Stolen credentials on the Dark Web

1 October 2019 Information Security, Security Services & Risk Management

Web security company, ImmuniWeb, has conducted research into the state of stolen credentials available on the Dark Web, which are being exploited by cybercriminals for spear-phishing and password re-use attacks against the highest-grossing global public and private companies - the Fortune 500.

ImmuniWeb used its all-in-one ImmuniWeb Discovery application discovery and inventory service solution to crawl generally accessible places and resources within the TOR network, across various Web forums, Pastebin, IRC channels, social networks, messenger chats and many other locations notorious for offering, selling or distributing stolen or leaked data.

Key findings: passwords

Over 21 million (21 040 296) credentials belonging to Fortune 500 companies, among which over 16 million (16 055 871) were compromised during the last 12 months.

As many as 95% of the credentials contained unencrypted, or brute-forced and cracked by the attackers, plaintext passwords.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, technology was the industry with the largest volume of credentials exposed in breaches of adult-oriented websites and resources, followed by financials and energy.

There were only 4,9 million (4 957 093) fully unique passwords amid the 21 million records, suggesting that many users are using identical or similar passwords.

One of the most common passwords in most of the industries researched was password.

Retail was the industry with the highest number of weak or default passwords.

Approximately 42% of the stolen passwords are somehow related either to the victim’s company name or to the breached resource in question, making password brute-forcing attacks highly efficient.

On average, 11% of the stolen passwords from one breach are identical - pointing to usage of default passwords, proliferation of spam and data scraping bots creating accounts, or a previous password reset setting an identical password to a large set of accounts.

Key findings: domains

The number of squatted domains and phishing websites per organisation is proportional to the total number of exposed credentials. The more illegitimate resources exist, the more credentials can be found for the organisation’s personnel.

The number of subdomains with failing Web security grade (C or F) is proportional to the number of exposed credentials. The more poorly secured a website is, the more credentials can be found for the organisation’s personnel.

Key findings: data

Over half of publicly accessible data is outdated or fake, or just comes from historical breaches in a false pretence to be newly compromised records.

The most popular sources of the exposed breaches were:

1.Third parties (e.g. websites or other resources of unrelated organisations).

2.Trusted third parties (e.g. websites or other resources of partners, suppliers or vendors).

3.The companies themselves (e.g. their own websites or other in-house resources).

Ilia Kolochenko, CEO and founder of ImmuniWeb, commented: “These numbers are both frustrating and alarming. Cybercriminals are smart and pragmatic, they focus on the shortest, cheapest and safest way to get your crown jewels. The great wealth of stolen credentials accessible on the Dark Web is a modern-day Klondike for mushrooming threat actors who don’t even need to invest in expensive zero-day or time-consuming APTs (the Klondike Gold Rush was a migration by an estimated 100 000 prospectors to the Klondike region of the Yukon, in north-western Canada, between 1896 and 1899). With some persistence, they easily break in, being unnoticed by security systems and grab what they want. Worse, many such intrusions can technically not be investigated due to lack of logs or control over the breached [third-party] systems.

In the era of cloud, containers and continuous outsourcing of critical business processes, most organisations have lost visibility and thus control over their digital assets and data. You cannot protect what you don’t see, likewise you cannot safeguard the data if you don’t know where it’s being stored and who can access it. Third-party risks immensely exacerbate the situation by adding even more perilous unknowns into the game.

A well-thought, coherent and holistic cybersecurity and risk management programme should encompass not just your organisation but third parties in a continuous and data-driven manner.

Full research and infographics at: https://www.immuniweb.com/blog/stolen-credentials-dark-web-fortune-500.html




Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page



Further reading:

Highest increase in global cyberattacks in two years
Information Security News & Events
Check Point Global Research released new data on Q2 2024 cyber-attack trends, noting a 30% global increase in Q2 2024, with Africa experiencing the highest average weekly per organisation.

Read more...
Upgrade your PCs to improve security
Information Security Infrastructure
Truly secure technology today must be designed to detect and address unusual activity as it happens, wherever it happens, right down to the BIOS and silicon levels.

Read more...
Open source code can also be open risk
Information Security Infrastructure
Software development has changed significantly over the years, and today, open-source code increasingly forms the foundation of modern applications, with surveys indicating that 60 – 90% of the average application's code base consists of open-source components.

Read more...
DeepSneak deception
Information Security News & Events
Kaspersky Global Research & Analysis researchers have discovered a new malicious campaign which is distributing a Trojan through a fake DeepSeek-R1 Large Language Model (LLM) app for PCs.

Read more...
SA’s strained, loadshedding-prone grid faces cyberthreats
Power Management Information Security
South Africa’s energy sector, already battered by decades of underinvestment and loadshedding, faces another escalating crisis; a wave of cyberthreats that could turn disruptions into catastrophic failures. Attacks are already happening internationally.

Read more...
Almost 50% of companies choose to pay the ransom
News & Events Information Security
This year’s Sophos State of Ransomware 2025 report found that nearly 50% of companies paid the ransom to get their data back, the second-highest rate of ransom payment for ransom demands in six years.

Read more...
Survey highlights cost of cyberdamage to industrial companies
Kaspersky Information Security News & Events
The majority of industrial organisations estimate their financial losses caused by cyberattacks to be over $1 million, while almost one in four report losses exceeding $5 million, and for some, it surpasses $10 million.

Read more...
Digital economy needs an agile approach to cybersecurity
Information Security News & Events
South Africa is the most targeted country in Africa when it comes to infostealer and ransomware attacks. Being at the forefront of the continent’s digital transformation puts South Africa in the crosshairs for sophisticated cyberattacks

Read more...
SIEM rule threat coverage validation
Information Security News & Events
New AI-detection engineering assistant from Cymulate automates SIEM rule validation for SecOps and blue teams by streamlining threat detection engineering with automated testing, control integrations and enhanced detections.

Read more...
Cybersecurity a challenge in digitalising OT
Kaspersky Information Security Industrial (Industry)
According to a study by Kaspersky and VDC Research on securing operational technology environments, the primary risks are inadequate security measures, insufficient resources allocated to OT cybersecurity, challenges surrounding regulatory compliance, and the complexities of IT/OT integration.

Read more...










While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd. | All Rights Reserved.