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Latest coverage for Lateral Movement

Lateral movement lets attackers reach more systems after entry; network segmentation, least privilege, and monitoring can limit its impact.

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Lateral movement is an attacker’s progress from an initially compromised device or account to other systems, accounts, or network segments. It commonly uses stolen credentials, remote administration services, shared drives, exposed management interfaces, or vulnerabilities. The objective may be to reach higher-value assets, obtain greater privileges, or establish access that supports data theft or disruption. Because these actions can resemble normal administration, a single endpoint compromise can become a broader intrusion without clear perimeter breaches.

The most relevant defenses limit both reach and credential reuse: segment networks and sensitive environments, apply least privilege, require strong authentication for administrative access, and remove unnecessary remote services. Monitor authentication patterns, new administrative relationships, unusual remote execution, and access between systems that rarely communicate; correlate these signals with endpoint and identity telemetry. Rapidly disabling compromised accounts, isolating affected hosts, and rotating exposed credentials can contain movement, while vulnerability management reduces exploitable paths that bypass authentication.

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The Hacker News 1 year, 11 months ago

Identity Threat Detection and Response Solution Guide

The Emergence of Identity Threat Detection and Response Identity Threat Detection and Response (ITDR) has emerged as a critical component to effectively detect and respond to identity-based attacks. Threat actors have shown their ability to compromise the identity infrastructure and move laterally into IaaS, Saas, PaaS and CI/CD environments. Identity Threat Detection and Response solutions help

Cybersecurity researchers have discovered two security flaws in Microsoft's Azure Health Bot Service that, if exploited, could permit a malicious actor to achieve lateral movement within customer environments and access sensitive patient data