A joint cybersecurity advisory (PDF) was released last week by U.S. agencies informing the healthcare and public health sector of recent ransomware activity (also known as CISA Alert AA20-302A).
In their advisory, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) caution that attackers are targeting the healthcare organization with malware that results in ransomware infection, data theft and disruption of service. They express particular concern for healthcare organizations dealing with cyberthreats during the COVID-19 pandemic, and provide information to help them combat these risks.
In September, a Fortune 500 healthcare and hospital services provider, Universal Health Services (UHS) was hit by a Ryuk ransomware attack (BleepingComputer). The disruption caused a shutdown of their business operations and IT infrastructure to contain ransomware spread across their network.
Last week, a medical center in Oregon, a New York-based health system, a Brooklyn hospital and several hospitals within a Vermont health network were hit by Ryuk ransomware. BleepingComputer cites Mandiant’s attribution to a Eastern European hacking group that plans to attack hundreds of other hospitals, while KrebsonSecurity reported on tip that they intend to deploy ransomware at more than 400 other U.S.-based healthcare facilities.
First seen in 2018, Ryuk ransomware infections have been observed as steadily rising since July of this year, attacking 20 organizations per week (Check Point). In 2020, Ryuk is responsible for one-third of all ransomware incidents so far this year, according to statistics from SonicWall’s Capture Labs.
According to the advisory, ransomware attackers will use robust and dual-purpose tools like Cobalt Strike and PowerShell Empire to steal credentials. Cobalt Strike is software that was created for adversary simulations and red team operations, normally used for penetration test engagements – but has also been seen in use for malicious purposes, according to Blumira’s Sr. Incident Detection Engineer Amanda Berlin in Analysis of a Threat: PowerShell Malicious Activity.
Using Mimikatz, a Windows attack tool, this allows them to dump cleartext passwords or hash values from memory. With stolen credentials, attackers can move laterally and map your network to understand the scope of ransomware infection.
From an approach perspective, attackers are using Living off the Land (LotL) techniques to infect healthcare networks. That means that rather than leveraging zero-day exploits, they’re using tools or features that already exist in a target environment to conduct malicious activity. I wrote more about this topic in March – see Top Security Threats: Detecting Ransomware Tactics.
Attackers are leveraging native Windows tools like net view and net computer to locate mapped network shares, domain controllers and active directory. To move laterally, attackers are also relying on native tools, such as PowerShell, Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) and Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP).
This shows that attackers are not using different or more advanced methods, but rather the same tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs) that we’ve seen prove to be effective for evading detection and ransomware infection.
The advisory details the steps of ransomware infection as follows:
Attackers are leveraging TrickBot tools to deploy ransomware like Ryuk and Conti, and conduct a variety of other malicious activities, including credential harvesting; mail and point-of-sale data exfiltration; and cryptomining.
The FBI reported on new TrickBot modules named Anchor – attackers use anchor_dns, a tool to send and receive stolen data. Anchor evades network defense solutions, blending malicious communications in with legitimate DNS (Domain Name System) traffic by using DNS tunneling.
Attackers have also been seen using BazarLoader/BazarBackdoor. They work together to infect and communicate with the same C2 infrastructure – it’s now one of the most commonly used vectors for ransomware deployment, according to the advisory.
The advisory has detailed code and examples of file, directory and module names to look out for when it comes to TrickBot, BazarLoader and BazarBackdoor. Mandiant also released a list of domains and internet addresses used by a Ryuk threat actor group in previous attacks.
U.S. government agencies are advising healthcare organizations to secure their networks by:
Other preparatory actions to take include:
Early detection of attacker tactics and techniques can help you prevent a ransomware infection. Blumira automates detection and response for ransomware prevention and detection by:
Reconnaissance Scanning – By detecting scanning tools on your network, Blumira can identify and alert you to an attacker early in the stages of an attack, before ransomware infection.
Credential Attacks – Blumira detects RDP connections, password spraying, brute-force and more to alert you to attackers attempting to gain access to your network to install ransomware.
Privilege Escalation – Blumira detects whenever administrator-level accounts are added or permissions are changed to alert you to attackers changing privileges in order to move laterally throughout your environment with malicious intent. Blumira can also monitor and alert on account creation.
Data Exfiltration – Attackers are stealing data before infection to use as leverage for demanding a ransom – to prevent data exposure, Blumira detects data exfiltration and any anomalous internal web traffic indicating an attempt to exfiltrate data out of your environment.
Malicious Applications and Files – Blumira detects and notifies your team when an application drops a new file or script on a machine, so you can respond quickly to block or contain malicious executables related to ransomware.
Watch a demo to find out how or contact us to learn more. You can also sign up for a free account of Blumira’s platform to detect and respond to threats in Microsoft 365.