Black Basta attacks AyA Kitchens and Baths

Incident Date: Nov 10, 2023

Attack Overview
VICTIM
AyA Kitchens and Baths
INDUSTRY
Manufacturing
LOCATION
Canada
ATTACKER
Blackbasta
FIRST REPORTED
November 10, 2023

Black Basta Ransomware Targets AyA Kitchens and Baths

Black Basta ransomware group has added AyA Kitchens and Baths to their darkweb portal. The victim was given a deadline of 8 days to pay the ransom, otherwise BlackBasta will disclose all data. AyA designs kitchens and baths for modern people. Their mission is to provide customers with a product that is innovative in design, consistent in quality and competitive in value.

To develop and maintain a working environment committed to safety, teamwork, advancement and professionalism. To contribute to the community as an environmentally conscious manufacturer, a dependable employer and a leader in our industry.

About Black Basta Ransomware

Black Basta is a RaaS (Ransomware-as-a-Service) that emerged in early 2022 and is assessed by some researchers to be an offshoot of the disbanded Conti and REvil attack groups. The group routinely exfiltrates sensitive data from victims for additional extortion leverage. Black Basta engages in highly targeted attacks and is assessed to only work with a limited group of highly vetted affiliate attackers.

Black Basta has quickly became one of the most prolific attack groups in 2023 and was observed leveraging unique TTPs (Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures) for ingress, lateral movement, data exfiltration data, and deployment of ransomware payloads. Ransom demands vary depending on the targeted organization with reports that they can be as high as $2 million dollars.

Black Basta continues to evolve their RaaS platform, with ransomware payloads that can infect systems running both Windows and Linux systems. Black Basta is particularly adept at exploiting vulnerabilities in VMware ESXi running on enterprise servers. Black Basta ransomware is written in C++, can target both Windows and Linux systems, encrypts data with ChaCha20, and then the encryption key is encrypted with RSA-4096 for rapid encryption of the targeted network.

In some cases, Black Basta leverages malware strains like Qakbot and exploits such as PrintNightmare during the infection process. Black Basta also favors abuse of insecure Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) deployments, one of the leading infection vectors for ransomware. Black Basta typically targets manufacturing, transportation, construction and related services, telecommunications, the automotive sector, and healthcare providers.

Black Basta also employs a double extortion scheme and maintains an active leaks website where they post exfiltrated data if an organization declines to pay the ransom demand.

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