Search This Blog

Powered by Blogger.

Blog Archive

Labels

Showing posts with label Infection time. Show all posts

Time Taken by Ransomware to Infect Systems Witnesses a Significant Drop


The amount of time it will take for a threat actor to completely infect the targeted system with ransomware has decreased significantly over the past 12 months. 

According to a report published by The Register, the average dwell time — the interval between the start of an assault and the deployment of ransomware — was 5.5 days in 2021 and 4.5 days in 2022. The dwell duration was less than 24 hours last year, but less this year. Ransomware was even distributed within five hours after first access in 10% of cases, according to Secureworks' annual State of the Threat Report.

It is interesting to note that the cybersecurity industry has become much better at spotting the activity that occurs before a ransomware outbreak, which is one of the factors contributing to this dramatic decrease in infection time. Because of this, Secureworks explains, "threat actors are focusing on simpler and quicker to implement operations, rather than big, multi-site enterprise-wide encryption events that are significantly more complex."

Also, this year has witnessed a considerable increase in the number of ransomware victims and data leaks due to the significant emergence of "several new and very active threat groups." Attacks are therefore occurring more frequently and in greater numbers.

The ransomware groups are now majorly utilizing three vectors to try and infect targeted systems. The first is known as scan-and-exploit, which looks for exploitable flaws in a system. When detected, stolen credentials are also exploited, and phishing emails are used to try to deceive people into giving attackers access to secure systems quickly.

Currently, Sony is one of the most recent high-profile victims of ransomware gang, but the company did not yet reveal the extent to which its systems are affected or data stolen. Another ransomware attack was recently witnessed in a Danish cloud-hosting company that compromised most of its customer data. Furthermore, a case came to light when the LockBit ransomware gang stole data from 8.9 million dental insurance customers earlier this year. 

However, on a positive note, the FBI was able to take down the renowned Qakbot botnet, which was revealed to be in charge of 700,000 compromised machines and was utilized in numerous ransomware assaults.