Ransomware review: December 2023

This article is based on research by Marcelo Rivero, Malwarebytes’ ransomware specialist, who monitors information published by ransomware gangs on their Dark Web sites. In this report, “known attacks” are those where the victim did not pay a ransom. This provides the best overall picture of ransomware activity, but the true number of attacks is far higher.

In November there were 457 total ransomware victims, making it the most active month for ransomware gangs in 2023 so far besides May. The top stories of the month include ALPHV’s shutdown, an increased focus on the healthcare sector, and high-profile attacks on Toyota, Boeing, and more using a Citrix Bleed vulnerability (CVE-2023-4966).

We’ve written about a few ransomware gangs getting shut down this year, including Hive in January and RansomedVC in October, but ALPHV is the latest—and arguably biggest—name to be crossed off of law enforcements’ hit list in 2023. The fate of the gang was sealed in early December, when their data leak sites suddenly became unavailable. Shortly thereafter, researchers at RedSense confirmed that law enforcement was indeed behind the takedown action.

ALPHV’s shutdown represents a huge blow to the ransomware world—and a big win for defenders. With a total of 573 victims since February 2022, it’s no exaggeration to say that ALPHV was second only to LockBit in being organizations’ biggest ransomware threat. The demise of ALPHV can be examined through a few different lenses. For one, it’s a reminder that no ransomware gang—however prolific or well-resourced—is immune to downfall.

The good news in all this is that today’s who’s who can be tomorrow’s nobody. The bad news? That same logic works in reverse as well: Today’s nobody can be tomorrows who’s who.

This is the case we’ve seen with gangs like Medusa or 8BASE. For every head lopped of off the ransomware Hydra, it feels like three more grow in its place. However, none of this is to say that decisive law enforcement action doesn’t deter ransomware gangs to some extent—it does. One can hope that ransomware gangs see a Goliath like ALPHV get felled and think twice about wantonly attacking organizations at the rate we’ve been seeing lately.

In other news, attacks on the healthcare sector last month reached an all-time high at 38 total attacks.

The record follows a steady uptick in attacks on the sector we’ve observed over the past year. According to the findings released by the Department of Health and Human Services last month, there has been a 278% increase in ransomware attacks on health sector over the past four years. “The large breaches reported this year have affected over 88 million individuals, a 60% increase from last year,” the agency also said.

Ransomware attacks on healthcare, 03/22 to 011/23

An attack on Ardent Health Services last month stands as a devastating reification of the trend. The attack, which occurred on Thanksgiving Day, left emergency rooms in multiple hospitals across four US states shut down for five days.

What explains the rise and focus on attacks on the healthcare sector? Well, for one thing, there isn’t a clear bias of one gang disproportionately targeting health care—our data shows LockBit is consistently at the top of the list, as they are likely for most sectors. The explanation, then, likely resides in a combination of facts:

  1. Ransomware attacks are up overall for all sectors
  2. Healthcare is easy to attack (Large number of weak points due to use of legacy systems, third-party vendors, etc).
  3. Healthcare might be more likely to pay (Higher desire to protect sensitive patient data).

Pair this up with a Thanksgiving holiday, and a bigger increase in attacks on health care is somewhat expected.

In other news, ransomware gangs rushed to exploit the Citrix Bleed vulnerability last month, taking advantage of a massive attack surface with over 8,300 vulnerable devices. LockBit led the fray by using the vulnerability to breach the likes of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), DP World, Allen & Overy, and Boeing. Reported to have been in use as a zero-day since late August, Citrix Bleed provides attackers with the capability to bypass multi-factor authentication (MFA) and hijack legitimate user sessions. It is also said to be very easy to exploit.

Known ransomware attacks by gang, November 2023
Known ransomware attacks by gang, November 2023
Known ransomware attacks by country, November 2023
Known ransomware attacks by country, November 2023
Known ransomware attacks by industry, November 2023
Known ransomware attacks by industry, November 2023

One of the most interesting developments last month were new reports reinforcing claims that Rhysida may be a rebrand of the infamous Vice Society ransomware gang. Not only does Rhysida share many operational and technical patterns with Vice Society—including using NTDSUtil for backups in ‘temp_l0gs’ and SystemBC for C2 communications—but the distribution of their monthly attacks lines up as well. Vice Society hasn’t been active since June 2023—the same month we witnessed the rise of Rhysida.

Vice Society vs Rhysidia monthly ransomware attacks. Rhysida seems to pick up right where Vice Society dropped off

That being said, a rebrand isn’t confirmed. Perhaps Rhysida is a splinter group. Whatever the explanation, however, it’s almost certain this pattern is no mere coincidence—especially considering the victimology of the two groups is extremely similar (a focus on education and healthcare sectors).

New Player: MEOW

First detected in August 2022, Meow ransomware, linked to the Conti v2 variant, reappeared after vanishing in February 2023. The group published nine victims to its leak site in November.

Operating as MeowCorp or MeowCorp2022, it encrypts files with a “.MEOW” extension and sends ransom notes demanding contact via email or Telegram. Using ChaCha20 and RSA-4096 encryption, Meow is related to other malware strains originating from the leaked Conti variant. Its dark web site shows a limited victim list, including the high-profile entity Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

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