Ransomware's latest mutations
Published Date: 2/20/2020
Source: axios.com
Ransomware attacks are becoming smarter, more common, and more dangerous.What's happening: In ransomware incidents, attackers take systems down and demand payment (usually in bitcoin) to restore access to them.Compared with the political impact of election hacking or the privacy violations of data breaches, ransomware has typically been viewed as the cyber equivalent of hit-and-run robbery.But aggressive new tactics, including threats of massive file dumps, are blurring the lines between ransomware and other attacks, making them a national security issue as well as a business problem.Driving the news: In the latest indication that ransomware is moving beyond its best-known targets — state and local governments and healthcare systems — a Department of Homeland Security advisory on Tuesday reported a ransomware attack that forced a natural gas compression facility to shut down two days.Analysts at Dragos identified the incident as one reported in December by the Coast Guard.Last month, researchers at Emsisoft warned that ransomware attacks could disrupt the 2020 U.S. elections. "[T]hreat actors could use ransomware to tamper with the 2020 election process by attacking county-level entities and lower-level election officials," according to the Emsisoft report. Attacks could "potentially disrupt local voting infrastructure, stifle access to information, leak voter data and ultimately undermine public trust." The Palm Beach County, Florida, election supervisor told the Palm Beach Post last week that the county had suffered a ransomware attack in September 2016. The county's previous election supervisor, who was in office then, denied the report.The big picture: A raft of recent ransomware research paints an alarming picture of a threat that's still evolving.The threat analysis firm Recorded Future reports a 20% increase in ransomware incidents affecting state and local governments and healthcare institutions year-to-date for 2020 compared with the same period in 2019. Recorded Future and other analysts note that many ransomware attackers now also seize mountains of data from target networks before shutting them down, then use the threat of publicizing the private documents to demand payment. In another trend, a whole industry of "ransomware as a service" providers is emerging to handle the technical work for would-be ransom takers. IBM reports "high levels of code innovation" in the ransomware realm, and finds that the most common vulnerability exploited by ransomware is a flaw in a part of the Windows operating system called SMB, or "server message block." Yes, but: The full scope of ransomware activity is tough to gauge because private industry is under no obligation to report incidents — and many affected companies are unlikely to admit they've been had.According to the FBI's Internet Crime report for 2019, the IC3 received 2,047 complaints identified as ransomware last year, with adjusted losses of over $8.9 million.That's compared to a total of 467,361 complaints of all kinds in 2019 — an average of nearly 1,300 every day — with more than $3.5 billion in losses to individual and business victims.