable Year (2020) That Was ~ Threatpost
SolarWinds hackers accessed Microsoft source code
"The hackers behind the SolarWinds supply chain attack managed to escalate access inside Microsoft's internal network and gain access to a small number of internal accounts, which they used to access Microsoft source code repositories, the company said on Thursday."
SolarWinds hackers accessed Microsoft source code ~ Zdnet
CISA updates SolarWinds guidance
"The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has updated its official guidance for dealing with the fallout from the SolarWinds supply chain attack.
In an update posted late last night, CISA said that all US government agencies that still run SolarWinds Orion platforms must update to the latest 2020.2.1HF2 version by the end of the year."
CISA updates SolarWinds guidance, tells US govt agencies to update right away
24 votes -
How police are “breaking phone encryption”
21 votes -
The 2020 SANS holiday hack challenge is live!
4 votes -
Security company FireEye was breached by a sophisticated attacker and had some of their red-team tools stolen, and are releasing countermeasures for them
7 votes