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Latest coverage for Initial Access

Initial Access covers phishing, exploits, and stolen credentials used to enter systems; MFA, patching, and segmentation reduce the resulting foothold.

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Background for this topic.

Initial access is the attacker’s first successful entry into an organization’s systems, accounts, or network. In threat-model terms, it covers paths such as phishing, exploitation of internet-facing applications or devices, use of valid stolen credentials, and compromise of a supplier or trusted service. The objective is to obtain a foothold that can support later actions, including privilege escalation, internal movement, or data access; initial access does not necessarily mean the attacker has administrative control.

The main security concern is reducing the number and reliability of these entry paths. Priorities include promptly fixing vulnerabilities in externally exposed systems, enforcing phishing-resistant multifactor authentication for sensitive access, limiting exposed services and unnecessary privileges, and using email, endpoint, and authentication telemetry to detect suspicious entry. Security teams should preserve relevant logs and investigate unusual logins or newly created access promptly, because the time between initial compromise and follow-on activity may be short.

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Bank Info Security 6 months, 1 week ago

Missing MFA Strikes Again: Hacker Hits Collaboration Tools

Terabytes of Data Stolen From Cloud-Based Collaboration Tools, Researchers WarnDozens of organizations that use real-time content collaboration platforms appear to have lost not only credentials but also terabytes of hosted data to information-stealing malware being wielded by an initial access broker with a sideline in auctioning large volumes of stolen data.