Play attacks Lazer Tow

Incident Date:

July 7, 2023

World map

Overview

Title

Play attacks Lazer Tow

Victim

Lazer Tow

Attacker

Play

Location

Grandview, USA

Missouri, USA

First Reported

July 7, 2023

Play Ransomware Gang's Recent Attacks

The Play ransomware gang has attacked Lazer Tow. Lazer Tow is a vehicle towing company headquartered in Kansas, USA. Play posted Lazer Tow to its data leak site on July 7th, claiming to have stolen company information.

The Play ransomware gang has attacked Lawer. Lawer is a dosing and dispensing services provider headquartered in Biella, Italy. Play posted Lawer to its data leak site on July 7th, claiming to have stolen private and personal confidential data, client and employee documents, contracts, and financial information.

About Play Ransomware

Play ransomware (aka PlayCrypt) is a newer ransomware group that emerged in the summer of 2022 with high-profile attacks on the City of Oakland, Argentina's Judiciary, and German hotel chain H-Hotels. Play has similarities to Hive ransomware and is known to leverage tools like Cobalt Strike for post-compromise lateral movement and SystemBC RAT for persistence, as well as Mimikatz and living-off-the-land binaries (LOLBins) techniques.

Play is an evolving RaaS platform known to exploit a known Exchange vulnerability (CVE-2022-41080 - patched by Microsoft in November of 2022) that allows them to leverage a second vulnerability with a ProxyNotShell exploit (CVE-2022-41082) even if a patch had been applied, which then allows the attackers to execute code on the systems remotely. Play leverages PowerTool to disable antivirus tools and security monitoring solutions.

Play employs tactics similar to both Hive and Nokoyawa ransomware and also attempts double extortion by first exfiltrating victim data with the threat to post it on their leak website. There is little information on how much Play demands for a ransom, but they have made good on their threats to leak the data of those who refuse payment.

Recent Ransomware Attacks

The Recent Ransomware Attacks (RRA) site acts as a watchtower, providing you with near real-time ransomware tracking of attacks, groups and their victims. Given threat actors’ overarching, lucrative success so far, ransomware attacks have become the most ubiquitous, and financially and informationally impactful cyber threat to businesses and organizations today.

The site’s data is generated based on hosting choices of real-world threat actors, and a handful of other trackers. While sanitization efforts have been taken, we cannot guarantee 100% accuracy of the data. Attack updates will be made as source data is reported by reputable sources. By viewing, accessing, or using RRA you acknowledge you are doing so at your own risk.