Other New LockBit Techniques Include Renaming PowerShell Files to Evade Detection and Using Google Docs for Command and Control

OXFORD, U.K. — Outubro 21, 2020 —

Sophos, a global leader in next-generation cybersecurity, today released its latest research into LockBit ransomware, “LockBit attackers used automated attack tools to identify tasty targets,” which shows how they used PowerShell tools to search for specific business applications on breached networks, including tax and point-of-sale software. If a fingerprint generated by this search met the keyword criteria, the tools would automatically execute a number of tasks, including launching the LockBit ransomware.

Researchers also uncovered a number of new attack methods that LockBit used to evade detection. These include renaming PowerShell files and using a remote Google document for command and control communications. Due to the highly automated nature of the attacks, the ransomware, once launched, spread across the network within five minutes, wiping its activity logs along the way.

"LockBit’s interest in specific business applications and keywords indicates the attackers were clearly looking to identify systems that are valuable to smaller companies—the systems that store financial information and handle daily business—in order to pressure victims to pay, and pay faster,” said Sean Gallagher, senior threat researcher, Sophos. “We’ve seen ransomware shut down business applications upon execution, but this is the first time we’ve seen attackers looking for certain types of applications in an automated approach to score potential targets.”

The operators also made extensive use of PowerShell throughout the attack, repurposing the code to suit their needs.

“The LockBit gang appears to be following other ransomware groups, including Ryuk—which Sophos recently found using Cobalt Strike—that are adapting tools developed for penetration testing to automate and accelerate their attacks,” said Gallagher. “In this case, the PowerShell scripts help the attackers identify systems that have applications with particularly valuable data, so that they don't waste their time encrypting or ‘supporting’ victims who are less likely to pay. They're using these tools in an automated fashion to cast as wide a net as possible, while limiting their actual hands-on-keyboard activity, to track down the most promising victims."

The LockBit attackers tried to conceal their activities by making them look like normal automated administrative tasks. They did this by abusing native tools: creating disguised copies of Windows scripting components and then using Windows’ task scheduler to launch them. They also modified the built-in anti-malware protection, so it couldn’t function.

“The only way to defend against these types of ransomware attacks is to have defense-in-depth, with a consistent implementation of malware protection across all assets. If systems are left exposed or misconfigured, attackers can easily leverage them,” said Gallagher.

Today’s report continues a deep dive into LockBit that Sophos published in April 2020, revealing its inner workings and showing how the gang was expanding into the targeted extortion business alongside Maze and REvil.

Further information on LockBit and other ransomware is available on SophosLabs Uncut,  where Sophos experts regularly publish their latest research and breakthrough findings, such as Maze leveraging Ragnar Locker and the return of Ryuk. Threat researchers and IT managers can follow SophosLabs Uncut in real time on Twitter at @SophosLabs.

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A Sophos é líder mundial em soluções inovadoras e avançadas em segurança que defendem contra ataques cibernéticos, incluindo o serviço MDR (Managed Detection and Response) e serviços de resposta a incidentes, além de um amplo portfólio de tecnologias de segurança de endpoint, rede, e-mail e nuvem. Uma das maiores provedoras globais pure-play de segurança cibernética, a Sophos se incumbe da defesa de mais de 600.000 organizações e de mais de 100 milhões de usuários contra adversários ativos, ransomwares, phishing, malwares e outros ataques. Os produtos e serviços da Sophos são interconectados através do painel de gerenciamento do Sophos Central e administrados pelo Sophos X-Ops, a unidade de inteligência de ameaças da empresa que oferece abrangência entre domínios. A inteligência do Sophos X-Ops otimiza todo o ecossistema de segurança cibernética adaptativa da Sophos, que inclui um Data Lake centralizado que se utiliza de um rico acervo de APIs abertas disponíveis para clientes, parceiros, desenvolvedores e outros fornecedores de cibersegurança e tecnologia da informação. A Sophos oferece Cybersecurity as a Service para as organizações que necessitam de soluções de segurança gerenciada. O cliente também pode gerenciar a sua própria segurança cibernética, utilizando a plataforma de operações de segurança da Sophos, ou operar seguindo uma abordagem híbrida para complementar suas equipes internas com os serviços da Sophos, como a caça e remediação de ameaças. A venda de produtos e serviços da Sophos é feita por parceiros revendedores e provedores de serviços gerenciados (MSP) em todo o mundo. A Sophos está sediada em Oxford, no Reino Unido. Mais informações se encontram disponíveis no site www.sophos.com.