The latest report from BlackBerry revealed an initial access broker termed
"Zebra2104" that has links with three harmful cybercriminals groups, and few are
involved in phishing campaigns and ransomware attacks Research and Intelligent
team at Blackberry discovered that Zebra2104 gave entry points to ransomware
groups such as MountLocker, Phobos, and StrongPity APT.
The access was given to
various organizations in Australia and Turkey which fell victim to the attacks.
The StrongPity APT attacked Turkish firms in the healthcare sector, and also
targeted smaller enterprises. As per Blackberry, its research suggests an access
broker having a lot of manpower, or actors might've built large hidden traps on
the web.
The report also suggests that an inquiry confirmed that MountLocker
ransomware was working along with StrongPity, an APT group that dates back to
2012, a Turkish state-sponsored group (allegedly). As of now, it might be hard
to believe that criminal groups are sharing resources, but the experts have
found a common link, enabled by a fourth criminal group termed Zebra2104,
which the experts believe to be an Initial Access Broker (IAB). According to
experts, there is an abundance of hacking groups working together, more than
mentioned in this article.
The single-domain directed the experts to a path
where they discovered various ransomware attacks, and an APT C2 (command and
control). The path turned out to be an IAB--Zebra2104 infrastructure. IAB's
general gets access to the top bidders in dark web platforms on underground
forums. Following that, the winning bidder deploys ransomware or any other
malware in the target organization's systems, the campaign depends on the goals
of the attack.
"A few of the domains had been involved in a phishing campaign
that went after state government departments in Australia as well as real estate
companies there in September 2020. With the help of other Microsoft reports, the
researchers were able to trace the campaigns further to an indicator of
compromise of a MountLocker intrusion," reports ZD Net.