Analysis of the Phishing Campaign: Behind the Incident
See the results of our investigation into the phishing campaign encountered by our company and get information to defend against it. Here are some key findings: We found around 72 phishing domains pretending to be real or fake companies. These domains created believable websites that tricked people into sharing their login details. The attack was sophisticated, using advanced techniques like direct human interaction to deceive targets. We analyzed several fake websites and reverse-engineered their web-facing application. At the end of the post, you will find a list of IOCs that can be used for improving your organization’s security.
Detecting and Preventing Unauthorized User Access: Instructions
Snowflake recently observed and is investigating an increase in cyber threat activity targeting some of our customers’ accounts. We believe this is the result of ongoing industry-wide, identity-based attacks with the intent to obtain customer data. Research indicates that these types of attacks are performed with our customers’ user credentials that were exposed through unrelated cyber threat activity. To date, we do not believe this activity is caused by any vulnerability, misconfiguration, or malicious activity within the Snowflake product. Throughout the course of our ongoing investigation, we have promptly informed the limited number of customers who we believe may have been impacted. This post will assist with investigating any potential threat activity within Snowflake customer accounts and provide guidance in the “Recommended Actions” section below.
CVE-2024-23108: Fortinet FortiSIEM 2nd Order Command Injection Deep-Dive
CVE-2024-23108 Fortinet FortiSIEM Command Injection Deep-Dive and Indicators of Compromise. This blog details a command injection vulnerability which allows an unauthenticated attacker to access the FortiSIEM server as root to execute arbitrary commands.
CVE-2023-34992: Fortinet FortiSIEM Command Injection Deep-Dive
CVE-2023-34992 Fortinet FortiSIEM Command Injection Deep-Dive and Indicators of Compromise. This blog details a command injection vulnerability which allows an unauthenticated attacker to access the FortiSIEM server as root to execute arbitrary commands.
Managing Attack Surface | Huntress Blog
Huntress recently detected interesting activity on an endpoint; a threat actor was attempting to establish a foothold on an endpoint by using commands issued via MSSQL to upload a reverse shell accessible from the web server. All attempts were obviated by MAV and process detections, but boy-howdy, did they try!