Like most businesses, cybercriminals have adapted and adjusted over the past two years. Modern attackers have learned to launch more destructive ransomware campaigns while becoming more efficient and adept at evading law enforcement.
We now see ransomware gangs quickly rebrand themselves after a disruption, with new names and new infrastructure. DarkSide, the ransomware group behind several prominent attacks, seems to have rebranded as BlackMatter.
With each reinvention, ransomware gangs can come back stronger, learn from their experiences and take advantage of new techniques and vulnerabilities. They have a wealth of evolving tools in their arsenals, many vectors to get to the data they’re after and myriad ways to avoid detection after infiltrating victim organizations. Different names, same potent punch.
The takedown of the REvil ransomware gang and a hacker allegedly behind the Kaseya supply chain attacks, along with the reported shutdown of BlackMatter, are notable and encouraging.
But there’s no time to relax. Keeping cybercriminals down is like putting out a fire in a dry forest — you can extinguish one, but flare-ups can happen anywhere, at any time.
Attackers mean business. There is a lot of money to be made, fueling development and innovation. Regulating cryptocurrency to make them less anonymous is a logical tactic, but cybercriminals are already switching to digital currencies that are harder to track like Monero. Until the incentives change, business leaders should expect that successful ransomware gangs will continue to reinvent themselves, refine their techniques and go after critical data.
No matter what name they go by, these cybercriminal groups typically use an efficient ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) model that allows independent attackers to get up and running quickly. Attackers can leverage a RaaS platform, along with their own tools and tricks, to target victims and hold their data hostage — twice. Attackers now use a double extortion model, where victims must pay to get their data back and pay again for the promise that the attackers won’t leak stolen data.
Today’s cybercriminal gangs are doing more than stealing and encrypting victims’ data. Attackers have been known to delve through a company’s files to uncover how much their cyber insurance will pay in the event of an attack; they then set the ransom to that amount.
BlackMatter tampered with access controls — the security settings that determine who can access what data on your network — and broke them so that every employee could access massive amounts of data. In other words, they’re not just breaking into the vault; they are blasting it open and leaving companies even more vulnerable to future attacks.
Nation-states and cybercriminal groups, like one identified as FIN7, are actively recruiting corporate insiders — employees and others who are already on the company’s network. The FIN7 group also reinvented themselves and sharpened old tricks. Other attackers, like the OnePercent Group, leak small amounts of stolen data to pressure organizations to pay. Attackers are also getting personal by threatening to release mental health records if clients don’t pay up.
This article first appeared on Forbes.