Tuesday, November 12, 2024
HomeCyber AttackDHS Issued Emergency Directive Ordering Federal Agencies To Audit DNS Activity for...

DHS Issued Emergency Directive Ordering Federal Agencies To Audit DNS Activity for their Domains

Published on

Malware protection

DHS issued an emergency directive to federal agencies and it staffs to Audit DNS Records, Change DNS Account Passwords, Add Multi-Factor Authentication and Monitor Certificate Transparency Logs within next 10 business days.

The emergency alert issued after in wake of the ongoing DNS campaigns targeting various domains organizations belonging to various government, telecommunications and internet infrastructure entities.

DNS hijacking is a type of Malicious attack that used to redirect the users to the malicious website when they visit the website via compromised routers or attackers modifying a server’s settings.

- Advertisement - SIEM as a Service

These types of attacks begins by gaining access to the acounts that privileaged to make changes with the DNS records.

Once the attackers gains control over the DNS portal of the domains they will change the DNS records such as Address (A), Mail Exchanger (MX), or Name Server (NS) records and points to malicious server address.

A – A record is used to point the domain name such as gbhackers.com to the IP address of it’s hosting server.
MX – Records responsible for Email exchange.
NS – NS records are to identify DNS servers responsible for the domain.

“To address the significant and imminent risks to agency information and information systems presented by this activity, this emergency directive requires the following near-term actions to mitigate risks from undiscovered tampering, enable agencies to prevent illegitimate DNS activity for their domains, and detect unauthorized certificates,” reads the advisory.

Advisory Actions – Within 10 Business Days

  • Audit public DNS records on all authoritative and secondary DNS servers and to verify they are pointing to desired locations.
  • Update passwords for all the accounts on the system.
  • Add multi-factor authentication for all the accounts that are privileaged to make the DNS changes.
  • Agencies should monitor the Certificate Transparency (CT) logs for agency domains and to begin monitoring CT log data for certificates issued that they did not request.

The infrastructure agency CISA began to provide regular delivery of newly added certificates to CT logs for agency domains via the Cyber Hygiene service.

You can follow us on Linkedin, Twitter, Facebook for daily Cybersecurity updates also you can take the Best Cybersecurity courses online to keep your self-updated.

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

10 Best DNS Management Tools – 2025

Best DNS Management Tools play a crucial role in efficiently managing domain names and...

Sweet Security Announces Availability of its Cloud Native Detection & Response Platform on the AWS Marketplace

Customers can now easily integrate Sweet’s runtime detection and response platform into their AWS...

Researchers Detailed Credential Abuse Cycle

Cybercriminals exploit leaked credentials, obtained through various means, to compromise systems and data, enabling...

New Android Malware SpyAgent Taking Screenshots Of User’s Devices

SpyAgent, a newly discovered Android malware, leverages OCR technology to extract cryptocurrency recovery phrases...

Free Webinar

Protect Websites & APIs from Malware Attack

Malware targeting customer-facing websites and API applications poses significant risks, including compliance violations, defacements, and even blacklisting.

Join us for an insightful webinar featuring Vivek Gopalan, VP of Products at Indusface, as he shares effective strategies for safeguarding websites and APIs against malware.

Discussion points

Scan DOM, internal links, and JavaScript libraries for hidden malware.
Detect website defacements in real time.
Protect your brand by monitoring for potential blacklisting.
Prevent malware from infiltrating your server and cloud infrastructure.

More like this

Researchers Detailed Credential Abuse Cycle

Cybercriminals exploit leaked credentials, obtained through various means, to compromise systems and data, enabling...

New Android Malware SpyAgent Taking Screenshots Of User’s Devices

SpyAgent, a newly discovered Android malware, leverages OCR technology to extract cryptocurrency recovery phrases...

Tor Network Suffers IP Spoofing Attack Via Non-Exit Relays

In late October 2024, a coordinated IP spoofing attack targeted the Tor network, prompting...