Cybersecurity Saturday

From the cybersecurity policy and law enforcement front,

  • Cyberscoop tells us,
    • “Members of Congress are pressing federal agencies and telecommunications companies for more information about a reported Chinese government-backed hacking campaign that breached the networks of at least three major U.S. telecoms.
    • “Earlier this month, the Wall Street Journal reported that a hacking group tied to Beijing successfully broke into the networks of Verizon, AT&T and Lumen Technologies. The hackers reportedly went undetected for months, possibly gaining access to systems and infrastructure used to process court-authorized wiretaps.
    • ‘On Thursday, Republican and Democratic leaders on the House Energy and Commerce Committee wrote to the three telecommunication firms asking for more information on their response, calling the incident “extremely alarming for both economic and national security reasons.” * * *
    • “The members requested a briefing with the telecoms to learn more about when they became aware of the compromise, findings from any internal investigations and subsequent engagement with law enforcement, their plans to notify affected customers and what if any corrective steps have been taken to harden cybersecurity in the wake of the incident.
    • “The House Homeland Security Committee has also requested a briefing on the hack from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, according to a committee aide.”
  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “The Defense Department released the final rule for the long-awaited Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification program today [October 11], further paving the way for CMMC requirements to show up in contracts starting next year.
    • “The final CMMC program rule was released for public inspection today. It’s expected to officially publish in the Federal Register on Tuesday, Oct. 15.
    • “The rule establishes the mechanisms for the CMMC program. The goal of CMMC is to verify whether defense contractors are following cybersecurity requirements for protecting critical defense information. Many contractors will be required to receive a third-party audit under the program, a significant departure from the current regime of relying on self-attestation.”
  • Per an October 3, 2024, HHS press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced a $240,000 civil monetary penalty against Providence Medical Institute in Southern California, concerning potential violations of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) Security Rule, following a ransomware attack breach report investigation by OCR. Ransomware and hacking are the primary cyber-threats in health care. There has been a 264% increase in large breaches reported to OCR involving ransomware attacks since 2018.
    • “Failures to fully implement all of the HIPAA Security Rule requirements leaves HIPAA covered entities and business associates vulnerable to cyberattacks at the expense of the privacy and security of patients’ health information,” said OCR Director Melanie Fontes Rainer. “The health care sector needs to get serious about cybersecurity and complying with HIPAA. OCR will continue to stand up for patient privacy and work to ensure the security of health information of every person. On behalf of OCR, I urge all health care entities to always stay alert and take every precaution and steps to keep their systems safe from cyberattacks.” * * *
    • “The Notice of Final Determination may be found at: https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/compliance-enforcement/agreements/pmi-nfd/index.html
  • Fedscoop notes,
    • “The Department of Health and Human Services is working on a new strategic plan for the use of artificial intelligence across the entire breadth of its mission, the department’s top AI official said Tuesday.
    • “Micky Tripathi — HHS’s acting chief AI officer and its assistant secretary for technology policy — said at the NVIDIA AI Summit in Washington, D.C., that the AI strategic plan should arrive sometime in January and that it will span “the entire, you know, sort of breadth of what the department covers.”
    • “During a panel discussion, Tripathi detailed the complex web of mission sets spanning “the value chain of life sciences and health care” that HHS oversees that the new strategic plan will attempt to wrap its arms around. Those include medical research and discovery, preclinical work, measuring the safety and effectiveness of medical products, health care delivery, health technology standards setting, human services, public health and more, he said.”

From the cybersecurity vulnerabilities and breaches front,

  • Beckers Health IT informs us,
    • “In the past 12 months, 92% of healthcare organizations reported experiencing at least one cyberattack, up from 88% in 2023, an Oct. 8 survey from Proofpoint and Ponemon Institute found.
    • “Of those cyberattacks, 69% reported disruptions to patient care as a direct consequence.”
  • The American Hospital Association News reports,
    • “The FBI, along with the National Security Agency, Cyber National Mission Force and United Kingdom’s National Cyber Security Centre, today released a joint agency advisory on cyber operations by the Russian Federation’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), also known as APT29, Midnight Blizzard, Cozy Bear, and the Dukes, targeting U.S. and global entities. The agencies recommend prioritizing rapid patch deployment and keeping software up to date to protect against cyberattacks.
    • “This alert highlights the SVR’s aggressive targeting of U.S. critical infrastructure for espionage and possible future offensive cyber operations,’ said John Riggi, AHA national advisor for cybersecurity and risk. “Although health care is not cited as being intentionally targeted by this SVR campaign, it is noted that any entity could become a target of opportunity if it has internet-facing vulnerabilities. The SVR takes advantage of opportunistic tactics to host malicious infrastructure, conduct follow-on operations from compromised accounts, or attempt to pivot to other networks on unprotected victim infrastructure. To mitigate this threat and other types of cyberattacks, such as ransomware attacks, it is imperative that health care entities prioritize patching internet-facing vulnerabilities, employ multi-factor authentication and follow the voluntary cybersecurity performance goals.”
  • HHS’s Health Section Cybersecurity Coordination Center issued its September report on vulnerabilities of interest to the health sector.
  • Cyberscoop points out,
    • “The number of malicious packages found in the open-source ecosystem has dramatically grown in the past year, according to a new report from Sonatype.
    • “The cybersecurity firm found that the number of malicious packages intentionally uploaded into open-source repositories has jumped by more than 150% compared to last year. Open-source software, a transparent development process where almost anyone can contribute to the code and components, is the bedrock of the digital age that can be found in most modern digital technologies.
    • “Sonatype, a firm that specializes in the open-source supply chain, looked at more than 7 million open-source projects and found that more than 500,000 contained a malicious package.
    • “Vulnerabilities in open-source packages and the developers who maintain them have become a hot topic following a spree of high-profile bugs and cyberattacks in recent years. Earlier this year, the maintainer of the data-compression tool XZ Utils was the focus of a yearslong campaign by hackers with the aim of inserting a vulnerability that would have been found in Linux servers throughout the world.”
  • The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) alerted us on October 10,
    • CISA has observed cyber threat actors leveraging unencrypted persistent cookies managed by the F5 BIG-IP Local Traffic Manager (LTM) module to enumerate other non-internet facing devices on the network. F5 BIG-IP is a suite of hardware and software solutions designed to manage and secure network traffic. A malicious cyber actor could leverage the information gathered from unencrypted persistence cookies to infer or identify additional network resources and potentially exploit vulnerabilities found in other devices present on the network.
    • CISA urges organizations to encrypt persistent cookies employed in F5 BIG-IP devices and review the following article for details on how to configure the BIG-IP LTM system to encrypt HTTP cookies. Additionally, F5 has developed an iHealth heuristic to detect and alert customers when cookie persistence profiles do not have encryption enabled. BIG-IP iHealth is a diagnostic tool that “evaluates the logs, command output, and configuration of a BIG-IP system against a database of known issues, common mistakes, and published F5 best practices” to help users verify the optimal operation of their BIG-IP systems.
  • CISA added six more known exploited vulnerabilities to its catalog this week.
  • Cybersecurity Dive adds,
    • “Ivanti released updates for three actively exploited zero-day vulnerabilities in Ivanti Cloud Service Appliance, which hackers are chaining together with a previously disclosed path traversal vulnerability, the company said in a Tuesday blog post
    • “Successful exploitation of the flaws can allow an attacker to gain administrative privileges to bypass restrictions, obtain remote code execution or run arbitrary SQL statements. The vulnerabilities are listed as CVE-2024-9379CVE-2024-9380CVE-2024-9381
    • “Ivanti previously disclosed and issued a patch that would address the prior critical vulnerability, listed as CVE-2024-8963, on Sept. 10. The company said it discovered the path traversal vulnerability when it was investigating exploitation of an OS command injection vulnerability, listed as CVE-2024-8190.”

From the ransomware front,

  • Tech Radar reports,
    • “The number of active ransomware groups over the last 12 months is on the rise as criminals look for more ways to target businesses, new research has claimed.
    • “The 2024 State of Threat Report from Secureworks has revealed a rise in the number of active ransomware groups over the last 12 months – identifying a 30% rise in the number of active groups.
    • “The figures represents a diversification of the landscape rather than a particularly drastic increase in criminals. Since the notorious Lockbit disruption, in which the most prolific group was briefly shut down, the ransomware ecosystem has evolved, with 31 new groups being established.” * * *
    • “One of the key findings from the report is that unpatched vulnerabilities remain the top Initial Access Vector (IAV) in ransomware attacks, making up almost 50% of all IAVs. This outlines more than ever the importance of staying on top of cybersecurity and software updates.”
  • Per Security Affairs,
    • “Sophos researchers warn that ransomware operators are exploiting the critical vulnerability CVE-2024-40711 in Veeam Backup & Replication to create rogue accounts and deploy malware.
    • “In early September 2024, Veeam released security updates to address multiple vulnerabilities impacting its products, the company fixed 18 high and critical severity flaws in Veeam Backup & Replication, Service Provider Console, and One.
    • “The most severe flaw included in the September 2024 security bulletin is a critical, remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability tracked as CVE-2024-40711 (CVSS v3.1 score: 9.8) impacting Veeam Backup & Replication (VBR).”
  • Palo Alto Networks Unit 24 tells us,
    • “In July 2024, researchers from Palo Alto Networks discovered a successor to INC ransomware named Lynx. Since its emergence, the group behind this ransomware has actively targeted organizations in various sectors such as retail, real estate, architecture, and financial and environmental services in the U.S. and UK.
    • “Lynx ransomware shares a significant portion of its source code with INC ransomware. INC ransomware initially surfaced in August 2023 and had variants compatible with both Windows and Linux. While we haven’t confirmed any Linux samples yet for Lynx ransomware, we have noted Windows samples. This ransomware operates using a ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) model.”

From the cybersecurity defenses front,

  • American Hospital Association cybersecurity expert John Riggi offers his perspective on this year’s cybersecurity challenges in the healthcare sector.
  • “Moffitt Cancer Center was one of many health systems impacted by the Change Healthcare ransomware attack earlier this year. The organization’s VP of RCM operations [Lynn Ansley] explains [in Health Leaders] how she navigated the disaster.”
  • Here is a link to Dark Reading’s CISO Corner.
  • HHS’s 405(d) program shares an endpoints security poster with the public.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *