Book Image

Incident Response Techniques for Ransomware Attacks

Book Image

Incident Response Techniques for Ransomware Attacks

Overview of this book

Ransomware attacks have become the strongest and most persistent threat for many companies around the globe. Building an effective incident response plan to prevent a ransomware attack is crucial and may help you avoid heavy losses. Incident Response Techniques for Ransomware Attacks is designed to help you do just that. This book starts by discussing the history of ransomware, showing you how the threat landscape has changed over the years, while also covering the process of incident response in detail. You’ll then learn how to collect and produce ransomware-related cyber threat intelligence and look at threat actor tactics, techniques, and procedures. Next, the book focuses on various forensic artifacts in order to reconstruct each stage of a human-operated ransomware attack life cycle. In the concluding chapters, you’ll get to grips with various kill chains and discover a new one: the Unified Ransomware Kill Chain. By the end of this ransomware book, you’ll be equipped with the skills you need to build an incident response strategy for all ransomware attacks.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Started with a Modern Ransomware Attack
5
Section 2: Know Your Adversary: How Ransomware Gangs Operate
9
Section 3: Practical Incident Response

Accessing credentials

As in most cases, ransomware affiliates want to encrypt as many hosts as possible, so they must be able to move laterally or at least run malicious code remotely. To do so silently and successfully, they prefer to obtain elevated credentials first, but, their main goal is to obtain the domain administrator account.

There are quite a few techniques that enable threat actors to obtain authentication material. Let's look at the most common ones.

Brute force (T1110)

As you may recall, RDP, VPN, and other external remote services are extremely common for human-operated ransomware attacks. Such services are poorly protected in many cases, so the initial access brokers or ransomware affiliates themselves may run successful brute-force attacks against them to gain access to valid accounts.

OS credential dumping (T1003)

Another very common technique is credential dumping. Despite the fact it's easily detectable, ransomware affiliates still use...