Tuesday, April 1, 2025
Homecyber securityAkira Ransomware Exploiting Zero-day Flaws For Organization Network Access

Akira Ransomware Exploiting Zero-day Flaws For Organization Network Access

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

The Akira ransomware group, which first appeared in March 2023, has been identified as a serious threat to data security. It encrypts data and demands a ransom for decryption, affecting both Windows and Linux devices.

The group has about 140 organizations as its target. The encryption binary of Akira, like that of many other ransomware, removes volume shadow copies, targets particular file extensions, and ignores files located in particular directories (such as those that include system files).

In particular, the United States of America, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and Canada were among the nations from which the gang claimed several victims.

Specifics of Akira’s Recent Operations

Three phases were identified in the attack, according to CERT Intrinsec’s investigation. In the initial stage, Akira affiliates get access to the network by using credentials that have been stolen or by making use of the CVE-2023-20269 vulnerability (affecting Cisco ASA and FTD).

This enables them to perform brute-force attacks on local passwords covertly. By setting up local and domain accounts or installing remote access tools, they create their persistence in the information system. 

Subsequently, affiliates use the Remote Desktop Protocol to travel laterally throughout the infrastructure, gather data, exfiltrate it using Filezilla or WinSCP, and then remove all traces of their activities to evade discovery.

The second phase lasts several days, during which affiliates stay stealthy. They could be analyzing technical data gathered from the information system or examining data that has been exfiltrated.

Attack path
Akira’s operation timeline

In the final stage, the attackers reappear to establish their final points of persistence, turn off security measures, attempt to destroy backups and erase volume shadow copies before executing their encryption code on the designated servers.

Investigations carried out during Akira operations reveal that affiliates will employ as many practical and legitimate techniques as possible, perhaps to ensure EDR solutions are bypassed.

Attackers attempted to remove Volume Shadow Copies using PowerShell commands and a management console connection to remove VEEAM backups.

“They finally encrypted equipments on the information system, using an Akira encryption binary,” researchers said.

Recommendation:

  • Install a backup solution and regularly test the restoration procedure.
  • Maintain a minimum of one backup version outside the information system.
  • Keep an eye on backup infrastructure access.
Balaji
Balaji
BALAJI is an Ex-Security Researcher (Threat Research Labs) at Comodo Cybersecurity. Editor-in-Chief & Co-Founder - Cyber Security News & GBHackers On Security.

Latest articles

Rockwell Automation Vulnerability Allows Attackers to Execute Arbitrary Commands

Rockwell Automation has identified a critical flaw in its Verve Asset Manager software, exposing industrial systems...

Check Point Confirms Data Breach, Says Leaked Information is ‘Old’

Cybersecurity giant Check Point has confirmed that a recent post on a notorious dark...

CrushFTP Security Vulnerability Under Attack After PoC Release

A recently disclosed security vulnerability in CrushFTP, identified as CVE-2025-2825, has become the target...

CISA Warns of Cisco Smart Licensing Utility Credential Flaw Exploited in Attacks

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has issued a security advisory warning organizations...

Supply Chain Attack Prevention

Free Webinar - Supply Chain Attack Prevention

Recent attacks like Polyfill[.]io show how compromised third-party components become backdoors for hackers. PCI DSS 4.0’s Requirement 6.4.3 mandates stricter browser script controls, while Requirement 12.8 focuses on securing third-party providers.

Join Vivekanand Gopalan (VP of Products – Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing – Indusface) as they break down these compliance requirements and share strategies to protect your applications from supply chain attacks.

Discussion points

Meeting PCI DSS 4.0 mandates.
Blocking malicious components and unauthorized JavaScript execution.
PIdentifying attack surfaces from third-party dependencies.
Preventing man-in-the-browser attacks with proactive monitoring.

More like this

Operation HollowQuill – Weaponized PDFs Deliver a Cobalt Strike Malware Into Gov & Military Networks

In a recent revelation by SEQRITE Labs, a highly sophisticated cyber-espionage campaign, dubbed Operation...

Earth Alux Hackers Use VARGIET Malware to Target Organizations

A new wave of cyberattacks orchestrated by the advanced persistent threat (APT) group Earth...

“Lazarus Hackers Group” No Longer Refer to a Single APT Group But a Collection of Many Sub-Groups

The term "Lazarus Group," once used to describe a singular Advanced Persistent Threat (APT)...