Feds Snarl ALPHV/BlackCat Ransomware Operation
Dark Web chatter indicates that Scattered Spider worked with the FBI to take down the BlackCat/ALPHV operation.
Coverage of incidents attributed to Scattered Spider, with analysis of infrastructure, disruption efforts, and defensive guidance for organizations.
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Background for this topic.
Scattered Spider is a label used in public reporting for a loosely defined, financially motivated intrusion set. Attribution is not always consistent, and the name may encompass related operators rather than a single centralized organization. Reported activity has involved social engineering of help-desk staff, theft or takeover of credentials and MFA-recovery methods, and access to cloud, identity, or virtual-administration environments. These techniques can turn weaknesses in account-recovery procedures into privileged access without exploiting a software vulnerability.
The principal defensive concern is compromise of the identity-management plane. Organizations should require robust, independently verified help-desk identity checks; prefer phishing-resistant MFA for privileged and remote access; restrict and alert on MFA, password, SIM, and recovery-setting changes; and monitor identity-provider, VPN, cloud, and administrative logs for unusual authentication or privilege changes. Threat intelligence is most useful when it supports behavior-based detection rather than reliance on a fixed list of indicators. If suspected, preserve authentication and support-ticket records quickly and investigate linked accounts, sessions, tokens, and administrator actions.
Dark Web chatter indicates that Scattered Spider worked with the FBI to take down the BlackCat/ALPHV operation.
Crimeware-as-a-service (CaaS) gang flies past CAPTCHAs, creating fraudulent accounts to sell to the likes of Scattered Spider; Microsoft mounts a counterattack.