SEC filings: SolarWinds says 18,000 customers were impacted by recent hack

SolarWinds
Image: SolarWinds, ZDNet

IT software provider SolarWinds downplayed a recent security breach in documents filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday.

Special feature

Cyberwar and the Future of Cybersecurity

Today’s security threats have expanded in scope and seriousness. There can now be millions — or even billions — of dollars at risk when information security isn’t handled properly.

Read More

SolarWinds disclosed on Sunday that a nation-state hacker group breached its network and inserted malware in updates for Orion, a software application for IT inventory management and monitoring.

Orion app versions 2019.4 through 2020.2.1, released between March 2020 and June 2020, were tainted with malware, SolarWinds said in a security advisory.

The trojanized Orion update allowed attackers to deploy additional and highly stealthy malware on the networks of SolarWinds customers.

Also: Best VPN services of 2020: Safe and fast don’t come for free   

Only 18,000 of 300,000 customers affected

But while initial news reports on Sunday suggested that all of SolarWinds’ customers were impacted, in SEC documents filed today, SolarWinds said that of its 300,000 total customers, only 33,000 were using Orion, a software platform for IT inventory management and monitoring, and that fewer than 18,000 are believed to have installed the malware-laced update.

The company said it notified all its 33,000 Orion customers on Sunday, even if they didn’t install the trojanized Orion update, with information about the hack and mitigation steps they could take.

In a security advisory on Sunday and SEC filings today, SolarWinds said it plans to release an Orion update on Tuesday that will contain code to remove any traces of the malware from customer systems.

If customers can’t wait until Tuesday, MicrosoftFireEye, and the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency (CISA) have also published technical reports on Sunday with instructions on how to identify traces of the SolarWinds Orion-delivered malware (named SUNBURST by FireEye and Solarigate by Microsoft), remove it from systems, and detect if hackers pivoted with a second-stage attack to internal networks.

SolarWinds Office 365 email account was also compromised

But while details about how hackers pivoted from SolarWinds to customer networks via the tainted Orion malware have now come to light, SolarWinds has not yet said how hackers breached its own network.

Nonetheless, in the same SEC documents, SolarWinds said that it also learned from Microsoft about a compromise of its Office 365 email and office productivity accounts.

The company said it’s currently investigating if the attackers used access to the email accounts to steal customer data.

SolarWinds did not specifically say that this email account compromise led to hackers gaining access to the server infrastructure supporting the Orion app’s update mechanism.

One of the most consequential hacks in recent years

The SolarWinds Orion platform hack is slowly turning out to be one of the most significant hacks in recent years.

Currently, the SolarWinds security breach has been linked to hacks at US security firm FireEye, the US Treasury Department, and the US Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA).

The hack is, however, expected to be much, much worse. Forbes reported today that SolarWinds is a major contractor for the US government, with regular customers including the likes of CISA, US Cyber Command, the Department of Defense, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs, and many others.

In addition, FireEye, which is investigating the incident as part of its own security breach, said the attackers also compromised targets all over the world, and not just in the US, including governments and private sector companies across several verticals.

Citing industry sources, Reuters reported today that despite a broad install base for the Orion platform, the attackers appear to have focused only on a small number of high-value targets, leaving most Orion customers unaffected.

Several IT administrators reported today that they found signs of the malware-laced Orion update on their systems, but they did not find signs of second-stage payloads, typically used by the attackers to escalate access to other systems and internal customer networks.

SolarWinds said in SEC documents today that in the first three quarters of 2020, revenue from the Orion product line brought in approximately $343 million, representing about 45% of the company’s total revenue.

If customers end up abandoning the app, the fallout from this security breach will end up having a major impact on SolarWinds’ bottom line as well.

By ZDNet Source Link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here