Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 16th October 2020

AUSCERT Week in Review for 16th October 2020 Greetings, This week, our Senior Manager Mike Holm joined a number of panel members from Baidam Solutions Pty Ltd and Vectra AI to discuss the topic of “Network Detection and Response”. This event was held in conjunction with the annual Australian Indigenous Business Month. A recording of this thought-leadership panel discussion can be found here. For those of you who missed out on attending AUSCERT2020, good news – content from the conference can now be found on the AUSCERT YouTube channel. Look out for the “AUSCERT2020” playlist to browse through all the presentations we’ve uploaded on there for your viewing pleasure. In addition to this, we’ve also published a couple of blog articles from the winners of our annual awards at the conference. These can be found here, with more to come in the following weeks! Members, keep an eye out for a copy of our October edition of the AUSCERT membership newsletter aka “The Feed”, landing in your inbox early next week. We will be sharing a bumper edition which will also contain a copy of our Q3 2020 report. Last but not least, don’t forget to complete the 2020 BDO in Australia and AUSCERT Cyber Security Survey. This anonymous survey closes at midnight on Friday, 30th October 2020 and takes less than 10 minutes to complete and by taking part, you will be offered the chance to win one of two Apple Watches. Until next week, have a wonderful weekend everyone. … Microsoft October 2020 Patch Tuesday fixes 87 vulnerabilities Date: 2020-10-13 Author: ZDNet [Please refer to AUSCERT bulletin ASB-2020.0161, member portal login required] Microsoft has released today its monthly batch of security updates known as Patch Tuesday, and this month the OS maker has patched 87 vulnerabilities across a wide range of Microsoft products. By far, the most dangerous bug patched this month is CVE-2020-16898. Described as a remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability in the Windows TCP/IP stack, this bug can allow attackers to take over Windows systems by sending malicious ICMPv6 Router Advertisement packets to an unpatched computer via a network connection. Microsoft and others orchestrate takedown of TrickBot botnet Date: 2020-10-12 Author: ZDNet A coalition of tech companies has announced today a coordinated effort to take down the backend infrastructure of the TrickBot malware botnet. Companies and organizations which participated in the takedown included Microsoft’s Defender team, FS-ISAC, ESET, Lumen’s Black Lotus Labs, NTT, and Broadcom’s cyber-security division Symantec. Iranian hackers restart attacks on universities as the new school year begins Date: 2020-10-14 Author: ZDNet A group of Iranian hackers with a history of attacking academic institutions have come back to life to launch a new series of phishing campaigns, security firm Malwarebytes said today. The new attacks were timed to coincide with the start of the new academic years when both students and university staff were expected to be active on university portals. The attacks consisted of emails sent to victims. Known as “phishing emails,” they contained links to a website posing as the university portal or an associated app, such as the university library. The websites were hosted on sites with lookalike domains, but in reality, collected the victim’s login credentials. The most common malicious email attachments infecting Windows Date: 2020-10-11 Author: Bleeping Computer To stay safe online, everyone needs to recognize malicious attachments that are commonly used in phishing emails to distribute malware. When distributing malware, threat actors create spam campaigns that pretend to be invoices, invites, payment information, shipping information, eFaxes, voicemails, and more. Included in these emails are malicious Word and Excel attachments, or links to them, that when opened and macros are enabled, will install malware on a computer. Malware gangs love open source offensive hacking tools Date: 2020-10-13 Author: ZDNet In the cyber-security field, the term OST refers to software apps, libraries, and exploits that possess offensive hacking capabilities and have been released as either free downloads or under an open source license. OST projects are usually released to provide a proof-of-concept exploit for a new vulnerability, to demonstrate a new (or old) hacking technique, or as penetration testing utilities shared with the community. Today, OST is one of the most (if not the most) controversial topics in the information security (infosec) community. ASB-2020.0161 – ALERT Windows: Multiple vulnerabilities Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday included fixes for multiple vulnerabilities ASB-2020.0167 – Microsoft Dynamics 365 (on-premises): Multiple vulnerabilities October 2020 patch by Microsoft resolves 3 vulnerabilities in Microsoft Dynamics 365 (on-premises) ESB-2020.3511 – Adobe Flash Player: Multiple vulnerabilities Adobe Flash Player updates for Windows, macOS, Linux and Chrome OS address a critical vulnerability in Adobe Flash Player ESB-2020.3531 – chromium-browser: Multiple vulnerabilities Update for chromium-browser fixes multiple vulnerabilities Stay safe, stay patched and have a good weekend! The AUSCERT team

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Blogs

AUSCERT2020 Member Organisation of the Year Winner

AUSCERT2020 Member Organisation of the Year Winner AUSCERT2020 Interview: Leigh Vincent from Federation University Australia We recently had the pleasure of chatting with Leigh Vincent from Federation University Australia who won the AUSCERT Member Organisation of the Year for 2020. Leigh opened up about what it is like to be an AUSCERT member and how Federation University is dealing with new cyber security issues. Can you start by telling us about your professional career? I have been at Federation University Australia (formally known as the University of Ballarat) for about 16 years in a cyber security role. This role has developed over the years and last year, we officially doubled our team, so now there are two of us!  While working at Federation University, I have gone through extensive training in incident handling and response, web application, penetration testing, and digital forensics and analysis. Having been a one-person team for so long, I was often in the position where I needed to provide the resources and support to University staff myself. There have been many years where the University’s budget just did not have enough room to stretch when it came to security. During this time, we could not justify hiring support from outside organisations when I could upskill and undergo training myself. I’m sure many would agree that cyber security in the university sector is a very interesting beast to work with. This was actually my first role working in security as I had previously worked in a system network administrator role. Since moving into security, I’ve enjoyed almost every moment. How long has Federation University been an AUSCERT Member? Federation University has been a member for as long as I have worked there, so at least 16 years. Personally, I have attended several of AUSCERT’s conferences since 2004. The highlight is always having the opportunity to network and catch up with people over the conference period.  What value do you get out of the on-going AUSCERT membership? In my experience, I would say the advice that the AUSCERT team and other members provide is invaluable and having people there that you can bounce ideas off makes resolving an issue much easier. Back when I was a one-man-team, I went on long-service leave and AUSCERT acted as the primary point of contact for the University if issues popped up. So both at a personal and professional level, the AUSCERT membership has been very beneficial. Speaking of your membership… Congratulations on winning the Member Organisation Of The Year award! What does winning this award mean to you? It was a complete surprise! I had to read over the email a couple of times before I realised that we had won. Winning this award is not something we had thought about, we often just continue to go about our work every day, but the acknowledgement means a lot. Receiving that recognition, especially as a two-person cyber security team just shows that people really do take notice of you and how you contribute to the industry. If you had some advice for some other AUSCERT members, what would you say? The biggest piece of advice I could give would be get involved. Take the time to interact with AUSCERT and its members—it is a valuable industry tool. As the ‘good guys’ in cyber security, we need to work on communicating more. We know the ‘bad guys’ are great at communicating and that is why they are always one step ahead of us. Ultimately we are all fighting the same fight so use the tools provided by AUSCERT (such as the Slack channels) to get involved, communicate and most of all keep an ear to the ground. Have you had any cyber security challenges this year, and how have you addressed this? Money has certainly been the biggest challenge, there is no denying that the education sector has taken a huge financial hit recently. We have also had to alter our focus to keeping tabs on all the remote workers and moving the University’s systems online very quickly. By making these quick changes, we have had to reassess some of our security restrictions to ensure a smooth and easy transition to working online for staff and students. Our focus has had to be on delivering quickly and trying to keep everyone safe when they are not inside our walls anymore. We control less when people are working from home, so we have had to encourage people to ask questions relating to their home security and support them where possible. Because we have made the switch to online for all course material, the push is now that we should keep it all online and maintain those platforms. However the challenge is ensuring that security can be enhanced and maintained to meet what will become a permanent method of content delivery to students and capabilities for staff to work from home as required going forward. Alternatively, we could also create something parallel that is safe and secured correctly, not just a platform that can ‘make it work’. What do you see as some of the main cyber threats in today’s society and their accompanying risks? Personally, I see social engineering as one of the biggest risks in cyber security today. It is a very real issue and we see it constantly. However, we can only overcome it by increasing user awareness and education—without this it can be very difficult to fight. Until we can get on top of that and educate users to make decisions themselves, it will inevitably remain a problem.  What is some advice you would give to organisations and other IT cyber security professionals? Talk and share with one another. We are all fighting the same fight and facing the same challenges. We might be from different organisations and have different technology, but ultimately, we are all fighting the same enemy.

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Blogs

AUSCERT2020 Information Security Excellence Winner

AUSCERT2020 Information Security Excellence Winner Congratulations to Michelle Price for being given the AUSCERT2020 “Information Security Excellence” award. During AUSCERT2020 we had a chat with her to learn more about her role as CEO at AustCyber, and her vision for the cyber security industry.   Tell us a little about your professional career? My first job was working in a small business that my family owned, that focused on food safety consulting and training. We also ran international conferences and created a lot of thought-leadership on the topic of food safety. Food safety in the mid-to-late 90s was an emerging issue in Australia; there were no standard practices. In the end, there were three companies (owned by my parents) that focused on risk, and the upside and downside of risk. I worked there for 10 years, starting in marketing and communications roles, and ending up doing food safety audits and strategy. I then moved into the advertising industry for a short stint, before moving into the federal government, with the majority of my time in National Security. The common thing across all the agencies I worked in at the government was risk and strategy. What was your role in the Prime Minister’s Department? When I was working in the Prime Minister’s Department, my first job was to work across all of national security, and I ended up running the National Security Budget and developing the world’s first national security strategic risk framework, and developing a framework of how to prioritise national security issues. That was under the Gillard government. Then when Prime Minister Abbot came in, I switched roles and moved across from high-level strategy on national security to focus on the cyber security area, and that’s how I ended up penning the 2016 National Cyber Security Strategy. How did you end up at AustCyber? After the strategy was launched, I was fortunate enough to have quite a few opportunities. I chose to focus on helping the Australian National University stand up a cyber policy function and to be able to better coordinate the growing area of cyber research across different disciplines. I didn’t stay there for as long as I thought I would, because I then got asked to come to AustCyber, and AustCyber was one of the initiatives in the Cyber Security Strategy that I had worked very hard on, so it was a no-brainer. Being born into a house of entrepreneurs it felt like a natural extension for me to end up running an organisation that is trail blazing around how to do the business of cyber security, and while we are doing that, is also creating an industry. That is the mission of AustCyber: To create an industry that is globally competitive and has impact for the country. Congratulations on winning the Information Security Excellent award. What does winning this award mean to you? Every time I think about it, I still get tingles. Partly because, cyber security is often a closed environment, but that is changing a lot. So, when someone like me turns up and writes a national strategy on something that I don’t have years of experience in, who am I to advocate for, and educate the country on a topic that is not natively my own. To have a community like the AUSCERT community that is dominated by traditional security leaders, that is composed of technical practitioners, to have someone like me recognised by them, and by AUSCERT, is so special to me. That’s why in my acceptance speech, I accepted it for the whole industry. We’ve started to mature, to grow up, and have so much to offer, and people outside of our industry have so much to offer as well. We are the enablers of the entire economy. To me this is an example of how our industry is shifting and changing for the better.   If you could give a piece of advice for organisations and security professionals, what would it be? Understanding other people’s context helps us work together. ‘Collaboration’ is a bit of an overused word, but it’s the right word, if we come together and work together to a common outcome. ‘Outcome’ is also an important word—it’s not just about outputs. If we continue to focus on outputs, we will never win the battle. Output is important, but to be able to achieve outcomes, we have to work together, and to work together, we need to understand contexts.  If we take a few moments in the day to understand who we are working with and what their context is helps us have a more open mind. We spend too much time focusing on the battle with each other, rather than coming together to focus on battling with our adversaries. They’re the ones who are ripping off the economy. They’re the ones who are affecting the physical and emotional lives of Australians. We all want the same outcome, and we can do better at collaborating. I know we can do this. #GAMEON  

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 9th October 2020

AUSCERT Week in Review for 9th October 2020 Greetings, This week our team participated in the 2020 ASEAN CERT Incident Drill which was organised by colleagues from the Cyber Security Agency of Singapore (CSA). The theme was especially pertinent this year – “Malware Campaign Leveraging the Pandemic Situation” – and we look forward to further collaborations with CSA and the wider CERT community in the future. These drill exercises are an integral part of our staff training and development initiatives and we are grateful for the opportunity to be involved. Next Tuesday 13th October at 11AM AEDT, tune in to the following thought leadership panel discussion as our Senior Manager Mike Holm joins a number of panel members from Baidam Solutions Pty Ltd and Vectra AI to discuss the topic of “Network Detection and Response”. This event is being held in conjunction with the annual Australian Indigenous Business Month. Moderated by CISO, author and influencer Claire Pales – this should be a good one! Last but not least, don’t forget to complete the 2020 BDO in Australia and AUSCERT Cyber Security Survey. This anonymous survey closes at midnight on Friday, 30 October 2020 and takes less than 10 minutes to complete and by taking part, you will be offered the chance to win one of two Apple Watches. Until next week, have a wonderful weekend everyone. Ransomware: Surge in attacks as hackers take advantage of organisations under pressure Date: 2020-10-08 Author: ZDNet Cyber criminals are doubling down on ransomware attacks, deploying more sophisticated campaigns at a time when remote working is already creating additional security challenges for businesses. All the tech in the 2020 federal budget Date: 2020-10-07 Author: iTnews Hundreds of millions of dollars flows to IT. Government agencies have scored funding for a range of projects in this year’s pandemic-dominated federal budget, with significant money flowing to all the usual suspects. The centrepiece is a half a billion dollar investment for Services Australia to complete its massive Centrelink IT overhaul, which began more than five years ago. The funding brings the project’s budget to more than $1.1 billion over nine years. Cybercriminals Have Shifted Their Attack Strategies. Are You Prepared? Date: 2020-10-05 Author: Security Week Recent threat research shows that during the first six months of 2020, cybercriminals adapted their usual attack strategies to take advantage of the global pandemic and target the expanded attack surface created by the dramatic shift to remote workers. Understanding this trend is critical for security teams tasked with identifying threats and properly securing networks. ESB-2020.3464 – chromium-browser: Multiple vulnerabilities Updates for the world’s most popular browser. ESB-2020.3459 – thunderbird: Multiple vulnerabilities Multiple thunderbird issues fixed. ESB-2020.3453 – Android: Multiple vulnerabilities Latest Android security patches released. Stay safe, stay patched and have a good weekend! The AUSCERT team

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AUSCERT at the 2020 ASEAN CERT Incident Drill

AUSCERT at the 2020 ASEAN CERT Incident Drill AUSCERT is proud to have been involved in this drill earlier this week, alongside colleagues in the ASEAN and various neighbouring regions. Thank you to colleagues from the Cyber Security Agency of Singapore (CSA) for organising. The theme was especially pertinent this year – “Malware Campaign Leveraging the Pandemic Situation” – and we look forward to further collaborations with the wider group in the future. +++++ 15th iteration of ASEAN CERT Incident Drill tests CERTs’ preparedness against opportunistic COVID-19-related campaigns The Cyber Security Agency of Singapore (CSA) organised the 15th iteration of the ASEAN Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) Incident Drill (ACID) on 7 October 2020. This was held in conjunction with the fifth Singapore International Cyber Week (SICW), the region’s most established annual cybersecurity event. An annual drill hosted by Singapore since 2006, ACID tests incident response procedures and strengthens cybersecurity preparedness and cooperation among CERTs in ASEAN Member States (AMS) and Dialogue Partners. This year’s theme, “Malware Campaign Leveraging the Pandemic Situation”, was chosen in view of the proliferation of malicious campaigns leveraging the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic as lures across multiple sectors, in many countries in the earlier part of the year. During a brief pre-drill dialogue, the participants also agreed that it was an opportune time to raise awareness and preparedness against opportunistic campaigns. The scenario injects are based on the Emotet malware campaign, given its prevalence, and the range of cybersecurity events that may occur following a successful Emotet malware infection. All the CERTs from the 10 AMS and five key Dialogue Partners from Australia, China, India, Japan, and South Korea, were represented in this year’s ACID. They were required to investigate, analyse, and recommend remediation and mitigation measures to a series of scenarios injects with varying levels of complexity. The drill this year was well-received and the participating CERTs provided positive feedback. Leading the exercise is Ms Goh Yan Kim, Deputy Director, SingCERT, CSA. Ms Goh said, “With the pandemic resulting in a heavier reliance on the internet, cybersecurity is now more important than ever. These exercises are essential to foster trust and preparedness among CERTs in ASEAN and our Dialogue Partners to respond to current and emerging threats. We look forward to conducting more of these exercises in future.” A copy of the original article can be found here: https://www.csa.gov.sg/news/news-articles/15th-asean-cert-incident-drill

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 02nd October 2020

AUSCERT Week in Review for 02nd October 2020 Greetings, And just like that, we’ve landed in the final quarter of 2020. This week we would like to share a couple of initiatives from colleagues in the industry, namely: · AustCyber and their Australian Cyber Week 2020 range of events which will take place at the end of this month between 26th to 30th October. · AHECS and their inaugural AHECS Cybersecurity Summit, which is a conference with a focus on the higher education & research, as well as identity management & privacy communities. We also wanted to bring to your attention a recent alert published by the ACSC (cyber.gov.au) on the topic of an observed resurgence of the Emotet malware campaign. Have a read and please do not hesitate to get in touch with our team should you require any assistance in this area. For those of you who took the time to complete our AUSCERT Security Bulletins survey – thank you! The team is currently working through the feedback you’ve provided and the results will be used to strengthen our delivery of this particular service and will be part of a long-term service improvement project. Last but not least, don’t forget to complete the 2020 BDO in Australia and AUSCERT Cyber Security Survey. This anonymous survey closes at midnight on Friday, 30 October 2020 and takes less than 10 minutes to complete and by taking part, you will be offered the chance to win one of two Apple Watches. Until next week, have a wonderful weekend everyone. Government’s cyber pledge has largely failed to increase awareness Date: 2020-09-30 Author: CRN Australia The federal government’s decision to spend $1.6bn boosting Australia’s ability to repel cyber-attacks might have highlighted the risks they pose to the economy, but security partners say that some customers still struggle to understand the scale of the threat and manage it appropriately. It was a trend that generally became more pronounced as businesses diminished in size, they said. However, even in larger organisations, board level support for company-wide measures to tackle cyber security breaches was still far from universal as cyber leaders continued to grapple with stubborn communication barriers. Microsoft Netlogon exploitation continues to rise Date: 2020-10-28 Author: Talos Intelligence Cisco Talos is tracking a spike in exploitation attempts against the Microsoft vulnerability CVE-2020-1472, an elevation of privilege bug in Netlogon, outlined in the August Microsoft Patch Tuesday report. The vulnerability stems from a flaw in a cryptographic authentication scheme used by the Netlogon Remote Protocol which — among other things — can be used to update computer passwords by forging an authentication token for specific Netlogon functionality. This flaw allows attackers to impersonate any computer, including the domain controller itself and gain access to domain admin credentials. Airports, ATMs, hospitals: Microsoft Windows XP leak would be less of an issue, if so many didn’t use it Date: 2020-10-30 Author: The Conversation The source code of the Windows XP operating system is now circulating online as a huge 43GB mega-dump. Although the software is nearly two decades old, it’s still used by people, businesses and organisations around the world. This source code leak leaves it open to being scoured for bugs and weaknesses hackers can exploit. Microsoft disrupts nation-state hacker op using Azure Cloud service Date: 2020-10-25 Author: Bleeping Computer In a report this week, Microsoft said that it disrupted operations of a nation-state threat group that was using its Azure cloud infrastructure for cyber attacks. Microsoft refers to the actor by the name Gadolinium and says that it’s been active for about a decade targeting organizations in the maritime and health industry; more recently, the hackers expanded focus to higher education and regional government entities. WA govt creates first cyber security operations centre Date: 2020-10-29 Author: ITnews The WA government has established a cyber security operations centre to coordinate its response to cyber security incidents and improve visability over the network threats facing agencies. The government launched the centre, complete with eight cyber security personnel, on Tuesday using $1.8 million set aside in next week’s 2020-21 state budget. Wondering how to tell the world you’ve been hacked? Here’s a handy guide from infosec academics Date: 2020-10-24 Author: theregister.com Infosec boffins at the University of Kent have developed a “comprehensive playbook” for companies who, having suffered a computer security breach, want to know how to shrug off the public consequences and pretend everything’s fine. In a new paper titled “A framework for effective corporate communication after cyber security incidents,” Kent’s Dr Jason Nurse, along with Richard Knight of the University of Warwick, devised a framework for companies figuring out how to publicly respond to data security breaches and similar incidents where servers are hacked and customer records end up in the hands of criminals. GitHub rolls out new Code Scanning security feature to all users Date: 2020-10-30 Author: ZDNet Code-hosting website GitHub is rolling out today a new security feature named Code Scanning for all users, on both paid and free accounts. GitHub says the new Code Scanning feature “helps prevent vulnerabilities from reaching production by analyzing every pull request, commit, and merge—recognizing vulnerable code as soon as it’s created.” Once vulnerabilities are detected, Code Scanning works by prompting the developer to revise their code. ESB-2020.3403 – firefox: Multiple vulnerabilities Red Hat’s updates include fixes for multiple vulnerabilities in Firefox. ESB-2020.3360 – NetworkManager: Reduced security – Existing account An update released for NetworkManager to address a Reduced Security vulnerability. ESB-2020.3343 – IBM Cloud Private: Multiple vulnerabilities IBM releases updates to address Kubernetes vulnerabilities. ASB-2020.0160 – Microsoft Edge (based on Chromium): Multiple vulnerabilities Microsoft updates its Edge browser to include security fixes from the upstream Chromium project. Stay safe, stay patched and have a good weekend! The AUSCERT team

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 25th September 2020

AUSCERT Week in Review for 25th September 2020 Greetings, We hope everyone’s been enjoying the Spring weather we’ve had recently! For those of you who attended our AUSCERT2020 conference last week, you can revisit the conference’s key learnings by re-watching the presentations on-demand on our now LIVE website. Please keep an eye out for an email that was sent earlier today with the specific details on how to access this resource page. A common theme throughout last week was just how much delegates enjoyed the ability to remain connected with their network of industry peers despite the circumstances this year. We hope you enjoyed your conference experience and we look forward to having you join us again at AUSCERT2021. Last but not least, it’s that time of the year again folks – the 2020 BDO in Australia and AUSCERT Cyber Security Survey is now open. This annual survey of key decision-makers across Australia and New Zealand, identifies the current cybersecurity trends, issues and threats facing organisations. We would like to encourage as many of you as possible to take part now. This anonymous survey closes at midnight on Friday, 30 October 2020 and takes less than 10 minutes to complete and by taking part, you will be offered the chance to win one of two Apple Watches. Until next week, have a restful weekend everyone. … Microsoft: Hackers using Zerologon exploits in attacks, patch now! Date: 2020-09-23 Author: BleepingComputer [Please refer to AUSCERT Bulletin ASB-2020.0140, member portal login required] Microsoft has warned that attackers are actively using the Windows Server Zerologon exploits in attacks and advises all Windows administrators to install the necessary security updates. Researchers say not to use myGovID until login flaw is fixed Date: 2020-09-21 Author: iTnews ATO declines to change protocol. Two security researchers are warning Australians not to use myGovID as they say the login system contains an implementation flaw that could lead to attackers gaining full access to their accounts. Masters student Ben Frengley and adjunct professor Vanessa Teague created a threat scenario in which an attacker sets up sites that they control and asks users to log into them with myGovID. In the scenario, the attacker captures the email address of the user and then immediately uses it to try to log into an official government portal. The official portal displays a 4-digit PIN that the attacker then relays back to the user via the controlled site. Popular password manager could have a critical vulnerability Date: 2020-09-22 Author: TechRadar A security researcher has discovered a new vulnerability in a popular password manager that could allow for remote code execution. The password manager in question is Bitwarden and the vulnerability resides in the company’s desktop app which automatically downloads updates and replaces its own code with these updates without user intervention. Australians want more control over privacy, survey shows Date: 2020-09-24 Author: Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) Privacy is a major concern for 70% of Australians while 87% want more control and choice over the collection and use of their personal information, a new study shows. The Australian Community Attitudes to Privacy Survey (ACAPS) 2020 released today provides a comprehensive view of beliefs and concerns about the protection of personal information. “Our survey shows data privacy is a significant concern for Australians, particularly as the digital environment and data practices evolve rapidly. The community sees identity theft and fraud, and data breaches and security, as the biggest privacy risks we face today.” Phishing awareness training wears off after a few months Date: 2020-09-21 Author: ZDNet Security and phishing awareness programs wear off in time, and employees need to be re-trained after around six months, according to a paper presented at the USENIX SOUPS security conference last month. The purpose of the paper was to analyze the effectiveness of phishing training in time. Taking advantage of the fact that organizations in the German public administration sector must go through mandatory phishing awareness training programs, academics from several German universities surveyed 409 of 2,200 employees of the State Office for Geoinformation and State Survey (SOGSS). ESB-2020.3307 – Apple: Multiple vulnerabilities Apple releases updates for macOS Catalina, High Sierra and Mojave ESB-2020.3233 – Google Chrome: Multiple vulnerabilities Updates released to address the multiple vulnerabilities in Google Chrome ESB-2020.3226 – MISP: Multiple vulnerabilities A new version of MISP released with several bugs fixed ESB-2020.3188 – Samba: Multiple vulnerabilities An update has been released to fix multiple vulnerabilities in Netlogon protocol Stay safe, stay patched and have a good weekend! The AUSCERT team

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 18th September 2020

AUSCERT Week in Review for 18th September 2020 Greetings, What a week it was! We took on uncharted territory this year by hosting our 19th annual conference, AUSCERT 2020 – virtually. While it mimicked an in-person event in so many ways (think: tech glitches and hiccups), our team is so very proud to have been able to deliver the conference nevertheless. We trust that you enjoyed your delegate experience and don’t forget to save the dates for next year as we look forward to seeing everyone SOAR with cyber. We would like to take this opportunity to congratulate our 2020 Australian Information Security Awards winners again: • Member Organisation of the Year: Federation University • Member Individual of the Year: Rachael Leighton from the Department of Premier and Cabinet, Victorian Government • Information Security Excellence Winner: Michelle Price from AustCyber Congratulations on their very deserving awards and we hope to continue working together in fostering our cyber and information security community. Members, don’t forget that we are extending the closing date of the AUSCERT Security Bulletins survey (member portal login required) to the close of business today. Every completed survey will go in the draw to win Nintendo Switch Lite console, valued at AU$299. Until next week, have a restful weekend everyone. … New privacy resource: When do Australian Government agencies need to conduct a privacy impact assessment? Date: 2020-09-14 Author: Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) has released a privacy resource to assist Australian Government agencies to determine when they need to conduct a privacy impact assessment. Govt systems to be classed critical infrastructure under cyber reforms Date: 2020-09-14 Author: IT News Select federal government systems and networks will be classified critical infrastructure alongside nationally significant private sector systems, Home Affairs boss Mike Pezzullo has revealed. Pending the passage of amendments to the Act and the co-design of sector-specific standards, the government expects the new cyber security obligations to come into effect in mid-2021. Office 365 will let users view their quarantined phishing messages Date: 2020-09-11 Author: Bleeping Computer Microsoft is planning to allow Office 365 users to view and request the release of phishing messages automatically quarantined by the Exchange Online Protection (EOP) filtering stack. This new capability is designed to make it possible for end-users to reclaim e-mails that have been accidentally marked as phishing or spam messages by Office 365 EOP. Attacked by ransomware? Five steps to recovery Date: 2020-09-15 Author: Help Net Security Ransomware has been noted by many as the most threatening cybersecurity risk for organizations, and it’s easy to see why: in 2019, more than 50 percent of all businesses were hit by a ransomware attack – costing an estimated $11.5 billion. In the last month alone, major consumer corporations, including Canon, Garmin, Konica Minolta and Carnival, have fallen victim to major ransomware attacks, resulting in the payment of millions of dollars in exchange for file access. While there is a lot of discussion about preventing ransomware from affecting your business, the best practices for recovering from an attack are a little harder to pin down. Govt elevates consent in proposed public data sharing laws Date: 2020-09-17 Author: ITNEWS Federal government agencies will need to seek consent before releasing personal information to other governments and the private sector if it feasible to do so under proposed public sector data sharing laws. An exposure draft of the Data Availability and Transparency Bill, published this week, reveals a change to the Office of National Data Commissioner (ONDC) policy position that embeds consent within one of five data sharing principles. ESB-2020.3181 – iOS & iPadOS: Multiple vulnerabilities Apple releases updates to address issues in iOS & iPadOS ESB-2020.3165 – McAfee Email Gateway: Multiple vulnerabilities Email Gateway update fixes path traversal vulnerability ESB-2020.3128 – McAfee Agent: Multiple vulnerabilities McAfee Agent update fixes four vulnerabilities in Windows and MacOs ESB-2020.3175 – Drupal: Multiple vulnerabilities Updates released to fix the multiple vulnerabilities identified in Drupal Core ESB-2020.3151 – mysql:8.0: Multiple vulnerabilities An update for the mysql:8.0 module is released for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Stay safe, stay patched and have a good weekend! The AUSCERT team

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 11th September 2020

AUSCERT Week in Review for 11th September 2020 Greetings, It seemed like ages ago when we announced that AUSCERT2020 will be moved to a virtual platform. Here we are, tutorials kick off in just 4-sleeps on Tuesday 15th September! Delegates, you would have received a unique targeted email featuring specific areas within our conference program over the past few days this week. Be sure to catch up on those to maximise your delegate experience. We covered the following areas of the conference: Interactive activities, Speakers and Keynotes, Program and Social Activities, Sponsor thank-you, and Delegate Experience. This week also saw us acknowledging R U OK Day and we realise the question is heavier this year. Sharing this blog piece from our conference charity partner LIVIN here. Members, don’t forget that we are extending the closing date of the AUSCERT Security Bulletins survey (member portal login required) to 5.00pm AEST on Friday 18th September. Every completed survey will go in the draw to win a Nintendo Switch Lite console, valued at AU$299. Until next week, we hope to catch up with as many of you as possible virtually at AUSCERT2020, “We Can be Heroes”. Have a great weekend everyone! … Universities are a juicy prize for cyber criminals. Here are 5 ways to improve their defences Date: 2020-09-08 Author: The Conversation [Dr David Stockdale, AUSCERT Director and Deputy Director of Infrastructure Operations Information Technology Services at The University of Queensland, co-authored this article.] Universities worldwide are a growing target for hackers. A July 2020 report by cybersecurity company Redscan found more than 50% of UK universities recorded a data breach in the previous 12 months. More recently, a data breach has affected 444,000 users of ProctorU. Universities, including several Australian ones, use this online tool to supervise students sitting exams from home. Personal records from ProctorU were made available on hacker forums. What can unis do to improve cybersecurity? Patch Wednesday fixes ‘worst-case scenario’ Exchange bug Date: 2020-09-09 Author: IT News Today’s regular set of security updates for Microsoft products fixes 23 critical and 105 important flaws, including a serious vulnerability in Exchange Server that is remotely exploitable. Dustin Childs of the Zero Day Initiative noted the vulnerability allows an attacker to run code at the high-privilege SYSTEM user level, simply by sending a specially crafted email to an unpatched Exchange server. Australian cyber companies collaborate on online training program for Defence Force Date: 2020-09-07 Author: iTWire A group of Australian sovereign cyber companies are claiming an Australia-first collaboration to create a successful pilot of a fully online, collective cyber training program for the Australian Defence Force. The companies – Cydarm, Elttam, Penten and Retrospect Labs – each with expertise in niche cyber technology, came together to tailor a solution for the ADF on FifthDomain’s cyber training platform. Newcastle Uni Ransomware Attack Will “Take Weeks” to Mitigate Date: 2020-09-08 Author: Infosecurity Magazine A leading UK university has warned staff and students that it will take weeks to recover from a recent ransomware incident, with a well-known threat group already posting stolen documents. Newcastle University in the north-east of England is part of the elite Russell Group. It claimed to have been attacked on August 30 2020 with most university systems unavailable or restricted indefinitely. “The nature of the problem means this is an on-going situation which we anticipate will take a number of weeks to address,” it said in an update on Monday. “We hope to have a better estimate at the end of this week.” Cybersecurity 101: Protect your privacy from hackers, spies, and the government Date: 2020-09-09 Author: ZDNet Privacy used to be considered a concept generally respected in many countries — at least, in the West — with a few changes to rules and regulations here and there often made only in the name of the common good. Things have changed, and not for the better. China’s Great Firewall, the UK’s Snooper’s Charter, the US’ mass surveillance and bulk data collection — compliments of the National Security Agency (NSA) and Edward Snowden’s whistleblowing — Russia’s insidious election meddling, and countless censorship and communication blackout schemes across the Middle East are all contributing to a global surveillance state in which privacy is a luxury of the few and not a right of the many. ASB-2020.0158 – Microsoft Exchange Server: Execute arbitrary code/commands – Existing account Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday included fixes for a vulnerability in Exchange Server ASB-2020.0156 – Internet Explorer & ChakraCore: Multiple vulnerabilities Microsoft released an update that resolves 6 vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer & ChakraCore ESB-2020.3108 – Threat Intelligence Exchange Server: Multiple vulnerabilities McAfee Threat Intelligence Exchange Server update includes fixes for five third-party vulnerabilities ESB-2020.3096 – Intel BIOS firmware: Multiple vulnerabilities Security vulnerabilities in BIOS firmware for multiple Intel platforms allow escalation of privilege, denial of service and/or information disclosure. ESB-2020.3095 – IBM Security Access Manager for Enterprise Single Sign-On: Multiple vulnerabilities Security Vulnerability has been identified in Apache Batik used by IBM WebSphere Application Access Manager for Enterprise Single Sign-On Stay safe, stay patched and have a good weekend! Vishaka

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Blogs

AUSCERT at the forefront of Cybersecurity and AUSCERT2020 "We Can be Heroes"

AUSCERT at the forefront of Cybersecurity and AUSCERT2020 "We Can be Heroes" [Editor’s notes: an edited version of this article features in the CyberAustralia Magazine 2020-2021] AUSCERT provides members with proactive and reactive advice and solutions to current threats and vulnerabilities. We help members prevent, detect, respond and mitigate cyber-based attacks. As a not-for-profit security group based at The University of Queensland Australia, AUSCERT delivers 24/7 service to members alongside a range of comprehensive tools to strengthen their cyber security strategy. The Australian Government Department of Home Affairs released their report on Australia’s 2020 Cyber Security Strategy recently and AUSCERT is very proud to have been involved in the consultation process late last year. The report included 60 recommendations to bolster Australia’s critical cyber defenses which are structured around a framework with five key pillars: Deterrence, Prevention, Detection, Resilience and Investment – all aligned to our core values here at AUSCERT: Deterrence: Any infrastructure reported by our members that proves to be malicious will be subject to persistent and escalating takedown notices. Prevention: The initiative of providing Indicators of Compromise, Indicators of Vulnerability, security advisories and bulletins provides strong proactive preventative information.    Detection: Bi-directional threat intelligence gathering through open source platforms where members are given real-time intel that help to automatically detect and block potential attacks. Resilience: AUSCERT partakes and assists to organise Asia Pacific regional cyber drills, as well as provide webinars to members to maintain cyber security awareness as front-of-mind. Investment: AUSCERT being a non-profit organisation reinvests all of our membership proceeds into service deliveries, improvements and the building of our membership cyber security capabilities.   Clear benefits for members AUSCERT leverages the resources provided by its membership base and The University of Queensland Australia. Our reach with international CERTS as well as other Australian organisations, increases the effectiveness of our action for malicious infrastructure take-downs, abuse advisory and this international co-operation enables an internationally recognised norm of incident response. With a 24/7 member incident hotline, AUSCERT enables our members to keep their incident response effective by providing assistance that complements existing capabilities. Cyber risks are owned by those best positioned to manage them Assistance in establishing risk assessment as well as an incident response plan are covered through AUSCERT education where an understanding of these concepts allows for efficient use of resources in preventing, mitigating the transfer of or avoiding cyber risks. AUSCERT members practice cyber security at home and at work With the increase in remote-working, AUSCERT assists our members no matter the physical location of their work setting may be. AUSCERT is a cyber security incident response team exemplar AUSCERT takes incident response seriously and trains its staff body to be able to handle incidents whenever they arise. This is done not only through internal training; all staff are also encouraged to attain industry certification(s) in line with their job requirement. This experience is then reinvested back to members in the form of advice publication, blog article(s) and educational events such as webinar sessions. Additionally, Indications of Vulnerabilities and Indications of Compromises are streamed to members on a daily basis, thus keeping our members aware of vulnerabilities, leaked credentials, misconfigurations as well as the availability of remedial advice. Trusted services, nationally and internationally AUSCERT as a trusted entity in cyber security is handed information on incidents and vulnerabilities from national and international sources.  AUSCERT2020 “We Can Be Heroes”  AUSCERT2019 “It’s Dangerous to Go Alone” gave delegates the tools to build knowledge within their teams. This year, the emphasis lies on the fact that anyone in your organisation can be your champion, your cyber security hero. Not only is it vital that you have a strong team behind you, but it is also equally important that you equip and encourage every individual in your organisation to assist in cyber and data security.  AUSCERT2020 will be held across 4-days; packed with world-class tutorials and presentations delivered by over 60 speakers from around the globe. With an audience of around 1000 delegates, this year’s confererence will be the largest held in recent years.  We’re especially proud to feature a number of AUSCERT content and speakers, namely – Colby Prior and his tutorial on the topic of “Running your own honeypot: An Introduction”, Mike Holm and his co-presentation with Leon Fouche from BDO on the topic of the “Joint AUSCERT and BDO Annual Cyber Security Survey Report 2019” and last but not least, Geoff Thonon on the topic of “Could Phishing be nastier by any other name?”. In addition to these AUSCERT presentations, UQ will also be represented by Mandy Turner from the SOC team, speaking on the topic of “Cybercrime” and the team from UQ Cyber from the EAIT Faculty will also be hosting a virtual booth at the conference.  The format of the conference delivery may be different this year, but AUSCERT is as committed as ever to providing you with meaningful and rich content – all from the comfort of your office or home environment. “Cyber security has never been more important”. The cyber security landscape is ever-changing, and AUSCERT is passionate about engaging with members to empower their people, capabilities and capacities. For more information on AUSCERT, please contact membership@auscert.org.au or +61 7 3365 4417. For further information on the AUSCERT2020 conference, please contact conference@auscert.org.au.     

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 4th September 2020

AUSCERT Week in Review for 4th September 2020 Greetings, This week, the team made headlines with our research piece on a data dump claimed to be from the Department of Education, which turned out to be low-threat info from a third-party company. Members, don’t forget that we are extending the closing date of the AUSCERT Security Bulletins survey (member portal login required) to 5.00pm AEST on Friday 18th September. Every completed survey will go in the draw to win Nintendo Switch Lite console, valued at AU$299. As promised, we announced our AUSCERT2020 partnership with LIVIN.org, an organisation focussed on “Breaking the stigma of mental health.” In 2020, all revenue raised through our general admission registration sales for AUSCERT2020 will be donated directly to a chosen charity. As an organisation, AUSCERT has always felt strongly about the effects of mental health in the cyber and information security industry and are proud to utilise this opportunity to contribute towards a very worthy cause. Word on the street also has it that our various delegate swag bags are making their way this week to the first 600 registered delegates with an Australian address. We hope you love the items included in the swag bag and have to thank our wonderful sponsors. Until next week, take care – don’t forget to spoil your awesome dads (Father’s Day on Sunday 6 September!) and have a great weekend everyone. David Lord, former team lead: On another note, I’m leaving AUSCERT today. I’m ADIR’s original creator and editor, although in recent times our comms expert Laura has taken the helm. It has been a pleasure to build and shape this service. Members sometimes send notes of thanks for our emphasis on concise but informative summaries, and that’s high praise indeed. I’ll certainly be staying subscribed 😉 Large Australian education data leak traced to third-party service Date: 2020-09-02 Author: iTnews An online maths resource with a large Australian user base appears to be behind a large-scale leak of data touted online as a dataset belonging to the “Australian department of education”. Images of the dataset purporting to contain the data of an unknown number of individuals, including those with vic.edu.au and wa.edu.au email addresses, emerged on Tuesday night. Alon Gal, chief technology officer at cyber security intelligence firm Hudson Rock, claimed the dataset belonged to the “Australian Department of Education”, which does not exist. AUSCERT says alleged DoE hack came from a third-party Date: 2020-09-02 Author: ZDNet In a statement posted on its website, AUSCERT said that after analyzing the data with cyber-security firm Cosive, it determined that the leaked data originated from K7Maths, an online service providing school e-learning solutions. AUSCERT is now urging Australian schools to check if their staff are using the K7Maths service for their daily activities, and take appropriate measures, such as resetting the teacher and students’ password, in case they had re-used passwords across other internal applications. SendGrid under siege from hacked accounts Date: 2020-08-29 Author: Krebs on Security Email service provider Sendgrid is grappling with an unusually large number of customer accounts whose passwords have been cracked, sold to spammers, and abused for sending phishing and email malware attacks. Sendgrid’s parent company Twilio says it is working on a plan to require multi-factor authentication for all of its customers, but that solution may not come fast enough for organizations having trouble dealing with the fallout in the meantime. [AUSCERT can empirically confirm that we see this daily.] Over 54,000 scanned NSW driver’s licences found in open cloud storage Date: 2020-08-28 Author: iTnews Tens of thousands of scanned NSW driver’s licenses and completed tolling notice statutory declarations were left exposed on an open Amazon Web Services storage instance, but Transport for NSW doesn’t know how the sensitive personal data ended up in the cloud. The open AWS S3 bucket was found by Bob Diachenko of Security Discovery, as part of an investigation into another data breach. “All the documents I observed were related to the NSW area and there was no indication as to who might be the owner of the data,” Diachenko told iTnews. ESB-2020.3001 – Django: Multiple vulnerabilities Filesystem permissions meant that a malicious local user had more access than they should. ESB-2020.2976 – Bacula: Denial of service It’s just a cool name for a backup service. ESB-2020.3028 – GitLab: Access confidential data GitLab’s packaging woes continued as they released another security release which excluded the security fixes, and then another hasty release to include them. If you’re using v13.3.3, v13.2.7 or v13.1.9, you should update. ESB-2020.3006 – Ansible: Multiple vulnerabilities (RCE) Another user/admin can manipulate the package store, and ansible will install packages that have been altered but won’t know or report it – so the deployment/config/ansible workflow/admin will not be aware of the compromise. Stay safe, stay patched and have a good weekend! David

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