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]]>By Zachery S. Mitcham, MSA, CCISO, CSIH, VP and Chief Information Security Officer, SURGE Professional Services-Group
Simply put, cryptojackers attack enterprise technological systems with the goal of leveraging their computer resources to launch cryptomining assaults on cryptocurrency firms. Graboid, PowerGhost, Badshell, MinerGate, and Prometei are all well know cryptojacking variants that intruders use to capitalize on the resources of the enterprise and personal systems with the intent of conducting cryptomining of popular cryptocurrencies.
Cybercriminals surreptitiously gain access into enterprise or personal computer systems and inject malicious computer code onto them. No systems are safe from cryptojacking. Cloud-based, file-based, and browser-based systems have all been known to have been affected by cryptojackers. The method of choice used by the intruder to introduce the code onto a system is by way of phishing attacks in various forms. Once the code’s payload is applied to the system it behaves similarly to a technological parasite, much like a tick on a dog or a leach on a host. The injected code works in the system background undetected. The preferred code used by the intruder is usually a polymorphic, zero-day, advanced persistent malware deployed as a rootkit.
The intent of the code is not to harm the host, rather hijack its CPU resources in order to launch attacks on other computer systems particularly cryptocurrency targets. Cryptojackers view crypto mining of cryptocurrency as less risky than ransomware in that cryptocurrency firms do not have the same emotional public and law enforcement support as does traditional brick and mortar enterprises that directly affect their everyday lives as was the case with the ransomware attack on the colonial pipeline causing a major consumer panic.
The degraded performance of your system could be an indication that its resources are being used to conduct unwitting cybercriminal activities. Traditional methods used to detect common vulnerabilities such as antivirus protection and popular vulnerability scans are ineffective when it comes to detecting Cryptojacking malware. Network monitoring tools are more effective in detecting Cryptojacking activities in that they reveal increased and unexplainable CPU usage that could possibly cause endpoint failure due to overheating as a result of the increase in usage. Utilizing various network monitoring tools such as Simple Network Management Protocol tools in tandem with Security Information and Event Management tools configured to detect changes within an enterprise technological network, servers and endpoints will be beneficial in the quest for discovering Cryptojacking within your organization.
The long and short of it is that cybercriminals do not have to comply with any rules, regulatory compliance mandates, or standards. Their tactics to disrupt, destroy and manipulate organizations technological system operations are ever-evolving. Therefore, the enterprise must be ever vigilant in the safeguard of their technological resources.
Stay alert! Stay Alive!
About the Author
Zachery S. Mitcham, MSA, CCISO, CSIH is the VP and Chief Information Security Officer at SURGE Professional Services-Group. He is a 20-year veteran of the United States Army where he retired as a Major. He earned his BBA in Business Administration from Mercer University Eugene W. Stetson School of Business and Economics. He also earned an MSA in Administration from Central Michigan University. Zachery graduated from the United States Army School of Information Technology where he earned a diploma with a concentration in systems automation. He completed a graduate studies professional development program earning a Strategic Management Graduate Certificate at Harvard University extension school. Mr. Mitcham holds several computer security certificates from various institutions of higher education to include Stanford, Villanova, Carnegie-Mellon Universities, and the University of Central Florida. He is certified as a Chief Information Security Officer by the EC-Council and a Certified Computer Security Incident Handler from the Software Engineering Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. Zachery received his Information Systems Security Management credentials as an Information Systems Security Officer from the Department of Defense Intelligence Information Systems Accreditations Course in Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Disclaimer
CISO MAG does not endorse any of the claims made by the writer. The facts, opinions, and language in the article do not reflect the views of CISO MAG and CISO MAG does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same. Views expressed in this article are personal.
The post How Cryptojacking and Cryptomining Assaults Work appeared first on CISO MAG | Cyber Security Magazine.
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