Handler on Duty: Manuel Humberto Santander Pelaez
Threat Level: green
Podcast Detail
SANS Stormcast Thursday, May 28th, 2026: Akira Ransomware; Vaultjacking; Poisoned Chatbot and Search Results;
If you are not able to play the podcast using the player below: Use this direct link to the audio file: https://traffic.libsyn.com/securitypodcast/9948.mp3
My Next Class
Click HERE to learn more about classes Johannes is teaching for SANS
Reconstructing an Akira Ransomware Kill Chain from Perimeter and Endpoint Logs
https://isc.sans.edu/diary/Reconstructing%20an%20Akira%20Ransomware%20Kill%20Chain%20from%20Perimeter%20and%20Endpoint%20Logs/33024
Vaultjacking: One Captured PIN, the Entire Google Password Manager Vault
https://phishu.net/blogs/blog-vaultjacking-phishing-the-google-password-manager-vault-in-the-phishu-framework.html
From poisoned search results to GPU mining: A cryptojacking campaign abusing ScreenConnect and Microsoft .NET utilities
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/05/26/poisoned-search-results-gpu-mining-cryptojacking-campaign-abusing-screenconnect-microsoft-net-utilities/
| Network Monitoring and Threat Detection In-Depth | Online | Arabian Standard Time | Jun 27th - Jul 2nd 2026 |
| Network Monitoring and Threat Detection In-Depth | Riyadh | Jun 27th - Jul 2nd 2026 |
| Application Security: Securing Web Apps, APIs, and Microservices | Washington | Jul 13th - Jul 18th 2026 |
| Application Security: Securing Web Apps, APIs, and Microservices | Online | British Summer Time | Jul 27th - Aug 1st 2026 |
| Application Security: Securing Web Apps, APIs, and Microservices | Las Vegas | Sep 21st - Sep 25th 2026 |
| Network Monitoring and Threat Detection In-Depth | Amsterdam | Nov 9th - Nov 14th 2026 |
| Application Security: Securing Web Apps, APIs, and Microservices | Washington | Dec 14th - Dec 18th 2026 |
Podcast Transcript
Hello and welcome to the Thursday, May 28, 2026 edition of the SANS Internet Storm Center's Stormcast. My name is Johannes Ulrich, recording today from Jacksonville, Florida. And this episode is brought to you by the SANS.edu Undergraduate Certificate Program in Cybersecurity Fundamentals. Well, I assume nobody here likes ransomware, but one thing I do like is a great write-up explaining how to early detect ransomware. Manuel wrote up an Akira ransomware killchain, which essentially walks you through the about one week of activity that was conducted by this particular threat actor against a network from which Manuel was able to obtain logs. Now, what was interesting is that really there were some early signs that something wasn't right. And that was a large number of failed authentication events against the SSL VPN. As so often, well, the security device here, the SSL VPN did sort of cause or provide the initial access. Now, here in this case, it was basically just the credential brute forcing. The attacker eventually got lucky and was able to log in. So there was no specific exploit used here. Next, we then had the internal discovery where the attacker was essentially probing the network. So of trying to connect to window shares and doing the usual whoami and such. So all actually things that are relatively easy to detect if you are properly instrumented. And then of course, lateral movement via RDP. Also very typical very typical ransomware strategy. Well, in summary, it took them about a week to actually start the encryption. So there were actually quite a few sort of early indicators that may have helped to then prevent the actual encryption and exfiltration potentially here of the data. Manuel walks you through all the different indicators, all the log ids and such to look for in order to identify this activity hopefully before it gets encrypted by a similar attack. or citricule Launch. So this is a question of what you've discussed with. So your asana ,cturrent network 방 da is 1.570, whether you're recently an example, our commit to the primate learning network is including neural duringess and authentication is, well, pass keys that have become more and more popular in recent years. Now the problem of course is still that the pass keys have to be stored somewhere and one of the usability features added to pass keys is the ability to synchronize them across different devices. So even if your pass keys are phishing resistant, well if the storage medium that you're using basically synchronization mechanism is not phishing resistant, well then that doesn't really matter how secure your pass keys are. And this is something that PhishU is exploiting and PhishU is a company that sort of does security awareness training and also these phishing as service testing engagements. Well and they documented now an interesting use of phishing in order to gain credentials for Google's password and pass key syncing mechanisms. It's all leveraged around the pin that's being used to authenticate a particular device and essentially the user is tricked into entering that pin into the PhishU dialogue. So it comes back down to phishing. If you're falling for phishing then you're possibly also going to enter your sync pin to unlock essentially a device to the adversary and the adversary is unable to add additional pass keys to your account which of course provides them with persistent access to your account and then also add their own device as a sync target for all of your password and pass key data. Interesting attack and again a phishing resistance is important and of course specifically important for things like password managers. Numerous times in the past I've talked about how Google Ads or in general Google search results are used to push malicious results and trick users into downloading malicious software. Well it turns out that chatbots and LLMs are not really exempt from this particular threats that the attackers are somewhat taking advantage of this now and are poisoning essentially the results here. So a user who may ask a chatbot a question like nowhere to download a particular piece of software such may then be fed malicious result and Microsoft documented a case of just that happening. Now once in this particular case the user installed the malware it actually turned out to be still a useful utility so it's not that the malware was obviously malicious but it still did what it was supposed to do it just side loaded a malicious DLL that was then used to well install a screen connect client on the user's system and essentially provide the attacker with access to the victim's system. Well and that's it for today thanks for listening thanks for liking and recommending this podcast thanks for subscribing and if you have any feedback please let me know thanks and talk to you again tomorrow bye on ��요 Thank you.





