SolarWinds Attackers Dangle BMWs to Spy on Diplomats
Cloaked Ursa/Nobelium gets creative by appealing to the more personal needs of government employees on foreign missions in Kyiv.
APT29 is an espionage-focused threat actor associated with Russian intelligence, making its tactics relevant to understanding state-backed cyber risk.
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Background for this topic.
APT29 is a sophisticated cyber espionage group linked to a nation-state, known for stealthy, long-term intrusions targeting government agencies, think tanks, and research institutions. They employ custom malware, zero-day exploits, and social engineering to gain initial access and maintain persistence, often using legitimate credentials to avoid detection. Their operations focus on intelligence collection rather than immediate disruption or destruction.
Security teams should watch for signs of credential compromise, lateral movement, and covert data exfiltration associated with APT29 activity. Defenses that emphasize multi-factor authentication, network segmentation, and behavioral anomaly detection can reduce risk. Understanding APT29’s tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) enables more effective threat hunting and tailored monitoring to detect and mitigate espionage campaigns early.
Cloaked Ursa/Nobelium gets creative by appealing to the more personal needs of government employees on foreign missions in Kyiv.
The Russian state-sponsored hacking group 'APT29' (aka Nobelium, Cloaked Ursa) has been using unconventional lures like car listings to entice diplomats in Ukraine to click on malicious links that deliver malware. [...]