New research finds 44% of foiled ransomware attacks are caught during lateral movement

New research finds 44% of foiled ransomware attacks are caught during lateral movement

Barracuda’s ransomware review of 2023/24 also shows that healthcare remains the top attack target

Barracuda Networks, a leading provider of cloud-first security solutions, has released new research showing that lateral movement is the clearest sign of an unfolding ransomware attack, catching just under half (44%) of incidents.

A quarter (25%) of incidents were detected when the attackers started writing or editing files, and 14% were unmasked by behaviour that didn’t fit with known activity patterns. 

The findings are included in Barracuda’s annual Threat Spotlight on ransomware, which explores the main ransomware attack patterns over the last 12 months. 

The ransomware threat landscape in 2023/24 

Barracuda researchers analysed a sample of 200 reported incidents covering August 2023 to July 2024, involving 37 countries and 36 different ransomware groups. 

The sample shows that 21% of incidents hit healthcare organisations, up from 18% a year ago, while 15% of reported attacks were against manufacturing and 13% targeted technology companies.

Incidents involving education halved from last year’s 18% to account for 9% in 2023/24.

Ransomware for rent

The most prevalent ransomware groups were Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) models. These include LockBit, which in the last 12 months was behind one in six, or 18% of attacks where the identity of the attacker is known. 

ALPHV/BlackCat ransomware accounted for 14% of attacks, while Rhysida, a relatively new ransomware group, accounted for 8% of named attacks.

“Ransomware-for-rent attacks can be hard to detect and contain. Different cybercriminal customers can use different tools and tactics to deploy the same payload, resulting in considerable variation,” said Adam Khan, VP, Global Security Operations at Barracuda Networks. 

“Fortunately, there are tried and tested approaches that most attackers rely on, such as scanning, lateral movement, and malware download. These can trigger security alerts that provide security teams with several opportunities to detect, contain and mitigate ransomware incidents before they have a chance to fully unfold. This is particularly important in IT environments where not all machines are completely secured,” Khan added.

Top attack tools and behaviours detected in 2024

According to detection data from Barracuda Managed XDR’s Endpoint Security, in the first six months of 2024, the top indicators of likely ransomware activity include:

·       Lateral movement: Just under half (44%) of the ransomware attacks were spotted by detection systems monitoring for lateral movement

·       File modifications: A quarter (25%) were detected by the system that notes when files are being written or modified and analyses them to see if they match any known ransomware signatures or suspicious patterns

·       Off-pattern behaviour: 14% were caught by the detection system that identifies abnormal behaviour within a system or network. This system learns the typical behaviour of users, processes and applications. When it detects deviations (such as unusual file access, tampering with operating system components, or suspicious network activity), it triggers an alert

The detailed investigation of a mitigated PLAY ransomware attack targeting a health technology business and an 8base incident hitting a car care company found that attackers try to establish footholds on unprotected devices to launch the next phase of their attack and hide malicious files in rarely used music and video folders.

Defence-in-depth

Multiple detection layers are essential in the battle against active threats such as ransomware, where attackers often leverage commercially available tools used legitimately by IT teams and can make real-time adjustments in their behaviour and tactics to succeed.

Barracuda recommends multilayered, AI-powered defences, which are key to detecting and remediating advanced attacks to contain and minimise the impact. This should be complemented by robust authentication and access policies, patching and regular security awareness training for employees.

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