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City of Pensacola, Fla., Confirms Ransomware Attack

Most systems remain offline to prevent the attack from spreading.

An ongoing cyberattack against the city of Pensacola, Fla., is confirmed to be ransomware, officials reported this week. While some email service has been restored for city workers, most of Pensacola’s systems are still disconnected to prevent the infection from spreading.

In a statement released after the Dec. 7 incident, city spokesperson Kaycee Lagarde said IT staff responded by removing computers from the city network. The city remained operational; however, some services were affected, including city emails, some city landlines, 311 customer services (calls are received, but online services are down), and online bill payments, including Pensacola Energy and City of Pensacola Sanitation Services. Emergency dispatch and 911 services were not affected.

An updated report from the Pensacola News Journal says Lagarde confirmed the attack was ransomware, but few other details were shared, including ransom amount or plans to pay it. In an email to County Commissioners, county IT staff reportedly said they were not aware of a ransom but were redirected to obtain a decryption key on the anonymized Tor network.

This email, which was initially published but has since been taken offline, said the malware used in this incident was similar to that used in an attack against security firm Allied Universal. The company has an office in Pensacola and was targeted with Maze ransomware in November. When it missed its ransom payment deadline, attackers published 700 MB of stolen data online.

If it’s true the same operators are behind the Pensacola incident, the city is in a tough spot. Pensacola is one of several Florida municipalities to be hit with ransomware this year: Lake City and Riviera Beach opted to pay ransom following attacks; shortly after, Key Biscayne was also hit with ransomware. 

The cyberattack against Pensacola occurred less than 24 hours after a shooting at Naval Air Station Pensacola on Dec. 6. So far it seems the two incidents are unrelated, though an investigation is ongoing.

Read more details about the Pensacola attack here.

Check out The Edge, Dark Reading’s new section for features, threat data, and in-depth perspectives. Today’s top story: “Security 101: What Is a Man-in-the-Middle Attack?

Dark Reading’s Quick Hits delivers a brief synopsis and summary of the significance of breaking news events. For more information from the original source of the news item, please follow the link provided in this article. View Full Bio

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Americans should have strong privacy-protecting encryption …that the Feds and cops can break, say senators

In its latest attempt to come up with a digital encryption scheme that’s both secure and not, the US Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday heard conflicting testimony from industry, academics, and law enforcement about whether encryption can simultaneously protect information and also reveal it on demand.

Committee Chairman Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) framed the issue as if longing for a cake he could both have and eat: “I think all of us want devices that protect our privacy. Having said that, no American should want a device that becomes a safe haven for criminality.”

Senator Diane Feinstein (D-CA) recalled the December 2015 shooting attack in San Bernardino, California, that resulted in 14 deaths and 22 injuries. The shooter destroyed all of his phones except his work handset, an iPhone 5C, which was recovered at the scene by the FBI.

Apple declined to assist with an iOS rewrite because that doing so would undermine the encryption for all its customers. And the FBI ultimately paid a contractor an amount said to be about $900,000 to break into the device using an undisclosed software vulnerability, to find nothing of value.

That should never have happened, said Feinstein. “In American law there is no place that’s immune from inquiry if criminality is involved,” she said, without mentioning the various legal privileges that excuse people from forced testimony.

Cyrus Vance, Jr, District Attorney for New York City, in his testimony [PDF] made similar arguments about the need for lawful access to information on demand.

Either we can have user privacy or lawful access, but we can’t have both, they say. And they’ve been successful in propagating this message, even though it’s not true

“Apple and Google,” he said, “have framed this issue as an either/or proposition. Either we can have user privacy or lawful access, but we can’t have both, they say. And they’ve been successful in propagating this message, even though it’s not true.”

Yet Vance did not reveal how encryption might work only some of the time. Rather, he recalled the situation before 2014, when different security mechanisms on devices were readily removed.

In effect, he called for a return to the time before effective end-to-end encryption was widely available. His answer to functional encryption is its absence, which isn’t the same thing as locks that open only for the “good guys.”

Anticipating Apple’s argument that “it is impossible to maintain keys to open one of their devices without creating a hole for crypto criminals themselves to gain access,” Vance said the company has acknowledged that its pre-2014 phone unlocking process never led to a known security breach.

He neglected to cite examples of lawful access systems going wrong. As noted in a 2015 paper [PDF] addressing this issue – one US authorities keep trying to resolve to their satisfaction – a lawful access mechanism built into a telephone switch operated by Vodafone Greece allowed an unknown party to spy on 100 members of the Greek government, including the Prime Minister, Ministry of Defence, and Ministry of Justice, for 10 months in 2004 and 2005. And when Chinese hackers penetrated Google’s Gmail system in 2010, they entered through a backdoor created to comply with US interception orders.

After implicitly advocating for a return to a time when end-to-end encryption was not widely available to consumers, Vance admitted, “I’m not a technologist, but I’m confident the problem can be solved by a company re-design as well.”

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In short, his technically uninformed answer to encryption is not to have it. He wants a design rollback to a time when Apple held the keys to its products and could thus provide them on-demand, for better or worse.

Erik Neuenschwander, manager of user privacy at Apple, said [PDF] pretty much what Vance predicted: “We do not know of a way to deploy encryption that provides access only for the good guys without making it easier for the bad guys to break in.”

At the same time, he noted that over the past seven years Apple has responded to 127,000 requests from US law enforcement. Apple, he said, shares the goal of law enforcement to make the world a safer place and publishes guidance to help law enforcement understand the data it can make available.

Jay Sullivan, product management director for privacy and integrity in Messenger at Facebook, also defended the need to maintain effective encryption. “We can be certain that if we build a backdoor for the US government, other governments, including repressive and authoritarian regimes around the world, will demand access or try to gain it clandestinely, including to persecute dissidents, journalists, and their political opponents,” he said [PDF].

He also dismissed the idea that implementing encryption undermines Facebook’s commitment to cooperate with law enforcement demands. “For example, encryption will have no effect on our responses to lawful requests in providing metadata, including potentially critical location or account information,” he said. “Nor will Facebook’s end-to-end encryption interfere with law enforcement’s ability to retrieve messages stored on a device.”

In essence, the focus on encryption obscures other ways electronic information can be surveilled and obtained, through traditional wiretaps, zero-day vulnerabilities, and metadata, among other options.

Matt Tait, a cyber security fellow and professor at The University of Texas at Austin, elaborated on this line of argument, noting in his testimony [PDF] that “options exist for both conducting wiretaps and retaining ‘cyber tips’ without the need for altering or regulating end-to-end encryption.”

In a Bloomberg op-ed on Tuesday, former NSA director Michael Hayden came to a similar conclusion, arguing that Congress should focus on strengthening digital security rather than pushing for law enforcement to have extraordinary access that “would needlessly increase the vulnerability of public and private actors to cyberattacks, without sufficiently addressing law enforcement’s needs.”

If only Congress actually paid attention to such protestations. ®

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Article source: https://go.theregister.co.uk/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2019/12/10/us_congress_encryption_backdoor_hearings/

It’s the end of the 20-teens, and your Windows PC can still be pwned by nothing more than a simple bad font

With the year winding to a close and the holiday parties set to kick off, admins will want to check out the December Patch Tuesday load from Microsoft, Adobe, Intel, and SAP and get them installed before downing the first of many egg nogs.

Redmond gifts admins a light burden

This month is a relatively small patch bundle from Microsoft, with fixes kicked out for just 36 CVE-listed bugs, only seven of which are considered to be critical risks by Redmond standards.

Not among those seven is CVE-2019-1458, a flaw believed to be under active attack in the wild. The bug, an elevation of privilege error caused by the handling of objects in memory, is said to have been chained with a Chrome flaw to let attackers remotely attack PCs, and is just rated as important.

“When that [Chrome] bug became public, there was speculation it was being paired with a Windows kernel bug to escape the sandbox,” explained Dustin Childs of the Trend Micro ZDI. “While it’s not confirmed this patch is connected to those Chrome attacks, this is the type of bug one would use to perform a sandbox escape.”

Also of note is CVE-2019-1471, a critical hypervisor escape bug that would allow an attacker running on a guest VM to execute code on the host box.

The bulk of this month’s critical fixes were for a series of five remote code execution flaws in Git for Visual Studio. In each of the flaws, said to be caused by improper handling of command-line input, an attacker would launch the exploit by convincing the target to clone a malicious repo.

The remaining critical patch is for CVE-2019-1468, a play on the tried-and-true font-parsing vulnerability. In the wild, an attacker would embed the poisoned font file in a webpage and attack any system that visits.

For Office, the December bonanza brings fixes for a denial of service bug in Word (CVE-2019-1461), a remote code execution flaw in PowerPoint (CVE-2019-1462), and an information disclosure flaw in Excel (CVE-2019-1464). In each case the attacker would convince the mark to open a poisoned document file.

Adobe wraps up Acrobat and Photoshop fixes

For Adobe, there are updates for Acrobat, Photoshop, Brackets, and ColdFusion.

The bulk of the fixes will apply to Acrobat and Acrobat Reader, where a total of 21 CVE-listed bugs were patched. Of those, six were information disclosure via out-of-bounds read flaws, while one was privilege escalation by changing default directories.

The remaining vulnerabilities allowed arbitrary code execution via security bypass, untrusted pointer dereference, buffer errors, heap overflows, use-after-free conditions, and out of bounds read and write.

For Photoshop, two CVE-listed bugs (CVE-2019-8253, CVE-2019-8254) are patched on Windows and macOS. Each would potentially allow arbitrary code execution if exploited.

Developers will want to pay attention to two Adobe patches in particular. In Brackets, there is one flaw allowing arbitrary code execution (CVE-2019-8255), and in ColdFusion there was a single privilege escalation flaw (CVE-2019-8256).

Adobe says none of the patched bugs are currently being targeted in the wild.

Intel’s December patches: More than just Plunderbolt

On Tuesday morning, word broke about Plunderbolt, the latest side-channel flaw for Intel processors. That advisory was one of 11 from Chipzilla this month.

Others included a set of privilege escalation flaws in NUC firmware, escalation of privilege via Linux Administrative Tools, and elevation of privilege errors in the handing of virtual environments.

SAP drops December fixes

For those using SAP software, there are a total of seven security notes this month, including fixes for bugs in Adaptive Server Enterprise (CVE-2019-0402), SAP BusinessObjects (CVE-2019-0395) and SAP Enable Now (CVE-2019-0405). ®

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Article source: https://go.theregister.co.uk/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2019/12/10/patch_tuesday_december_2019/

Alleged Nigerian social engineer wins free flight to the US for business email fraud and love scams

A 64 year-old man from Nigeria is set to be tried in the US on charges he was the brains behind a string of business email hacks and romance scams.

Babatunde Martins is one of eleven people indicted in the Western Tennessee US District Court on charges of wire fraud, conspiracy, computer fraud, money laundering, and identity theft.

Prosecutors say that Martins was a key part of the group that in 2016 used spoofed email addresses and phished accounts to eavesdrop on the dealings of a Tennessee real estate company and, at various times, instruct unsuspecting employees to re-route outgoing payments into the accounts of money mules who then wired the stolen funds overseas.

Martins, it is alleged in the indictment (PDF) [PDF], not only participated in the business email compromise scheme, but also owned and operated a Ghana-based business that was used to launder the pilfered money.

It is alleged that the funds stolen from the real estate company were supplemented by cash from more conventional online rackets, including romance scams, gold buying schemes, credit card fraud, and other nefarious social engineering tricks that resulted in victims being coerced into sending money and goods to Martins and his co-conspirators.

“The indictment alleges that various Africa-based co-conspirators committed, or caused to be committed, a series of intrusions into the servers and email systems of a Memphis-based real estate company in June and July 2016,” prosecutors said.

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“Using sophisticated anonymization techniques, including the use of spoofed email addresses and Virtual Private Networks, the co-conspirators identified large financial transactions, initiated fraudulent email correspondence with relevant business parties and then redirected closing funds through a network of US-based money mules to final destinations in Africa.”

While the exact figure was not given, prosecutors say the schemes netted the criminals “hundreds of thousands” in ill-gotten gains.

The extradition of Martins in the latest in a prosecution effort that stretches back to 2017, when the first indictments in the case were filed. Since then, the US prosecutors have managed to either arrest (or extradite) and win convictions against five of the 11 people (not including Martins).

The two most recent convictions in the case, against 33 year-old Olufalojimi Abegunde and 30 year-old Javier Luis Ramos-Alonso, resulted in sentences of 78 and 31 months, respectively. So it is likely Martins will at least face multiple years behind bars should he be found guilty. ®

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Article source: https://go.theregister.co.uk/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2019/12/11/email_hacker_extradited/

Microsoft Fixes Windows Zero-Day on Lightest Patch Tuesday of 2019

This month’s batch of security updates addresses 36 CVEs, seven of which are rated Critical and one of which has been exploited in the wild.

Today marks the last Patch Tuesday of 2019 and Microsoft’s lightest of the year, with fixes for 36 vulnerabilities including one Windows zero-day flaw that has been exploited in the wild.

The elevation of privilege bug under active attack (CVE-2019-1458) exists when the Win32k component fails to properly handle objects in memory. An attacker could exploit this by first logging onto the system and running a specially crafted application to take control of a system. If successful, the attacker could install programs; view, change, or delete data; or create new accounts with full user rights. Today’s update addresses the way Win32k handles objects in memory.

Researchers with Kaspersky Labs discovered this zero-day while investigating Operation WizardOpium, which leverages a separate zero-day in Google Chrome (CVE-2019-13720). In these attacks, they learned, the Chrome exploit embeds CVE-2019-1458 so attackers can gain higher privileges on an infected machine while escaping the Chrome process sandbox.

Analysis of the privilege escalation exploit revealed the vulnerability belonged to the win32k.sys driver, and it works on the latest versions of Windows 7 and a few builds of Windows 10. New builds of Windows 10 are not affected because they contain measures to prevent the normal use of exploitable code, the researchers explain. It’s worth noting this also affects Windows Server 2008, which, along with Windows 7, will no longer receive security updates after Jan. 14.

CVE-2019-1458 may have been the only vulnerability under attack, but it wasn’t the only notable bug this month. Critical patches included a fix for CVE-2019-1468, a remote code execution vulnerability in Win32k graphics. A flaw exists when the Windows font library improperly handles specially crafted embedded fonts. There are a few ways to abuse this.

“To exploit the flaw, an attacker could use social-engineering tactics to either convince their victim to visit a specially crafted website containing the exploit code or by embedding the exploit code in a specially crafted document and enticing their victim to open it,” says Satnam Narang, senior research engineer at Tenable. Successful exploitation could enable an attacker to install programs, manipulate or delete data, or create new accounts with user privileges.

Five of the Critical vulnerabilities patched today are remote code execution flaws in Git for Visual Studio: CVE-2019-1349, CVE-2019-1350, CVE-2019-1352, CVE-2019-1354, and CVE-2019-1387. The seventh Critical bug, CVE-2019-1471, is a Windows Hyper-V remote code execution vulnerability.

CVE-2019-1349, one of the remote code execution bugs in Git for Visual Studio, could put engineering teams at risk for malware attacks, lateral movement, rogue account creation, and theft of proprietary app code, warns Richard Melick, senior technical product manager at Automox. The vulnerability exists when the Git for Visual Studio client improperly sanitizes input, he notes.

“As Visual Studio is one of the most popular development environments used today to design and build applications, this exploit puts engineering organizations on the front lines of a potential attack,” says Melick. To exploit the bug, an attacker would need to use the Git client to download a malicious repository to a target machine. Basic online research could tell an attacker about an organization’s use of Visual Studio and details of open source projects. From there, a well-crafted phishing email could grant an attacker entry into the target network.

December’s Patch Tuesday, with only 36 vulnerabilities fixed, is Microsoft’s smallest security update this year and its lightest in a long time. November’s rollout addressed 74 vulnerabilities, including an Internet Explorer zero-day; October’s fixed 59 bugs. September arrived with patches for 80 vulnerabilities, including two that had been previously exploited in the wild.

Dustin Childs of the Zero-Day Initiative notes a light December isn’t uncommon for Microsoft. “While this is a much lower quantity of CVEs compared to other months, it is quite common for Microsoft to have a light December release,” he explains in a blog post on today’s updates.

Related Content:

Check out The Edge, Dark Reading’s new section for features, threat data, and in-depth perspectives. Today’s top story: “Security 101: What Is a Man-in-the-Middle Attack?

Kelly Sheridan is the Staff Editor at Dark Reading, where she focuses on cybersecurity news and analysis. She is a business technology journalist who previously reported for InformationWeek, where she covered Microsoft, and Insurance Technology, where she covered financial … View Full Bio

Article source: https://www.darkreading.com/microsoft-fixes-windows-zero-day-on-lightest-patch-tuesday-of-2019/d/d-id/1336573?_mc=rss_x_drr_edt_aud_dr_x_x-rss-simple

Data Leak Week: Billions of Sensitive Files Exposed Online

A total of 2.7 billion email addresses, 1 billion email account passwords, and nearly 800,000 applications for copies of birth certificate were found on unsecured cloud buckets.

Revelations this week of separate data exposure incidents — a billion passwords displayed in plaintext as well as hundreds of thousands of US birth certificate applications — shared a common thread: unsecured cloud-based databases that left the sensitive information wide open for anyone to access online.

An epidemic in the past year or so of organizations inadvertently leaving their Amazon Web Services S3 and ElasticSearch cloud-based storage buckets exposed and without proper security has added a new dimension to data breaches. Organizations literally aren’t locking down their cloud servers, researchers are finding them en masse, and it’s likely cybercriminals and nation-state are as well. Misconfigured online storage has led to an increase of 50% in exposed files this year over 2018, according to data from Digital Shadows published in May. 

“Cloud services are inexpensive ways to do things we’ve done expensively for years, so it makes sense why so many people are moving their resources to the cloud. The problem is that it’s still far too easy to make mistakes that expose all your data to the Internet,” says John Bambanek, vice president of security research and intelligence at ThreatStop.

Security researcher Bob Diachenko last week discovered a massive ElasticSearch database of more than 2.7 billion email addresses, 1 billion of which included passwords in plaintext. Most of the stolen email domains were from Internet providers in China, such as Tencent, Sina, Sohu, and NetEase, although there were some Yahoo, Gmail, and Russian email domains as well. The pilfered emails that came with the passwords were confirmed to be part of a previous massive breach from 2017, when a Dark Web vendor had them for sale.

The ElasticSearch server was hosted at a US-based colocation service, which on Dec. 9 took down the server after Diachenko reported it. It had sat wide open and searchable, with no password protection, for at least one week.

“In terms of numbers, this is perhaps the biggest thing I’ve seen” in exposed records, says Diachenko, cyber threat intelligence director at SecurityDiscovery.com, who has unearthed multiple data exposures since 2018, including a database of 275 million personal records of Indian citizens this past May. “What’s interesting about [this latest] particular exposure is that it was stored in a public cluster, and it seemed the data has been [updating] in real time.”

Diachenko says he wasn’t able to verify each email as valid and active, but he did cross-reference some with previously reported breaches he had found. He says it’s unlikely many of the victims are aware of the breach. “The chances are high these email accounts are still vulnerable,” he says, because users in that region often are not alerted to a breach and services to check email compromises can be blocked by China’s Great Firewall. He teamed up with Comparitech to study the exposed data.

It’s unclear for sure just who was behind the database — cybercriminals or even security researchers — but either way, the configuration oversight was a blatant security misstep. ElasticSearch offers security options, Diachenko notes, but this example and others are just another example of how many organizations ignore or overlook securing cloud storage.

One clue he found: The owners of the database had hashed the stolen email addresses with MD5, SHA1, and SHA256 hashes of each address, which Diachenko believes was for ease of search purposes in the database. “My best shot is that somebody just bought it and was trying to start a searchable database for I don’t know what reasons,” he says. “And ElasticSearch was misconfigured and became publicly available.”

Another Badly Built Bucket
Meanwhile, researchers at Fidus Information Security, a UK-based penetration testing firm, separately discovered nearly 800,00 online applications for copies of US birth certificates on an exposed AWS S3 storage bucket belonging to a firm that provides a service for obtaining copies of birth and death certificate copies. The bucket had no password protection, so the database was open to anyone who found it.

Interestingly, the storage bucket’s trove of 94,000 death certificate copy applications was not accessible, according to TechCrunch, which reported this week that it had verified the records for Fidus. 

Data included in the birth record applications, which dated back to late 2017, ranges from names, birthdates, addresses, email addresses, phone numbers, and other personal data, TechCrunch found.

Andrew Mabbitt, director of Fidus, says his firm found the data while working on an AWS S3 project. “The bucket was configured for complete world readable access — allowing anybody with the URL to obtain a full list of all files,” Mabbitt says.

The server — and data — still remain exposed. “We contacted the company numerous times and got no response at all. We contacted the Amazon AWS security team, who thanked us for the report and said they would pass it on to the bucket owner,” he says. “I assume this was done, but their email to the owner was ignored, too.”

Misconfigured and exposed data sitting on the public Internet is ripe for fraud and identity theft. Attackers can use email addresses for targeted phishing or use personally identifiable information to hack bank or other valuable accounts as well.

Anurag Kahol, CTO of Bitglass, recommends organizations ensure they have full knowledge and visibility of customer data. He also advises they employ real-time access control, encryption of at-rest data, and can detect any misconfigured cloud security settings.

Related Content:

Check out The Edge, Dark Reading’s new section for features, threat data, and in-depth perspectives. Today’s top story: “Security 101: What Is a Man-in-the-Middle Attack?

Kelly Jackson Higgins is the Executive Editor of Dark Reading. She is an award-winning veteran technology and business journalist with more than two decades of experience in reporting and editing for various publications, including Network Computing, Secure Enterprise … View Full Bio

Article source: https://www.darkreading.com/cloud/data-leak-week-billions-of-sensitive-files-exposed-online/d/d-id/1336574?_mc=rss_x_drr_edt_aud_dr_x_x-rss-simple

Don’t pay off Ryuk ransomware, warn infoseccers: Its creators borked the decryptor

If you’re an Oracle database user and are tempted to pay off a Ryuk ransomware infection to get your files back, for pity’s sake, don’t. The criminals behind it have broken their own decryptor, meaning nobody will be able to unlock files scrambled by the malicious software.

This is according to infosec biz Emsisoft, which warned the latest evolution of Ryuk’s decryptor truncates a file footer used by the ransomware to check whether or not a particular file has been fully or partially encrypted.

“In one of the latest versions of Ryuk,” said Emsisoft in a recent blog post, “changes were made to the way the length of the footer is calculated. As a result, the decryptor provided by the Ryuk authors will truncate files, cutting off one too many bytes in the process of decrypting the file.”

If you’re lucky, that final byte which gets hacked off was unused. If you’re unlucky, however, your virtual disk file (VHD/VHDX) or your Oracle database file “will store important information in that last byte”, meaning the file will fail to load properly after decryption.

Should you have acquired a Ryuk ransomware infection within the last two weeks (ie, the latest strain), don’t be tempted to take the easy way out and pay off the crooks. It won’t work and you’ll be left empty-handed and out of pocket.

Emsisoft, which, among other things, sells commercial ransomware recovery services, said in a blog post: “If you’ve paid for a decryptor but have yet to use it, either back up your files before running it or get in touch with us instead.”

The firm added: “prior to running any ransomware decryptor – whether it was supplied by a bad actor or by a security company – be sure to back up the encrypted data first. Should the tool not work as expected, you’ll be able to try again.”

Ryuk is a particularly horrible software nasty. It works by finding and encrypting network drives as well as wiping Windows volume snapshots to prevent the use of Windows System Restore points as an easy recovery method, as we explained when reporting how an American local council recovered from a Ryuk infection without paying the ransom.

The ransomware is thought to have originated in North Korea, forming part of the well-documented means by which the pariah state continues acquiring cash with which to keep functioning in the face of heavy and ongoing international sanctions.

Victims who pay the ransoms are very likely to be funding the North Korean hereditary dictatorship, which actively practises all kinds of organised, deliberate barbarity. ®

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Article source: https://go.theregister.co.uk/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2019/12/10/ryuk_decryptor_broken_latest_strain/

Intel might want to reconsider the G part of SGX – because it’s been plunderstruck

Intel on Tuesday plans to release 11 security advisories, including a microcode firmware update to patch a vulnerability in its Software Guard Extensions (SGX) on recent Core microprocessors that allows a privileged attacker to corrupt SGX enclave computations.

The SGX flaw has been dubbed Plundervolt by the computer scientists who found it – Kit Murdock, David Oswald, and Flavio Garcia from the UK’s University of Birmingham, Daniel Gruss from Austria’s Graz University of Technology, and Jo Van Bulckand and Frank Piessens from Belgium’s KU Leuven.

In their research paper [PDF], “Plundervolt: Software-based Fault Injection Attacks against Intel SGX”, the boffins explain how they were able “to reliably corrupt enclave computations by abusing privileged dynamic voltage scaling interfaces”.

Using undocumented interfaces for manipulating chip voltage, they demonstrated they could recover cryptographic keys based on RSA-CRT and AES-NI crypto libraries and create memory safety errors like out-of-bounds array accesses and heap corruption.

Their technique requires privileged access to the operating system and BIOS to pull off, though Intel’s SGX is supposed to protect applications and data from malicious administrators, such as a rogue employee at a cloud service provider. The technique can also be carried out by a remote, logged-in adversary, without the need for physical access to the target machine.

Intel chips, from Skylake onward, have a voltage regulator on a separate chip on the main circuit board. The researchers found that they could lower the voltage supplied by writing the concealed Model Specific Register (MSR) 0x150 using the using the msr Linux kernel module. With sufficient but not excessive transient voltage reduction, the processor can be made to produce incorrect results for certain instructions.

The attacks bears some similarity to Rowhammer, which lets an attacker flip bits in memory. Plundervolt lets an attacker flip bits in the CPU, before they’re written to memory, thereby avoiding SGX’s memory protection measures. It also shares some similarities to CLKScrew and VoltJockey, which target ARM processors and the ARM Trustzone respectively via power management manipulation.

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The researchers notified Intel of their findings on June 7, 2019. Intel in its advisory thanks these SGX explorers and two other sets of computer scientists – from Technische Universität Darmstadt and the University of California, and from the University of Maryland and Tsinghua University – who appear to have identified the voltage vulnerability independently in August.

Intel confirmed the flaw and assigned CVE-2019-11157 and an Intel Security Advisory designation, INTEL-SA-00289. The company told the boffins it plans to deal with the issue by releasing “a BIOS patch to disable the overclocking mailbox interface configuration” and “a microcode update will be released that reflects the mailbox enablement status as part of SGX TCB [Trusted Computing Base] attestation.”

Intel Core processors (the 6th through the 10th generation), Xeon E3 v5 v6 and Xeon E-2100 and E-2200 families are affected and should be updated, Chipzilla recommends.

SGX is also vulnerable to an attack called Membuster, described in a research paper released last week. Intel considers Membuster to be outside the scope of its threat model. ®

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Article source: https://go.theregister.co.uk/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2019/12/10/intel_sgx_youve_been_plunderstruck/

Only 53% of Security Pros Have Ownership of Workforce IAM

Most practitioners report an increase in identities, but many don’t have control over how those identities are protected from a range of attacks.

At the core of many data breaches are compromised credentials. Over the past 10 years, companies have invested billions in security tools and identity access management (IAM) technology to secure them. However, many security teams lack power to mitigate identity risks.

A new survey of 511 IT security professionals, conducted by Dimensional Research and commissioned by the Identity Defined Security Alliance, found 52% of respondents saw a fivefold increase in identities over the past decade. The rise is primarily driven by technological changes including mobile devices (76%), enterprise connected devices (60%), and cloud apps (59%). Workforce growth (57%) and an increase in employees using tech (66%) have also contributed.

Security teams are increasingly worried about a range of identity-related attacks. Phishing (83%) was the most common concern, followed by social engineering (70%) and compromise of privileged identities (64%). All respondents say a lack of strong IAM policies introduces risk.

Despite the growth of identities and concern for their security, only 53% of respondents report security has any level of ownership for workforce IAM. While 99% say security is involved with IAM activities, only 24% say the security team has “excellent” awareness of IAM. They attribute this to lack of goal alignment between security and the organization (33%), reporting structure (30%), history of security not being involved (30%), and resistance from other teams (24%). Budget ownership (40%) is the top reason for companies holding back on IAM investment.

Read more details in the full report here.

Check out The Edge, Dark Reading’s new section for features, threat data, and in-depth perspectives. Today’s top story: “Criminals Hide Fraud Behind the Green Lock Icon.”

Dark Reading’s Quick Hits delivers a brief synopsis and summary of the significance of breaking news events. For more information from the original source of the news item, please follow the link provided in this article. View Full Bio

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Intel’s CPU Flaws Continue to Create Problems for the Tech Community

We can’t wait out this problem and hope that it goes away. We must be proactive.

The tech community was once again blindsided with news last month of another security exploit involving Intel’s processors; exploits have continued to be discovered since Meltdown and Spectre were first unveiled two years ago, causing widespread concern about the ramifications for computer systems globally. In addition to leaving sensitive data exposed, the vulnerabilities also put businesses in the difficult, but necessary, position of implementing mitigations that can seriously reduce the performance of computers and servers.

In January 2018, researchers revealed two exploits that take advantage of side-channel vulnerabilities found in computer chips manufactured since the mid-1990s. Since that time, six additional exploits — Foreshadow ZombieloadRIDLFallout, SWAPGS, and now TAA  — have been discovered that take advantage of the same vulnerabilities. While chips made by AMD and ARM are affected to a minimal degree, the vast majority of Intel’s chips are affected by all of these exploits. And due to Intel’s dominant market position, this vulnerability can be found in nearly every computer on the planet.

These exploits take advantage of a process called “speculative execution,” a process introduced in the 1990s by Intel and other chipmakers as they sought to increase the speed of computer processors. In short, computer processors can “speculate” (or guess) what a user will run next, increasing speed by not having to wait to execute actions until they are formally received. While this process was credited with significantly improving the speed of computers, the exploits are able to give unauthorized users access to what should be confidential data, creating a vast security vulnerability. They typically leak data from different internal CPU buffers such as line-fill buffers, load ports, and store buffers.

To address this problem, Intel has provided software patches or businesses can apply other workarounds, such as disabling hyper-threading technology in vulnerable computers. However, both of these fixes can reduce the performance of CPUs. LoginVSI recently released a survey of IT professionals regarding the impact of the patches and found that approximately 20% of them experienced performance reductions of up to 10% on their systems, and another 11% said they experienced a performance hit up to 15%. Some respondents had performance impacts as high as 20%.

While addressing this problem is challenging, what is clear, as noted recently by a leading Linux developer, is that the security problems with Intel’s chips “are not going away.” So, we cannot simply wait this problem out and hope that it disappears. We must be proactive.

To understand the extent of the risk, the first thing any business should do is conduct an audit of the CPUs that it has in its systems. The easiest approach would then be to replace all affected CPUs with unaffected hardware. However, replacing all affected hardware may very well be cost-prohibitive.

Therefore, businesses should begin immediately diversifying and randomizing their CPUs. It can do this by purchasing unaffected chips (for example, from AMD) as it goes through its normal upgrade cycles and then randomizing affected Intel chips across its systems, strategically placing them in servers and computers where they are least vulnerable to hacks. In addition, by placing the affected CPUs in areas with lighter workloads, a business can also reduce the overall effect of the performance reductions caused by the software patches.

It would also be prudent to hire experienced IT security staff, plan for the increased energy costs of running current systems at maximum for longer periods of time to offset the performance reductions of the patches, or identify revenue streams to purchase new servers to add processing capacity.

While it is clear that being insecure is not a practical option, businesses must remember that there is not a one-size-fits-all solution. A company’s remedies to this ongoing challenge must be assessed within the context of its own unique and dynamic technology environment. Undoubtedly, this challenge will be expensive, burdensome, and time consuming for businesses.

Related Content:

Check out The Edge, Dark Reading’s new section for features, threat data, and in-depth perspectives. Today’s top story: “Criminals Hide Fraud Behind the Green Lock Icon.”

Irfan Ahmed is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Science at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), where he runs the Security and Forensics Engineering (SAFE) Lab. His research interests include system security, malware, digital forensics, and industrial … View Full Bio

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