Saturday, May 30, 2020

WeTransfer Banned In India, 5 Alternatives of WeTransfer



WeTransfer has become an important technology that allows the user to upload and send large files with excellent quality to other users. A premium version of the service allows one to share larger file more than 2GB.

When this file sharing site has helped many users around the world share important files with each other during this work from home culture, Indian users are reporting that the file sharing website is not accessible now. If you are unable to access WeTransfer.com for sending work files, this is not your internet connection issue.

According to a report in The Mumbai Mirror, The Department of Telecommunications has banned popular file-sharing site WeTransfer.com and mentioned public interest and national security. News report says, on 18 May, the telecom department issued a notice to all internet service providers (ISPs) to ban two specific website URLs on WeTransfer and then banning the entire site.

Wetransfer is suggesting users to use VPN to access this site.


5 Alternatives of Wetransfer  -

However, if you are also having these problems, we have solution. You can try using few alternative websites mentioned below as We Transfer hack.

Firefox Send-

Firefox Send is Mozilla's file-sharing website and it allows users to share files upto 2.5 GB of data where WeTransfer allows up to 2 GB files. Firefox Send doesn’t require a Firefox Account to share files with other users, but they have a limitation of only uploading files up to 1 GB. Firefox Account user can share files of 2.5 GB of data successfully.  Firefox Send use encryption to protect the data from unauthorized access and it is completely free.


Dropbox Transfer- 

Dropbox is one of the innovators in file-sharing services over the Internet. A registered user can send a maximum of 100 GB data, however, Its free version offers upto 3 GB. The file owners can set passwords and an expiry date to the transferred which expires once the date has crossed.


Google Drive-

Google Drive is still one of the excellent file sharing website. You can upload files up to 15 GB in free version and share with anyone.  If you have money to spend then you can use the Google One service which gives you access to a number of plans with storage capacities of 100 GB, 200 GB and 2TB.

 

One Drive - 

OneDrive is Microsoft’s cloud storage service to store and share files. You can upload and share files up to 5 GB in free version.Again If you need more storage and have money then you can buy a plan with 100 GB. 


Send-anywhere –

Send Anywhere tool allows users to send files up to 10 GB for free. In the Free version website shows few ads and the files expiration set to 48 hours. It's paid version has many benefits including  size of the files up to 1 TB . No ads and files expiration if you purchase plus version. You can track file and improves upload and download speed..




Saturday, May 16, 2020

REvil Ransomware Attack | Hackers Threaten to Post Trump "Dirty Laundry" And Celebs Secret

A New York-based firm, Grubman Shire Meiselas & Sacks that offers legal services to the entertainment and media industries including Lady Gaga, Madonna, Elton John, Barbara Streisand, Bruce Springsteen, Mariah Carey and Mary J. Blige and Priyanka Chopra, has been hit by a ransomware attack.

Cybercriminals attack law firm using the REvil ransomware (also known as Sodinokibi). Hackers are now threatening to release the 756 gigabytes of data allegedly stolen - including Telephone numbers, Email addresses, non-disclosure agreements, client contracts and personal correspondence. However, celebrity law firm is declining to settle up and now attackers have multiplied the ransom request to $42 million and threatened to publish the information they have claimed to have "a ton of dirty laundry" about President Trump.

Since this information is in public domain, you can get further update from any NEWS channel or websites. Here I'm going to share complete details of REvil ransomware.

 

REvil ransomware -

REvil, also known as Sodinokibi, Bluebackground, or Sodin, is a ransomware that is backed by an underground affiliate program,  uses wide range of tactics to distribute the ransomware and earn 30% to 40% commission. It appeared in the first half of 2019. It exploited vulnerabilities in remote services such as Oracle WebLogic platform (CVE-2019-2725) and carried out attacks on MSP providers. Oracle vulnerability was easy for attackers to exploit, as anyone with HTTP access to the WebLogic server could carry out an attack.

Execution Method –

Hackers utilized the CVE-2019-2725 vulnerability to execute a PowerShell command on Oracle WebLogic server. Doing so allowed them to upload a dropper to the server, which then installed the payload — the Sodin ransomware. Patches for the bug were released in April, however, a similar vulnerability was discovered — CVE-2019-2729 later.

REvil gets onto users’ machines in different ways using MSPs.  In few examples, the attackers used the Webroot and Kaseya remote access consoles to implant the Trojan. In other cases, hackers penetrated MSP infrastructure using an RDP connection, gained privileges, deactivated security solutions and backups, and then downloaded ransomware to client computers.

Sodinokibi or REvil ransomeware collects some basic system information and saves it to the registry with the generated encryption parameters. If the dbg option is not in the config, the UI language and keyboard layout values are checked, and the malware will simply exit on systems.

Business Model –

Sodinokibi or REvil ransomeware works on Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) model. Sodinokibi has 41 active affiliates program. Each affiliate's version of Sodinokibi gets customized with a unique ID so that they can receive payments. Sodinokibi affiliates keep 60 to 70 percent of every ransom payment.

 In July 2019, Sodinokibi advertisers posted a recruitment announcement on a popular hacking forum UNKN.  They mentioned in advertisement that they were looking for experienced individuals to expand their activity and it was a private operation with "limited number of seats" available.

The forum post stressed that it’s forbidden to do business in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) region, including Ukraine, Russia, Belarus, and Moldova.

You can see below some of their attacks post their hiring process. 

§  August 2019, Sodin attack 22 local administrations in Texas and demanded a collective ransom of $2.5 million. 

§  August 2019 : Hacker attack a remote data backup service and encrypted files from dental practices in the U.S. 

§  December 2019 : Hacker  hit another IT vendor serving hundreds of dentistry practices, infecting clients’ computers by exploiting a vulnerable remote access tool. 

§  December  2019 : They claim that they attack against the CyrusOne data center. As per UNKN claim,  they have stolen files from the company before encrypting their network.

§  December  2019 : Developers changed their ransom note over the holidays to include a new message wishing the victims a "Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays".

§  December  2019, they attack Travelex and  the company has to take offline all its computer systems. 

§  January 2020 : Sodinokibi threatened to publish data stolen from GEDIA Automotive Group, a German automotive supplier. They published a MS Excel spreadsheet containing an AdRecon report with information on an Active Directory environment. 

§  February 2020 : the operators of the Sodinokibi Ransomware (REvil)  started urging affiliates to copy their victim's data before encrypting computers . 

§  February 2020 : the operators of  Sodinokibi Ransomware published download links to files containing what they claim is financial and work documents  and customers' personal data stolen from U.S. fashion house Kenneth Cole Productions.

 

Prevention –  

We recommend the following actions to prevent these kind of ransomware attack. 

Ø  A little bit of extra vigilance and don’t open dubious-looking emails. 

Ø  Maintain up-to-date backups of the most important files. 

Ø  Take seriously the storing of passwords for remote access. 

Ø  Use two-factor authentication. 

Ø  Log and centrally collect web, application, and operating systems events. 

Ø  Restrict the account access used to run the WebLogic process. 

Ø  Monitor for Egress network communications from data center systems. 

Ø  Unexpected activity of service or system accounts (WebLogic user). 

Ø  Scan and mitigate your vulnerability posture. 

Ø  Restrict outbound Data Center communications.  

Ø  Always ready for Disaster Recovery, including maintaining and testing data backups and recovery.

 

Conclusion -

Sodinokibi, REvil, Sodin  – regardless of what you call it, it's the dangerous  ransomware on the cyberthreat map now. The REvil attackers use zero-day exploit to distribute ransomware and zero-day exploitation technique could work on otherwise fully-patched systems. Its developers seem to always have new unpredicted tricks up their sleeve, and perfect crypto implementation means that victims must pay up otherwise they will lose all their data.