Critical RCE Vulnerabilities Discovered in Cisco ISE Platform
June 26, 2025Critical RCE Vulnerabilities Discovered in Cisco ISE Platform
June 26, 2025Severity
High
Analysis Summary
LockBit ransomware takes as little as five minutes to deploy the encryption routine on target systems once it lands on the victim network. LockBit attacks leave few traces for forensic analysis as the malware loads into the system memory, with logs and supporting files removed upon execution. In one case, researchers found that the attack began from a compromised Internet Information Server that launched a remote PowerShell script calling another script embedded in a remote Google Sheets document. This script connects to a command and control server to retrieve and install a PowerShell module for adding a backdoor and establishing persistence. To evade monitoring and go unnoticed in the logs, the attacker renamed copies of PowerShell and the binary for running Microsoft HTML Applications (mshta.exe); this prompted Sophos to call this a “PS Rename“ attack. The backdoor is responsible for installing attack modules and executes a VBScript that downloads and executes a second backdoor on systems restart.
LockBit strives to target different sectors throughout the world and has just rebranded for the second time. Operators and affiliates behind the LockBit ransomware started transitioning to LockBit 3.0 around June 2022. LockBit 3.0, also known as LockBit Black, is active and out there, and the BFSI Sector makes up 1/3rd of its victims. This latest LockBit version has a new extortion model that allows them to purchase stolen data during attacks. Rapid affiliate adoption of LockBit 3.0 has resulted in a large number of victims being identified on the new "Version 3.0" leak sites, a collection of public blogs that identify non-compliant victims and release extracted data.
In September 2022, researchers discovered that LockBit 3.0 ransomware is being delivered in Word document format while masquerading as job application emails in NSIS format.
It was recently discovered that LockBit 2.0 and LockBit 3.0 are being distributed once more with merely a filename change. The latest versions are being delivered using phishing emails that seem like job applications, compared to earlier examples where Word files or emails with copyright claims were utilized.
LockBit has recently been distributed without restriction to version or identical filename.
Therefore, users must examine the file extensions of document files, update apps and V3 to the newest version, and be very cautious when opening files from unidentified sources.
Impact
- File Encryption
- Sensitive Information Theft
Indicators of Compromise
MD5
054314733888215dd469adcbdee14d46
8670dc5beb4133a84ea86c250f2ce10b
dfac83994c43a8cba786c678f383e8f3
c433928566927fb281056a3cda7e2751
SHA-256
25fba0e92d00184dde662c7d30aff006851dba296daa6f6f82ce797b66789ed2
7a42a2591858a6901ad37d4669a9c9a78a981b1d670c3dbfeef23500eae972c1
f53f84ac24e0ae43cd5b59a0e031d6423f8dce2400d21e0d59ea5511b57f256f
33e5396c26b5fff35264d758f66244d54372a93be3bc83a27bb1ebef58b1528c
SHA1
909ea155337f7bc2feb95b6559de1eb3da27748f
4b8817f25b023f28ce1910aa483c0753d9345a91
e809a61e0288fd77c3bbf43f55064fd2041f1df0
74f4ba5d38c7cae8c972c2deeb064f321b48b32f
Remediation
- Block all threat indicators at your respective controls.
- Search for indicators of compromise (IOCs) in your environment utilizing your respective security controls.
- Maintain cyber hygiene by updating your anti-virus software and implementing a patch management lifecycle.
- In a ransomware attack, the adversary will often delete or encrypt backups if they have access to them. That’s why it’s important to keep offline (preferably off-site), encrypted backups of data and test them regularly.
- Never trust or open links and attachments received from unknown sources/senders.
- Enable antivirus and anti-malware software and update signature definitions on time. Using multi-layered protection is necessary to secure vulnerable assets.