Rhysida attacks Seven Seas Technology
Incident Date:
April 3, 2024
Overview
Title
Rhysida attacks Seven Seas Technology
Victim
Seven Seas Technology
Attacker
Rhysida
Location
First Reported
April 3, 2024
Rhysida Ransomware Compromises Seven Seas Technology
The Rhysida ransomware group has reportedly compromised Seven Seas Technology. The gang has demanded a ransom of 6 BTC, with a deadline of 10 April. The attack involves miscellaneous data, including PII documents. Seven Seas Technology (SSTech) offers ICT solutions and services in enterprise systems, cloud, data, networking, unified communications, and more. It has over 40 years of experience and more than 300 ICT-trained and certified professionals.
Rhysida: A Growing Threat
Rhysida is a RaaS that was first observed in May of 2023 and has become one of the more prevalent threats in the latter half of 2023. Rhysida engages in data exfiltration for double extortion and maintains both a leak site and a victim support portal on TOR. They are thought to be responsible for attacks against the Chilean military and, more recently, against Prospect Medical Holdings, which impacted services at hundreds of clinics and hospitals across the US.
FBI and CISA Advisory
In Q4-2023, the FBI and CISA released a joint advisory on Rhysida operations. Rhysida has been steadily increasing its attack volume and continuing to expand the targeted industries, but the volume is modest compared to that of its leaders.
Method of Attack
Rhysida deploys its ransomware through various methods, including Cobalt Strike or similar frameworks, as well as phishing campaigns. Analysis of Rhysida ransomware samples suggests that the group is still in the early stages of development. The ransomware lacks certain standard features, such as VSS removal, which are standard in contemporary ransomware. However, the group follows the practices of modern multi-extortion groups by threatening to distribute the stolen data publicly.
Execution and Payment
Upon execution, Rhysida displays a cmd.exe window and scans all files on local drives. Victims are instructed to contact the attackers using the TOR-based portal and their unique identifier provided in the ransom notes. The group only accepts payment in Bitcoin (BTC) and provides victims with instructions on purchasing and using BTC through the victim portal. Victims are also given an additional form on the payment portal to provide authentication and contact details to the attackers. The Rhysida ransom notes are written as PDF documents and placed in the affected folders on the targeted drives.
Recent Ransomware Attacks
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