Blogs

2019 Cyber Security Survey

2019 Cyber Security Survey Complete the 2019 Cyber Security Survey The cyber landscape is constantly changing, and the number and level of sophistication of attacks are increasing.  Being aware of the latest cyber security threats and trends in the industry can help your organisation put the right measures in place to protect against cyber threats.  Is your organisation prepared to manage the impact of a significant cyber event?  How do your cyber practices stack up against other organisations in your industry? The fourth BDO and AUSCERT Cyber Security Survey is now open. This annual survey, aimed at key decision makers, identifies the current cyber security trends, issues and threats facing businesses in Australia and New Zealand. Participation gives you direct access to our survey report, allowing you to: Compare your organisation’s cyber maturity against peers Benchmark your business’ current cyber security efforts with trends in your industry Identify potential gaps in your organisation’s cyber security approach Determine ways to improve your organisation’s cyber security culture, planning and response measures. Take part now Don’t miss out on your chance to gain free insight into the maturity of your organisation’s cyber security approach. The survey closes at midnight on Friday 1 November. The survey is anonymous and takes less than 10 minutes to complete. The survey also offers the chance to win one of three Apple Watches.* For more information about this survey contact our team: membership@auscert.org.au * Refer to the survey competition terms and conditions.    

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 25th October 2019

AUSCERT Week in Review for 25th October 2019 Greetings, This week we saw both Google and Mozilla release updates to patch multiple vulnerabilities in the Chrome and Firefox browsers, part of the on-going battle to ensure we are a little safer whilst we battle the web. Additionally, with consumer protection in mind, Apple pulled eighteen malicious apps from the iOS store, whilst on Google Play Store, forty two adware Android apps were removed.  However, despite measures taken by vendors to protect us from the ‘evilz’, we must still remember that have to take responsibility for our own actions and choices.  Be vigilant with your app choice and always perform due diligence. Every day we are more invested in staying connected to both people and systems, and Naked Security informed audiences in an article this week that people still think of phishing as being solely an email borne scam. However, the article correctly reminded readers that the technique is applied by scammers to communications streams available on our electronic devices, including social message, instant messaging and SMS text messages. Please feel free to dive into the associated articles:——————————————————————————– iBye, bad guy: Apple yanks 18 iOS store apps that sheltered advert-mashing malwareDate: October 24Author: The Register 42 Adware Apps with 8 Million Downloads Traced Back to Vietnamese StudentDate: October 24Author: The Hacker News Phishy text message tries to steal your cellphone accountDate: October 18Author: Naked Security ——————————————————————————– Here are four of this week’s interesting security bulletins: ASB-2019.0308Google Chrome was patched to resolve multiple vulnerabilities which when unpatched offered an interesting selection of impact/access factors. ESB-2019.3941Mozilla also patched multiple vulnerabilities in Firefox, resolving a bunch of ‘Remote with User Interaction’ associated impacts. ESB-2019.3947Red Hat plugged a nifty vulnerability related to little old sudo which researchers found would lead to root compromise when exploited. ESB-2019.3958VMware issued update to resolve a vulnerability associated with its vCenter Server Appliance, addressing a sensitive information disclosure vulnerability (remote unauthenticated) in backup and restore. ——————————————————————————– As always, stay safe, stay patched, and make it a good weekend! Best regards,Colin and Patch the AUSCERT cat

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Blogs

AUSCERT at the APCERT Conference 2019

AUSCERT at the APCERT Conference 2019 AUSCERT was represented at the recent APCERT 2019 gathering in Singapore by Senior Information Security Analyst, Geoff Thonon and Senior Security System Administrator, Colby Prior.  Highlights of this work trip included the below initiatives.  _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ APCERT-AGM 2019 Teams that are part of APCERT (Asia Pacific Computer Emergency Team)[1] took part in the APCERT Conference 2019 which kicked off on Sunday the 29th September.  This was Day One of the APCERT Annual General Meeting and like with all groups that meet once-a-year, the day was filled with reports on the years’ activities. Working Groups [2] were queued up and reported on the progress of various projects that makes the APCERT community more effective as a whole.  [1] http://www.apcert.org/[2] http://www.apcert.org/about/structure/groups.html   AUSCERT @ APCERT Drill-WG AUSCERT co-presented  with the convenor of ThaiCERT on the APCERT-Drill that took place in 2019 [1].  AUSCERT rallied the group to participate in and briefed them about the APCERT-Drill 2020, within a diverse set of roles.  Along with rallying the group for the coming Drill, some factors were highlighted in using the currently available platform(s) within APCERT in terms of communication and coordination, as well as using this event to further further promote cooperation with all new CERTs/CSIRTs in the Asia Pacific region.    [1] http://www.apcert.org/documents/pdf/APCERT_Drill2019_Press%20Release.pdf ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ We look forward to hosting the APCERT-Drill in 2020 and to meeting our colleagues at the next APCERT annual conference!

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 18th October 2019

AUSCERT Week in Review for 18th October 2019 Greetings, This week we saw Oracle release its quarterly “Critical Patch Updates,Alerts and Bulletins”. Numerous vulnerabilities and patches were reportedin their broad range of products, that will need to be managed. We canexpect many other vendors to release patches over the next few weeks fortheir products which might be built around Oracle technologies includingdatabases and Java products. Please refer to our webpage for details of upcoming events – hosted bothby AUSCERT as well as other industry groups:https://wordpress-admin.auscert.org.au/resources/events/ — Here’s a summary (including excerpts) of some of the more interestingstories we’ve seen this week: Title: Germany’s cyber-security agency recommends Firefox as most secure browserhttps://www.zdnet.com/article/germanys-cyber-security-agency-recommends-firefox-as-most-secure-browser/Author: Catalin CimpanuDate: 17 October 2019Excerpt:“Germany’s BSI tested Firefox, Chrome, IE, and Edge. Firefox was onlybrowser to pass all minimum requirements for mandatory security features.” Title: Sudo? More like Su-doh: There’s a fun bug that gives restrictedsudoers root access (if your config is non-standard)https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/10/14/linux_sudo_security_bug/Author: Chris WilliamsDate: 14 October 2019Excerpt:“Linux users who are able to run commands as other users, via the sudoermechanism, though not as the all-powerful root user, can still run commandsas root, thanks to a fascinating coding screw-up.” Title: MacGibbon joins local cyber security push to challenge multinationalshttps://www.itnews.com.au/news/macgibbon-joins-local-cyber-security-push-to-challenge-multinationals-532376/Author: Justin HendryDate: 15 October 2019Excerpt:“Two of Australia’s most high-profile IT executives have joined forcesto form the nation’s largest dedicated cyber security company, a movethat directly challenges the dominance of large US-affiliated vendors insecuring key contracts with major corporates and government.” Title: ATO phone scammers turn up at Adelaide man’s house dressed as police with eftpos machinehttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-10-15/ato-scammers-turn-up-at-house-with-eftpos-machine/11603144/Author: Eugene BoisvertDate: 16 October 2019Excerpt:“Two men turned up to another man’s house with an eftpos machine demandingmoney after earlier calling him pretending to be from the AustralianTaxation Office (ATO), according to SA Police.” Title: Planting tiny spy chips in hardware can cost as little as $200https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2019/10/planting-tiny-spy-chips-in-hardware-can-cost-as-little-as-200/Author: Andy GreenbergDate: 13 October 2019Excerpt:“Proof-of-concept shows how easy it may be to hide malicious chips insideIT equipment.” — Here are some of this week’s noteworthy security bulletins (in no particularorder): ESB-2019.3826 – [UNIX/Linux][Ubuntu] sudo: Root compromise – Existing accounthttps://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3826/– See article above for discussion of issue. ASB-2019.0294 – [Win][UNIX/Linux] Oracle Java SE: Multiple vulnerabilitieshttps://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ASB-2019.0294/– One of the outputs from Oracle’s CPU this week. ESB-2019.3835 – [SUSE] linux kernel: Multiple vulnerabilitieshttps://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3835/– Another root compromise vulnerability. ESB-2019.3881 – [Cisco] Cisco Identity Services Engine: Multiplevulnerabilitieshttps://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3881/– Cisco had a big week too reporting vulnerabilities and patches, this isone of those. ESB-2019.3861 – [Win][Mac] Acrobat and Reader: Multiple vulnerabilitieshttps://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3861/– 68 CVEs reported! — Stay safe, stay patched and have a great weekend,Marcus.  

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 11th October 2019

AUSCERT Week in Review for 11th October 2019 Greetings, In the words of the Beatles, “it’s getting better all the time”. That is, flawed software is always being discovered and fixed. A cynic might add that flawed software is being created faster than the fix process can keep up. Microsoft’s monthly Patch Tuesday came and went this week without any major dramas, but popular macOS terminal app iTerm fixed a major RCE thanks to research funded by Mozilla, and D-Link have given up entirely on certain home routers, leaving them open to any botnet which will have them. Critical Security Issue identified in iTerm2 as part of Mozilla Open Source Audit Date: 2019-10-09 Author: The Hacker News A 7-year-old critical remote code execution vulnerability has been discovered in iTerm2 macOS terminal emulator app—one of the most popular open source replacements for Mac’s built-in terminal app. Tracked as CVE-2019-9535, the vulnerability in iTerm2 was discovered as part of an independent security audit funded by the Mozilla Open Source Support Program and conducted by cybersecurity firm Radically Open Security. “MOSS selected iTerm2 for a security audit because it processes untrusted data, and it is widely used, including by high-risk targets (like developers and system administrators),” Mozilla says. ‘Hypocritical and ironic’: NSA whistleblower dropped from speaking at Melbourne cybersecurity conference Date: 2019-10-08 Author: ABC News A high-profile American whistleblower and a privacy researcher have been unexpectedly dropped from addressing a Government-backed cybersecurity event underway in Melbourne. Thomas Drake and Dr Suelette Dreyfus of the University of Melbourne were both told their talks were “incongruent” with CyberCon, despite being invited to speak months earlier. Mr Drake’s presentation was to address national security and surveillance, while Dr Dreyfus planned to explore the use of safe digital drop boxes for anti-corruption whistleblowing. Beware of Fake Amazon AWS Suspension Emails for Unpaid Bills Date: 2019-10-09 Author: BLEEPING COMPUTER A billing notice from a vendor, especially one like Amazon, that states that your account has been suspended for unpaid bills, may confuse a user enough to click on the email link. Attackers are capitalizing on this confusion by sending emails that pretend to be from Amazon AWS Support at postmaster@amazon.com and that use a subject of “Your service has now been suspended”. D-Link Home Routers Open to Remote Takeover Will Remain Unpatched Date: 2019-10-07 Author: ThreatPost D-Link won’t patch a critical unauthenticated command-injection vulnerability in its routers that could allow an attacker to remotely take over the devices and execute code. The vulnerability (CVE-2019-16920) exists in the latest firmware for the DIR-655, DIR-866L, DIR-652 and DHP-1565 products, which are Wi-Fi routers for the home market. With no patch available, affected users should upgrade their devices as soon as possible. Signal Messenger Bug Lets Callers Auto-Connect Calls Without Receivers’ Interaction Date: 2019-10-04 Author: The Hacker News Almost every application contains security vulnerabilities, some of which you may find today, but others would remain invisible until someone else finds and exploits them—which is the harsh reality of cybersecurity and its current state. And when we say this, Signal Private Messenger—promoted as one of the most secure messengers in the world—isn’t any exception. Google Project Zero researcher Natalie Silvanovich discovered a logical vulnerability in the Signal messaging app for Android that could allow malicious caller to force a call to be answered at the receiver’s end without requiring his/her interaction. Australia, US negotiate CLOUD Act data swap pact Date: 2019-10-08 Author: iTnews Australian law enforcement and national security agencies are set to have greater access to data held by US-based cloud providers under an agreement being negotiated with the US government. But the bilateral agreement, if finalised and approved, will also require Australian-based cloud providers to hand over data requested by US law enforcement authorities. Short October Patch Tuesday Includes Remote Desktop Client, Browser, and Authentication Patches Date: 2019-10-08 Author: TrendLabs Security Intelligence Blog October’s Patch Tuesday is relatively modest, with Microsoft releasing a total of 59 patches. However, this shorter list still warrants attention. Nine of the 59 were still identified as Critical, while the remaining 50 were labeled Important. Most of the critical bulletins were for various Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge vulnerabilities, with one covering a Remote Desktop Client vulnerability. The Important bulletins fixed several issues, including NLTM and Microsoft IIS server vulnerabilities. 10 Steps to Assess SOC Maturity in SMBs Date: 2019-10-07 Author: Dark Reading Facing a system and organisation controls audit doesn’t have to be stressful for small and midsize businesses if they follow these guidelines. Preparing for a system and organisation controls (SOC) compliance audit for the first time can be challenging. Many organisations, especially small to midsize businesses (SMBs), underestimate the level of planning and effort that goes into completing a successful SOC audit, adding to their security-related stress. Without proper preparation, SMBs risk missing milestones and deadlines, which can result in additional fees to complete a SOC audit. Addressing these 10 questions can help an organisation prevent delays, determine their level of preparedness to complete an audit, and hopefully limit unnecessary work and effort from process owners and employees critical to the business. Yes, MFA Isn’t Perfect. But That’s Not a Reason for Your Company Not to Use It Date: 2019-10-08 Author: Bitdefender When computer users and businesses ask me for a single step they could take to dramatically enhance their security it’s easy to answer: enable multi-factor authentication. Multi-factor authentication (MFA) offers an additional layer of protection for accounts that means even if a criminal manages to phish, guess or crack your password, even if a data breach spills your login credentials, there’s a very good chance your account won’t be compromised. Multi-factor authentication is a great way to improve your security from some of the most common attacks that are out there, but that’s not to say it’s perfect. Stay safe, stay patched and have a good weekend! Patch the AUSCERT cat

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Blogs

Ryuk Ransomware and Action – Summary Information

Ryuk Ransomware and Action – Summary Information Hello! Welcome to my first blog post, today topic involves Ryuk Ransomware, which has had some press of late thought it might be useful to supply summary details about this ransomware variant to aid understanding and steps to aid mitigation. Written for quick absorption, without further ado, please find ready for consumption a non-exhaustive, best effort ‘Ryuk Ransomware and Action – Summary Information’ below the fold (popcorn optional).   ** Ryuk Ransomware and Action – Summary Information ** Meaning: “Gift of God”Highly complex ransomware, constantly under development Primary purpose: “Money Maker”Secondary purpose: Potential sald for further exploit (compromised host marketplace) Trojan Associations: – Emotet (modular malware, emerged in 2014, primarily used as downloader for other malware, i.e., trickbot & IcedID)– Trickbot (spyware, emerged 2016, mainly used to target banks, distributed via spam email or Emotet’s geo-based d/l function) *Highlevel Process Flow – Ryuk Ransomware (quick simple flow)*– Spam email /w malicious doc– Emotet and/or Trickbot malware installed– Credential theft– Create new Admin User– Lateral movement through network– Recon Active Directory– Attempts to disable host security protection and 3rd-party backup services– Deletes Windows VSS shadow copies– Ryuk ransomware deployed *Detail/Notes* Ryuk Stealth Aspect: – Dropper is deleted by payload– Encryption could occur days, weeks or year after infection– Activation delay presumed to be surveillance related / actors performing reconnaisance on their ‘big game’ – Known Anti-forensics include PowerShell anti-logging scripts, anti-analysis infinite loop Encrypted file extension: .RYK Ransom note filename: “RyukReadMe.txt”Ransom note includes: – Two private email addresses– In addition, variants observed, one includes payment related details, whilst another doesn’t and victim to make contact Lateral movement: – RDP Usage (via brute force and vulnerability exploit)– SMB exploit (MS17-010)– Continues until privileges recovered to reach DC. Makes use of any or all of following tools:– PsExec (free Microsoft sysinternals tool): To push Ryuk binary to individual hosts– PowerShell Empire: D/L and installed as a service, PowerShell agents and keyloggers– ‘pwgrab’ (Trickbot module) for recovering credentials– Mimikatz: Steal admin credentials and create persistent backdoors Persistence: – Early variants had persistence, – recent reports indicates newer variants do not persist after restart– be prepared for either Interesting: – TrickBot is leveraged for lateral movement and to infect as many machines as possible   (It then deploys Ryuk at a randomly determined time)– When TrickBot compromises a machine, it is bundled with a library of modules, used to:  – perform reconnaissance  – harvest credentials  – perform lateral movement – Ryuk:  – attempts to disable AV products and delete Windows VSS shadow copies before ransomware starts encryption procedure  – operates with a whitelist of three file extension types: exe, dll and hrmlog     (hrmlog believed to be a debug log filename created during development of Ryuk’s 2017 predecessor, Hermes ransomware)  – disables several 3rd-party backup services, including Acronis, SQLSafe, VEEAM, and Zoolz – PowerShell Empire, a well-known penetration-testing tool, is no longer maintained by its creators (respected members of the infosec community)   – its capabilities and behaviors closely resemble those used by current nation state advanced persistent threat actors   – evades security solutions, operating in a covert manner, and enabling attackers’ total control over compromised systems   – Empire’s use among cybercriminals grew exponentially and in 2018, the UK’s National Cyber Security Center included Empire on its shortlist of the five most dangerous publicly available hacking tools   – However, development of Empire framework stopped after creators said “project reached its initial goal” – Ryuk victims may have a small chance of getting free decryption through Security firm Emisoft’s free decrypt tools *Defending against Ryuk and other ransomware*Considerations that usual methods for delivering ransomware are rarely complicated, simply relying on tried and tested techniques such as:– exploiting vulnerabilities– sending spam and phishing emails– stealing user credentials (also consider obtained via credential stuffing) User/staff awareness!– enhance your user saviness and confidence in identifying and appropriately fielding suspicious emails– encourage users to be avid first line reporters ASD Essential 8 Mitigation Strategies:– preventing malware delivery and execution  – application whitelisting  – configure MS Office Macro setting  – patch Apps  – user app hardening– limiting the extent of cyber security incidents  – restrict administrative privileges  – MFA  – patch operating systems– recovering data and system availability  – daily backups Other Government produced advisories:– Follow ACSC “Guidelines for System Management” (October 2019), ensuring networks and systems are patched or appropriate measures are in place  – advice included under ‘When patches are not available’– Review NCSC guidance publication named “Mitigating Malware”, specifically section four titled (see references for url):  – “What to do if you (or your organisation) has been infected with malware” Enterprise deployment or configuration considerations include… Follow industry best practice wherever, or whenever possible, however specific recommendations as follows… Following good practice, non-exhaustive:– Restrict use of system administration tools, i.e., PsExec, do admins really need to use it?– Disable unnecessary services, i.e., RDP/terminal services Backups – you might have them, but recommend testing them during quiet times! Logging:– goes without saying, but logs are essential– ensure logging is enabled wherever possible (and you have capacity for it), inc PowerShell logging and security– sysmon is also a handy tool,   – free from MS sysinternals  – offers valuable capabilities, event collection, processes, netcons, hashes, registry mods, file creations and more!  – SIEM forwarding, i.e., a sysmon add-on for splunk exists Software Restriction Policy (SRP):– SRPs are a Group Policy-based feature that identifies software programs running on computers in a domain– controls the ability of those programs to run, including specific file path locations, e.g., %APPDATA% directory in the user profile – Software restriction policies are part of the Microsoft security and management strategy Perform annual policy reviews and enforce compliance Detecting Compromised Hosts:– review available Indicators of Compromise (IoCs)   – SIEM, security solution revews (searchable audit trail if not fed into SIEM), cloud analytic services (e.g., MS Defender ATP)– Email Security / Gateway reviews  – ID recipients of an identified phishing email, solutions such as Mimecast can track users interaction with rewritted urls, malware may not have activated yet– undertake appropriate scanning / log reviews   – outbound traffic f/w log reviews  – vulnerability scan assets within specified IP ranges to detect assets and associated vulns, especially SMB related, e.g., eternalblue    (shine your light in your network! did you know about all assets listed in results?)  – SCCM review, are you offering all appropriate patches?    – marry up what is listed vuln wise within your vulnerabilty scanning tool asset results, and what is offered by SCCM     – use automatic deployment rules (ADRs) rather than adding new updates to an existing software update group    – typically, you use ADRs to deploy monthly software updates Proactiveness:Configure alerting on detection of – anomalous command execution, e.g., “vssadmin.exe Delete Shadows /All /Quiet”– unusual administrative tool use within SIEM, e.g., PsExec, net commands – privileged and service account monitoring– obfuscated commands, see something obfucated? it can’t be good PsExec spotlight:– The service PSEXESVC will be installed on the remote system  – 4697 and/or 7045 event log entry    – Note, the 4697 event, if available, may also contain account information  – may also have 4624 and/or 4625 Windows Event log entries, capturing the logon events of the tool usage.– SIEM search Application Compatibility Cache / RecentFileCache.bcf– evidence of program execution in the Application Compatibility Cache (“AppCompat”) and/or Amcache,   – replaces the RecentFileCache.bcf in newer Windows operating systems Last note on the topic of ‘external providers’ or contractors, non-exhaustive considerations:– their need to following org policy– what access into Enterprise they have– their skill level *Reading List*https://resources.infosecinstitute.com/what-you-should-know-about-ryuk-ransomware/https://www.crowdstrike.com/blog/big-game-hunting-with-ryuk-another-lucrative-targeted-ransomware/https://www.trendmicro.com/vinfo/us/security/news/cybercrime-and-digital-threats/ryuk-ransomware-shows-diversity-in-targets-consistency-in-higher-payoutshttps://success.trendmicro.com/solution/1123892-ryuk-ransomware-informationhttps://www.trendmicro.com/vinfo/us/security/news/cybercrime-and-digital-threats/examining-ryuk-ransomware-through-the-lens-of-managed-detection-and-responsehttps://blog.trendmicro.com/trendlabs-security-intelligence/trickbots-bigger-bag-of-tricks/https://blog.malwarebytes.com/cybercrime/malware/2019/01/ryuk-ransomware-attacks-businesses-over-the-holidays/https://blog.malwarebytes.com/botnets/2019/09/emotet-is-back-botnet-springs-back-to-life-with-new-spam-campaign/https://blog.talosintelligence.com/2019/09/emotet-is-back-after-summer-break.htmlhttps://www.wired.com/story/what-is-credential-stuffing/https://www.sentinelone.com/blog/ryuk-ransomware-targets-av-solutions-not-just-files/https://www.zdnet.com/article/development-stops-on-powershell-empire-framework-after-project-reaches-its-goal/https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2019/01/new-ransomware-rakes-in-4-million-by-adopting-a-big-game-hunting-strategy/https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2019/09/worlds-most-destructive-botnet-returns-with-stolen-passwords-and-email-in-tow/https://news.sophos.com/en-us/2019/10/04/rolling-back-ryuk-ransomware/https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/dch-hospital-pays-ryuk-ransomware-for-decryption-key/https://www.emsisoft.com/ransomware-decryption-tools/https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/report/joint-report-on-publicly-available-hacking-toolshttps://www.ncsc.gov.uk/guidance/mitigating-malwarehttps://www.secjuice.com/enterprise-powershell-protection-logging/https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/identity/software-restriction-policies/software-restriction-policieshttps://4sysops.com/archives/application-whitelisting-software-restriction-policies-vs-applocker-vs-windows-defender-application-control/http://woshub.com/how-to-block-viruses-and-ransomware-using-software-restriction-policies/https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sccm/sum/deploy-use/automatically-deploy-software-updateshttps://www.blackhat.com/docs/us-17/thursday/us-17-Bohannon-Revoke-Obfuscation-PowerShell-Obfuscation-Detection-And%20Evasion-Using-Science-wp.pdfhttps://www.splunk.com/blog/2019/06/12/defending-against-common-phishing-frameworks-kits-with-splunk-enterprise-security-content-updates.htmlhttps://www.splunk.com/blog/2019/06/12/monitor-for-investigate-and-respond-to-phishing-payloads-with-splunk-enterprise-security-content-update.htmlhttps://www.splunk.com/blog/2017/07/06/hellsbells-lets-hunt-powershells.htmlhttps://digital-forensics.sans.org/blog/2012/12/17/protecting-privileged-domain-accounts-psexec-deep-divehttps://medium.com/@bromiley/digging-into-sysinternals-psexec-64c783bace2bEmotet:   https://attack.mitre.org/software/S0367/Trickbot: https://attack.mitre.org/software/S0266/PsExec:   https://attack.mitre.org/software/S0029/https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/downloads/sysmonhttps://splunkbase.splunk.com/app/1914/https://github.com/MHaggis/sysmon-dfirhttps://www.zdnet.com/article/new-zealand-comcom-suffers-breach-after-laptop-theft/ *Further reading*https://www.cyber.gov.au/ism/guidelines-system-managementhttps://www.sans.org/reading-room/whitepapers/detection/disrupting-empire-identifying-powershell-empire-command-control-activity-38315https://www.cisco.com/c/dam/en/us/products/se/2019/2/Collateral/cybersecurity-series-threat.pdfhttps://www.staysmartonline.gov.au/   AUSCERT as a non-profit organisation aims to help all, and it is also my personal hope that this post will serve to empower Australians, even if in a small way.  Arriving during Stay Smart Online Week (7-13 October), it’s my pleasure to make this post to support the community, and their efforts in reversing or recovering from cybercrime.  For more information about Stay Smart Online week, please visit the dedicated Australian government website (see further reading). This post has been formed from a wide range of articles, blogs and publications (see reading list) and curious readers are encouraged to dig further if interested.  I will also highlight the important and informative efforts that those varying industry author groups or organisations have made, and continue to make. All efforts are critical in understanding the specific and evolving threats, and research made towards mitigation steps, or methodology formation.   Stay safe and stay smart! Colin Colin Chamberlain CISSP, GCFA, eCTHPSenior Information Security AnalystAUSCERT

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 4th October 2019

AUSCERT Week in Review for 4th October 2019 AUSCERT Week in Review04 October 2019 This week the ANU publicly released their report on the Nov 2018 breach oftheir administrative systems. This report is unique in that, as per thereport’s Forward, “provides details on the attack including the methodsused by the attacker” and “this publicly available report is the first ofits kind in Australia following a cyber attack on a public institution”. Members are encouraged to review the report to understand some of thethreats also faced by them and where possible incorporate the valuablelessons learned.     New Checkm8 jailbreak released for all iOS devices running A5 to A11 chipsDate: 27 SeptemberAuthor: ZDNet A security researcher has released today a new jailbreak that impactsall iOS devices running on A5 to A11 chipsets — chips included in allApple products released between 2011 and 2017, spanning eight generationsof devices, from iPhone 4S to iPhone 8 and X. Victorian hospitals targeted in ransomware attackDate: 1 OctoberAuthor: ABC News The Victorian Government is investigating the scale of a ransomwareattack by “sophisticated cyber criminals” on some of the state’s majorregional hospitals that has forced healthcare providers to go offline. Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerability Patched in Exim Email ServerDate: 1 October A Critical vulnerability recently addressed in the popular open-sourceemail server Exim could lead to remote code execution.   Inside a massive cyber hack that risks compromising future leaders around the globeDate: 2 October Without anyone clicking on a link, a massive cyber attack of unprecedentedsophistication gained access to private information of potentiallyhigh-ranking officials across the globe. Thanks to the release of a 5,000-word report into the incident, the publiccan see for the fist time how sophisticated and extensive the attack onthe ANU was.   ANU hackers built ‘shadow ecosystem’ to stay hidden for six weeksDate: 3 October  

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 27th September 2019

AUSCERT Week in Review for 27th September 2019 Greetings, This week has been a mix of something old and something new. On the old side, a vBulletin zero-day gained attention, and whilst this was shocking news to some, it was old news to others as we learned it had been an exploited commodity for years. It’s good to be in the know it seems. Being in the know was echoed by Atlassian who published a community article stating their intention to retire support for Internet Explorer, coming at the same time as ZDNet’s report that Microsoft had released two brand-spanking patches, one to plug an IE zero-day, and the other squash a Defender bug. In a change of tact, interesting to hear that hackers are looking into new methods of injecting card stealing code on “Layer 7” routers to steal payment card details, instead of utilising websites. Whether this focus change is due to frustration in having their lovingly crafted websites taken-down, or in wanting to remain undetected for longer, one things is certain, this should highlight an organisations need to perform effective asset management and patch management practices. And in considering vulnerable assets, we should also consider those non-traditional or non-managed devices that connect to our networks and become potential threat vectors. As remote working practices are becoming more widely accepted, InsiderPro reported to the evolution of the Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) policy has recently raised discussions regarding Bring Your Own Office (BYOO). Perhaps it’s time to splash out on two sweet 27″ monitors for your home office. Lastly, a reminder to both enterprise and consumers that Windows 7 support will end on 14 January 2020, so perhaps new year, new secure you! And if you’re an Apple device user, then definitely check Wired’s article for checking your iOS 13 privacy and security features. vBulletin Zero-Day Exploited for Years, Gets Unofficial PatchDate: 25 SeptemberAuthor: BleepingComputer A zero-day exploit for the vBulletin forum platform was publicly disclosed and quickly used to attack affected versions of the forum software. It turns out, though, that this exploit has been known, utilized, and sold by researchers and attackers for years. Retiring IE11 support for Atlassian cloud, server, and data center productsDate: 23 SeptemberAuthor: AtlassianURL: https://community.atlassian.com/t5/Feedback-Forum-articles/Retiring-IE11-support-for-Atlassian-cloud-server-and-data-center/ba-p/1185312 In 2015 Microsoft released Edge as the browser to supersede Internet Explorer (IE). Since then IE has not received major updates, or added support for many modern web standards. Microsoft recently discouraged the use of Internet Explorer as a default browser, and we’ve also seen a decrease in IE11 usage across our cloud, server, and data center products over time. To allow us to continue to take advantage of modern web standards to deliver improved functionality and the best possible user experience across all of our products, we have decided to end support for IE11. Microsoft releases out-of-band security update to fix IE zero-day & Defender bugDate: 23 SeptemberAuthor: ZDNet Microsoft has released an emergency out-of-band security update today to fix two critical security issues — a zero-day vulnerability in the Internet Explorer scripting engine that has been exploited in the wild, and a Microsoft Defender bug.The updates stand out because Microsoft usually likes to stay the course and only release security updates on the second Tuesday of every month. The company rarely breaks this pattern, and it’s usually only for very important security issues. Hackers looking into injecting card stealing code on routers, rather than websitesDate: 25 SeptemberAuthor: ZDNet Security researchers at IBM have found evidence that hackers have been working on creating malicious scripts they can deploy on commercial-grade “Layer 7” routers to steal payment card details. Why your company needs a BYOO (bring your own office) policyDate: 23 SeptemberAuthor: InsiderPro Remote work is not a trend. It’s there to stay. Insider Pro columnist Mike Elgan explains why it’s time to re-orient your organisation’s thinking around workshifting and BYOO. Just as the reality of consumer devices drove the BYOD policy trend, the reality of remote work demands the systematic thinking and communication of a bring your own office (BYOO) policy. Windows 7 support will end on January 14, 2020Date: Aug 3, 2019Author: Microsoft Microsoft made a commitment to provide 10 years of product support for Windows 7 when it was released on October 22, 2009. When this 10-year period ends, Microsoft will discontinue Windows 7 support so that we can focus our investment on supporting newer technologies and great new experiences. The specific end of support day for Windows 7 will be January 14, 2020. After that, technical assistance and software updates from Windows Update that help protect your PC will no longer be available for the product. The iOS 13 Privacy and Security Features You Should KnowDate: 22 SeptemberAuthor: WIRED Your iPhone just got a major security upgrade. The reputation of iOS security may have taken some dings of late, but it’s still one of the most secure consumer operating systems available. Here are all the ways the latest version keeps you even more protected. Here are some noteworthy bulletins from the week: ESB-2019.3609Adobe ColdFusion patched to resolve two critical and one important vulnerability. ESB-2019.3617Cisco IOx multiple vulnerabilities. ESB-2019.3616Cisco IOS XR root compromise vulnerability. ESB-2019.3648Confidential data access vulnerabilities patched in Apple iOS and iPadOS. ESB-2019.3641Apple iOS, macOS and watchOS were all patched due to an out-of-bounds readwith significant implications. As always, stay safe, stay patched, and make it a good weekend!Colin

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 13th September 2019

AUSCERT Week in Review for 13th September 2019 Greetings, This week has been a busy one with Microsoft patch Tuesday, a serious Exim vulnerability being actively exploited and other potentially life threatening medical equipment vulnerabilities being exposed. All in all, just another day at the office! As the week comes to a close, here are some articles that may help ease you into the weekend. ThreatList: Amidst Data Breaches, Account Creation Fraud Soars in 2019 Date published: 10/09/2019  Author: Tara Seals Excerpt: “The first half of 2019 saw a 13 percent increase in fraudulent activity compared to the previous six months, with a spike in June representing the highest-volume bot attack that’s been recorded since 2016, according to an analysis from LexisNexis. The firm’s report, with data gleaned from 277 million human-initiated attacks across its Digital Identity Network, shows that bot attacks focused on new account creations are on the rise, bent on building fake online identities across diverse sectors. This type of attack is the only criminal “use case” that saw growth in the study period. The June attack targeted a virtual gift-card provider, with a bot trying to set up accounts using different email addresses. LexisNexis found that the attack originated in the U.S., but the browser language was set to Russian.” Weakness in Intel chips lets researchers steal encrypted SSH keystrokes Date published: 11/09/2019 Author: Dan Goodin Excerpt: “The researchers have named their attack NetCAT, short for Network Cache ATtack. Their research is prompting an advisory for Intel that effectively recommends turning off either DDIO or RDMA in untrusted networks. The researchers say future attacks may be able to steal other types of data, possibly even when RDMA isn’t enabled. They are also advising hardware makers do a better job of securing microarchitectural enhancements before putting them into billions of real-world servers. “While NetCAT is powerful even with only minimal assumptions, we believe that we have merely scratched the surface of possibilities for network-based cache attacks, and we expect similar attacks based on NetCAT in the future,” the researchers, from the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and ETH Zurich, wrote in a paper published on Tuesday. “We hope that our efforts caution processor vendors against exposing microarchitectural elements to peripherals without a thorough security design to prevent abuse.”” Fake PayPal Site Spreads Nemty Ransomware Date published: 08/09/2019 Author: Ionut Ilascu Excerpt: “The automated analysis showed that it took about seven minutes for the ransomware to encrypt the files on the victim host. However, this may differ from one system to another. Fortunately, the malicious executable is detected by most popular antivirus products on the market. A scan on VirusTotal shows that it is detected by 36 out of 68 antivirus engine.” Threats to macOS users Date published: 11/09/2019 Authors: Mikhail Kuzin, Tatyana Shcherbakova, Tatyana Sidorina, Vitaly Kamluk Excerpt: “The belief that there are no threats for the macOS operating system (or at least no serious threats) has been bandied about for decades. The owners of MacBooks and iMacs are only rivaled by Linux users in terms of the level of confidence in their own security, and we must admit that they are right to a certain degree: compared to Windows-based systems, there are far fewer threats that target macOS. However, the main reason for this is the number of potential victims: there are many more computers running Windows than those running macOS. However, the situation is changing, since the popularity of the latter platform is growing. Due to this and despite all the efforts that have been taken by the company, the threat landscape for Apple devices is changing, and the amount of malicious and unwanted software is growing. For the purposes of this report we used the statistics from Kaspersky Security Network cloud infrastructure. It stores information about all of the malicious programs and other threats that our macOS product users agreed to anonymously share with us. In fact, all these threats at some point attacked the computers of Kaspersky security solution users, but these attacks were successfully repelled.” COBALT DICKENS Goes Back to School…Again Date published: 11/09/2019 Authors: Secureworks Counter Threat Unit Research Team Excerpt: “For this campaign, the threat actors registered at least 20 new domains targeting over 60 universities in Australia, the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Hong Kong, and Switzerland. These domains were registered using the Freenom domain provider, which administers the following free top-level domains (TLDs) unless the domain is considered “special”: .ml .ga .cf .gq .tk   Many of these domains use valid SSL certificates, likely to make the spoofed pages appear authentic. The overwhelming majority of the certificates observed in 2019 were issued by Let’s Encrypt, a nonprofit organization that programmatically issues free certificates. However, past campaigns used certificates issued by the Comodo certificate authority.”   Here are this week’s noteworthy-ish security bulletins: 1) Microsoft Windows: Multiple vulnerabilities https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ASB-2019.0257/ Microsoft Patch Tuesday (or Wednesday in this part of the world) saw the release of security updates for multiple Microsoft products. These included Edge, Internet Explorer (surprise, surprise), Exchange server, Office, Skype, etc. The update for Windows had a rather small 49 vulnerabilities addressed within it, including multiple remote code execution vulnerabilities and privilege escalation vulnerabilities. 2) UPDATED ALERT exim4: Root compromise – Remote/unauthenticated https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3394.2/ This was published, and then, republished as an alert when a malware campaign involving the installation of LILOCKED ransomware in Linux servers by gaining root access on those servers. Chatter from a Russian-language blog indicated exim as a potential vector employed by the malware authors gain root privileges within the target servers. If you want to to learn more, see https://twitter.com/threatbear_co/status/1170876973436022785?s=20 3) Becton, Dickinson and Company Pyxis: Unauthorised access – Existing account https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3404/ The weekly roundup just wouldn’t be complete without a medical industry related vulnerability. This particular session fixation vulnerability could allow an attacker who has gained prior access to a lower privileged account within the Pyxis medication management platform, to re-use a higher privileged users Active Directory credentials, thereby increasing his privileges within the platform. At that point, the attacker could view patient data and medication details and potentially alter medication records within the platform. 4) Adobe Flash Player: Execute arbitrary code/commands – Remote with user interaction https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ASB-2019.0264/ Adobe got a bit of security love from Microsoft as part of its updates. Just two “critical” remote code execution vulnerabilities being addressed this time around. Adobe also released an update fixing a remote code execution vulnerability in its Application Manager software. 5) curl: Multiple vulnerabilities https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3472/ Last but not least, everyone’s favourite url retrieval tool, curl, got an update for two remote code execution vulnerabilities which stem from it incorrectly handling memory when performing transfer of TFTP or when using Kerberos over FTP. ..and with that, have a great weekend all!  Nick

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 6th September 2019

AUSCERT Week in Review for 6th September 2019 Greetings, Ask yourself this question. “Should I always believe what you see (or hear)?” As the week comes to a close, here are some articles that may help ease you into the weekend. Privacy concerns mount over Chinese face-swap app Zao Date published: 03/09/2019  Author: Mark Wycislik-Wilson Excerpt: “Zao — a Chinese face-swapping app with the potential to be used to create deepfakes — went viral over the weekend, shooting to the top of the App Store download charts. But concerns have been raised not only over the potential for the app to be abused, but also over its privacy policies. Of particular concern are clauses which grant the developers “free, irrevocable, permanent, transferable, and relicense-able” rights over users’ photos. Zao responded by tweaking its privacy policy, but complaints are still flooding in.” Nemty Ransomware Gets Distribution from RIG Exploit Kit Date published: 03/09/2019 Author: Ionut Ilascu Excerpt: “BleepingComputer saw that the post-encryption ransom demand was around $1,000 in bitcoin. Unfortunately, there is no free decryption tool available at the moment and the malware makes sure to remove the file shadows created by Windows. Security researcher Mol69 noticed that the file-encrypting malware is now a payload in malvertising campaigns from RIG exploit kit (EK). The malware used the .nemty extension for the encrypted files but the variant observed by Mol69 adds ‘._NEMTY_Lct5F3C_’ at the end of the processed files.” Scammer Successfully Deepfaked CEO’s Voice To Fool Underling Into Transferring $243,000 Date published: 03/09/2019 Author: Jennings Brown Excerpt: “The CEO of an energy firm based in the UK thought he was following his boss’s urgent orders in March when he transferred funds to a third-party. But the request actually came from the AI-assisted voice of a fraudster.” Threat Actor behind Astaroth is now using Cloudflare Workers to bypass your Security Solutions. Date published: 01/09/2019 Author: Marcel Afrahim Excerpt: “You might have seen the recently published report about a widespread fileless campaign called Astaroth by Microsoft Research Team that completely “lived off the land”: it only ran system tools throughout a complex attack chain. If you haven’t, you SHOULD definitely read the details of the research article done by the Microsoft team here. Following the report, the group behind the Astaroth attack campaign changed tactics and they ran a similar campaign again earlier in august with few changes, notably use of Cloudflare Workers. In this article I will try to show highlight the changes and show a clear chain of attack from the delivery till infection, something Microsoft research article failed to do.”   Here are this week’s noteworthy-ish security bulletins: 1) Firefox and Firefox ESR: Multiple vulnerabilities https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ASB-2019.0252/ Mozilla released updates for Firefox and Firefox ESR that addressed a large number of vulnerabilties, the most severe being a remote code execution vulnerability stemming from poor sanitization of logging related command line parameters. Luckily, this issue only affects Windows and not many people use that! 2) Cisco Small Business RV160, 260, and 340 Series VPN Routers: Root compromise – Existing account https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3369/ A number of Cisco small business VPN routers have been identified as being affected by a number of vulnerabilities. The most important of these deal with hardcoded password hashes stored for the root user stored in the firmware and the ability to view undocumented user accounts, which includes the “root” account! If you own any of these, please read the bulletin and update! 3) Cisco Identity Services Engine: Cross-site scripting – Remote with user interaction https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3364/ More from Cisco! Cisco fixed a reflected XSS vulnerability in web-based management interface of its ISE product. 4) Cisco Content Security Management Appliance – Access confidential data –Existing account https://portal.auscert.org.au/bulletins/ESB-2019.3362/ Just one more Cisco bulletin. Cisco released a fix for an information disclosure vulnerability in its CCSM appliance, which originates from a role permissions implementation error allowing unauthorised access to other users spam folders, for example. Stay safe, stay patched, keep your eyes peeled and have a great weekend free of paranoia!  Nick

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Week in review

AUSCERT Week in Review for 20th September 2019

AUSCERT Week in Review for 20th September 2019 Greetings, This week’s big headline is the findings of the AFP and ASIC’s investigation into a cybercrime syndicate targeting Australian superannuation accounts. Also, Reuters (normally a relatively credible source) have published a story attributing the Australian parliament hack, albeit without official sources. More after the jump. China blamed for Australian parliament hackDate: 16 SeptemberAuthor: iTnews Australian intelligence determined China was responsible for a cyber-attack on its national parliament and three largest political parties before the general election in May, five people with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.The Australian Signals Directorate concluded in March that China’s Ministry of State Security was responsible for the attack, the five people said. Cyber fraud hits superannuation, share accountsDate: 17 SeptemberAuthor: iTnews Millions of dollars have allegedly been stolen from personal superannuation and share trading accounts using hijacked identity credentials that were obtained on the dark net.The Australian Federal Police and on Tuesday revealed the “multi-layered cybercrime activity” after a 12-month investigation into a major fraud and identity theft syndicate with the Australian Securities and Investment Commission. 400 Million Medical Radiological Images Exposed on the InternetDate: 18 SeptemberAuthor: Bleeping Computer An analysis of medical image storage systems exposed to the public web reveals that almost 600 servers in 52 countries are completely unprotected against unauthorized access.Audited systems were unpatched against thousands of vulnerabilities, more than 500 of them having the highest severity score. A Guide on 5 Common LinkedIn ScamsDate: 19 SeptemberAuthor: Tripwire The fact that scammers haunt Facebook and Twitter is not surprising. Even so, digital criminals don’t stop with just those two platforms. They’re also known to stalk users on LinkedIn where connections carry greater professional gravity.Fortunately, users can stay alert of such activity by familiarizing themselves with the most common types of LinkedIn scams. Here are five ruses, in particular, that should be on their radar. Here are some noteworthy bulletins from the week: 1. ESB-2019.3511 – Norton Password Manager information disclosureUnspecified information disclosure vulnerability in Symantec’s password manager for Android. 2. ESB-2019.3519 – IBus access control vulnerabilityUnintentional keylogger for different users on the same machine. 3. ESB-2019.3541 – Werkzeug cross-container accessThe debugger security PIN was not unique per Docker container. 4. ASB-2019.0268 – Mozilla Thunderbird web view fixesThunderbird’s email view disables scripting, but if the program is used “in browser or browser-like contexts”, it could be abused. Stay safe, stay patched, and have a good weekend!David

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Blogs

AUSCERT: Whatโ€™s next in 2019?

AUSCERT: Whatโ€™s next in 2019? It’s been a month since the wrap up of our annual AUSCERT Cyber Security Conference and we’re now at the start of the second half of 2019. To kick things off for the rest of the year, allow us to recap a few initiatives we’ve accomplished in the industry and goals that our team’s looking forward to achieve in the next six months:  “It’s Dangerous to Go Alone” In honouring the theme from our conference, we have joined forces with the Council of Australasian Directors of Information Technology (CAUDIT) and Australia’s Academic and Research Network (AARNet) to create the Australasian Higher Education Cybersecurity Service (AHECS). Together with CAUDIT and AARNet, we are working together to address the industry’s unique cyber security challenges, with an aim to develop coordinated services that are tailored to the Australasian higher education and research sectors. This AHECS initiative will span across several tertiary institutions to build group strength and a trusted community through engagement, advocacy, and support. In addition to this, we continue to work with the Department of Premier and Cabinet and all of the Victorian Government workforce, one of the largest and most diverse enterprises in Australia – both in delivering our member services as well as providing their team with an in-house training module on the topic of ‘Incident Response Planning’ Both of these examples showcase our commitment for our members to “Empower their People, Capabilities and Capacities” by providing an extension of their workforces and channelling the expertise gained from an AUSCERT membership directly into their business processes.  Training courses with AUSCERT  We are continuing with our training workshop offerings to our members and the wider information security community by providing the following options:  Incident Response PlanningBe equipped with the tools to write a bespoke incident response plan for your organisation  MISPSet-up, configure and integrate Malware Information Sharing Platform into your organisation’s cybersecurity defense strategy  Cyber Security Risk ManagementGain the confidence to perform a risk assessment of cyber security risks and the ability to rate and assess business risks rather than technical vulnerabilities Introduction to Cyber Security for IT professionals Understand information security principles, cyber security as a risk to business objectives; and cultivate an appreciation of the current cyber threat landscape Cost $990 for members $1980 for non-members Customised in-house or group training options At AUSCERT we are also able to develop tailored industry and/or government content with each of our members and clients to ensure that the resulting workshop meets their needs and objectives – P.O.A  To find out more on each of these training courses – let us know what topic(s) you’re interested in, number of people from your organisation and city/state location – please contact us via membership@auscert.org.au  New services: MISP feed (AusISAC) and ADIR Over the past couple of years, AUSCERT has coordinated and run a highly-successful information sharing group for the tertiary education sector, and we are pleased to announce the establishment of an AUSCERT Information Sharing and Analysis Center (AusISAC); now available to general members. Members who join will be given access to our MISP platform, where we share a curated feed of threat intelligence gathered from multiple sources, and our own malware and threat analysis.  Cost of service: $20,000 Sign up now and receive a complimentary half-day remote MISP training session (we will cap these sessions at a maximum of 5 participants in each class!). Please note that members who subscribe to this service cannot use it for commercial purposes.  We have also launched the AUSCERT Daily Intelligence Report (ADIR) service. ADIR is a daily summary of information security news, with a focus on the Australian cyberspace. To sign up, send us an email via membership@auscert.org.au. UQ Cyber Security Initiative  One of the most exciting projects we’ve been lucky to be involved in this year has been our relationship and collaboration with colleagues from UQ’s School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering through their Cyber Security Initiative. In the next six months or so, our collaboration with this team will continue to evolve in a few different ways:  1 August, public seminar by Professor Corey Schou from Idaho State University   30 September to 4 October, (ISC)2 and CISSP CBK training ‘UQ Cyber Squad’ – allowing students from any field of studies and course level to represent the University at local and international cyber-security competition  Mike Holm AUSCERT Operations Manager   

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