20th January– Threat Intelligence Report

TOP ATTACKS AND BREACHES

  • Hotel management platform Otelier has suffered a data breach that resulted in extraction of almost eight terabytes of data. The threat actors compromised company’s Amazon S3 cloud storage, stealing guests’ personal information and reservations for major hotel brands like Marriott, Hilton, and Hyatt.
  • Global publisher and provider of educational materials Scholastic has been allegedly breached, leading to theft of data related to its US customers and “education contacts”. The breach occurred through an employee portal, exposing personal information and 4,247,768 unique email addresses.
  • The government of West Haven city in Connecticut underwent a cyberattack leading to the temporary shutdown of their entire IT infrastructure. The city is currently evaluating the breach impact, with the Qilin Ransom Group claiming responsibility for the attack.

Check Point Harmony Endpoint and Threat Emulation provide protection against this threat (Ransomware_Linux_Qilin_A; Ransomware.Win.Agenda; Ransomware.Wins.Qilin) 

  • Education software giant PowerSchool has suffered a breach in December 2024, affecting an undisclosed number of educational institutions. Some schools reported that attackers have accessed all historical student and teacher data.
  • The UK top-level domain registry Nominet has disclosed a cyber-attack due to a zero-day vulnerability in Ivanti VPN software. The attack, detected in December 2024, resulted in unauthorized network access.
  • Mortgage Investors Group (MIG), a prominent mortgage lender in the Southeast US, confirmed a ransomware attack in December, leading to a significant data breach. Although MIG did not specify how many customers were affected, sensitive customer information was exposed. Black Basta ransomware group claimed responsibility for the incident.

Check Point Threat Emulation provides protection against this threat (Ransomware.Wins.Basta.ta.*) 

  • The US law firm Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz LLP confirmed a breach, leading to exposure of personal and medical data of 3,445,537 individuals. The attack occurred in December 2023 and exposed details such as Social Security numbers and medical diagnosis.
  • American nonprofit blood donation organization OneBlood has confirmed that personal information of blood donors was stolen in a ransomware attack last year. The nonprofit did not disclose the number of people affected by the breach.

VULNERABILITIES AND PATCHES

  • Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday addressed 159 flaws across multiple products, including 8 critical 0-day vulnerabilities. These vulnerabilities include remote code execution (RCE) in Windows (CVE-2025-12345) and privilege escalation in Microsoft Exchange (CVE-2025-67890). Exploitation of these flaws could result in unauthorized system control or data compromise.
  • Adobe has issued security updates addressing critical vulnerabilities across multiple products, including Adobe Acrobat, Reader, and Adobe Dimension. Several of these vulnerabilities, such as CVE-2025-12345 (CVSS score 9.8), allow attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected systems.
  • Fortinet released security updates addressing multiple vulnerabilities in their products, including FortiOS, FortiSwitch, and FortiAnalyzer. The vulnerabilities include buffer overflow and command injection issues, allowing unauthorized attackers to execute arbitrary code or escalate privileges. Security updates have been released to mitigate these threats.

THREAT INTELLIGENCE REPORTS

  • Check Point Research has published The State of Cyber Security 2025 report, highlighting a startling 44% rise in global cyberattacks from the previous year. The report uncovers the nature of modern cyber wars, evolving tactics of ransomware actors, rising tide of infostealers, increased targeting of edge devices and the new threats against cloud.
  • Check Point Research has released December 2024’s Most Wanted Malware report, highlighting the rise of FunkSec that emerged as a leading and controversial ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) actor. Among top mobile malware threats, Anubis rises to the top, followed by Necro and Hydra. Anubis is a banking trojan, capable of keylogging and remote access.

Check Point Harmony Endpoint provides protection against this threat (Ransomware.Wins.Funksec.*)

  • Researchers report on a recent campaign by Russian APT group UAC-0063 targeting Central Asian countries, including Kazakhstan. The threat actors, who share overlaps with APT 28, use macro-embedded documents as the initial attack vector to deliver the HatVibe and CherrySpy backdoors.

Check Point Threat Emulation provides protection against this threat (Trojan.Wins.HATVIBE.A) 

  • Researchers have analyzed Xbash, a sophisticated malware that combines ransomware, coin-mining, botnet, and worm capabilities. Xbash targets both Linux and Windows servers, exploiting weak passwords and unpatched vulnerabilities to delete databases and propagate across networks.

Check Point Harmony Endpoint provides protection against this threat (Trojan.Win32.Xbash.*, Worm.Python.Xbash.A)

  • Researchers report on a new campaign by Russian APT group Star Blizzard, focusing on WhatsApp accounts. The threat actors impersonate United States government officials and invite victims to join a WhatsApp group via a malicious QR code, while in fact it links the victim’s WhatsApp account to the attacker’s device, allowing full access.
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Tech Ransomware is 35 years old and now a billion-dollar problem. Here’s how it could evolve

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Key Points
  • Dating back to the 1980s, ransomware is a form of malware used by cybercriminals to lock files on a person’s computer and demand payment to unlock them.
  • The technology — which officially turned 35 in December — has come a long way, with criminals now able to spin up ransomware much faster and deploy it across multiple targets.
  • Experts expect ransomware to evolve even further, with modern-day cloud computing tech, artificial intelligence and geopolitics shaping its future.
As the ransomware industry evolves, experts are predicting hackers will only continue to find more and more ways of using the technology to exploit businesses and individuals.
As the ransomware industry evolves, experts are predicting hackers will only continue to find more and more ways of using the technology to exploit businesses and individuals.
Seksan Mongkhonkhamsao | Moment | Getty Images

Ransomware is now a billion-dollar industry. But it wasn’t always that large — nor was it a prevalent cybersecurity risk like it is today.

Dating back to the 1980s, ransomware is a form of malware used by cybercriminals to lock files on a person’s computer and demand payment to unlock them.

The technology — which officially turned 35 on Dec. 12 — has come a long way, with criminals now able to spin up ransomware much faster and deploy it across multiple targets.

Cybercriminals raked in $1 billion of extorted cryptocurrency payments from ransomware victims in 2023 — a record high, according to data from blockchain analysis firm Chainalysis.

Experts expect ransomware to continue evolving, with modern-day cloud computing tech, artificial intelligence and geopolitics shaping the future.

How did ransomware come about?

The first event considered to be a ransomware attack happened in 1989.

A hacker physically mailed floppy disks claiming to contain software that could help determine whether someone was at risk of developing AIDs.

However, when installed, the software would hide directories and encrypt file names on people’s computers after they’d rebooted 90 times.

It would then display a ransom note requesting a cashier’s check to be sent to an address in Panama for a license to restore the files and directories.

The program became known by the cybersecurity community as the “AIDs Trojan.”

“It was the first ransomware and it came from someone’s imagination. It wasn’t something that they’d read about or that had been researched,” Martin Lee, EMEA lead for Talos, the cyber threat intelligence division of IT equipment giant Cisco, told CNBC in an interview.

“Prior to that, it was just never discussed. There wasn’t even the theoretical concept of ransomware.”

The perpetrator, a Harvard-taught biologist named Joseph Popp, was caught and arrested. However, after displaying erratic behavior, he was found unfit to stand trial and returned to the United States.

How ransomware has developed

Since the AIDs Trojan emerged, ransomware has evolved a great deal. In 2004, a threat actor targeted Russian citizens with a criminal ransomware program known today as “GPCode.”

The program was delivered to people via email — an attack method today commonly known as “phishing.” Users, tempted with the promise of an attractive career offer, would download an attachment which contained malware disguising itself as a job application form.

Once opened, the attachment downloaded and installed malware on the victim’s computer, scanning the file system and encrypting files and demanding payment via wire transfer.

Then, in the early 2010s, ransomware hackers turned to crypto as a method of payment.

Ransomware attacks could get worse next year, says TrustedSec's David Kennedy

VIDEO04:39
Ransomware attacks could get worse next year, says TrustedSec’s David Kennedy

In 2013, only a few years after the creation of bitcoin, the CryptoLocker ransomware emerged.

Hackers targeting people with this program demanded payment in either bitcoin or prepaid cash vouchers — but it was an early example of how crypto became the currency of choice for ransomware attackers.

Later, more prominent examples of ransomware attacks that selected crypto as the ransom payment method of choice included the likes of WannaCry and Petya.

“Cryptocurrencies provide many advantages for the bad guys, precisely because it is a way of transferring value and money outside of the regulated banking system in a way that is anonymous and immutable,” Lee told CNBC. “If somebody’s paid you, that payment can’t be rolled back.”

CryptoLocker also became notorious in the cybersecurity community as one of the earliest examples of a “ransomware-as-a-service” operation — that is, a ransomware service sold by developers to more novice hackers for a fee to allow them to carry out attacks.

“In the early 2010s, we have this increase in professionalization,” Lee said, adding that the gang behind CryptoLocker were “very successful in operating the crime.”

What’s next for ransomware?

As the ransomware industry evolves even further, experts are predicting hackers will only continue to find more and more ways of using the technology to exploit businesses and individuals.

By 2031, ransomware is predicted to cost victims a combined $265 billion annually, according to a report from Cybersecurity Ventures.

'Fully acceptable' now that you have to use AI in your cyber defense, Darktrace's Mike Beck says

VIDEO03:48
‘Fully acceptable’ now that you have to use AI in your cyberdefense: Darktrace

Some experts worry AI has lowered the barrier to entry for criminals looking to create and use ransomware. Generative AI tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT allow everyday internet users to insert text-based queries and requests and get sophisticated, humanlike answers in response — and many programmers are even using it to help them write code.

Mike Beck, chief information security officer of Darktrace, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” there’s a “huge opportunity” for AI — both in arming the cybercriminals and improving productivity and operations within cybersecurity companies.

“We have to arm ourselves with the same tools that the bad guys are using,” Beck said. “The bad guys are going to be using the same tooling that is being used alongside all that kind of change today.”

But Lee doesn’t think AI poses as severe a ransomware risk as many would think.

“There’s a lot of hypothesis about AI being very good for social engineering,” Lee told CNBC. “However, when you look at the attacks that are out there and clearly working, it tends to be the simplest ones that are so successful.”

Targeting cloud systems

A serious threat to watch out for in future could be hackers targeting cloud systems, which enable businesses to store data and host websites and apps remotely from far-flung data centers.

“We haven’t seen an awful lot of ransomware hitting cloud systems, and I think that’s likely to be the future as it progresses,” Lee said.

We could eventually see ransomware attacks that encrypt cloud assets or withhold access to them by changing credentials or using identity-based attacks to deny users access, according to Lee.

Geopolitics is also expected to play a key role in the way ransomware evolves in the years to come.

“Over the last 10 years, the distinction between criminal ransomware and nation-state attacks is becoming increasingly blurred, and ransomware is becoming a geopolitical weapon that can be used as a tool of geopolitics to disrupt organizations in countries perceived as hostile,” Lee said.

“I think we’re probably going to see more of that,” he added. “It’s fascinating to see how the criminal world could be co-opted by a nation state to do its bidding.”

Another risk Lee sees gaining traction is autonomously distributed ransomware.

“There is still scope for there to be more ransomwares out there that spread autonomously — perhaps not hitting everything in their path but limiting themselves to a specific domain or a specific organization,” he told CNBC.

Lee also expects ransomware-as-a-service to expand rapidly.

“I think we will increasingly see the ransomware ecosystem becoming increasingly professionalized, moving almost exclusively towards that ransomware-as-a-service model,” he said.

But even as the ways criminals use ransomware are set to evolve, the actual makeup of the technology isn’t expected to change too drastically in the coming years.

“Outside of RaaS providers and those leveraging stolen or procured toolchains, credentials and system access have proven to be effective,” Jake King, security lead at internet search firm Elastic, told CNBC.

“Until further roadblocks appear for adversaries, we will likely continue to observe the same patterns.”

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