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You may have been hacked

You may have been hacked

The use of ransomware authors to attack companies during the coronavirus crisis was not unusual. Contrary to recent reports that hackers pledged not to attack hospitals, medical companies and government institutions, new file-encrypting malware was released in the first weeks of April. It caused a great deal of chaos and created some significant risk for multiple industries, but it will be contained by cybersecurity experts.

Though it’s true that hacking attempts have been going on for decades, they’re now more sophisticated and private. They are now waiting to strike until they’ve realized the most financial benefit. These attacks often start with compromising vulnerable devices. Then, they use brute force to breach RDP server accounts. This allows malicious people to gain access to system administrator accounts.

To help prevent DDoS attacks and other threats, the latest campaigns have mainly focused on RDP and Virtual Desktop endpoints that did not have multi-factor authentication enabled, systems with unsupported software such as Windows Server 2003 and 2008, web servers with incorrect configuration, vulnerabilities (Netscaler) ADC systems and Pulse Secure VPNs.

Weaknesses in systems, commonly called hacks and exploits, are constantly found on the web by attackers. If administrators have not fixed them yet, they will have a lot of trouble protecting themselves from cybercriminals.

The worrying aspect of the case is hackers’ recent change in tactics. They now make money by stealing data and then trying to charge for revealing it. Microsoft even claims that many hackers, even after payment, retain some access to the data for future blackmail.

Have you been hacked in the past?

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Author: PC-GR
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