'Power, influence, notoriety': The Gen-Z hackers who struck MGM, Caesars
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[September 22, 2023]
By Zeba Siddiqui and Raphael Satter
SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - About a year ago, the U.S. security
firm Palo Alto Networks began to hear from a flurry of companies that
had been hacked in ways that weren't the norm for cybercriminals.
Native English-speaking hackers would call up a target company’s
information technology helpdesk posing as an employee, and seek login
details by pretending to have lost theirs. They had all the employee
information needed to sound convincing. And once they got access, they’d
quickly find their way into the company's most sensitive repositories to
steal that data for extortion.
Ransomware attacks are not new, but this group was extraordinarily
skilled at social engineering and bypassing multi-factor authentication,
said Wendi Whitmore, senior vice president for the security firm Palo
Alto Networks' Unit 42 threat intelligence team, which has responded to
several intrusions tied to the group.
"They are much more sophisticated than many cybercriminal actors. They
appear to be disciplined and organized in their attacks," she said. "And
that's something we typically see more frequently with nation-state
actors, versus cyber criminals."
Known in the security industry variously as Scattered Spider, Muddled
Libra, and UNC3944, these hackers were thrust into the limelight earlier
this month for breaching the systems of two of the world's largest
gambling companies - MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment Ltd.
Behind the scenes, it has hit many more companies, according to analysts
tracking the intrusions - and cybersecurity specialists expect the
attacks to continue.
The FBI is investigating the MGM and Caesars breaches, and the companies
did not comment on who may be behind them.
From Canada to Japan, the security firm CrowdStrike has tracked 52
attacks globally by the group since March 2022, most of them in the
United States, said Adam Meyers, senior vice president of threat
intelligence at the company. Google-owned intelligence firm Mandiant,
has logged more than 100 intrusions by it in the last two years.
Nearly every industry, from telecommunications to finance, hospitality,
and media, has been hit. Reuters was not able to determine how much
money the hackers may have extorted.
But it's not just the scale or the breadth of attacks that make this
group stand out. They're extremely good at what they do and "ruthless"
in their interactions with victims, said Kevin Mandia, Mandiant's
founder.
The speed at which they breach and exfiltrate data from company systems
can overwhelm security response teams, and they have left threatening
notes for staff of victim organizations on their systems, and contacted
them by text and email in the past, Mandiant found.
In some cases - Mandia did not say which ones - hackers tied to
Scattered Spider placed bogus emergency calls to summon heavily armed
police units to the homes of executives of targeted companies.
The technique, called SWATing, "is something that’s utterly dreadful to
live through as a victim," he said. "I don’t even think these intrusions
are about money. I think they’re about power, influence and notoriety.
That makes it harder to respond to."
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Caesars Palace Las Vegas Hotel and Casino is seen on the Las Vegas
Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. February 26, 2018. Picture taken
February 26, 2018. REUTERS/Darrin Zammit Lupi
Reuters couldn't immediately reach the hacking group for comment.
17-22 YEAR OLDS
There's little detail on Scattered Spider's location or identity.
Based on the criminals’ chats with victims and clues gleaned from
breach investigations, CrowdStrike's Meyers said they are largely
17-22 years-olds. Mandiant estimates they’re mainly from Western
countries, but it's unclear how many people are involved.
Before calling helpdesks, the hackers acquire employee information
including passwords by social engineering, especially 'SIM swapping'
- a technique where they trick a telecom company's customer service
representative to reassign a specific phone number from one device
to another, analysts say.
They also appear to make the effort to study how large organizations
work, including their vendors and contractors, to find individuals
with privileged access they can target, according to analysts.
That’s something David Bradbury, chief security officer of the
identity management firm Okta, saw first-hand last month, when he
discovered multiple Okta customers – including MGM – breached by
Scattered Spider. Okta provides identity services such as
multi-factor authentication used to help users securely access
online applications and websites.
"The threat actors have clearly taken our courses that we provide
online, they've clearly studied our product and how it works,"
Bradbury said. "This is stuff we haven't seen before."
A larger group named ALPHV said last week it was behind the MGM
hack, and analysts believe it provided the software and attack tools
for the operation to be carried out by Scattered Spider.
Such collaborations are typical for cybercriminals, said Okta's
Bradbury. ALPHV, which according to Mandiant is a "ransomware-as-a-service",
would provide services such as a helpdesk, webpage and branding, and
in turn get a cut of whatever Scattered Spider would make from the
hack.
While many ransomware attacks go unpublicised, the MGM hack was a
vivid example of the real-world impact of such incidents. It caused
chaos in Las Vegas, as gaming machines stalled and hotel systems
were disrupted.
Ransomware gangs often function like large organizations, and
continue to evolve their methods to adapt to the latest security
measures organizations use.
"In some ways this is just like the age-old game of cat and mouse,"
said Whitmore, who compared Scattered Spider to Lapsus$, another
group behind previous hacks into Okta and the technology giant
Microsoft. The British police last year arrested seven people
between the ages of 16 and 21 following those hacks.
(Reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in San Francisco and Raphael Satter in
New York; Editing by Chris Sanders and Claudia Parsons)
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