While tracking the activities of 4BID Kaspersky researchers uncovered a new string of campaigns that appear to be the work of several interconnected actors. While politically motivated groups generally limit their scope to specific nations – for 4BID and its peers, primarily Russian and occasionally Belarusian organizations – the latest findings reveal a shift. The actual geographic footprint of these attacks became broader than expected, striking companies across Kazakhstan, the UAE, Syria, and Egypt.
What triggered Kaspersky’s investigation was spotting a cluster of indicators of compromise within a breached Russian organization’s infrastructure. The researchers used these footprints to successfully track down other environments hit by the same threat actors and piece together the bigger picture.
Read more…
Source: Kaspersky
Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox
Related:
- Cinterion EHS5 3G UMTS/HSPA Module Research
June 13, 2024
Modems play an important role in enabling connectivity for a wide range of devices. This includes not only traditional mobile devices and household appliances, but also telecommunication systems in vehicles, ATMs and Automated Process Control Systems (APCS). When integrating the modem, many product developers do not think of protecting their device from a potential modem compromise. ...
- Ransomware Attackers May Have Used Privilege Escalation Vulnerability as Zero-day
June 12, 2024
The Cardinal cybercrime group (aka Storm-1811, UNC4393), which operates the Black Basta ransomware, may have been exploiting a recently patched Windows privilege escalation vulnerability as a zero-day. The vulnerability (CVE-2024-26169) occurs in the Windows Error Reporting Service. If exploited on affected systems, it can permit an attacker to elevate their privileges. The vulnerability was patched on ...
- Quebec: Police arrest three in connection with massive Desjardins data breach
June 12, 2024
Laval police say they arrested three suspects Wednesday in connection to a massive data breach at Desjardins Group made public in 2019. The data breach at the Quebec-based credit union is thought to be one of the largest ever among Canadian financial institutions, affecting roughly 4.2 million people and 173,000 businesses. The leaked information includes names, ...
- How to Recognize and Defend Against Malicious Insider Threats
June 12, 2024
Insider threats arise from careless users, users with compromised credentials, or users who seek to cause harm intentionally. The latter type of user—the malicious insider—can be the most daunting for security teams to manage. It requires them to analyze a user’s behavior and determine whether they have bad intentions. Although less frequent, malicious insiders are costly. ...
- Noodle RAT: Reviewing the Backdoor Used by Chinese-Speaking Groups
June 11, 2024
Since 2022, Trend Micro researchers have been investigating numerous targeted attacks in the Asia-Pacific region that used the same ELF backdoor. Most vendors identify this backdoor as a variant of existing malware such as Gh0st RAT or Rekoobe. However, Trend Micro unearthed the truth: this backdoor is not merely a variant of existing malware, but is ...
- City of Helsinki’s suffers data breach
June 11, 2024
It remains unclear whether the perpetrator behind a massive data breach of the City of Helsinki has tried to benefit from the crime, according to the City. Detected in April, the hack resulted in the leak of tens of millions of files from the city’s internal network. The stolen files included the personal data of up ...

