Many companies are still failing to protect against the most common threats

Businesses are making it easy for crooks

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When hackers want to access a target network, they are most likely to launch a phishing attack, exploit known software vulnerabilities or simply brute-force their way in through theremote desktopprotocol (RDP).

This is according to a new report from Palo Alto Networks’ cybersecurityarm, Unit 42. In its latest paper, the company says these three make up more than three quarters (77%) of all suspected root causes for intrusions.

Drilling deeper, Unit 42 found that more than half (55%) of all successful software vulnerability exploits leveraged ProxyShell (55%), followed by Log4j (14%), SonicWall (7%), ProxyLogon (5%) and Zoho ManageEngine ADSelfService Plus (4%).

However, businesses could have done a lot more to stay safe. Out of 600 incident response cases Unit 42 analyzed for the report, businesses lacked multi-factor authentication on critical internet-facing systems in half of cases. Meanwhile, more than a quarter (28%) had poorpatch managementprocedures and 44% did not have anendpoint protectionservice in place.

BEC and ransomware

BEC and ransomware

Once they gain access, threat actors will engage either in business email compromise (BEC) orransomwareattacks. The average amount stolen through BEC was $286,000, the report said, while for ransomware, the highest average demand was in finance at nearly $8 million.

A new ransomware victim gets their data posted on leak sites every four hours now, the report found. That’s why, the researchers claim, identifying ransomware activity early is crucial.

Business email attacks are now a multi-billion dollar industry>Proofpoint wants to kill off BEC attacks>Our list of the best antivirus services around

Usually, the attackers spend up to 28 days on the target network, identifyingendpointsand key data, before actually deploying any ransomware.

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“Right now, cybercrime is an easy business to get into because of its low cost and often high returns. As such, unskilled, novice threat actors can get started with access to tools like hacking-as-a-service becoming more popular and available on the dark web,” said Wendi Whitmore, SVP and head of Unit 42 at Palo Alto Networks.

“Ransomware attackers are also becoming more organized with their customer service and satisfaction surveys as they engage with cybercriminals and the victimized organizations.”

Sead is a seasoned freelance journalist based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. He writes about IT (cloud, IoT, 5G, VPN) and cybersecurity (ransomware, data breaches, laws and regulations). In his career, spanning more than a decade, he’s written for numerous media outlets, including Al Jazeera Balkans. He’s also held several modules on content writing for Represent Communications.

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