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#TECH: Kaspersky reveals external cybersecurity loopholes in SEA

KASPERSKY unveiled the results of its Digital Footprint Intelligence (DFI) report covering the external threats for a selection of countries from the Asia Pacific (APAC) region in 2021, including the six key countries Southeast Asia (SEA).

The report's sole purpose is to create awareness about security threats, and demonstrate effective approaches to risk mitigation for widespread attacks with high business impact.

With the help of public sources and specialised search engines, Kaspersky collected information on 390,497 services available from public networks and analysed them for key security issues and vulnerabilities.

Analysis revealed that in 2021, almost every fifth of the vulnerable services contained more than one vulnerability, thereby increasing the chances of an attacker performing a successful attack.

"While worrisome, reports such as our Digital Footprint Intelligence can be used as a tool to guide the cybersecurity capacity building of concerned organisations. If you know your weak areas, it's easier to prioritise," said its managing director for Asia Pacific, Chris Connell.

EXPLOITATION CAPABILITIES

The rapidly growing share of adversaries' initial access approach is the exploitation of one-day vulnerabilities.

Complicated business processes are forced to leave services on the perimeter, which in turn increases the external attack surface.

"Clearly, cybercriminals are busy uncovering possible entry points in the region. From hunting for unpatched software, one-day vulnerabilities, and exploitable remote access and management services, malicious actors have a lot of options to infect lucrative industries. In short, a cyberattack is like a ticking bomb," added Connell.

All industry sectors, analysed in the report (financial, healthcare, industrial, and governmental), in all countries have issues with application of security updates for publicly available services.

Government institutions (major personally identifiable information (PII) processors and providers of critical services for citizens) are potential incident-generators by a huge margin.

Singapore, on the other hand, has a low number of vulnerabilities and an outstanding low ratio between the number of services and the sum of vulnerabilities in them. However, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia have the highest ratio among SEA countries.

IDENTIFIED EXPLOITS

In terms of the share of vulnerabilities with publicly available exploits, three countries out of top five are located in Southeast Asia and they are Malaysia, Vietnam, and the Philippines.

From Kaspersky's practice in incident response handled by Global Emergency Response Team (GERT) and CISA advisory adversaries use a well-known list of vulnerabilities to exploit organisation defences.

While researching the security problems of companies from the APAC region, Kaspersky experts observed a number of commonly used vulnerabilities dubbed ProxyShell and ProxyLogon.

Exploits for these vulnerabilities are easily available on the Internet, therefore, they can be easily exploited by even a low-skilled attacker.

While ProxyShell is quite common in China and in Vietnam, the countries most affected by ProxyLogon are—in government bodies (Thailand), in financial services (China), in healthcare (Philippines) and in the industrial sector (Indonesia).

ProxyShell is a group of vulnerabilities for Microsoft Exchange servers - CVE-2021-31206, CVE-2021-31207 , CVE-2021-34473, and CVE-2021-34523. The ProxyLogon group includes CVE-2021-26855, CVE-2021-26857, CVE-2021-26858, and CVE-2021-27065. The vulnerabilities from the both groups enable an actor to bypass authentication and execute code as a privileged user.

The best defence against these vulnerabilities is to keep public-faced systems updated with the latest patches and product versions. Companies should also avoid direct access to Exchange Server from the Internet.

CREDENTIAL BRUTE FORCE ATTACKS

A great share of attackers' initial accesses leading to cybersecurity incidents are related to services with remote access or management features. One of the best-known examples is RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol). It is Microsoft's proprietary protocol that enables a user to connect to another computer through a network of computers running Windows.

RDP is widely used by both system administrators and less-technical users to control servers and other PCs remotely but this tool is also what intruders exploit to penetrate the target computer that usually houses important corporate resources.

Last year, Kaspersky monitored 16,003 remote access and management services available for exploitation.

Indonesia, India, Bangladesh, the Philippines, and Vietnam provide the maximum facilities for an attacker to gain remote access.

Government institutions are serving more than 40 per cent of the attack surface for brute force attacks and credential leaks reuse.

To protect your businesses from such threats, Kaspersky experts recommend:

l  Regulate every major change to the network perimeter hosts, including services or applications launching, exposing new APIs, software installation and updating, network devices configuration and so on. All changes should be reviewed from the perspective of security impact.

l  Develop and implement reliable procedure for identifying, installing, and verifying patches for products and systems.

l  Focus your defence strategy on detecting lateral movements and data exfiltration to the internet.

l Pay special attention to outgoing traffic to detect cybercriminal connections. Back up data regularly. Make sure you can quickly access it in an emergency.

l  Use solutions like Kaspersky Endpoint Detection and Response and the Kaspersky Managed Detection and Response service, which help to identify and stop the attack in the early stages, before the attackers achieve their goals.

l  Use a reliable endpoint security solution, such as Kaspersky Endpoint Security for Business (KESB) that is powered by exploit prevention, behaviour detection, and a remediation engine that is able to roll back malicious actions. KESB also has self-defence mechanisms that can prevent its removal by cybercriminals.

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