Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

50 Cybersecurity Stats IT Professionals Should Know for 2023

When it comes to cybersecurity, knowledge is power. Understanding what threats exist, where trends are headed, and how cybercrime could affect your organization is all critical to building up your defenses and improving your security posture. For example, the cybercrime industry is now a $1.5 trillion industry — has your organization contributed to that total? Is your organization concerned about cyber attacks?

CVE-2022-47523 - High Severity Vulnerability in ManageEngine Credential Management Products

Between the 28th –30th of December 2022, Zoho released security updates to address a SQL injection vulnerability that they identified, designated as CVE-2022-47523. An advisory was later published, summarizing the affected products and remediation. This vulnerability affects several credential management products including ManageEngine PAM360, ManageEngine Access Manager Plus, and ManageEngine Password Manager Pro.

Introducing Arctic Wolf Incident Response

Our mission at Arctic Wolf is to end cyber risk, and our North Star on that mission is the NIST security operations framework. Spanning five functions (Identify, Protect, Detect, Respond, Recover), the NIST framework offers guidelines and best practices that when followed, allow an organization to both reduce the likelihood and the impact of cyber-attacks.

The Top Cyber Attacks of December 2022

Another year, another reshaping of the never-boring and constantly evolving world of online crime. Old favorites like phishing, MITM attacks, and, of course, ransomware carried on strong while new variations and tricky workarounds continued to develop. For our final monthly cyber attack roundup of the calendar year, let’s take a look at four cases that stood out for the versatility of their executions, the escalation of their tactics, and/or the aggressiveness of their perpetrators.

LastPass Data Breach

On Thursday, December 22, 2022, LastPass updated their security incident notice to include additional details around the data breach they began investigating in November 2022. According to their notice, the threat actor used information obtained in an earlier, August 2022, data breach to target an employee and obtain credentials and keys used to decrypt storage volumes within their cloud-based storage service.

Arctic Wolf Labs Named Open-Source Tool Creator of the Year by SANS Institute

“It’s about doing good and doing it exceedingly well.” This was how Daniel Thanos, Head of Arctic Wolf Labs, described the work of Arctic Wolf Labs when accepting the award for Open-Source Tool Creator of the Year, as voted by the SANS Insitute community at the 2022 Difference Makers Awards. This prestigious awards program “honors individuals and teams in the cyber security community who have made a measurable and significant difference in security.”

Challenge Accepted: An Appointment with Dr. Zero Trust

Challenge Accepted is a podcast from Arctic Wolf that has informative and insightful discussions around the real-world challenges organizations face on their security journey. Hosted by Arctic Wolf’s VP of Strategy Ian McShane and Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) Adam Marrè, the duo draw upon their years of security operations experience to share their thoughts and opinions on issues facing today’s security leaders.

New Microsoft Exchange Exploit Chain via "OWASSRF" Leads to RCE

On Wednesday, December 21, 2022, security researchers shared that they observed ransomware threat actors using a new exploit chain that bypasses the ProxyNotShell URL rewrite mitigations that were shared by Microsoft in September and October. This new exploit chain works by abusing CVE-2022-41080 & CVE-2022-41082 and leads to remote code execution on affected Exchange servers through Outlook Web Access (OWA).

NIST SP 800-171: What You Need to Know

Like many industries, the federal government and the Department of Defense (DoD) are more digital, more dispersed, and work with more third parties than ever before. This shift means that information the departments deal with, referred to as controlled unclassified information, needs to be protected due to its high value. Enter “Safeguarding covered defense information and cyber incident reporting,” which is part of the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS) requirements.