November 17, 2015 By Michelle Alvarez 2 min read

This year has flown by! It seems like just yesterday IBM was presenting “2014: The Year That the Internet Fell Apart” at the InterConnect Conference. Aside from good holiday cheer, the end of the year is often a time when one reflects on past events and lessons learned. For this reason, the final issue of the 2015 IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Quarterly shifts the focus to our in-house experts at IBM Security Services and their recent security research.

The IBM Security Services team has an extensive global reach and experience with addressing cybersecurity concerns and incidents affecting clients across a broad range of industries. Insights garnered from these experiences allow the team to identify common threads, which are woven together to form a picture of current security trends, techniques and tools used by cybercriminals, as well as reoccurring gaps in our clients’ security postures.

Security Research Finds Four Top Cybercrime Trends

Many of the security incidents to which the IBM Emergency Response Services (ERS) team responds involve fundamental breakdowns in sound security practices — that is, they could be prevented. While the incidents occur around the globe, many of them share certain characteristics and fit recurring patterns.

Our report begins by highlighting four key trends the ERS team has observed throughout 2015. These include an increase in onion-layered security incidents, ransomware attacks and insider threats, along with the transformation of security issues into a boardroom priority.

Indicators of Compromise

These security trends raise an important question: How can your enterprise find the footprints that attackers leave behind when they breach your defenses? Fortunately, the attackers aren’t the only ones who have a collection of tools at their disposal.

Our second article addresses indicators of compromise (IoC), which provide the digital evidence that an attack may have occurred and are an important tool in forensic analysis following a breach. We focus on how security teams can use IoC to track advanced attackers, assess the level of compromise and remediate issues before significant damage occurs.

Good News! Small Changes Can Have a Big Impact

It’s been a tough year for our customers’ security teams. Insider threats, malware, stealthy tools and morphing attacks continue to challenge organizations of all sizes in 2015.

When IBM X-Force looks back across the year, we see many areas for improvement. The good news is that organizations can use this security research to take stronger responsibility, make a few small changes and see a big impact for the long term.

Download the complete IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Quarterly – 4Q 2015

More from X-Force

SoaPy: Stealthy enumeration of Active Directory environments through ADWS

10 min read - Introduction Over time, both targeted and large-scale enumeration of Active Directory (AD) environments have become increasingly detected due to modern defensive solutions. During our internship at X-Force Red this past summer, we noticed FalconForce’s SOAPHound was becoming popular for enumerating Active Directory environments. This tool brought a new perspective to Active Directory enumeration by performing collection via Active Directory Web Services (ADWS) instead of directly through Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) as other AD enumeration tools had in the past.…

Smoltalk: RCE in open source agents

26 min read - Big shoutout to Hugging Face and the smolagents team for their cooperation and quick turnaround for a fix! Introduction Recently, I have been working on a side project to automate some pentest reconnaissance with AI agents. Just after I started this project, Hugging Face announced the release of smolagents, a lightweight framework for building AI agents that implements the methodology described in the ReAct paper, emphasizing reasoning through iterative decision-making. Interestingly, smolagents enables agents to reason and act by generating…

Being a good CLR host – Modernizing offensive .NET tradecraft

14 min read - The modern red team is defined by its ability to compromise endpoints and take actions to complete objectives. To achieve the former, many teams implement their own custom command-and-control (C2) or use an open-source option. For the latter, there is a constant stream of post-exploitation tooling being released that takes advantage of various features in Windows, Active Directory and third-party applications. The execution mechanism for this tooling has, for the last several years, relied heavily on executing .NET assemblies in…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today