Elastic announced its second
Elastic Global Threat Report, issued by
Elastic Security Labs.
Based on observations from more than 1 billion data points over the
last 12 months, the report reveals ransomware is expanding and
diversifying; more than half of all observed malware infections were on
Linux systems; and credential access techniques have become an essential
part of the cloud intrusion process.
Key findings from the report include:
Malware Trends
The majority of malware observed was composed of a small number of
highly prevalent ransomware families and commercial off-the-shelf (COTS)
tools. As financially motivated threat communities adopt or offer
malware-as-a-service (MaaS) capabilities, enterprises should heavily
invest in developing security functions with broad visibility of
low-level behaviors to expose previously undiscovered threats.
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BlackCat, Conti, Hive, Sodinokibi and Stop are the most prevalent
ransomware families we identify through signatures, amounting to about 81% of all ransomware activity.
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COTS malware capabilities like Metasploit and Cobalt Strike represented 5.7% of all signature events. On Windows, these families amounted to about 68% of all infection attempts.
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Around 91% of malware signature events came from Linux endpoints, while Windows endpoints accounted for only about 6%.
Endpoint Behavior Trends
The most sophisticated threat groups evade security by withdrawing to
edge devices, appliances, and other platforms where visibility is at its
lowest. As never before, the report highlights the need for enterprises
to evaluate the tamper-resistant nature of their endpoint security
sensors and consider monitoring projects to track vulnerable device
drivers used to disable security technologies. In addition,
organizations with large Windows environments should track vulnerable
device drivers to disable these essential technologies.
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When looked at together, Execution and Defense Evasion make up more than 70% of all endpoint alerts.
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Elastic observed the most discreet techniques on Windows endpoints, being the top target by adversaries with 94% of all endpoint behavior alerts, followed by macOS at 3%.
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macOS-specific credential dumping was responsible for an astounding 79% of all credentials access techniques by adversaries, an increase of approximately 9%
since last year. Of these attempts, we observed that Windows
environments where ProcessDump.exe, WriteMiniDump.exe, and RUNDLL32.exe
were used more than 78% of the time.
Cloud Security Trends
As enterprises increasingly migrate on-premises resources to hybrid or
entirely cloud-based environments, threat actors are taking advantage of
misconfigurations, lax access controls, unsecured credentials, and no
functional principle of least privilege (PoLP) models. Organizations can
dramatically reduce the risk of compromise by implementing the security
features that their cloud providers already support and monitoring for
common credential abuse attempts.
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For Amazon Web Services, Elastic observed defense evasion (38%), credential access (37%), and execution (21%) as the most common tactics mapped to threat detection signals.
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53% of credential access events were tied to compromised legitimate Microsoft Azure accounts.
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Microsoft 365 experienced a high rate of credential access signals, accounting for 86%.
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85% of Google Cloud threat detection signals were related to defense evasion.
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Discovery accounted for approximately 61% of all Kubernetes-specific signals, predominantly related to unexpected service account requests that were denied.
"Today's threat landscape is truly borderless, as adversaries morph into
criminal enterprises focused on monetizing their attack strategies,"
said Jake King, head of security intelligence and director of engineering at Elastic. "Open
source, commodity malware, and the use of AI have lowered the barrier
to entry for attackers, but we're also seeing the rise of automated
detection and response systems that enable all engineers to better
defend their infrastructures. It's a cat-and-mouse game, and our
strongest weapons are vigilance and the continued investment in new
defense technologies and strategies."
Download the report