Article
Colonial Pipeline Breached by Darkside Ransomware Group
Arete Analysis
Cyber Threats

On Saturday May 8, US Colonial Pipeline announced that they were victim of a ransomware attack that affected their network on Friday May 7.
US Colonial Pipeline is said to be the largest fuel pipeline in the United States and the main source of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel for the East Coast providing 45% of all fuel consumed on the East Coast.
To contain the threat, the company took certain systems offline, and these actions temporarily halted all pipeline operations and affected some of their IT systems. The company said that they have remained in contact with law enforcement and other federal agencies, including the Department of Energy who is leading the Federal Government response.
Arete Darkside Ransomware Group Analysis
Arete Incident Response has worked on multiple breach response engagements associated with the DarkSide ransomware group. The following are statistics and metrics from our DFIR engagements associated with this threat:

Sectors affected
Critical Infrastructure
Manufacturing
Professional Services
Public Service
Financial Services
High Technology/Engineering/Social Media
Retail
Average ransom demand in US dollars: 2,720,909
The highest ransom demand Arete observed has been 12 million dollars
Average ransom paid in US dollars: 1,548,509
Data exfiltration has been observed in 80% of the cases
FBI Response and Recommendations
Today, the FBI announced in their Twitter page that the DarkSide ransomware is confirmed to be the malware affecting Colonial Pipeline:

The FBI also released an FBI FLASH alert MU-000146-MW coordinated with DHS-CISA and the Department of Energy. The alert confirms press reporting on Darkside infecting a critical infrastructure company in the United States and describes Darkside as a ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) variant, in which criminal affiliates conduct the attacks and the proceeds are shared with the ransomware developer(s). It also mentions that Darkside has impacted numerous organizations across various additional sectors including manufacturing, legal, insurance, healthcare, and energy.
Recommended Mitigations by the FBI:
Backup data regularly, keep offline backups, and verify integrity of backup process.
Keep software updated. Install software patches so that attackers cannot take advantage of known problems or vulnerabilities.
Use two-factor authentication and strong passwords.
Audit logs for all remote connection protocols.
Audit logs to ensure all new accounts were intentionally created.
Scan for open or listening ports and disable SMBv1.
Consider disabling RDP if it is not being used.
Ensure anti-virus and anti-malware solutions are set to automatically update and regular scans are conducted.
Implement application whitelisting. Only allow systems to execute programs known and permitted by security policy.
Monitor Active Directory and local administrators group changes.
Maintain only the most up-to-date version of PowerShell and uninstall older versions.
Enable PowerShell logging and monitor for unusual commands, especially execution of Base64 encoded PowerShell.
Turn off the option to automatically download attachments. To simplify the process of reading email, many email programs offer the feature to automatically download attachments. Check your settings to see if your software offers the option and disable it.
Arete strongly recommends the use of advanced behavioral endpoint detection and response (EDR) technology to counter ransomware attacks! Advanced behavior EDR systems should include artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML).
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Article
Phishing-as-a-Service Evolves with Venom
“Whaling” has taken on a new meaning with a highly targeted phishing campaign active from November 2025 through March 2026, aimed exclusively at senior executives from more than 20 industries. The campaign, dubbed VENOM, is a phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) platform that combines advanced evasion capabilities with immediate persistence of targeted executives. The initial phish impersonates an internal SharePoint document notification and uses embedded QR codes to convince victims to shift to unmanaged mobile devices to bypass corporate security controls. VENOM aims to establish persistence immediately by either registering a new MFA device or retaining long-lived refresh tokens, allowing threat actors to maintain access even after password resets or other base-level remediation efforts.
What’s Notable and Unique
This campaign is unique in its targeted nature of the PhaaS platform rather than broad, sweeping attempts. The threat actors behind VENOM create convincing phishing emails that impersonate SharePoint activity using the victim’s own domain, company name, and even fabricated email threads. These convincing social engineering tactics, combined with the specific targeting of executives, make this an effective capability for cybercriminals.
VENOM operates as a closed-access system, with full adversarial support, but has no public visibility on the dark web or from security researchers. The service likely operates on an invite-only basis, unlike most PhaaS platforms, which typically seek to have as many paying customers as possible. This, among other items such as the sophisticated evasion techniques, indicates a higher degree of sophistication than most other PhaaS offerings.
Either through MFA enrollment or Microsoft Device Code abuse, the threat actor forces the victim to aid them in establishing persistence early in the attack lifecycle. These tactics result in either valid tokens or an additional MFA login method controlled by the threat actor, meaning typical password resets alone are not effective against this technique. Administrators would be required to explicitly revoke sessions and token grants to mitigate the threat actors’ persistence.
Analyst Comments
Oftentimes, MFA is viewed as a one-stop shop to cybersecurity, but tactics such as this show how threat actors can bypass MFA, or worse, use it to establish persistence. Ultimately, this campaign highlights how modern attacks increasingly abuse legitimate authentication workflows rather than attempting to defeat them outright. Defenses that rely solely on MFA without other security posturing, such as continuous session monitoring, token revocation, and identity logging, can leave organizations vulnerable. As attackers shift toward token theft and device trust abuse, incident response and identity security strategies must evolve accordingly.
Sources
Meet VENOM: The PhaaS Platform That Neutralizes MFA
Article
Threat Actors Continue to Leverage BYOVD Technique
Multiple ransomware operations have recently been observed leveraging the Bring Your Own Vulnerable Driver (BYOVD) technique to disable endpoint security controls prior to ransomware deployment. Notably, the Qilin ransomware group commonly leverages a malicious msimg32.dll file loaded via DLL side-loading, along with vulnerable drivers including rwdrv.sys and hlpdrv.sys, to gain kernel-level access and disable security processes. Similarly, Warlock ransomware has been observed exploiting the vulnerable NSecKrnl.sys driver to bypass security controls. The use of BYOVD has also been observed across ransomware campaigns associated with Akira, INC, Medusa, and other threat actors.
What’s Notable and Unique
The Qilin ransomware group employs a sophisticated multi-stage infection chain, leveraging DLL side-loading (msimg32.dll) to execute malicious payloads directly in memory and evade traditional file-based detection. In DLL side-loading, a threat actor tricks a program into loading a malicious dynamic link library. The malware escalates privileges and uses signed but vulnerable drivers (rwdrv.sys and hlpdrv.sys) to bypass security controls, access system memory, and systematically disable endpoint defenses by terminating security processes and disabling monitoring callbacks at the kernel level.
Akira ransomware operators have also exploited the rwdrv.sys and hlpdrv.sys drivers. Additionally, Arete has observed threat actors leveraging multiple other drivers, including the vulnerable TrueSight.sys, to bypass security controls.
Meanwhile, Warlock ransomware operators disguised malicious activity by renaming rclone.exe to TrendSecurity.exe to appear legitimate. The file functioned as a loader, exploiting the vulnerable NSecKrnl.sys driver to disable security processes, while Group Policy Objects (GPOs) were leveraged to systematically disable security controls across the environment.
Analyst Comments
The BYOVD technique, employed by multiple known ransomware operators, reflects a broader shift toward pre-encryption defense evasion, including suppression of Windows telemetry, removal of monitoring callbacks, and abuse of legitimately signed but vulnerable drivers. This technique enables threat actors to evade detection, maintain persistence for extended periods, and maximize the operational impact of ransomware deployment across compromised environments. Organizations should implement strict driver control policies, such as Microsoft’s Vulnerable Driver Blocklist and application control mechanisms. Additionally, enforcing least privilege access, enabling multi-factor authentication (MFA), maintaining up-to-date patching, and continuously monitoring for anomalous driver and kernel-level activity can further reduce the risk of such attacks.
Sources
Qilin EDR killer infection chain
Web Shells, Tunnels, and Ransomware: Dissecting a Warlock Attack
Article
Ransomware Trends & Data Insights: March 2026
The threat landscape in March had a much more even distribution of threat groups than has been observed since the first half of 2025. Although Akira, Qilin, Play, and INC remained among the most active groups, Arete observed 21 unique ransomware and extortion groups in March, compared to only 15 in February. Akira and Qilin’s activity also declined from the previous month; in February, the two groups were responsible for almost half of all ransomware incidents, but in March they only comprised a little more than a quarter of all activity. Arete also observed activity from several emerging groups in the past month, including BravoX, NightSpire, Payouts King, and Securotrop.

Figure 1. Activity from the top 5 threat groups in March 2026
Analysts at Arete identified several trends behind the threat actors perpetrating cybercrime activities:
In March, threat actors actively exploited FortiGate Next-Generation Firewall appliances as initial access vectors to compromise enterprise networks. The activity involves the exploitation of recently disclosed security vulnerabilities, including CVE-2025-59718, CVE-2025-59719, and CVE-2026-24858, or weak credentials, allowing attackers to gain administrative access, extract configuration files, and obtain service account credentials. Arete also observed Fortinet device exploitation involving various threat groups, with the Qilin ransomware group notably leveraging Fortinet device exploits.
Phishing campaigns leveraging OAuth redirection and a resurgence of Microsoft Teams–based social engineering were also observed in March. In one campaign, attackers sent emails disguised as Microsoft Teams recordings or Microsoft 365 alerts, redirecting victims through legitimate OAuth endpoints to attacker-controlled pages hosting malicious ZIP payloads. A separate campaign has been ongoing since last year, in which attackers flood users’ inboxes with spam and impersonate IT support personnel to trick victims into initiating remote support sessions via tools like Quick Assist.
Arete recently released its 2025 Annual Crimeware Report. Leveraging data and intelligence collected during ransomware and extortion incident response engagements, this report highlights notable trends and shifts in the threat landscape throughout 2025, including Akira’s unusually high activity levels in the second half of 2025, evolving social engineering techniques, and trends in ransom demands and impacted industries.
Sources
Arete Internal
Report
Arete's 2025 Annual Crimeware Report
Harness Arete’s unique data and expertise on extortion and ransomware to inform your response to the evolving threat landscape.



