833-847-3280
Schedule a Call

Hacking: Phishing, Malware, Password Spraying – DHS warns U.S. about Hackers

Hacking

In late June of 2019, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) warned US companies of increased malicious cyber-activity, or hacking, from Iranian Hackers.

Consequently, DHS has urged US companies to do everything they can to protect against some of the hackers’ most common hacking practices.

These include data-wiping malware, password spraying, spear phishing, and credential stuffing.

 

What are the common hacking practices?

Data-wiping malware is just like it sounds. It deletes data on compromised systems. The purpose is usually to prevent forensic analysis.

In 2012, Iran utilized this malware scheme to attack major oil companies in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The companies temporarily forced to stop oil production. This triggered financial losses.

Password Spraying is an attack that mimics brute force attacks.

For example, the hacker will take a commonly used password (“password”) and see how many accounts they can access with it while coming through in the internet.

Spear phishing is a type of social engineering attack where the hacker will send a detailed specific email to someone in an organization attempting to gather information.

For example, an email that comes from the CEO to the head of HR asking for social security numbers.

Credential stuffing is simply a hacker taking known information like usernames and passwords that have been leaked on third-party sites.

They will use this information to gain access to accounts that are being targeting. This is considered targeting password reuse.

An example of this is people who use same password for multiple accounts such as Banking, email, Amazon, and Facebook.

 

What does this mean for the United States?

With the United States now working against Iran, it is likely that U.S. companies will now become targets. Iranian hackers have successfully gone after energy companies in the past.

Most importantly, MainNerve is sure all U.S. industries will be easy targets.  Please take these warnings very seriously. Not only are we attempting to keep U.S., Chinese, and Russian hackers at bay, now we have gained notoriety for Iranian hackers to be placed in the queue.

In conclusion, if you would like to see how your employees react to spear phishing in a controlled way, you can purchase one of our social engineering tests.

We can provide information on who might need a little extra training.

Latest Posts

A transparent image used for creating empty spaces in columns
Your firewall is important, but it’s just not enough. For years, the security model was simple: build a strong perimeter around your network. Put up a firewall, lock down the border, and keep the bad guys outside. Everything inside the perimeter was trusted, and everything…
A transparent image used for creating empty spaces in columns
Sarah walked into the conference room already skeptical. As CFO of a mid-sized manufacturing company, she’d approved the $6,000 penetration test because the CISO insisted it was necessary for their cyber insurance renewal. Fine. But now she was being pulled into a “findings debrief” that…
A transparent image used for creating empty spaces in columns
Small business cybersecurity advice usually sounds like this: “Implement a comprehensive security program with layered defenses, regular risk assessments, security awareness training, incident response planning, and continuous monitoring.” Great. That’ll take six months, cost $50,000, and require expertise you don’t have. Meanwhile, attackers are targeting…
A transparent image used for creating empty spaces in columns
Most small and medium-sized businesses don’t have a Chief Information Security Officer. They can’t justify the $150K-$250K salary for a full-time security executive when they’re a 10 or 50-person company still figuring out basic growth. But cybersecurity risk doesn’t care about your company’s size. Ransomware…
A transparent image used for creating empty spaces in columns
A competitor recently claimed on a webinar that any penetration test under $5,000 is “half-assed.” Let’s unpack why that statement is completely wrong and reveal a fundamental misunderstanding of the small and medium business market.   The Enterprise Mindset Problem Here’s what’s actually happening: many…
A transparent image used for creating empty spaces in columns
Something needs to be said about how cybersecurity vendors sell their products. The industry has a sales problem. It’s annoying, and it’s actively costing vendors business. Customers are making purchasing decisions based not on product quality or features, but on which sales team is least…
contact

Our Team

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name(Required)
quick links to

Our Services

On Load
Where? .serviceMM
What? Mega Menu: Services