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BlackCat Ransomware ‘Unseizing’ a Dark Web Stunt | #ransomware | #cybercrime

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Ransomware Group Declares Nothing Off Limits Outside of CIS Countries

BlackCat Ransomware 'Unseizing' a Dark Web Stunt
The BlackCat/Alphv ransomware as a service operation used dark web domain name resolution to its advantage (Image: Shutterstock)

The BlackCat ransomware as service operation’s putative “unseizing” of its leak site from the FBI is a stunt made possible by way the dark web handles address resolution, security researchers said Monday.

See Also: APT43: North Korean Group Uses Cybercrime to Fund Espionage Operations

U.S. authorities as part of an international law enforcement operation announced Monday morning seized dark web infrastructure of the BlackCat ransomware as a service (see: FBI Seizes BlackCat Infrastructure; Group Has New Domain).

The Russian-speaking group established a new dark web leak site and replaced the FBI seizure notice on its previous leak site with a Russian-language note. “This website has been unseized,” it declared. In the note, the ransomware gang said that no targets are now off limits, except those inside the Commonwealth of Independent States, a Russia-dominated association roughly compromised of countries formerly part of the Soviet Union.

“You can now block hospitals, nuclear power plants, anything, anywhere,” the site said, according to machine translation.

BlackCat, also known as Alphv, was able to substitute its own notice for the FBI seizure notice because the gang likely preserved a copy of the public-private key associated with that dark web domain. Domain name resolution for .onion sites – websites accessible through the Tor network – isn’t similar to the hierarchical system of the open web.

“There isn’t a central location, it’s all based on who has the key pair, and the way the protocol works is whichever server is the most recent to have the key pair is the one that the traffic gets redirected to,” said Allan Liska, a ransomware expert at Recorded Future. “They didn’t ‘unseize’ it in the way that they’re using the term.” Law enforcement still should have possession of the original server.

The ransomware actors were able to retain the public-private key pair in advance of their server’s seizure likely because of leaks about the law enforcement operation, Liska told Information Security Media Group (see: Ransomware Group Offline: Have Police Seized Alphv/BlackCat?).

Brett Callow, a threat analyst at Emsisoft, called BlackCat’s posted note a “tactical error” that could alienate affiliates, the on-commission hackers who spread the group’s malware. “If Cyber Command weren’t looking at them before, they certainly are now, and declarations like this make them public enemy number one.” Sensible affiliates will distance themselves from BlackCat, he added, despite the group’s offer to decrease its take from extortion payments down to 10%.

Liska echoed that sentiment, but noted that the gang has already hit medical care facilities and critical infrastructure organizations. “I don’t know how they could possibly be any worse, but they continue to surprise me.”

BlackCat earlier offered affiliates a sliding scale of between 80% and 90% of the extortion money depending on the extortion amount, said cyber threat intel firm Mandiant. The firm said it already spotted actors affiliated with LockBit, another high-profile Russian-speaking ransomware as a service group, apparently attempting to gain market share by appealing to BlackCat “affiliates and offering to post data from victims who were in the negotiation process with Alphv.”

As of publication, the FBI has restored its seizure notice on the BlackCat leak site taken down earlier today.



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