Under Active Attack: Ivanti EPMM Zero-Day Exploited in the Wild via Harvested Admin Credentials
The post Under Active Attack: Ivanti EPMM Zero-Day Exploited in the Wild via Harvested Admin Credentials appeared first on Daily CyberSecurity.
In 2026, AI agents are being widely used. OpenClaw has become a high-frequency efficiency improvement tool for enterprises and developers with its autonomous decision-making and local execution capabilities. However, several authoritative security agencies have recently issued warnings: OpenClaw is facing multi-dimensional security threats from supply chain poisoning to remote control. When internal employees privately deploy […]
The post NSFOCUS Threat Intelligence: Building an OpenClaw Defense System with Multiple-Layer Protection appeared first on NSFOCUS, Inc., a global network and cyber security leader, protects enterprises and carriers from advanced cyber attacks..
The post NSFOCUS Threat Intelligence: Building an OpenClaw Defense System with Multiple-Layer Protection appeared first on Security Boulevard.

Microsoft today released updates to fix more than 50 security holes in its Windows operating systems and other software, including patches for a whopping six “zero-day” vulnerabilities that attackers are already exploiting in the wild.
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Zero-day #1 this month is CVE-2026-21510, a security feature bypass vulnerability in Windows Shell wherein a single click on a malicious link can quietly bypass Windows protections and run attacker-controlled content without warning or consent dialogs. CVE-2026-21510 affects all currently supported versions of Windows.
The zero-day flaw CVE-2026-21513 is a security bypass bug targeting MSHTML, the proprietary engine of the default Web browser in Windows. CVE-2026-21514 is a related security feature bypass in Microsoft Word.
The zero-day CVE-2026-21533 allows local attackers to elevate their user privileges to “SYSTEM” level access in Windows Remote Desktop Services. CVE-2026-21519 is a zero-day elevation of privilege flaw in the Desktop Window Manager (DWM), a key component of Windows that organizes windows on a user’s screen. Microsoft fixed a different zero-day in DWM just last month.
The sixth zero-day is CVE-2026-21525, a potentially disruptive denial-of-service vulnerability in the Windows Remote Access Connection Manager, the service responsible for maintaining VPN connections to corporate networks.
Chris Goettl at Ivanti reminds us Microsoft has issued several out-of-band security updates since January’s Patch Tuesday. On January 17, Microsoft pushed a fix that resolved a credential prompt failure when attempting remote desktop or remote application connections. On January 26, Microsoft patched a zero-day security feature bypass vulnerability (CVE-2026-21509) in Microsoft Office.
Kev Breen at Immersive notes that this month’s Patch Tuesday includes several fixes for remote code execution vulnerabilities affecting GitHub Copilot and multiple integrated development environments (IDEs), including VS Code, Visual Studio, and JetBrains products. The relevant CVEs are CVE-2026-21516, CVE-2026-21523, and CVE-2026-21256.
Breen said the AI vulnerabilities Microsoft patched this month stem from a command injection flaw that can be triggered through prompt injection, or tricking the AI agent into doing something it shouldn’t — like executing malicious code or commands.
“Developers are high-value targets for threat actors, as they often have access to sensitive data such as API keys and secrets that function as keys to critical infrastructure, including privileged AWS or Azure API keys,” Breen said. “When organizations enable developers and automation pipelines to use LLMs and agentic AI, a malicious prompt can have significant impact. This does not mean organizations should stop using AI. It does mean developers should understand the risks, teams should clearly identify which systems and workflows have access to AI agents, and least-privilege principles should be applied to limit the blast radius if developer secrets are compromised.”
The SANS Internet Storm Center has a clickable breakdown of each individual fix this month from Microsoft, indexed by severity and CVSS score. Enterprise Windows admins involved in testing patches before rolling them out should keep an eye on askwoody.com, which often has the skinny on wonky updates. Please don’t neglect to back up your data if it has been a while since you’ve done that, and feel free to sound off in the comments if you experience problems installing any of these fixes.

We discuss widespread exploitation of Ivanti EPMM zero-day vulns CVE-2026-1281 and CVE-2026-1340. Attackers are deploying web shells and backdoors.
The post Critical Vulnerabilities in Ivanti EPMM Exploited appeared first on Unit 42.


Microsoft today issued patches to plug at least 113 security holes in its various Windows operating systems and supported software. Eight of the vulnerabilities earned Microsoft’s most-dire “critical” rating, and the company warns that attackers are already exploiting one of the bugs fixed today.
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January’s Microsoft zero-day flaw — CVE-2026-20805 — is brought to us by a flaw in the Desktop Window Manager (DWM), a key component of Windows that organizes windows on a user’s screen. Kev Breen, senior director of cyber threat research at Immersive, said despite awarding CVE-2026-20805 a middling CVSS score of 5.5, Microsoft has confirmed its active exploitation in the wild, indicating that threat actors are already leveraging this flaw against organizations.
Breen said vulnerabilities of this kind are commonly used to undermine Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR), a core operating system security control designed to protect against buffer overflows and other memory-manipulation exploits.
“By revealing where code resides in memory, this vulnerability can be chained with a separate code execution flaw, transforming a complex and unreliable exploit into a practical and repeatable attack,” Breen said. “Microsoft has not disclosed which additional components may be involved in such an exploit chain, significantly limiting defenders’ ability to proactively threat hunt for related activity. As a result, rapid patching currently remains the only effective mitigation.”
Chris Goettl, vice president of product management at Ivanti, observed that CVE-2026-20805 affects all currently supported and extended security update supported versions of the Windows OS. Goettl said it would be a mistake to dismiss the severity of this flaw based on its “Important” rating and relatively low CVSS score.
“A risk-based prioritization methodology warrants treating this vulnerability as a higher severity than the vendor rating or CVSS score assigned,” he said.
Among the critical flaws patched this month are two Microsoft Office remote code execution bugs (CVE-2026-20952 and CVE-2026-20953) that can be triggered just by viewing a booby-trapped message in the Preview Pane.
Our October 2025 Patch Tuesday “End of 10” roundup noted that Microsoft had removed a modem driver from all versions after it was discovered that hackers were abusing a vulnerability in it to hack into systems. Adam Barnett at Rapid7 said Microsoft today removed another couple of modem drivers from Windows for a broadly similar reason: Microsoft is aware of functional exploit code for an elevation of privilege vulnerability in a very similar modem driver, tracked as CVE-2023-31096.
“That’s not a typo; this vulnerability was originally published via MITRE over two years ago, along with a credible public writeup by the original researcher,” Barnett said. “Today’s Windows patches remove agrsm64.sys and agrsm.sys. All three modem drivers were originally developed by the same now-defunct third party, and have been included in Windows for decades. These driver removals will pass unnoticed for most people, but you might find active modems still in a few contexts, including some industrial control systems.”
According to Barnett, two questions remain: How many more legacy modem drivers are still present on a fully-patched Windows asset; and how many more elevation-to-SYSTEM vulnerabilities will emerge from them before Microsoft cuts off attackers who have been enjoying “living off the land[line] by exploiting an entire class of dusty old device drivers?”
“Although Microsoft doesn’t claim evidence of exploitation for CVE-2023-31096, the relevant 2023 write-up and the 2025 removal of the other Agere modem driver have provided two strong signals for anyone looking for Windows exploits in the meantime,” Barnett said. “In case you were wondering, there is no need to have a modem connected; the mere presence of the driver is enough to render an asset vulnerable.”
Immersive, Ivanti and Rapid7 all called attention to CVE-2026-21265, which is a critical Security Feature Bypass vulnerability affecting Windows Secure Boot. This security feature is designed to protect against threats like rootkits and bootkits, and it relies on a set of certificates that are set to expire in June 2026 and October 2026. Once these 2011 certificates expire, Windows devices that do not have the new 2023 certificates can no longer receive Secure Boot security fixes.
Barnett cautioned that when updating the bootloader and BIOS, it is essential to prepare fully ahead of time for the specific OS and BIOS combination you’re working with, since incorrect remediation steps can lead to an unbootable system.
“Fifteen years is a very long time indeed in information security, but the clock is running out on the Microsoft root certificates which have been signing essentially everything in the Secure Boot ecosystem since the days of Stuxnet,” Barnett said. “Microsoft issued replacement certificates back in 2023, alongside CVE-2023-24932 which covered relevant Windows patches as well as subsequent steps to remediate the Secure Boot bypass exploited by the BlackLotus bootkit.”
Goettl noted that Mozilla has released updates for Firefox and Firefox ESR resolving a total of 34 vulnerabilities, two of which are suspected to be exploited (CVE-2026-0891 and CVE-2026-0892). Both are resolved in Firefox 147 (MFSA2026-01) and CVE-2026-0891 is resolved in Firefox ESR 140.7 (MFSA2026-03).
“Expect Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge updates this week in addition to a high severity vulnerability in Chrome WebView that was resolved in the January 6 Chrome update (CVE-2026-0628),” Goettl said.
As ever, the SANS Internet Storm Center has a per-patch breakdown by severity and urgency. Windows admins should keep an eye on askwoody.com for any news about patches that don’t quite play nice with everything. If you experience any issues related installing January’s patches, please drop a line in the comments below.

Microsoft this week pushed security updates to fix more than 60 vulnerabilities in its Windows operating systems and supported software, including at least one zero-day bug that is already being exploited. Microsoft also fixed a glitch that prevented some Windows 10 users from taking advantage of an extra year of security updates, which is nice because the zero-day flaw and other critical weaknesses affect all versions of Windows, including Windows 10.
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Affected products this month include the Windows OS, Office, SharePoint, SQL Server, Visual Studio, GitHub Copilot, and Azure Monitor Agent. The zero-day threat concerns a memory corruption bug deep in the Windows innards called CVE-2025-62215. Despite the flaw’s zero-day status, Microsoft has assigned it an “important” rating rather than critical, because exploiting it requires an attacker to already have access to the target’s device.
“These types of vulnerabilities are often exploited as part of a more complex attack chain,” said Johannes Ullrich, dean of research for the SANS Technology Institute. “However, exploiting this specific vulnerability is likely to be relatively straightforward, given the existence of prior similar vulnerabilities.”
Ben McCarthy, lead cybersecurity engineer at Immersive, called attention to CVE-2025-60274, a critical weakness in a core Windows graphic component (GDI+) that is used by a massive number of applications, including Microsoft Office, web servers processing images, and countless third-party applications.
“The patch for this should be an organization’s highest priority,” McCarthy said. “While Microsoft assesses this as ‘Exploitation Less Likely,’ a 9.8-rated flaw in a ubiquitous library like GDI+ is a critical risk.”
Microsoft patched a critical bug in Office — CVE-2025-62199 — that can lead to remote code execution on a Windows system. Alex Vovk, CEO and co-founder of Action1, said this Office flaw is a high priority because it is low complexity, needs no privileges, and can be exploited just by viewing a booby-trapped message in the Preview Pane.
Many of the more concerning bugs addressed by Microsoft this month affect Windows 10, an operating system that Microsoft officially ceased supporting with patches last month. As that deadline rolled around, however, Microsoft began offering Windows 10 users an extra year of free updates, so long as they register their PC to an active Microsoft account.
Judging from the comments on last month’s Patch Tuesday post, that registration worked for a lot of Windows 10 users, but some readers reported the option for an extra year of updates was never offered. Nick Carroll, cyber incident response manager at Nightwing, notes that Microsoft has recently released an out-of-band update to address issues when trying to enroll in the Windows 10 Consumer Extended Security Update program.
“If you plan to participate in the program, make sure you update and install KB5071959 to address the enrollment issues,” Carroll said. “After that is installed, users should be able to install other updates such as today’s KB5068781 which is the latest update to Windows 10.”
Chris Goettl at Ivanti notes that in addition to Microsoft updates today, third-party updates from Adobe and Mozilla have already been released. Also, an update for Google Chrome is expected soon, which means Edge will also be in need of its own update.
The SANS Internet Storm Center has a clickable breakdown of each individual fix from Microsoft, indexed by severity and CVSS score. Enterprise Windows admins involved in testing patches before rolling them out should keep an eye on askwoody.com, which often has the skinny on any updates gone awry.
As always, please don’t neglect to back up your data (if not your entire system) at regular intervals, and feel free to sound off in the comments if you experience problems installing any of these fixes.
[Author’s note: This post was intended to appear on the homepage on Tuesday, Nov. 11. I’m still not sure how it happened, but somehow this story failed to publish that day. My apologies for the oversight.]

On July 22, 2025, the European police agency Europol said a long-running investigation led by the French Police resulted in the arrest of a 38-year-old administrator of XSS, a Russian-language cybercrime forum with more than 50,000 members. The action has triggered an ongoing frenzy of speculation and panic among XSS denizens about the identity of the unnamed suspect, but the consensus is that he is a pivotal figure in the crime forum scene who goes by the hacker handle “Toha.” Here’s a deep dive on what’s knowable about Toha, and a short stab at who got nabbed.
An unnamed 38-year-old man was arrested in Kiev last month on suspicion of administering the cybercrime forum XSS. Image: ssu.gov.ua.
Europol did not name the accused, but published partially obscured photos of him from the raid on his residence in Kiev. The police agency said the suspect acted as a trusted third party — arbitrating disputes between criminals — and guaranteeing the security of transactions on XSS. A statement from Ukraine’s SBU security service said XSS counted among its members many cybercriminals from various ransomware groups, including REvil, LockBit, Conti, and Qiliin.
Since the Europol announcement, the XSS forum resurfaced at a new address on the deep web (reachable only via the anonymity network Tor). But from reviewing the recent posts, there appears to be little consensus among longtime members about the identity of the now-detained XSS administrator.
The most frequent comment regarding the arrest was a message of solidarity and support for Toha, the handle chosen by the longtime administrator of XSS and several other major Russian forums. Toha’s accounts on other forums have been silent since the raid.
Europol said the suspect has enjoyed a nearly 20-year career in cybercrime, which roughly lines up with Toha’s history. In 2005, Toha was a founding member of the Russian-speaking forum Hack-All. That is, until it got massively hacked a few months after its debut. In 2006, Toha rebranded the forum to exploit[.]in, which would go on to draw tens of thousands of members, including an eventual Who’s-Who of wanted cybercriminals.
Toha announced in 2018 that he was selling the Exploit forum, prompting rampant speculation on the forums that the buyer was secretly a Russian or Ukrainian government entity or front person. However, those suspicions were unsupported by evidence, and Toha vehemently denied the forum had been given over to authorities.
One of the oldest Russian-language cybercrime forums was DaMaGeLaB, which operated from 2004 to 2017, when its administrator “Ar3s” was arrested. In 2018, a partial backup of the DaMaGeLaB forum was reincarnated as xss[.]is, with Toha as its stated administrator.
Clues about Toha’s early presence on the Internet — from ~2004 to 2010 — are available in the archives of Intel 471, a cyber intelligence firm that tracks forum activity. Intel 471 shows Toha used the same email address across multiple forum accounts, including at Exploit, Antichat, Carder[.]su and inattack[.]ru.
DomainTools.com finds Toha’s email address — toschka2003@yandex.ru — was used to register at least a dozen domain names — most of them from the mid- to late 2000s. Apart from exploit[.]in and a domain called ixyq[.]com, the other domains registered to that email address end in .ua, the top-level domain for Ukraine (e.g. deleted.org[.]ua, lj.com[.]ua, and blogspot.org[.]ua).
A 2008 snapshot of a domain registered to toschka2003@yandex.ru and to Anton Medvedovsky in Kiev. Note the message at the bottom left, “Protected by Exploit,in.” Image: archive.org.
Nearly all of the domains registered to toschka2003@yandex.ru contain the name Anton Medvedovskiy in the registration records, except for the aforementioned ixyq[.]com, which is registered to the name Yuriy Avdeev in Moscow.
This Avdeev surname came up in a lengthy conversation with Lockbitsupp, the leader of the rapacious and destructive ransomware affiliate group Lockbit. The conversation took place in February 2024, when Lockbitsupp asked for help identifying Toha’s real-life identity.
In early 2024, the leader of the Lockbit ransomware group — Lockbitsupp — asked for help investigating the identity of the XSS administrator Toha, which he claimed was a Russian man named Anton Avdeev.
Lockbitsupp didn’t share why he wanted Toha’s details, but he maintained that Toha’s real name was Anton Avdeev. I declined to help Lockbitsupp in whatever revenge he was planning on Toha, but his question made me curious to look deeper.
It appears Lockbitsupp’s query was based on a now-deleted Twitter post from 2022, when a user by the name “3xp0rt” asserted that Toha was a Russian man named Anton Viktorovich Avdeev, born October 27, 1983.
Searching the web for Toha’s email address toschka2003@yandex.ru reveals a 2010 sales thread on the forum bmwclub.ru where a user named Honeypo was selling a 2007 BMW X5. The ad listed the contact person as Anton Avdeev and gave the contact phone number 9588693.
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A search on the phone number 9588693 in the breach tracking service Constella Intelligence finds plenty of official Russian government records with this number, date of birth and the name Anton Viktorovich Avdeev. For example, hacked Russian government records show this person has a Russian tax ID and SIN (Social Security number), and that they were flagged for traffic violations on several occasions by Moscow police; in 2004, 2006, 2009, and 2014.
Astute readers may have noticed by now that the ages of Mr. Avdeev (41) and the XSS admin arrested this month (38) are a bit off. This would seem to suggest that the person arrested is someone other than Mr. Avdeev, who did not respond to requests for comment.
For further insight on this question, KrebsOnSecurity sought comments from Sergeii Vovnenko, a former cybercriminal from Ukraine who now works at the security startup paranoidlab.com. I reached out to Vovnenko because for several years beginning around 2010 he was the owner and operator of thesecure[.]biz, an encrypted “Jabber” instant messaging server that Europol said was operated by the suspect arrested in Kiev. Thesecure[.]biz grew quite popular among many of the top Russian-speaking cybercriminals because it scrupulously kept few records of its users’ activity, and its administrator was always a trusted member of the community.
The reason I know this historic tidbit is that in 2013, Vovnenko — using the hacker nicknames “Fly,” and “Flycracker” — hatched a plan to have a gram of heroin purchased off of the Silk Road darknet market and shipped to our home in Northern Virginia. The scheme was to spoof a call from one of our neighbors to the local police, saying this guy Krebs down the street was a druggie who was having narcotics delivered to his home.
I happened to be lurking on Flycracker’s private cybercrime forum when his heroin-framing plan was carried out, and called the police myself before the smack eventually arrived in the U.S. Mail. Vovnenko was later arrested for unrelated cybercrime activities, extradited to the United States, convicted, and deported after a 16-month stay in the U.S. prison system [on several occasions, he has expressed heartfelt apologies for the incident, and we have since buried the hatchet].
Vovnenko said he purchased a device for cloning credit cards from Toha in 2009, and that Toha shipped the item from Russia. Vovnenko explained that he (Flycracker) was the owner and operator of thesecure[.]biz from 2010 until his arrest in 2014.
Vovnenko believes thesecure[.]biz was stolen while he was in jail, either by Toha and/or an XSS administrator who went by the nicknames N0klos and Sonic.
“When I was in jail, [the] admin of xss.is stole that domain, or probably N0klos bought XSS from Toha or vice versa,” Vovnenko said of the Jabber domain. “Nobody from [the forums] spoke with me after my jailtime, so I can only guess what really happened.”
N0klos was the owner and administrator of an early Russian-language cybercrime forum known as Darklife[.]ws. However, N0kl0s also appears to be a lifelong Russian resident, and in any case seems to have vanished from Russian cybercrime forums several years ago.
Asked whether he believes Toha was the XSS administrator who was arrested this month in Ukraine, Vovnenko maintained that Toha is Russian, and that “the French cops took the wrong guy.”
So who did the Ukrainian police arrest in response to the investigation by the French authorities? It seems plausible that the BMW ad invoking Toha’s email address and the name and phone number of a Russian citizen was simply misdirection on Toha’s part — intended to confuse and throw off investigators. Perhaps this even explains the Avdeev surname surfacing in the registration records from one of Toha’s domains.
But sometimes the simplest answer is the correct one. “Toha” is a common Slavic nickname for someone with the first name “Anton,” and that matches the name in the registration records for more than a dozen domains tied to Toha’s toschka2003@yandex.ru email address: Anton Medvedovskiy.
Constella Intelligence finds there is an Anton Gannadievich Medvedovskiy living in Kiev who will be 38 years old in December. This individual owns the email address itsmail@i.ua, as well an an Airbnb account featuring a profile photo of a man with roughly the same hairline as the suspect in the blurred photos released by the Ukrainian police. Mr. Medvedovskiy did not respond to a request for comment.
My take on the takedown is that the Ukrainian authorities likely arrested Medvedovskiy. Toha shared on DaMaGeLab in 2005 that he had recently finished the 11th grade and was studying at a university — a time when Mevedovskiy would have been around 18 years old. On Dec. 11, 2006, fellow Exploit members wished Toha a happy birthday. Records exposed in a 2022 hack at the Ukrainian public services portal diia.gov.ua show that Mr. Medvedovskiy’s birthday is Dec. 11, 1987.
The law enforcement action and resulting confusion about the identity of the detained has thrown the Russian cybercrime forum scene into disarray in recent weeks, with lengthy and heated arguments about XSS’s future spooling out across the forums.
XSS relaunched on a new Tor address shortly after the authorities plastered their seizure notice on the forum’s homepage, but all of the trusted moderators from the old forum were dismissed without explanation. Existing members saw their forum account balances drop to zero, and were asked to plunk down a deposit to register at the new forum. The new XSS “admin” said they were in contact with the previous owners and that the changes were to help rebuild security and trust within the community.
However, the new admin’s assurances appear to have done little to assuage the worst fears of the forum’s erstwhile members, most of whom seem to be keeping their distance from the relaunched site for now.
Indeed, if there is one common understanding amid all of these discussions about the seizure of XSS, it is that Ukrainian and French authorities now have several years worth of private messages between XSS forum users, as well as contact rosters and other user data linked to the seized Jabber server.
“The myth of the ‘trusted person’ is shattered,” the user “GordonBellford” cautioned on Aug. 3 in an Exploit forum thread about the XSS admin arrest. “The forum is run by strangers. They got everything. Two years of Jabber server logs. Full backup and forum database.”
GordonBellford continued:
And the scariest thing is: this data array is not just an archive. It is material for analysis that has ALREADY BEEN DONE . With the help of modern tools, they see everything:
Graphs of your contacts and activity.
Relationships between nicknames, emails, password hashes and Jabber ID.
Timestamps, IP addresses and digital fingerprints.
Your unique writing style, phraseology, punctuation, consistency of grammatical errors, and even typical typos that will link your accounts on different platforms.They are not looking for a needle in a haystack. They simply sifted the haystack through the AI sieve and got ready-made dossiers.

The scourge of ransomware continues primarily because of three main reasons: Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS), cryptocurrency, and safe havens.
With these three challenges in mind, law enforcement and governments have a very difficult job to do when it comes to fighting ransomware but fight it they must. In this blog we shall recall what counter-ransomware activities took place in 2024, analyse their effectiveness, and assess how the landscape shall evolve as a result.
A podcast version of this blog is also available here.
During 2024, there were significant disruption operations by
law enforcement and financial authorities targeting individuals behind
ransomware campaigns (see the Table below). The main focus of 2024 for Western
law enforcement was squarely on the LockBit RaaS and its affiliates as it was
the largest and highest earning ransomware operation to date.
Several key players of the ransomware ecosystem were
arrested, including the main developer of LockBit ransomware. Interestingly,
Russian law enforcement also decided to arrest ransomware threat actors located
in Moscow and Kaliningrad as well.
| Month | Group(s) | Law Enforcement Activity |
|---|---|---|
| February 2024 | SugarLocker, REvil | Russian authorities have identified and arrested three alleged members in Moscow of a ransomware gang called SugarLocker. |
| February 2024 | LockBit | The LockBit leak site was seized. Two LockBit affiliates were arrested in Poland and Ukraine. Up to 28 servers belonging to LockBit were taken down. |
| February 2024 | LockBit | Two Russian nationals, Ivan Kondratiev and Artur Sungatov, were sanctioned by the US Treasury for being affiliates of LockBit, among other RaaS. |
| May 2024 | LockBit | Dmitry Khoroshev, the administrator and developer of LockBit was sanctioned by the US Treasury. |
| May 2024 | IcedID, SystemBC, Pikabot, Smokeloader, Bumblebee, TrickBot | European police took down malicious spam botnets that support ransomware campaigns. This resulted in 4 arrests (1 in Armenia and 3 in Ukraine), over 100 servers and 2,000 domains being seized. One of the main suspects earned €69 million by renting out infrastructure sites to deploy ransomware. |
| June 2024 | Conti, LockBit | A Ukrainian national was arrested for supporting Conti and LockBit ransomware attacks as a crypter developer. |
| August 2024 | Reveton, RansomCartel | Maksim Silnikau, a Belarusian national, was arrested in Spain for running Reveton and RansomCartel. |
| August 2024 | Karakurt, Conti | Deniss Zolotarjovs, a Latvian national was arrested and extradited to the US from Georgia for running the Karakurt data extortion gang linked to Conti. |
| October 2024 | Evil Corp, LockBit | The UK, alongside the US and Australia, has sanctioned 16 members of Evil Corp, including Aleksandr Ryzhenkov, Viktor Yakubets, and Eduard Benderskiy. |
| November 2024 | Phobos | Evgenii Ptitsyn, a Russian national, was arrested and extradited to the US from South Korea for running the Phobos ransomware gang. |
| December 2024 | LockBit | Rostislav Panev, a dual Russian and Israeli national, was arrested in Israel for developing LockBit ransomware. |
| December 2024 | LockBit, Babuk, Hive | Mikhail “Wazawaka” Matveev was arrested in Russia for violating domestic laws against the creation and use of malware. He was fined and had his cryptocurrency seized and is awaiting trial. |
The ransomware ecosystem has fragmented due to the law enforcement disruptions of the largest players, such as
ALPHV/BlackCat and LockBit. In the case of ALPHV/BlackCat, the operators staged
a law enforcement takedown as they put up a fake seizure notice as part of
an exit scam in March 2024 after the attack on UnitedHealth.
Following these disruptions, some affiliates have migrated
to less effective strains or launched their own strains. This includes
Akira and RansomHub at the top of the list as well as Hunters International and
PLAY.
During 2024, law enforcement seized funds from and
sanctioned a number of cryptocurrency exchanges and individuals running payment
processors using cryptocurrency (see the Table below).
One of the most interesting disclosures this year came from
the UK National Crime Agency (NCA) around Operation Destablise. The NCA linked
payments to ransomware gangs to money laundering networks used by Russian
oligarchs to covertly purchase property and Russia Today, the state-run media
organization, to covertly fund pro-Russia foreign entities.
Another notable investigation in 2024 was when the US
Treasury sanctioned more Russian cryptocurrency exchanges, such as PM2BTC and
Cryptex, that led to money launderers that facilitate the cashing out of ransom
payments being arrested by Russian law enforcement.
| Month | Exchange(s) | Law Enforcement Activity |
|---|---|---|
| August 2024 | Cryptonator | The US Justice Department indicted Russian national Roman Pikulev and Cryptonator, which processed a total of $1.4 billion in transactions, of which $8 million were ransom payments. Cryptonator also has ties to other sanctioned entities including Blender, Hydra Market, Bitzlato, and Garantex, among others. |
| September 2024 | PM2BTC, Cryptex, UAPS | FinCEN identified PM2BTC as being of “primary money laundering concern” in connection with Russian illicit finance. This was alongside Cryptex and Sergey Sergeevich Ivanov, a Russian national, who is associated with UAPS and PinPays, as well as Genesis Market. Cryptex also facilitated more than $115 million of proceeds from ransomware payments. |
| September 2024 | 47 exchanges | In Operation Final Exchange, German federal police (BKA) shut down 47 cryptocurrency exchange services that ransomware gangs use that operated without requiring registration or identity verification. |
| October 2024 | Cryptex, UAPS | Russian authorities have arrested nearly 100 suspected cybercriminals linked to the anonymous payment system UAPS and the cryptocurrency exchange Cryptex. |
| November 2024 | Smart, TGR Group | The NCA uncovered a Russian money-laundering network operated by two companies called Smart and TGR Group as part of Operation Destabilise that involved UK-based cash-to-crypto networks that laundered Ryuk ransom payments as well as the money of Russian oligarchs and Russia Today. |
While ransomware is a global problem, there are only a few
countries that are to blame for this rapid expansion of the ransomware
ecosystem. The state that is blamed the most for preventing many ransomware operators
from facing justice is Russia. There are explicit rules posted to
Russian-speaking cybercrime forums that state as long as members avoid
targeting Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), they are
free to operate.
The Russian ransomware safe haven theory was further proven
following sanctions levied against Evil Corp by the UK, US, and Australia. One
of the sanctioned men connected to Evil Corp was Eduard
Benderskiy, a former Russian federal security service (FSB) official.
Benderskiy is reportedly
the father-in-law of Maksim Yakubets, the leader of Evil Corp, an organized cybercrime
group responsible for multiple
ransomware strains including BitPaymer, WastedLocker, Hades, PhoenixLocker,
and MacawLocker. In total, Evil Corp has reportedly extorted at least $300
million from victims globally, according to the UK NCA. It is now clear that
Evil Corp has protection from a highly connected Russian FSB official who has
also been involved
in multiple overseas assassinations on behalf of the Kremlin, according to
Bellingcat investigators.
While a number of ransomware operators were arrested in 2024
and some were extradited to the US, the work done by law enforcement
specializing in cybercrime was put in the spotlight during the August
2024 prisoner swap. Multiple countries decided to release cybercriminals,
spies and an assassin as part of a historic
prisoner exchange with Russia at an airport in Ankara, Turkey. The US negotiated
the release of 16 people from Russia, including five Germans as well as seven
Russian citizens who were political prisoners in their own country.
Notably, from a cybercrime intelligence perspective, the Russian
nationals released from the West included the infamous cybercriminals Roman
Seleznev and Vladislav Klyushin. The latter, Klyushin, was sentenced
in 2023 to nine years in US prison after he was caught in a $93 million stock
market cheating scheme that involved hacking into US companies for insider
knowledge. The other cybercriminal, Seleznev, was sentenced
to 27 years in prison in 2017 for stealing and selling millions of credit card
numbers from 500 businesses using point-of-sale (POS) malware and causing more
than $169 million in damage to small businesses and financial institutions,
including those in the US.
In 2024, we saw several more Russian nationals get
extradited to the US after being arrested by law enforcement in the country
they were residing in. This includes the Phobos operator living in South Korea
and the LockBit developer living in Israel. This follows others arrested in
previous years such as a TrickBot developer arrested
in South Korea as well as the two LockBit affiliates extradited
to the US. There is a potential that these Russian nationals involved in
ransomware could be used in prisoner exchanges in the future.
Further, another curious trend in 2024 was that some Russians
inside Russia, which is firmly considered a safe haven for ransomware gang, did
get arrested. This includes the SugarLocker operators arrested in Moscow and
the LockBit affiliate Wazawaka who was arrested in Kaliningrad. This is
alongside the money launderers arrested around Russia linked to the Cryptex
exchange.
The arrests of Russian nationals in Russia for ransomware
activities appear to be more symbolic than a true crackdown on this type of
activity. This is because there are several dozen Russian-speaking ransomware
gangs that continue to operate, as well as a plethora of other types of cybercrime
in the Russian-speaking underground.
In 2024, there was lots of significant action by law
enforcement to shake up the ransomware economy. One of the main successes of the
notable Operation Cronos action taken against LockBit was the sowing of
distrust and disharmony in the ransomware ecosystem. Despite the admins of
LockBit trying to recover, their reputation and army of affiliates have been
smashed.
Many of Russian law enforcement activities could all be
related to the costs of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Russian authorities seizing funds of the illicit cryptocurrency exchanges could be to pay for
the war in Ukraine and they could be recruiting arresting cybercriminals for offensive
cyber operations related to the war in Ukraine. The true motivations of Russian law enforcement arresting these specific ransomware operators but allowing others to operate are unclear. The cybercriminals could also simply have not paid their protection money or lack connections in the FSB like Evil Corp has.
Due to the fall of LockBit and ALPHV/BlackCat in 2024, there has been a rise of other ransomware groups like RansomHub and Akira to fill the vacuum. However, the rate of attacks by these emerging groups is still noticeably lower than when LockBit was operating at full force. This should be perceived as a success for law enforcement operations in 2024 due to the overall number of ransomware attacks lowering, which we should all be thankful for.