Construction was among the top five business sectors targeted by cyberattacks in the second quarter of 2018, according to the latest “threat report” released earlier this month by eSentire, the largest pure-play managed detection and response service provider.
Based on intelligence gathered from more than 2,000 proprietary network and host-based detection sensors distributed globally in multiple industries, eSentire estimates that the number of attacks on Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) jumped to 1.7 million in the second quarter, from 2,000 in the first quarter. Most sources targeting IIS web servers originated from China-based IP addresses: according to Shodan, the global search engine for Internet-connected devices, there are 3.5 million IIS web servers exposed (with 1 million in China). The compromised servers largely originated from the Tencent and Alibaba sites.
eSentire observed IIS and WebLogic attacks originating from servers hosting Apache, RDP, SQL, IIS, and HTTP API services. Most of the records included known potential vulnerabilities based on server software version. Vulnerability records for attacking servers showed a steady increase. The majority of this growth appeared to come from Apache HTTP Servers, version 2.4.23. In the same period, records reporting vulnerabilities in IIS 7.5 and HTTP Server 2.4.10 appeared to diminish.
Four million potentially hostile events resulted in 57,000 alerts having been sent from eSentire’s SOC (Security Operations Center) between April 1 and June 30, 2018. Normalizing by sensor count, the top five affected industries were Biotechnology, Accounting Services, Real Estate, Marketing, and Construction. Regardless of industry, most attackers are probably looking to drive ad revenue or adopt compromised servers into their attack infrastructure, the report suggests.
The reason attacks continue, posits the report, is because most organizations have internal systems they hesitate to update for fear it will change or break something. These systems are sometimes accidentally exposed to background internet radiation which includes a firehose of exploits. Or, they are unaware that a patch is necessary or underestimate the gravity of failing to patch. This is an easily rectifiable problem that nevertheless lingers for many businesses.
There also was an increase, in general, in phishing attacks that used shipping invoice lures, despite an overall decline in the use of DocuSign—which facilities the exchanges of contracts and signed documents—as lures. Construction, Education, and Marketing experienced the largest amount of confirmed phishing attacks, with DocuSign dominating the lures observed; likely, these industries make frequent use of DocuSign in handling digital invoices and quotes due to remotely based business relationships and employees.
Construction was vulnerable to phishing attacks that used DocuSign as their primary lure. Image: eSentire
Real Estate experienced high volumes of D-Link home router exploit attempts. Marketing was subjected to a high volume of D-Link exploit attempts and a sizable degree of malicious PowerShell activity. And Construction experienced a large amount of Drupalgeddon2 attacks (the name given to an extremely critical vulnerability Drupal maintainers patched in late March).
PowerShell is a task-based command-line shell and scripting language built on .NET. PowerShell helps system administrators, and power-users can rapidly automate tasks that manage operating systems (Linux, macOS, and Windows) and processes. PowerShell commands let you manage computers from the command line.
In Q2 2018, the eSentire detection surface revealed that an obfuscated PowerShell realized an increase of 50% in commands, partly due to Emotet, a sophisticated malware.
Emotet, a four-year-old banking trojan, continues to evolve and emerge; antivirus solutions detected it, on average, only 22% of the time in the quarter. Emotet remains a popular choice for threat actors and was the most frequently observed malware due to numerous version updates and feature additions since it was first reported in 2014. Obfuscated malicious PowerShell commands increased 50% in Q2 2018.
Nearly half (49%) of Emotet samples included “invoice,” “payment,” or “account” in their file names. For Emotet’s competitor, Hancitor, fax documents were a popular lure (25%).
To protect against Emotet and to mitigate worming capabilities, Server Message Block Protocol (SMB) communications between systems in a network should be restricted via group policy settings or in the configuration of host-based Intrusion Prevention Systems (HIPS).
Malware, which is intended to damage or disable computers and systems, breaks down into four threat levels: malicious, suspicious, benign, and ambiguous (like false positives). Construction ranked fourth—behind Healthcare, Real Estate, and Marketing—for malware events (20 per sensor), and ranked second (after Accounting Services) for reputational blocks (about 5.25 alerts per sensor), which occur when known bad Internet Protocols (IPs) are detected trying to establish connections with monitored clients. Accounting Services and Construction are known to have large threat surfaces.
Some IPs only attempted an IIS or WebLogic exploit, while other IPs attempted both. The IPs attempting IIS and WebLogic persisted throughout the quarter, said eSentire, but those tended to rise with the emergence of other potential campaigns, indicating some threat actors may have an array of botnets in different configurations.
Related Stories
Architects | May 14, 2018
4 tactics for our digital transformation
While our technology is becoming more advanced, the fundamental processes at the core of design and construction businesses have largely remained unchanged for decades.
Virtual Reality | May 8, 2018
‘Bespoke’ VR apps give Woods Bagot an edge in presenting design ideas
The architectural firm is finding that some clients respond quicker to proposals as a result.
Architects | Apr 16, 2018
Is the AEC industry ready to shake off its retrograde image?
Technology has been and always will be perceived as a source for wonder and worry.
Building Technology | Apr 10, 2018
A jobsite dashboard is helping Clark Construction take the drudgery out of managing punch lists
Turnover Vision is the latest example of Clark digitizing its construction management process.
Contractors | Apr 9, 2018
Tech Report 5.0: Smart(er) Jobsites
Real-time construction analysis, just-in-time materials delivery, digital production planning systems—these are just a few of the novel approaches construction firms are implementing to take control of their jobsites.
Building Technology | Apr 9, 2018
Autodesk opens its Forge platform, encouraging more suppliers to build onto it
The goal is to further streamline the construction process, from design to commissioning.
Architects | Apr 5, 2018
Tech Report 5.0: The Human Touch
Can studying humans at a behavioral level produce better buildings? Cognitive architecture experts are working to find out.
Building Technology | Apr 4, 2018
Tech Report 5.0: Digital Immersion
Indoor digital media changes the identities of buildings by stimulating occupant interaction.
Building Technology | Apr 3, 2018
Tech Report 5.0: AI Arrives
From construction scheduling to risk management, AEC firms see promise in budding artificial intelligence platforms geared for commercial building projects.
Building Technology | Mar 1, 2018
Small construction businesses will continue to lag other sectors in tech spending this year
A survey of 800 companies found tepid interest overall in investing in “big data.”