Tech Certifications Are Earning Cash Premiums, and Info/Cyber Security Certs Are the Hottest

Why would an employer pay its tech workers extra cash for a skill or certification if they’re already getting a salary and annual bonus?

There are a dozen good reasons why, and they all share one thing in common: None would be necessary if the company’s compensation structure and pay practices were agile enough to successfully compete for talent in volatile labor markets. The nature of the tech labor marketplace is exactly that, where the market value of a job or skill can move like a roller coaster depending on what’s hot and what’s not at any given moment. If your employer doesn’t have built-in flexibility to react quickly and correctly, it will struggle to find and keep people to execute tech-enabled business strategies.

Who Needs Skills Pay and Why
How do you know if your employer is a victim? Say, for instance, your company doesn’t normally have trouble retaining tech talent and suddenly the best people start walking out the door. Most likely your company wasn’t able to match competing salary offers. Then to make matters worse, it’s soon discovered that the competing offers were actually realistic average local market salaries for these positions – so your employer was underpaying these people from the start. It’s called ‘salary compression,’ when market-driven pay for talent is growing at a faster rate than the annual salary increases employers are able to offer their workers.

Compression is a widespread systemic reality that tends to be much worse in the tech workforce because of the rapid evolution of technology, skills and jobs. Every employer must decide whether to fix it permanently (very difficult) or patch it occasionally (less difficult and more practical).

If there is little leeway in the incumbent’s salary range to sweeten the pot on a counter-offer, and a promotion is not a viable option, paying workers extra cash for critical skills and certifications can be the perfect solution. That is especially true when workers possess the very hot certified or noncertified tech skills that other employers are aggressively targeting. The trick is to tie this extra cash directly to current market value for the hot skill or certification and guarantee that premium for some period of time, usually one year or more. When time’s up, the employer can check whether market value has changed and decide if it makes sense to continue to pay the skills premium and how much to pay, or to switch it out for another hot skill that has become more valuable to the organization.

What is the current cash market value for certifications?
Extra pay awarded to 69,900 U.S. and Canadian IT professionals for 880 certified and noncertified IT and business skills – also known as skills pay premiums – has been tracked and updated quarterly since 1999 in the IT Skills and Certifications Pay Index™(ITSCPI). About 3,000 private and public sector employers currently provide this data to Foote Partners, covering a total of 255,600 IT professionals at these companies.

ISACA certifications are doing extremely well. As a group they’ve gained 15.3 percent in cash market value in the last six months compared to nearly 8 percent growth in pay across all 80 security-related certifications in the ITSCPI. The Certified in Risk and Information Systems Control (CRISC) and Certified in the Governance of Enterprise IT (CGEIT) are the top gainers. The CSX Practitioner (CSXP) certification appeared for the first time in the latest ITSCPI, earning an average pay premium equivalent to 12 percent of base salary – a very strong number for a new certification.

The following security certifications are earning the highest pay premiums right now. They’re paying median cash premiums equivalent to 13 percent to 19 percent of base salary, typically paid out each pay period as a cash bonus in addition to salary, and are shown below in descending rank order of market value including ties, arranged alphabetically within each rank.

  1. Certified Cyber Forensics Professional
  2. (Tie) Certified Forensic Computer Examiner
    CyberSecurity Forensic Analyst
    GIAC Reverse Engineering Malware
  3. (Tie) EC-Council Certified Incident Handler
    EC-Council Computer Hacking Forensic Investigator
    GIAC Certified Forensics Examiner
    GIAC Certified Forensics Analyst
    GIAC Exploit Researcher and Advanced Penetration Tester
    GIAC Web Application Penetration Tester
  4. (Tie) GIAC Enterprise Defender
    GIAC Secure Software Programmer–Java
    InfoSys Security Architecture Professional (ISSAP/CISSP)
  5. (Tie) Certified Information Security Manager (CISM)
    Certified Information Systems Security Professional
    Certified in Risk and Information Systems Control (CRISC)
    EC-Council Licensed Penetration Tester
    InfoSys Security Engineering Professional (ISSEP/CISSP)

Market values for 412 tech certifications in the most recent ITSCPI data update are averaging the equivalent of a 7.7 percent of base salary and as a group recorded gains in 14 consecutive calendar quarters, unprecedented in the 18 years Foote Partners has been tracking and reporting compensation for certifications. Figuring prominently in this growth has been info/cyber security certifications.

Market values for 80 info/cyber security certifications have been on a slow and steady upward path for four years, up 10.7 percent in average cash value as a group in just the past 12 months and 15 percent during the past two years – the largest gain among all certification categories reported. Strong performing security certifications so far in 2016 cut a wide swath: cybersecurity, forensics, penetration testing, perimeter protection and enterprise defense, security analysis, risk and security software programming.

Editor’s note: Registration is open for the first testing window of 2017 for ISACA’s core certifications.

Exams for CISA, CISM, CGEIT and CRISC will be offered in 2017 at PSI testing locations worldwide during three, eight-week testing windows. The first testing window will be 1 May-30 June, with 28 February marking the early registration deadline. Exam registration via the ISACA website is available at www.isaca.org/examreg.

David Foote, Chief Analyst and co-founder, Foote Partners, LLC

[ISACA Now Blog]

Tropic Trooper Targets Taiwanese Government and Fossil Fuel Provider With Poison Ivy

Taiwan has been a regular target of cyber espionage threat actors for a number of years. Reasons for Taiwan being targeted range from being one of the sovereign states of the disputed South China Sea region to its emerging economy and growth with Taiwan being one of the most innovative countries in the High-Tech industry in Asia.

In early August, Unit 42 identified two attacks using similar techniques. The more interesting one was a targeted attack towards the Secretary General of Taiwan’s Government office – Executive Yuan. The Executive Yuan has several individual boards which are formed to enforce different executing functions of the government. The Executive Yuan Council evaluates statutory and budgetary bills and bills concerning martial law, amnesty, declaration of war, conclusion of peace and treaties, and other important affairs. Given the important functions undertaken by the Executive Yuan office, it is not a surprise that they were targeted. The second attack was against an energy sector company also located in Taiwan.

The attacks in this case are associated with a campaign called Tropic Trooper, which has been active since at least 2011 and is known for heavily targeting Taiwan. One of the attacks used their known Yahoyah malware, but the other attack deployed the widely available Poison Ivy RAT.  This confirms the actors are using Poison Ivy as part of their toolkit, something speculated in the original Trend Micro report but not confirmed by them. Further analysis uncovered a handful of ties indicating the actors may also be using the PCShare malware family, which has not been previously tied to the group.

Figure 1 shows the spear phishing email which was sent to the Secretary General of Executive Yuan. The email is spoofed so that it appears as though it was sent from a staff member at the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).

Figure 1. Spear-phishing email with malicious attachment.

The document attached to this e-mail exploits CVE-2012-0158, a Microsoft Office vulnerability. This process is described in the Malware Analysis section later in this report, but one interesting aspect of this malicious was the decoy document the attacker chose to deploy.

Decoy Document

As we have noted in many earlier reports, attackers commonly use decoy files to trick victims into thinking a malicious document is actually legitimate. After infecting the computer, the display a clean document to the victim that contains content that is relevant to them.

The decoy document used in this case is a spreadsheet with four tabs, respectively titled “example,” “0720,” “0721,” and “1041109 full update”. All of the text uses Traditional Chinese, in contrast to Simplified Chinese, which is the official written language of the People’s Republic of China. Traditional Chinese is used in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, and many overseas Chinese communities.  The overarching theme of the spreadsheet is documenting protestor activity and/or progressive reform attempts in progress across Taiwan and the tone of the spreadsheet suggests it was compiled by progressive supporters. Because we were unable to find the spreadsheet online, and there is specific persona data included related to these movements and protests, we are not including any screen shots except for the one below.

Figure 2. The four tabs in the decoy spreadsheet.

The “example” spreadsheet tab is exactly as described – it contains the headers and suggested information within two of the remaining three tabs. The headers themselves translate, from left to right, to “responsible department,” “issue,” “developments this week,” “political situation judgment,” and “related information.”  The tab labeled 0721 only has the matching headers and no additional information.  None of the information in the spreadsheet relates to activities past 2015, and there are references made to the then upcoming January 16, 2016 elections in Taiwan. In that election the DPP won, displacing the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) for only the second time in history, and with Taiwan’s first female President.

The spreadsheet labeled 0720 refers to the Anti-Black Box Movement, which was a protest by Taiwanese high school students against certain proposed curriculum changes. The use of “black box” by the protestors is in reference to former Taiwanese President Ma Ying-Jeou’s government and its lack of transparency concerning government decisions. Protestors occupied Taiwan’s Ministry of Education last July. A resolution passed by Taiwan’s legislature and approved by the Executive Yuan in May of this year delayed implementing that curriculum until 2020 to allow time for the act to be amended.

The Anti-Black Box Movement is related to the Sunflower Student Movement, a coalition of both student groups and other civic organizations that protested the Cross-Strait Trade Agreement between Taiwan and the PRC, feeling it would hurt Taiwan’s economy and increase the PRC’s sway over the island.  On March 17 2014, the KMT, the ruling party at the time, tried to force a vote without a previously agreed clause by clause review with the DPP. The following evening protesters occupied the Legislative Yuan, the first time that had occurred Taiwan’s history. On March 23 of the same year, after then President Ma re-affirmed he supported the pact and would not alter or drop it, protestors occupied the Executive Yuan where over 150 were injured and 61 arrested.

The final tab contains the most information of the three and has different headers. From left to right, the headers are titled “responsible person(s),” “summary of issues and major groups,” “crisis simulation, political judgment, and recommendations,” “degree of tension,” and “participating members.”

  • Information related to the November 2015 “Autumn Struggle” protest, which is an annual protest first done in 2013.
  • Information on a Taichung City government development proposal being protested largely on environmental impact grounds, and protestor demands.
  • Army 1st Special Forces veterans attempt to receive compensation for alleged illegal extension of forced military service
  • The recently settled case where toll workers forced into unemployment by the Taiwanese government’s agreement with the Far Eastern Electronic Toll Collection Company to create a national electronic toll collection system ended up resulting in the 2013 layoffs of hundreds, who have since protested for new jobs as well as lost severance and pension.
  • Kaohsiung refinery closing and protestor demands, also largely related to environmental effects and necessary cleanup; the refinery officially closed at the end of December 2015
  • Closely watching any trade agreements between the Malaysian government and Taiwan
  • Potential environmental and current residential issues related to the development of the Aerotropolis around Taoyuan International Airport, which is intended to create a major transportation hub and industry center for Asia with infrastructure for corporate research and development, conference centers, and other facilities.
  • The Puyu Development Plan, which is part of Taiwan’s Knowledge-based Economy plan
  • Taiwan’s 12-year compulsory education plan
  • Anti-Black Box Movement demands and recent activity
  • Improving working conditions for Taiwanese firefighters
  • Pension reforms
  • The Nest Movement, which started in 2014 and is related to the older “Shell-less Snail Movement,” focused on affordable housing, neighborhood and urban development, ending forced demolition and relocation, property tax reform, and related housing issues
  • The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) voted on by the Environmental Protection Bureau (EPB) for the Dongshi-Fengyuan Expressway, part of the National Highway #4 Project and anti-eviction efforts
  • Kaohsiung water quality issues and related projects
  • Same sex marriage legalization
  • Protecting old trees in Kaohsiung amidst construction for a new “green” library; most of the designated “precious trees” are rare exotic species
  • Indigenous peoples in Kaohsiung land return
  • Activities against the Miramar Resort Village, including the revocation of the EIA, forcing development to halt
  • Lowering the voting age in Taiwan from 20 to 18

Malware Analysis

The documents attached to spear-phishing e-mails used in both attacks contain code that exploits CVE-2012-0158, which despite its age remains one of the most common Microsoft Word vulnerabilities being exploited by multiple threat actors. This matches with known Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (TTPs) for Tropic Trooper, targeting both government institutions and also the energy industry in Taiwan.

The delivery document uses the XLSX extension typically used by OpenXML documents, but the file itself is actually an OLE (XLS) document. The file extension to file type discrepancy was caused by the actor using Excel’s built-in encryption capability, which stores XLSX ciphertext and the information needed for decryption in an OLE document.

Filename: 進步議題工作圈議題控管表.xlsx
MD5: a89b1ce793f41f3c35396b054dbdb749
SHA1: f45e2342e40100b770d73dd06f5d9b79bfce4a72
SHA256: 2baa76c9aa3834548d82a36e150d329e3268417b3f12b8f72d209d51bbacf671
Type: CDF V2 Document, No summary info
Size: 327128 bytes

Table 1. Details of the malicious document attached to the e-mail.

The embedded shellcode enumerates open handles for a file with a size greater than 0xa6f0 (Decimal – 42736) bytes. It will then set the file pointer to 0xa6e8 (Decimal – 42728) and starts looking for the following delimiter:

GfCv\xef\xfe\xec\xce

If it finds this delimiter, the shellcode knows it is working with the correct file and continues by reading 0x600 (decimal 1536) bytes following this delimiter. The shellcode then decrypts the first 0xc0 (decimal 192) DWORDs of the data read from the file using an XOR algorithm that decrypts one DWORD of ciphertext at a time with 0x29f7c592. The resulting cleartext is a second piece of shellcode that continues carrying out further functionality.

The secondary shellcode starts by resolving the following API functions using a ROT13 hashing algorithm:

kernel32.dll!CreateFileA
kernel32.dll!ReadFile
kernel32.dll!WriteFile
kernel32.dll!SetFilePointer
kernel32.dll!CopyFileA
kernel32.dll!MoveFileExA
kernel32.dll!CreateToolhelp32Snapshot
kernel32.dll!Process32Next
kernel32.dll!CloseHandle
kernel32.dll!VirtualAlloc
kernel32.dll!WinExec
kernel32.dll!TerminateProcess
kernel32.dll!LoadLibraryA
kernel32.dll!lstrlenA
kernel32.dll!lstrcpyA
kernel32.dll!lstrcatA
kernel32.dll!GetTempPathA
kernel32.dll!WideCharToMultiByte
kernel32.dll!QueryDosDeviceA
ntdll.dll!NtQueryObject
advapi32.dll!RegOpenKeyA
advapi32.dll!RegSetValueExA
advapi32.dll!RegCloseKey

Immediately following these API functions there are three DWORDS; one used to locate the payload embedded within the exploit file, one for the size of the payload, and one for the size of decoy document. The two size values are added together to get the length of the ciphertext that the shellcode will decrypt. In the sample we analyzed, the following values were present, showing that the payload is at offset 0xabc0 and has a size of 0x45218:

DWORD offset_toPayload; (0ABC0h)
DWORD payload_Size; (1C600h)
DWORD decoy_Size; (28C18h)

The shellcode then creates a string that it uses to create a registry key to automatically run the final payload each time the system starts. It then opens the registry key ‘Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon’ and sets the value to the “Shell” subkey to the previously created string. Ultimately, the following registry key is created for persistence:

HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\Shell:
“explorer.exe,rundll32.exe “C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\Application
Data\Identities\Identities.ocx” SSSS”

It then uses the “offset_toPayload” value as an offset that it will read 283160 (45218h) bytes from the XLS file. The shellcode then enters a decryption loop to convert the embedded payload from ciphertext to cleartext. The algorithm uses the length of the ciphertext negated as the initial encryption key, which it bit rotates right by 1 to adjust the key for each of decryption. It will use this key to decrypt four bytes of the ciphertext with the XOR operation until all the ciphertext is decrypted. During each iteration of the decryption process, the algorithm will check to make sure the four bytes of ciphertext are not equal to the key or equal to zero before decrypting the ciphertext.  The following table contains the first five rounds of the algorithm to explain the decryption process:

 Key Ciphertext  Cleartext
0  ~0x45218 = 0xFFFBADE8 >> 1 = 0x7FFDD6F4  0x7F6D8CB9  0x00905a4d = MZ\x90\x00
1  0x7FFDD6F4 >> 1 = 0x3FFEEB7A  0x3FFEEB79  0x03 = \x03\x00\x00\x00
2  0x3FFEEB7A >> 1 = 0x1FFF75BD  0x1FFF75B9  0x04 = \x04\x00\x00\x00
3  0x1FFF75BD >> 1 = 0x8FFFBADE  0x8FFF4521  0xFFFF = \xff\xff\x00\x00
4  0x8FFFBADE >> 1 = 0x47FFDD6F  0x47FFDDD7  0xB8 = \xb8\x00\x00\x00
5  0x47FFDD6F >> 1 = 0xA3FFEEB7  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
6  0xA3FFEEB7 >> 1 = 0xD1FFF75B  0xD1FFF71B  0x40 = \x40\x00\x00\x00
7  0xD1FFF75B >> 1 = 0xE8FFFBAD  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
8  0xE8FFFBAD >> 1 = 0xF47FFDD6  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
9  0xF47FFDD6 >> 1 = 0x7A3FFEEB  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
10  0x7A3FFEEB >> 1 = 0xBD1FFF75  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
11  0xBD1FFF75 >> 1 = 0xDE8FFFBA  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
12  0xDE8FFFBA >> 1 = 0x6F47FFDD  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
13  0x6F47FFDD >> 1 = 0xB7A3FFEE  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
14  0xB7A3FFEE >> 1 = 0x5BD1FFF7  0x00000000  0x00000000 = \x00\x00\x00\x00
15  0x5BD1FFF7 >> 1 = 0xADE8FFFB  0xADE8FEF3  0x108 = \x08\x01\x00\x00
16  0xADE8FFFB >> 1 = 0xD6F47FFD  0xD84E60F3  0xEBA1F0E = \x0e\x1f\xba\x0e
17  0xD6F47FFD >> 1 = 0xEB7A3FFE  0x26738BFE  0xCD09B400 = \x00\xb4\x09\xcd
18  0xEB7A3FFE >> 1 = 0x75BD1FFF  0x39BCA7DE  0x4C01B821 = \x21\xb8\x01\x4c
19  0x75BD1FFF >> 1 = 0xBADE8FFF  0xD28AAE32  0x685421CD = \xcd!Th
20  0xBADE8FFF >> 1 = 0xDD6F47FF  0xAD4F3496  0x70207369 = is p
21  0xDD6F47FF >> 1 = 0xEEB7A3FF  0x9CD0CC8D  0x72676F72 = rogr
22  0xEEB7A3FF >> 1 = 0xF75BD1FF  0x947BBC9E  0x63206D61 = am c
23  0xF75BD1FF >> 1 = 0xFBADE8FF  0x94C3869E  0x6F6E6E61 = anno
24  0xFBADE8FF >> 1 = 0xFDD6F47F  0x98B4D40B  0x65622074 = t be
25  0xFDD6F47F >> 1 = 0xFEEB7A3F  0x909E081F  0x6E757220 =  run

Table 2.  Decrypting the payload

As you can see from the table above, the algorithm decrypts what is an embedded portable executable that acts as the payload in this attack. The embedded payload is written to %APPDATA\Identities\Identities.ocx and has the following attributes:

The decoy document, described in the section above, is saved to %TEMP%\進步議題工作圈議題控管表.xlsx and has the following attributes:

The shellcode will move the decoy document to the location of the originally executed XLSX file and will create the following command:

cmd /c start excel /e  “<path to original XLSX file, now decoy
document>”

Before running the above command to open the decoy document, the shellcode enumerates the running processes on the system, specifically looking for processes created for an executable with a filename that starts with “avp.”, presumably in an attempt to find Kaspersky’s antivirus process. If the process is found, the shellcode will not open the decoy document and exits.

The shellcode does not launch the payload, rather it relies on the registry key it created for persistence to execute the payload when the user reboots the system, meaning during dynamic analysis the execution of the payload may be missed.

Delivered Payload – Poison Ivy

When the system starts up, the persistence registry key will launch the Identities.ocx payload and call its “SSSS” exported function. The “SSSS” function checks to make sure that the DLL is running within the context of a “rundll32.exe” process and then begins piecing 0x141B bytes of data together in the correct order to build the shellcode of the Poison Ivy Trojan.

We found and parsed the following configuration from the Poison Ivy shellcode:

Looking for more samples which exhibited the same file structure, encryption and obfuscation to deliver the above Poison Ivy sample yielded only two additional samples. In the other two instances the delivered payloads were respectively PCShare and Yahoyah.  PCShare has not been previously associated with Tropic Trooper, but in addition to the aforementioned overlaps, the two samples have passive DNS overlap with some known Tropic Trooper infrastructure. For those reasons, we assess with limited confidence the group is also using this malware family.

Figure 3. The limited ties between C2 infrastructure used by Yahoyah samples (top) and PCShare malware samples (bottom).

The below table shows the details of the documents, payload delivered and the C2 servers used for communications.

SHA256 a3becf3639fa82bfbf01740ce5a8335f291fb83b544e02a6cc9f1e9c96fb3764
Filename CTC Statement.xlsx
Payload d76d7d64c941713d4faaedd5c972558c5136cd1b7de237280faaae89143e7d94
Tool PCShare
C2 belindianlab[.]itemdb[.]com
C2 IP 210.108.146[.]20
SHA256 ca10489091b71b14f2c3dc0b5201825e63a1f64c0a859ba2bd95900f45580fc4
Filename 全台餐廳更新版餐廳_.xlsx
Payload bff5f2f84efc450b10f1a66064ed3afaf740c844c15af88a927c46a0b2146498
Tool Yahoyah
C2 www[.]dpponline[.]trickip[.]org
C2 www[.]myinfo[.]ocry[.]com
C2 IP 223.27.35[.]244

 

It is interesting to see that the exploit documents we found had either low or no detections on most popular antivirus engines, showing that the threat actors behind this campaign have been having considerable success in bypassing static analysis undertaken by traditional antivirus solutions with this technique.

We further expanded our search using the AutoFocus Threat Intelligence platform on the IOCs extracted from the PIVY, PCShare and Yahoyah payloads and found 42 samples which either matched unique behaviors, the unique PIVY mutex or had common C2 infrastructure.  The hashes of all the samples found are given in the appendix section at the end of this blog.

Figure 4 below shows the compilation timestamps of the payload samples found using AutoFocus. Given some of the payloads that were used in recent attacks, which were compiled months before, it shows that the threat actor group continues to reuse the payload within their exploit documents.

Figure 4. Payload Compilation Timelines

The below Maltego graph shows some of the shared infrastructure which have been used by Tropic Trooper. The complete list of indicators on the graph can also be found in the appendix section of this report.

 

Figure 5 Maltego graph of Tropic Trooper infrastructure

Conclusion

The Tropic Trooper threat actor group has been known to target governments and organizations in the Asia Pacific region for at least six years. In addition to using Yahoyah malware, we were able to confirm they are also using Poison Ivy and possibly PCShare malware families.  They are also still exploiting CVE 2012-0158, as are many threat actors. Palo Alto Networks customers are protected from Tropic Trooper’s malicious activities by:

  • WildFire correctly identifies all related malware as malicious
  • The C2 infrastructure are classified as malicious in PAN-DB
  • Traps prevents exploitation of CVE-2012-0158

Autofocus customers can discover additional information on Tropic Trooper via the following AutoFocus tags:

Appendix

Samples matching unique indicators, behaviors and C2 infrastructure from the payload extracted out of the malicious documents:

SHA256 hashes
Winsloader
c098235a43d9788661490d2c7b09b1b2b3544d22ee8d9ae6cd5d16a977fd1155
e81bc530075d6d31358aea5784d977d1ac2932a13a615cd1319d01d6e39c2995
cf32fb6371cc751b852c2e2e607c813e0de71cd7bcf3892a9a23b57dfd38d6fc
07663f8bca3c2118f3f77221c35873fd8dd61d9afa30e566fe4b51bcfb000834
92da05bae1d9694a1f63b854e86b5b17ef27d5fc2551318e49e17677c7c90042
e267ecfd37f3af55e8b02b081e7c9d8c0bf633e1d5acb0228be694eae4660eee
PCShare
d76d7d64c941713d4faaedd5c972558c5136cd1b7de237280faaae89143e7d94
66d672a94f21e86655f243877ee04d7e67a515a7153891563f1aeedb2edbe579
Yahoyah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Poison Ivy
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C2 domains
news[.]hpc[.]tw
www[.]dpponline[.]trickip[.]org
www[.]forensic[.]zyns[.]com
www[.]bannered[.]4dq[.]com
www[.]forensic611[.]3-a[.]net
bbs[.]zzbooks[.]net
bbs[.]ccdog[.]net
wallstreet[.]1dumb[.]com
www[.]cham[.]com[.]tw
pinkker[.]zzux[.]com
www[.]amberisic611[.]4dq[.]com
www[.]metacu[.]ygto[.]com
bbs[.]zzbook[.]net
www[.]myinfo[.]ocry[.]com
www[.]gmal1[.]com
news[.]hpc[.]tw
www[.]dpponline[.]trickip[.]org
pinkker[.]zzux[.]com
wallstreet[.]1dumb[.]com
redpeach[.]youdontcare[.]com
redapple[.]justdied[.]com
stone[.]mypop3[.]org
zeus[.]jkub[.]com
sniper[.]mynumber[.]org
unclesam[.]jungleheart[.]com
arora[.]x24hr[.]com
flanando[.]fartit[.]com
www[.]dpponline[.]trickip[.]org
www[.]myinfo[.]ocry[.]com
belindianlab[.]itemdb[.]com
kr[.]dns1[.]us

 

C2 HTTP requests
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hxxp://223[.]27[.]35[.]244/images/D2015_id[.]jpg
hxxp://www[.]myinfo[.]ocry[.]com/images/D2015_id[.]jpg
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hxxp://www[.]forensic[.]zyns[.]com/monitor/images/Smarp140102[.]24[.]gif
hxxp://113[.]10[.]221[.]89/Pictures/sbsb_0620[.]24[.]jpg
hxxp://bbs[.]ccdog[.]net/Pictures/sbsb_0620[.]24[.]jpg
hxxp://www[.]forensic611[.]3-a[.]net/monitor/images/Smartzh131225[.]24[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]bannered[.]4dq[.]com/monitor/images/Smartzh131225[.]24[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]forensic[.]zyns[.]com/monitor/images/Smartzh131225[.]24[.]gif
hxxp://bbs[.]zzbooks[.]net/Pictures/lclc_0523[.]24[.]jpg
hxxp://bbs[.]ccdog[.]net/Pictures/lclc_0523[.]24[.]jpg
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hxxp://www[.]amberisic611[.]4dq[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav141216[.]64[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]metacu[.]ygto[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav141216[.]64[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]metacu[.]ygto[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav141216[.]32[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]amberisic611[.]4dq[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav141216[.]32[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]bannered[.]4dq[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav141216[.]32[.]gif
hxxp://bbs[.]ccdog[.]net/Pictures/20150120-hex[.]64[.]jpg
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hxxp://bbs[.]zzbook[.]net/Pictures/20150120-hex[.]64[.]jpg
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hxxp://23[.]27[.]112[.]216/Pictures/20150120-hex[.]32[.]jpg
hxxp://bbs[.]ccdog[.]net/Pictures/20150120-hex[.]32[.]jpg
hxxp://bbs[.]ccdog[.]net/Pictures/h20141212012[.]64[.]jpg
hxxp://23[.]27[.]112[.]216/Pictures/h20141212012[.]32[.]jpg
hxxp://113[.]10[.]221[.]89/Pictures/h20141212012[.]32[.]jpg
hxxp://bbs[.]ccdog[.]net/Pictures/h20141212012[.]32[.]jpg
hxxp://113[.]10[.]221[.]89/Pictures/ooba_0823[.]24[.]jpg
hxxp://198[.]100[.]122[.]66/Pictures/ooba_0823[.]24[.]jpg
hxxp://50[.]117[.]38[.]164/Pictures/ooba_0823[.]24[.]jpg
hxxp://www[.]metacu[.]ygto[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav0120[.]64[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]amberisic611[.]4dq[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav0120[.]64[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]bannered[.]4dq[.]com/moitor/images/SmartNav0120[.]64[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]bannered[.]4dq[.]com/moitor/images/SmartNav0120[.]32[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]metacu[.]ygto[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav0120[.]32[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]amberisic611[.]4dq[.]com/monitor/images/SmartNav0120[.]32[.]gif
hxxp://www[.]dpponline[.]trickip[.]org/images/D2015_id[.]jpg
hxxp://223[.]27[.]35[.]244/images/D2015_id[.]jpg
hxxp://www[.]myinfo[.]ocry[.]com/images/D2015_id[.]jpg
hxxp://49[.]254[.]211[.]75//tedws/1[.]64[.]jpg
hxxp://107[.]183[.]183[.]235/public/1[.]64[.]jpg
hxxp://49[.]254[.]211[.]75//tedws/1[.]32[.]jpg
hxxp://107[.]183[.]183[.]235/public/1[.]32[.]jpg
hxxp://flanando[.]fartit[.]com/2015/p1[.]64[.]jpg
hxxp://flanando[.]fartit[.]com/2015/p1[.]32[.]jpg

[Palo Alto Networks Research Center]

CSX Fundamentals Study Guide Great for New Hires

I have just finished reading the CSX Fundamentals Study Guide, which ISACA provides for the CSX Fundamentals exam. I am impressed. When I hire entry level individuals to work for my company, I look for someone who has familiarity with the topics outlined in the guide. I don’t expect them to be an expert, but when we are tackling a subject as a team, I expect my employees to know the topic being discussed.

Over the years, my employees have been exposed to many cyber security issues, and for the most part, they understand the new ideas and are able to conduct research on them. This helps improve our company’s awareness of critical cyber security issues and what we can expect with the next issue we will have to evaluate or the next solution that we will have to implement. What I like about the CSX Fundamentals Study Guide is that it outlines those very key topics we are in the throes of working on every day.

Everything changes rapidly in technology; however, companies are not always on the cutting edge, and the subjects covered in the guide are works in progress. That means the guide and courses are preparing someone who is entertaining a cyber security career so that they can be versed in what is currently going on. I appreciate that as a hiring manager. I don’t expect an entry-level person to be certified with high-end skills or have extensive experience in a particular area. I do expect them to come on board and be able to acclimate to our environment and be part of the team working on such things as data loss prevention (DLP), mobile technologies and their use within the corporation.

I have expertise in forensics and encryption on my team; however, I need new hires to know the basics of why and how to use these technologies. The guide provides a good base of knowledge for these and other technologies where the expectation that an entry-level hire would be able to work with another team member and provide value in taking over some of the tasks.

Naturally, a new hire would need further training, that goes without saying, but the CSX Fundamentals Study Guide helps to put that person on the same page as the rest of a team in the cyber security community. I would also recommend using the guide in preparing for the exam. After instructing CISA and CISM courses for years, this guide seems to hit the fundamentals right on and would benefit the exam taker.

The CSX program is very meaningful to the cyber security field and I expect the courses ISACA is creating will boost the numbers in the profession.

Editor’s note: the CSX Fundamentals Study Guide was recently an ISACA Bookstore book of the month.

Cheryl Santor, Information Security Manager, Metropolitan Water District of SoCal

[ISACA Now Blog]

So What’s New with the New UK Cybersecurity Strategy?

The intent to enforce… something quite significant actually.

A first read and review of the news coverage around the United Kingdom’s (U.K.) new Cybersecurity Strategy earlier this month left many believing that there is little to report on cybersecurity from their new government. The initiatives articulated and the funding levels had already been publically discussed throughout the year, while any new intentions expressed in the strategy lacked detail.

My initial reaction was disappointment that Teresa May’s government did not see fit to add new funds to the £1.9 billion committed by the previous Chancellor in November last year. Given that Ms. May had been Home Secretary and her new Chancellor, Philip Hammond, Secretary of State for Defence, they clearly bring an informed view of how threats are evolving. Mr. Hammond even highlighted the elevated level of threats coming from state actors and terrorism in particular in his speech.

I have since had the chance to spend time absorbing the new strategy, and looking back to what was said in the original five-year plan, the difference is astonishing. Today, we have a narrative that reflects a much clearer understanding of the scope of the task ahead, something (ISC)² as a professional body has been working to articulate for some time. The government has also clearly laid out what it believes its job should be, and what it expects of the rest of us as professionals, businesses, innovators, and individual citizens. It is interesting that Hammond chose a technology innovation event – Microsoft’s Future Decoded conference – to announce the strategy, clearly working to reach an audience that is to be held accountable.

“Technology companies – many of whom are represented here today – must take responsibility for incorporating the best possible security measures into the design of their products.

Getting this right will be crucial to keeping Britain at the forefront of digital technology security – itself a growing business sector,” he said on the day.

The report itself details far more and specific expectations:

“Organisations and company boards are responsible for ensuring their networks are secure. They must identify critical systems and regularly assess their vulnerability against an evolving technological landscape and threat. They must invest in technology and their staff to reduce vulnerabilities in current and future systems, and in their supply chain, to maintain a level of cybersecurity proportionate to the risk. They must also have tested capabilities in place to respond if an attack happens.”

With reference to incident response, expectation is repeated again:

“It is the responsibility of organisation and company management, in both the public and private sector, to ensure their networks are secure and to exercise incident response plans.”

And again with reference to skills:

“…. employers also have a significant responsibility to clearly articulate their needs, as well as train and develop employees and young people entering the profession.”

Perhaps most crucially, the government laid out an intent to enforce what is expected. The document states unequivocally that market forces have not been and will not be enough to ensure the action required, and that government will work “in partnership with departments and regulators, who will assure whether cyber risk is being managed in their sectors to the level demanded by the national interest.” Further, the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) to be in force by May 2018 is cited as an effective lever to drive up standards and there is an intent to ensure that the industry acts and becomes “outcome” rather than “compliance” focused.

Cyber and information security professionals have been asking organisations for such a mandate for over two decades. The U.K. government has now given it to us. I encourage our membership and the cybersecurity community in general, whether they are working within the U.K. or not, to take the time to read the new U.K. Strategy; understand its intent, and take on an active role in assuring their organisations can do their part.

As I read through the document, I stopped wondering whether the Government thinks their budget commitments to cybersecurity are adequate. I don’t believe that they do. I suspect we didn’t see more funding because the government doesn’t yet know how much it will cost; because much of what they are doing should come with the evolution of the economy in a digital age; and because we need to see greater value from what has been committed to date to justify any increases in budget: There seems little justification to add to the public investment before the private sector begins to assume its role more definitively. I suspect we will see more public funds to committed this strategy, but not before fines for lack of action fuel public coffers.

By Adrian Davis, CISSP, Managing Director EMEA, (ISC)²

[(ISC)² Blog]

Cloud Security Alliance Releases Report on State of Cloud Adoption in India

Findings Come on the Heels of Successful CSA APAC Congress in Bengaluru

Bengaluru, India – November 22, 2016 – The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA), the world’s leading organization dedicated to defining and raising awareness of best practices to help ensure a secure cloud computing environment, successfully hosted its 4th CSA APAC Congress on 22nd-23rd November in Bengaluru, India. This two-day event hosted delegates from over 300 international government organizations, industry, academia, and professionals attending with compelling presentations and interesting discussions about research, development, practice and trends related to cloud security.

The conference featured some of the region’s and world’s most influential minds in information security and cloud computing including:

  • Shri. Ajay Kumar, Additional Secretary at Ministry of Electronics & Information technology
  • Rajiv R. Chetwani, Director Information Systems Programme Office at ISRO
  • Sri. Raj Kumar Srivastava, IFS , Managing director , Karnataka State Electronics,Development Corporation Limited
  • Dr. Amar Prasad Reddy , Director General at National Cyber- Safety & Security Standards
  • Jim Reavis, Co-founder & CEO of Cloud Security Alliance
  • Dr. Meng Chow Kang, Chief Information Security Officer, APJC Region at Cisco Systems, Inc.
  • Juanita Koilpillai, Founder & CEO of Waverley Labs
  • Rudra Murthy, CISO, Digital India at Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Debabrata Nayak, Chief Security Officer at Huawei
  • Dr. Vikram Sharma, Founding Director & Chief Executive Officer at Quintessence Labs
  • Clayton Jones, Managing Director Asia- Pacific, (ISC)2

For additional information and the agenda, visit https://www.eventbank.com/event/648/

Cloud Security Alliance also announced the release of the survey report State of Cloud Adoption in India. This report is part of an ongoing series of research initiatives, to provide insights on cloud adoption across the APAC region, to recognize APAC countries leading the cloud adoption trend, as well as to identify countries with opportunities for cloud computing adoption. The State of Cloud Adoption in India report posed two key findings for the region:

  • A lack of established industry standards within the Indian cloud computing industry is a lingering problem the country faces. Public cloud services offered in India by local providers are commonly proprietary to a great extent, which may pose challenges for cloud consumers in case they wanted to develop a global IT strategy; not to mention moving from one cloud provider to another. In addition, the current state of relevant national standards in India is not compatible and aligned with global standards.
  • Indian organizations are extremely concerned about security, especially data sovereignty. Organizations are most worried about their data on the cloud. Data breach and data loss are major concerns of organizations from a cloud security perspective.

Aloysius Cheang, Executive Vice President and Managing Director APAC of the Cloud Security Alliance said, “This study is critical for us to understand the current landscape in India. The results are both expected and shocking. It is expected that data sovereignty and data breach will continue to toe the top line concerns of senior management in companies in India and other parts of the world. But it is shocking to find that while there is an increase usage of cloud services in India, but the maturity and the strategic use of cloud services lags where behind other countries that we have surveyed. Coming from the ICT capital of the world, that is shocking”.

Speaking at the launch, Sandip Kumar Panda, CEO – InstaSafe said “While Cloud adoption in India is on the rise, security concerns still dominate a lot of discussions about movement to cloud. The objective of conducting this survey, in conjunction with CSA, was to understand the Indian CIO’s mindset, the current adoption status, unearth gaps in widespread adoption and work with the industry to help assuage those fears. It would be imperative for Indian CIO’s to read the report to understand where they are on the adoption cycle and work with their vendors in asking the right questions.”

In addition to the other conference highlights, CSA announced the release of a new research working group SaaS Governance.

SaaS Governance Working Group

The SaaS Governance Working Group aims to benefit all parties in the Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) ecosystem by supporting a common understanding of SaaS related risks from the perspectives of the cloud customer and cloud service provider. Security and privacy are the primary concerns for organizations considering SaaS adoption, and recent research indicates that 77% of SaaS-adopting organizations have experienced SaaS-specific security incidents. SaaS services account for the bulk of the cloud industry market, and any security incident could critically impact cloud customers. SaaS services present unique risks to their cloud customers such as highly business process specific, handle and store critical business and personal data, and much more. Due to heavy competitive pressure in the SaaS market today, security is too often not a top priority for SaaS providers – especially for the smaller providers that may not have the necessary security expertise to identify and manage the risks that could impact cloud customers and the cloud provider’s own operations.

For more information on on the SaaS Governance Working group along with other CSA research initiatives, events and education, visit https://cloudsecurityalliance.org.

About Cloud Security Alliance

The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) is the world’s leading organization dedicated to defining and raising awareness of best practices to help ensure a secure cloud computing environment. CSA harnesses the subject matter expertise of industry practitioners, associations, governments, and its corporate and individual members to offer cloud security-specific research, education, certification, events and products. CSA’s activities, knowledge and extensive network benefit the entire community impacted by cloud — from providers and customers, to governments, entrepreneurs and the assurance industry — and provide a forum through which diverse parties can work together to create and maintain a trusted cloud ecosystem. CSA has developed the definitive best practices for the industry, such as the “Security Guidance for Critical Areas of Focus in Cloud Computing”, the “Cloud Controls Matrix”, “Top Threats to Cloud Computing” and 50 other cloud security research artifacts.

[Cloud Security Alliance Research News]

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