LockBit 2.0: How This RaaS Operates and How to Protect Against It
2022-6-9 21:0:27 Author: unit42.paloaltonetworks.com(查看原文) 阅读量:23 收藏

A conceptual image representing ransomware, such as LockBit 2.0, discussed here.

This post is also available in: 日本語 (Japanese)

Executive Summary

LockBit 2.0 is ransomware as a service (RaaS) that first emerged in June 2021 as an upgrade to its predecessor LockBit (aka ABCD Ransomware), which was first observed in September 2019.

Since its inception, the LockBit 2.0 RaaS attracted affiliates via recruitment campaigns in underground forums, and thus became particularly prolific during the third quarter of calendar year 2021. The LockBit 2.0 operators claimed to have the fastest encryption software of any active ransomware strain as of June 2021, claiming accordingly that this added to its effectiveness and ability to disrupt the ransomware landscape.

While several top-tier RaaS affiliate programs, such as Babuk, DarkSide and REvil (aka Sodinokibi) disappeared from the underground in 2021, LockBit 2.0 continued to operate and gradually became one of the most active ransomware operations. While Conti was recognized as being the most prolific ransomware deployed in 2021 per our 2022 Unit 42 Ransomware Threat Report, LockBit 2.0 is the most impactful and widely deployed ransomware variant we have observed in all ransomware breaches during the first quarter of 2022, considering both leak site data and data from cases handled by Unit 42 incident responders.

According to data analysis of ransomware groups’ dark web leak sites, LockBit 2.0 was the most impactful RaaS for five consecutive months. As of May 25, LockBit 2.0 accounted for 46% of all ransomware-related breach events for 2022. And the LockBit 2.0 RaaS leak site has the most significant number of published victims, with over 850 in total.

Additionally, LockBit 2.0 has affected many companies globally, with top victims based in the U.S., Italy and Germany. Its most highly targeted industry verticals include professional services, construction, wholesale and retail, and manufacturing.

Palo Alto Networks customers receive protections against LockBit 2.0 attacks from Cortex XDR, as well as from the WildFire cloud-delivered security subscription for the Next-Generation Firewall. (Please see the Conclusion section for more detail.)

Table of Contents

LockBit 2.0 Overview
Victimology
Leak Site Data
Unit 42 Incident Response Data on LockBit 2.0
LockBit 2.0 Tactics, Techniques and Procedures
LockBit 2.0 Technical Details
LockBit 3.0
Courses of Action
Conclusion
Appendix A
Additional Resources

LockBit 2.0 Overview

LockBit 2.0 is another example of RaaS that leverages double extortion techniques as part of the attack to pressure victims into paying the ransom.

In some cases, LockBit 2.0 operators have performed DDoS attacks on the victims' infrastructure as well as using a leak site. This practice is known as triple extortion, a tactic observed in groups like BlackCat, Avaddon and SunCrypt in the past.

Like other ransomware families such as BlackByte, LockBit 2.0 avoids systems that use Eastern European languages, including many written with Cyrillic alphabets.

Unlike other RaaS programs that don't require the affiliates to be super technical or savvy, LockBit 2.0 operators allegedly only work with experienced penetration testers, especially those experienced with tools like Metasploit and Cobalt Strike. Affiliates are tasked with gaining initial access to the victim network, allowing LockBit 2.0 to conduct the rest of the attack.

LockBit 2.0 has been observed changing infected computers’ backgrounds to a ransomware note. The ransomware note was also used to recruit insiders from victim organizations. The notes claimed the threat actors would pay “millions of dollars” to insiders who provided access to corporate networks or facilitated a ransomware infection by opening a phishing email and/or launching a payload manually. The threat actors also expressed interest in other access methods such as RDP, VPN and corporate email credentials. In exchange, they offer a cut of the paid ransom.

Victimology

LockBit 2.0 targets organizations opportunistically. The operators work with initial access brokers to save time and allow for a larger profit potential. While typically seeking victims of opportunity, LockBit 2.0 does appear to have victim limitations. The group announced that they would not target healthcare facilities, social services, educational institutions, charitable organizations and other organizations that “contribute to the survival of the human race”. However, despite these claims, there have been instances of affiliates undermining these guidelines by still opting to attack industry verticals such as healthcare and education.

Organizations in Europe and the U.S. are hit more often by LockBit 2.0 than those in other countries, likely due to the high profitability and insurance payouts.

Leak Site Data

During the first calendar year quarter of 2022, LockBit 2.0 persisted as the most impactful and the most deployed ransomware variant we observed in all ransomware breaches shared on leak sites.

LockBit 2.0 46%, Conti 17%, BlackCat (ALPHV) 10%, Stormous 6%, Hive 6%, Vice Society 5%, Black Basta 3%, BlackByte 3%, Cuba 3%, Kelvin Security 2%
Figure 1. Ransomware leak site data from the first calendar year quarter of 2022.

According to leak site data analysis, LockBit 2.0 was the most impactful RaaS for five consecutive months. As of May 25, LockBit 2.0 accounted for 46% of all ransomware-related breach events for 2022 shared on leak sites.

Additionally, the LockBit 2.0 RaaS leak site has the most significant number of published victims, with over 850 in total. The site itself typically features information such as victim domains, a time tracker and measures of how much data was compromised.

A screenshot of the LockBit 2.0 extortion site. The header reads "conditions for partners and contacts."
Figure 2. LockBit 2.0 leak site extortion site.

LockBit 2.0 claims that they have demanded ransom from at least 12,125 companies, as shown in the figure below.

A screenshot showing LockBit 2.0's claim that they have demanded ransom from at least 12,125 companies.
Figure 3. Source: VX-underground.

According to leak site data for LockBit 2.0, since its inception in June 2021, the RaaS has affected many companies globally, with top victims based in the U.S., Italy and Germany.

Top 10 countries impacted by LockBit 2.0: United States 49.6%, Italy 9.6%, Germany 7.9%, Canada 6.6%, France 6.1%, United Kingdom 5.9%, Spain 4.8%, Thailand 3.5%, Brazil 3.1%, Switzerland 2.9%
Figure 4. LockBit 2.0 geographical impact chart.

LockBit 2.0 has also impacted various victims across multiple industry verticals. Its most highly targeted industry verticals include professional services, construction, wholesale and retail and manufacturing.

Top Leaked Industry Verticals - Professional and Legal 45.6%, Construction 12.8%, Federal Government 7.5%, Real Estate 7.3%, Wholesale and Retail 11.3%, High Tech 5.3%, Manufacturing 10.2%
Figure 5. LockBit 2.0 impacted industry vertical chart.

When looking at leak site data across all ransomware families, we’ve observed LockBit 2.0 targeting the highest number of organizations in the following regions: JAPAC, EMEA, and LATAM.

Unit 42 Incident Response Data on LockBit 2.0

Cases handled by Unit 42 security consultants involving LockBit 2.0 since its appearance in June 2021 demonstrate shorter dwell times and less flexibility in negotiation in the beginning of FY 2022 (measured October-September) in comparison to the end of FY 2021. The following data is broken into fiscal years and quarters based on when the threat actor breached the network, not when the activity was noticed by a client.

LockBit 2.0 has shown a decrease in dwell time in FY 2022. From the last two quarters of FY 2021 to the first two quarters of FY 2022, there has been an average 37-day difference.

LockBit 2.0 Average Dwell Time - FY21 Q3 - approx 55 days, FY21 Q4 approx 73 days, FY22 Q1 approx 35 days, FY22 Q2 approx 18 days
Figure 6. LockBit 2.0 average dwell time by fiscal quarter.

The difference in initial and final ransom demands over the past fiscal year has been converted to percentages and then averaged. The graph below demonstrates that at the end of FY 2021, threat actors using LockBit 2.0 were much more open to negotiations of ransom amounts; during that time the ransom was dropped approximately 83% from the initial ask on average. In comparison, we see less flexibility in FY 2022 Q1 and Q3 – threat actors only offered an average of about 30% as a price drop. FY 2022 Q2 is not included due to lack of sufficient information.

LockBit 2.0 Average Difference in Initial vs Final Ransom - FY21 Q4 - approx 83%, FY22 Q1 - approx 30%, FY22 Q3 - approx 30%
Figure 7. LockBit 2.0 average difference in initial vs final ransom amount, shown as percentages.

LockBit 2.0 Tactics, Techniques and Procedures

Technically speaking, we have observed LockBit 2.0 affiliates leveraging the following tactics, techniques and procedures:

TA0001 Initial Access
T1078 Valid Accounts Credentials that have either been reused across multiple platforms or have previously been exposed. Additionally, this includes VPN accounts – not just domain and local accounts.
T1133 External Remote Services Affiliates have been seen brute forcing exposed RDP services and compromising accounts with weak passwords.
T1190 Exploit Public-Facing Applications Vulnerabilities such as ProxyShell (CVE-2021-34473) and improper SQL sanitization (CVE-2021-20028) have been observed being utilized as footholds into the environment.
TA0002 Execution
T1053.005 Scheduled Task/Job Scheduled Task. LockBit 2.0 can be executed via scheduled tasks.
T1059 Command and Scripting Interpreter LockBit 2.0 is typically executed via command line arguments via a hidden window.

Windows SysInternals PsExec has been utilized for both persistence and execution purposes. Its ability to execute processes on other systems spread the ransomware and assisted in reconnaissance activities. 

TA0003 Persistence
T1053.005 Scheduled Task/Job Scheduled Task. It was quite common to see scheduled tasks used to create persistence for the ransomware executable, PsExec, and occasionally some defense evasion batch scripts.
T1078 Valid Accounts Compromised accounts may be used to maintain access to the network.
T1136.001 Create Account In rare cases, LockBit 2.0 has been observed to create accounts for persistence with simple names, such as “a.”
T1505.003 Server Software Component With the upsurgence of ProxyShell, webshells have become more common entry points.
TA0004 Privilege Escalation
T1068 Exploitation for Privilege Escalation The ProxyShell elevation of privilege on the Exchange PowerShell Backend (CVE-2021-34523), Windows Background Intelligent Transfer Service (BITS) improperly handling symbolic links (CVE-2020-0787), and abusing the CMSTPLUA COM interface have all been seen as methods of privilege escalation.
T1548.002 Abuse Elevation Control Mechanism: Bypass User Account Control LockBit 2.0 has utilized a UAC bypass tool.
TA0005 Defense Evasion
T1070 Indicator Removal on Host Indicators, such as logs in Windows Event Logs or malicious files, are typically removed using wevtutil, a batch script, or CCleaner.
T1140 Deobfuscate/Decode Files or Information Most PowerShell scripts involved in LockBit 2.0 cases are Base64 encoded.
T1484.001 Domain Policy Modification: Group Policy Modification LockBit 2.0 has been seen using the PowerShell module InvokeGPUpdate to update the group policy.
T1562.001 Impair Defenses: Disable or Modify Tools Windows Defender, other anti-malware solutions and monitoring tools are disabled utilizing a process explorer tool, a batch script or a specially crafted command line script.
T1564.003 Hide Artifacts: Hidden Window Affiliates use hidden windows to hide malicious activity from plain sight.
TA0006 Credential Access
T1003 OS Credential Dumping As seen with other ransomware cases, Mimikatz is a key player in dumping credentials but LockBit 2.0 has been occasionally seen utilizing MiniDump as well.
T1555 Credentials from Password Stores LockBit 2.0 has been seen utilizing numerous tools to dump passwords from password stores and Chrome using GrabChrome and GrabRFF.
TA0007 Discovery
T1046 Network Service Discovery Both Advanced Port Scanner and NetScan have been used to discover local network infrastructure devices and services running on remote hosts. Active Directory queries for remote systems have been performed by ADFind.
T1057 Process Discovery Process Explorer, Process Monitor and PCHunter have been utilized to discover any anti-malware or monitoring software and terminate it.
T1082 System Information Discovery LockBit 2.0 enumerates system information such as hostname, shares, and domain information.
T1614 System Location Discovery Attempts to check the language settings.
TA00008 Lateral Movement
T1021 Remote Services Although Cobalt Strike has many capabilities beneficial to threat actors in ransomware attacks, it was mainly seen in LockBit 2.0 investigations acting as a command and control beacon, a method of lateral movement and a tool for downloading/executing files.
T1021.002 Remote Services: SMB/Windows Admin Shares LockBit 2.0 has been known to self-propagate via SMB.
TA0010 Exfiltration
T1030 Data Transfer Size Limits In some cases, LockBit 2.0 will limit the data transfer sizes to fly under the radar of any monitoring services a client may have set up.
T1041 Exfiltration over C2 Channel MEGASync is the leading way for LockBit 2.0 affiliates to exfiltrate data from clients with it being occasionally replaced by RClone.
TA0011 Command and Control
T1219 Remote Access Software AnyDesk has been the most common legitimate desktop software used to establish an interactive command and control channel, with ConnectWise seen slightly less frequently.
TA0040 Impact
T1486 Data Encrypted for Impact LockBit 2.0 is known for its extortion tactics, encrypting devices and demanding a ransom.
T1489 Service Stop During the defense evasion phase, anti-malware and monitoring software is often disabled. Firewall rules have occasionally been seen being disabled as well.

LockBit 2.0 Technical Details

LockBit 2.0 was developed using the Assembly and Origin C programming languages and leverages advanced encryption standard (AES) and elliptic-curve cryptography (ECC) algorithms to encrypt victim data. It can affect both Windows and Linux OS, as the operator released a Linux version of LockBit 2.0 to target VMware ESXi hypervisor systems in October 2021, coded exclusively in the C programming language.

The LockBit group claimed that LockBit 2.0 is “the fastest encryption software all over the world” and provided a comparative table showing the encryption speed of various ransomware samples.

Encryption speed comparative table for some ransomware - 02.08.2021 - The chart provided on the LockBit blog shows LockBit and LockBit 2.0 at the top of a list of encryption speed compared to other ransomware families. It also claims to self-spread.
Figure 8. LockBit encryption comparative table | Source: LockBit blog.

LockBit 2.0 also contains a self-spreading feature, clears logs and can print the ransom note on network printers until the paper runs out.

A management panel that affiliates can use to manage victims and affiliate accounts, generate new ransomware builds and generate the decryptor if the demanded ransom is paid also exists.

This screenshot of the ransomware management panel shows an example of a chat function that allows communication between threat actor and victim.
Figure 9. LockBit 2.0 management panel. Source: ProDaft.

LockBit 2.0 operators also released an information-stealer dubbed StealBit, which was developed to support affiliates of the LockBit 2.0 RaaS when exfiltrating data from breached companies.

StealBit contains the following capabilities:

  • Operates as a file grabber and dumps/uploads victim data to the LockBit victim-shaming site.
  • No reliance on third-party cloud file-sharing services, where data can be easily removed if the victim submitted a complaint.
  • The download speed is limited only by internet connection bandwidth, so it is possible to clone folders from corporate networks and upload them to the LockBit victim shaming blog quickly.

The operator of LockBit 2.0 has provided a comparative table speed showing the information stealer compared to other tools.

Comparative table of the information download speed of the attacked company. - an information sheet provided by the operator of LockBit 2.0 ransomware.
Figure 10. LockBit 2.0 download speed, according to LockBit 2.0 operator.

LockBit 3.0

There was a bug that existed in LockBit 2.0 that allowed researchers to revert the encryption process on an MSSQL database. After the bug’s disclosure, LockBit forum members discussed how the bug will not exist in LockBit’s next iteration. Moreover, on March 17, LockBit forum members mentioned the release of LockBit’s next version in one or two weeks. On March 25, VX underground posted a tweet with details of this new version, dubbed LockBit Black.

The screen reads: LockBit Black - All your important files are stolen and encrypted! You must find 7WYIIG83f.README.txt file and follow the instruction!
Figure 11. LockBit Black post-infection desktop wallpaper (Source: VX-underground).

Courses of Action

Several adversarial techniques were observed in this activity and the following measures are suggested within Palo Alto Networks products and services to ensure mitigation of threats related to LockBit 2.0 ransomware, as well as other malware using similar techniques:

Product / Service Course of Action
Initial Access, Execution, Persistence, Privilege Escalation, Defense Evasion
The courses of action below mitigate the following techniques:

Exploit Public-Facing Application [T1190], Command and Scripting Interpreter [T1059], Local Account [T1136.001], Web Shell [T1505.003], Exploitation for Privilege Escalation [T1068], Indicator Removal on Host [T1070], Deobfuscate/Decode Files or Information [T1140], Disable or Modify Tools [T1562.001], Hidden Window [T1564.003], Valid Accounts [T1078], External Remote Services [T1133], Scheduled Task [T1053.005], Bypass User Account Control [T1548.002], Group Policy Modification [T1484.001]

THREAT PREVENTION Ensure a secure Vulnerability Protection Profile is applied to all security rules allowing traffic
Ensure a Vulnerability Protection Profile is set to block attacks against critical and high vulnerabilities, and set to default on medium, low, and informational vulnerabilities
Ensure DNS sinkholing is configured on all anti-spyware profiles in use
Ensure an anti-spyware profile is configured to block on all spyware severity levels, categories, and threats
Ensure a secure anti-spyware profile is applied to all security policies permitting traffic to the internet
Ensure passive DNS monitoring is set to enabled on all anti-spyware profiles in use
CORTEX XSOAR Deploy XSOAR Playbook Cortex XDR - Isolate Endpoint
Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Block Account Generic
Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Access Investigation Playbook
Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Impossible Traveler
NEXT-GENERATION FIREWALLS Ensure 'Service setting of ANY' in a security policy allowing traffic does not exist
Ensure application security policies exist when allowing traffic from an untrusted zone to a more trusted zone
Ensure 'Security Policy' denying any/all traffic to/from IP addresses on Trusted Threat Intelligence Sources Exists
Ensure that the User-ID service account does not have interactive logon rights
Define at least one 'Include Network'.
Ensure that User-ID is only enabled for internal trusted interfaces
Ensure that 'Include/Exclude Networks' is used if User-ID is enabled
Ensure remote access capabilities for the User-ID service account are forbidden.
Ensure that the User-ID Agent has minimal permissions if User-ID is enabled
CORTEX XDR PREVENT Enable Anti-Malware Protection
Enable Anti-Exploit Protection
Configure Host Firewall Profile
Configure Behavioral Threat Protection under the Malware Security Profile
Credential Access
The courses of action below mitigate the following techniques:

OS Credential Dumping [T1003], Credentials from Password Stores [T1555]

CORTEX XDR PREVENT Enable Anti-Exploit Protection
Enable Anti-Malware Protection
Discovery
The below courses of action mitigate the following techniques:

Network Service Scanning [T1046], Process Discovery [T1057], System Location Discovery [T1614], System Information Discovery [T1082]

CORTEX XDR PREVENT Configure Behavioral Threat Protection under the Malware Security Profile
NEXT-GENERATION FIREWALLS Ensure that all zones have Zone Protection Profiles with all Reconnaissance Protection settings enabled, tuned, and set to appropriate actions
Ensure 'Service setting of ANY' in a security policy allowing traffic does not exist
Ensure 'Security Policy' denying any/all traffic to/from IP addresses on Trusted Threat Intelligence Sources Exists
Ensure application security policies exist when allowing traffic from an untrusted zone to a more trusted zone
CORTEX XSOAR Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Port Scan
Lateral Movement
The courses of action below mitigate the following techniques:

Remote Services [T1021], SMB/Windows Admin Shares [T1021.002]

NEXT-GENERATION FIREWALLS Ensure remote access capabilities for the User-ID service account are forbidden.
Ensure that User-ID is only enabled for internal trusted interfaces
Ensure that the User-ID Agent has minimal permissions if User-ID is enabled
Ensure that the User-ID service account does not have interactive logon rights
Ensure that 'Include/Exclude Networks' is used if User-ID is enabled
Ensure that security policies restrict User-ID Agent traffic from crossing into untrusted zones
CORTEX XSOAR Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Block Account Generic
Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Access Investigation Playbook
Command and Control
The courses of action below mitigate the following techniques:

Remote Access Software [T1219]

NEXT-GENERATION FIREWALLS Ensure that the Certificate used for Decryption is Trusted
Ensure application security policies exist when allowing traffic from an untrusted zone to a more trusted zone
Ensure 'Security Policy' denying any/all traffic to/from IP addresses on Trusted Threat Intelligence Sources Exists
Ensure 'SSL Forward Proxy Policy' for traffic destined to the internet is configured
Ensure 'SSL Inbound Inspection' is required for all untrusted traffic destined for servers using SSL or TLS
Ensure 'Service setting of ANY' in a security policy allowing traffic does not exist
THREAT PREVENTION Ensure DNS sinkholing is configured on all anti-spyware profiles in use
Ensure passive DNS monitoring is set to enabled on all anti-spyware profiles in use
Ensure a secure anti-spyware profile is applied to all security policies permitting traffic to the Internet
Ensure that antivirus profiles are set to block on all decoders except 'imap' and 'pop3'
Ensure an anti-spyware profile is configured to block on all spyware severity levels, categories, and threats
Ensure a secure antivirus profile is applied to all relevant security policies
URL FILTERING Ensure secure URL filtering is enabled for all security policies allowing traffic to the internet
Ensure all HTTP Header Logging options are enabled
Ensure that PAN-DB URL Filtering is used
Ensure that URL Filtering uses the action of ‘block’ or ‘override’ on the URL categories
Ensure that access to every URL is logged
CORTEX XSOAR Deploy XSOAR Playbook - PAN-OS Query Logs for Indicators
Exfiltration
The courses of action below mitigate the following techniques:

Data Transfer Size Limits [T1030], Exfiltration Over C2 Channel [T1041]

THREAT PREVENTION Ensure DNS sinkholing is configured on all anti-spyware profiles in use
Ensure that antivirus profiles are set to block on all decoders except 'imap' and 'pop3'
Ensure an anti-spyware profile is configured to block on all spyware severity levels, categories, and threats
Ensure passive DNS monitoring is set to enabled on all anti-spyware profiles in use
Ensure a secure anti-spyware profile is applied to all security policies permitting traffic to the Internet
Ensure a secure antivirus profile is applied to all relevant security policies
URL FILTERING Ensure that PAN-DB URL Filtering is used
Ensure that access to every URL is logged
Ensure that URL Filtering uses the action of ‘block’ or ‘override’ on the URL categories
Ensure secure URL filtering is enabled for all security policies allowing traffic to the internet
Ensure all HTTP Header Logging options are enabled
CORTEX XSOAR Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Block URL
Deploy XSOAR Playbook - PAN-OS Query Logs for Indicators
Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Block IP
DNS SECURITY Enable DNS Security in Anti-Spyware profile
NEXT-GENERATION FIREWALLS Setup NetFlow Monitoring
Ensure application security policies exist when allowing traffic from an untrusted zone to a more trusted zone
Ensure 'Service setting of ANY' in a security policy allowing traffic does not exist
Ensure 'Security Policy' denying any/all traffic to/from IP addresses on Trusted Threat Intelligence Sources Exists
Impact
The courses of action below mitigate the following techniques:

Data Encrypted for Impact [T1486], Service Stop [T1489]

CORTEX XSOAR Deploy XSOAR Playbook - Ransomware Manual for incident response.

†These capabilities are part of the NGFW security subscriptions service
Note: This is not an all-inclusive list of the protections provided by Palo Alto Networks. This is a subset of our current Courses of Action initiative and will be updated as the project progresses.

Conclusion

LockBit 2.0 and its evolution over time is a perfect example to illustrate the persistence, increasing complexity and impact brought by the ransomware landscape as a whole. With claims of this RaaS offering the fastest encryption on the ransomware market, coupled with the fact that it has been delivered in high volume by experienced affiliates, this RaaS poses a significant threat. LockBit’s continuation with operations and its next iteration coming up on the horizon means that organizations and their security teams need to stay vigilant in the ever-evolving threat landscape.

Palo Alto Networks detects and prevents LockBit 2.0 ransomware in the following ways:

  • WildFire: All known samples are identified as malware.
  • Cortex XDR:
    • Identifies indicators associated with LockBit 2.0.
    • Anti-Ransomware Module to detect LockBit 2.0 encryption behaviors on Windows.
    • Local Analysis detection for LockBit 2.0 binaries on Windows.
  • Next-Generation Firewalls: DNS Signatures detect the known C2 domains, which are also categorized as malware in Advanced URL Filtering.

If you think you may have been compromised or have an urgent matter, get in touch with the Unit 42 Incident Response team or call:

  • North America Toll-Free: 866.486.4842 (866.4.UNIT42)
  • EMEA: +31.20.299.3130
  • APAC: +65.6983.8730
  • Japan: +81.50.1790.0200

Palo Alto Networks has shared these findings, including file samples and indicators of compromise, with our fellow Cyber Threat Alliance members. CTA members use this intelligence to rapidly deploy protections to their customers and to systematically disrupt malicious cyber actors. Learn more about the Cyber Threat Alliance.

Appendix A

In August 2021, a Russian blogger published a 22-minute interview with an alleged representative of the group behind LockBit 2.0 called “LockBitSupp” on a YouTube channel called “Russian-language open source intelligence (OSINT).” The same Russian blogger previously published interviews with a representative of the group behind the REvil ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS), hackers and security experts.

Some key takeaways from the claims made in the interview were:

  • The LockBit 2.0 threat actor claimed the group’s RaaS was unlikely to be rebranded since the team allegedly was a business that was honest with their customers – suggesting a supposed contrast between LockBit 2.0 and Avaddon, DarkSide and REvil affiliates.
  • The LockBit 2.0 ransomware disregarded keyboard layout, but it allegedly would not run on a host where the system language was set to any of the languages spoken in the Commonwealth of Independent States region.
  • The group did not devise attacks on companies of their choice; they simply worked with initial access to any corporate network they obtained elsewhere, since this was more profitable and saved time. The team selected targets for ransomware attacks based on the company’s finances — the bigger, the better. The location also did not matter. However, team members allegedly did not attack healthcare facilities, social services, educational institutions and charitable organizations or any other organization that “contributed to the survival of the human race.” [Note that Unit 42 case data does include indications that threat actors using LockBit 2.0 have targeted healthcare organizations at times.]
  • The threat actor claimed that the largest number of victims who paid ransom were company representatives who did not care about creating backup copies and did not protect their sensitive data. According to the threat actor’s claims, companies that violated regulations about collecting and handling customer or user personal information were among those eager to pay. The threat actor claimed that there generally were only a few companies who refused to pay ransom on principle, while most of the victims evaluated profit and loss to decide whether or not to pay a ransom.
  • LockBit 2.0 operators allegedly almost always offered discounts to their victims since the goal was to streamline attacks.
  • The threat actor claimed that the COVID-19 pandemic facilitated ransomware attacks significantly, saying it was easy to compromise home computers of employees who work remotely and use them as a springboard to access other networked systems.
  • Companies in Europe and the U.S. were hit with ransomware much more often than companies based in other countries allegedly because of high profit and insurance and not because of language barriers.
  • Ransomware operators usually recruit negotiators, who coerce victims to pay ransom, since professional penetration testers allegedly lack the time for chatter.

Additional Resources

LockBit 3.0: Another Upgrade to the World’s Most Active Ransomware
Ransomware Groups to Watch: Emerging Threats
Average Ransom Payment Up 71% This Year, Approaches $1 Million
2022 Unit 42 Ransomware Threat Report Highlights

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