Black Basta, Double Extortion and RaaS: Your Ransomware Guide
Thomas Murray
Global Risk Intelligence | Safeguarding clients and their communities since 1994
Black Basta
Ransomware gangs are becoming more aggressive and more innovative than ever before, and the financial services industry – where companies with strong balance sheets are determined to protect their reputations for asset safety and security – is a particular target.
Since 2020, those in financial services have been especially hard hit by cyber criminals who have evolved increasingly sophisticated and effective means for breaching the most robust defences. These include Ransomware as a Service (RaaS) and so-called ‘double extortion’ techniques.
According to the Anti-Phishing Working Group, the financial services industry experienced a 35% increase in ransomware attacks in the first quarter of 2022 alone. It was also subject to almost 25% of all phishing attacks.
The real problem for the financial sector is not the increasing frequency of these incidents, however. Rather, it’s the nature of the attacks themselves, which tend to be particularly complex in an effort to overcome the rigorous security used by most financial organisations. These groups are organised, experienced, creative, and often politically motivated (and funded).
Ransomware as a Service and double extortion
Just as many businesses outsource technology requirements to SaaS providers and MSPs, so threat actors are using third-party suppliers of ransomware capabilities to launch more targeted and effective assaults on their victims.
Known as Ransomware as a Service (RaaS), it mirrors the way most legitimate organisations structure their own supplier relationships. Black Basta is one of the most prolific RaaS groups.
RaaS means that criminals no longer need to have the skills required to launch a cyberattack – they can simply pay another group to create the software that will do it for them.
Black Basta is extremely good at what it does. It managed to hit at least 75 organisations on behalf of its ‘affiliates’ (as its clients are known) over the course of a few months in 2022. Although it is known for being a RaaS organisation, the gang also uses ‘double extortion.’ This means that if its victims refuse to pay a ransom, it simply exfiltrates sensitive data and releases it for sale on a cybercrime marketplace.
Black Basta is prolific and hugely effective, yet analysts can find no evidence that it recruits on the Dark Web. This has led to speculation that Black Basta may in fact be a rebrand of the Russian group Conti.
Conti pledged loyalty to the Kremlin at the start of Russia’s war in Ukraine, and US law enforcement has evidence that members of Black Basta have been urging a specific targeting of organisations in English-speaking countries allied with the US.
Managing cyber risk – what can you do?
It’s not only the financial sector that will be vulnerable to RaaS and double extortion. Healthcare providers, universities, local and national government agencies, to name just a few – all have the same vulnerabilities and treasure troves of sensitive data that make them irresistible targets.
Anticipate – Third-party due diligence is essential. Third-party risk is on the rise and threat actors will exploit vulnerabilities in secure companies’ supply chains to find ‘back doors’ into their systems. You need to map out your companies’ critical service providers and other third parties, and develop a classic risk matrix which begins by prioritising ‘high impact, high likelihood’ events.
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Educate – Human fallibility is often at the heart of a successful IT breach. A lot of people tune out during IT security training: Keep your people up-to-date on the latest threats and ensure that training materials are regularly refreshed.
Your board and senior leadership team should also be thoroughly briefed on your cyber breach response plans. This will minimise the chances of rash decisions being acted on in the heat of the moment.
Communicate – Collaboration between IT security teams in different jurisdictions is crucial to ensuring everyone is on the same page. Michigan State University, for example, paid US$1m to a ransomware gang that discovered its physics department had not properly patched its VPN.
Evaluate – Continuous monitoring of your attack surfaces and threat environment is vital. Do you know exactly how many servers there are through which your defences could be breached? You may be surprised by how often the number changes.
Automate – It isn’t possible for such continuous monitoring to be a manual job. Harness the power of a third-party expert to provide you with an automated system that gives you an overview of your ever-changing attack surface.
With Orbit Security , you can:
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