Scattered Spider Hackers Target Numerous Companies Months After MGM, Caesars Cyberattacks

Posted on: May 8, 2024, 06:01h. 

Last updated on: May 9, 2024, 09:42h.

Scattered Spider, which was behind last year’s sensational hacking of MGM Resorts International and Caesars Entertainment, is suspected of recently hacking two insurance companies and targeting other businesses, according to Bloomberg News.

FBI's Brett Leatherman
The FBI’s Brett Leatherman, pictured above. He said some hacking groups remain a challenge. (Image: Institute for Security and Technology)

Beyond the insurance firms, the nefarious hacking group attempted to gain access to systems at 29 different companies since April 20, this week’s report added. The targets are believed to be in the financial services sector and include Visa, PNC Financial Services Group, and Synchrony Financial, according to Bloomberg.

News on the latest Scattered Spider exploits was released by Resilience Cyber Insurance Solutions, a cybersecurity firm that monitors the illicit group.

FBI Says it’s Challenged

The Record, a Recorded Future News online publication, was told this week by an FBI official that Scattered Spider presents “a unique challenge for cyber cops.”

“We have to continue to evolve as they evolve. We have to innovate as they innovate,” Brett Leatherman, deputy assistant director of the FBI’s cyber division, told Recorded Future News on Monday.

If you look at Scattered Spider, it is very consistent that we need private sector victims who have been compromised by Scattered Spider to come forward quickly enough to provide us with information that would help us in that enforcement operation,” he added. “If we can get that right away, we can sometimes use core authorized capabilities to go after that infrastructure and collect new information that allows us to conduct a disruption operation.”

Believed to be tied to a group known as “the Community,” Scattered Spider allegedly has ties to Russian ransomware gangs.

Authorities confirm they have been more successful in confronting another group, LockBit. Police were able to break into their website and reveal background information on its members, the report said.

Scattered Spider, however, remains a challenge, Leatherman said.

It’s very difficult to dismantle large organizations like this,” he added. “We will always endeavor to do it… We are putting our best folks forward on that disruption — especially in a group like Scattered Spider.”

Scattered Spider has also used the names Star Fraud, UNC3944, and Octo Tempest.

MGM, Caesars Cyberattacks

Last September, MGM saw a roughly week-long outage of its internal cybersecurity and data systems following a hack carried out by Scattered Spider.

MGM didn’t pay money to the hackers, but it faced a $100M hit to its third-quarter earnings and $10M in one-time expenses.

Last month, MGM Resorts sued the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) due to the agency’s probe into the breach. MGM wants FTC Chairwoman Lina Khan to recuse herself from the case due to potential conflicts of interest.

At the time of the MGM attack, Scattered Spider successfully extorted tens of millions of dollars from Caesars Entertainment, according to Bloomberg.