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Ransomware Trends & Data Insights: October 2025

Arete Analysis

Cybersecurity Trends

Akira and Qilin were overwhelmingly the top two ransomware groups observed by Arete in October. Additionally, throughout the month, analysts at Arete identified several distinct trends behind the threat actors perpetrating cybercrime activities:

  • In October, the Cl0p threat group exploited a zero-day vulnerability in Oracle’s E-Business Suite (CVE-2025-61882) and posted victims to its data leak site (DLS). Although the total number of victims impacted remains unknown, this campaign follows Cl0p’s annual pattern of exploiting a high-impact vulnerability to access data from multiple victims.

  • Also in October, the Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters threat group exposed a separate Oracle E-Business Suite Server-Side Request Forgery vulnerability (CVE-2025-61884) on a Telegram channel. Oracle has released security updates that patch both vulnerabilities, so organizations using Oracle E-Business Suite should immediately patch their software if they have not yet done so.

  • The threat actor Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters is allegedly a partnership between Scattered Spider, Lapsus$, and Shinyhunters groups. The group claimed responsibility for the Salesloft breaches and created a new data leak site (DLS) where they began adding organizations starting on October 3, 2025. These breaches were enabled by a compromise of Salesloft Drift integrations, which allowed exfiltration of data from Salesforce instances. Salesforce has publicly stated that they will not pay a ransom to the threat actors.

In addition to the continued surge of Akira attacks, the number of unique ransomware variants slightly decreased from September, with only 12 unique groups observed throughout October.

Figure 1. Activity from the top 5 threat groups in October 2025

Sources

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CMS Vulnerability Leads to ClickFix Campaign

Threat actors compromised at least 700 education and technology websites in a recent ClickFix campaign by exploiting a critical SQL injection flaw (CVE-2026-26980) in the Ghost content management system (CMS). Adversaries combined the vulnerability with the ClickFix social engineering tactic to steal admin keys and inject a malicious JavaScript that delivers a fake Cloudflare or CAPTCHA verification pop-up, tricking victims into copying and pasting a malicious command into their systems.

What’s Notable and Unique

  • Rather than targeting the end user first, this campaign is unique in its initial exploitation of the system, followed by social engineering attempts. This hybrid attack style is likely being leveraged to bypass traditional defenses.

  • This recent campaign also highlights how trusted web properties can be weaponized at scale and coupled with unpatched CMS vulnerabilities. Rather than using the CMS compromise to perpetrate a single attack, threat actors turned it into a supply-chain attack that ultimately affected over 700 trusted websites.

Analyst Comments

As network defenders and their tools enhance threat detection capabilities, adversaries increasingly seek methods to bypass these defenses. By combining vulnerability exploitation, social engineering techniques, and staging for ancillary attacks, this campaign successfully bypassed traditional defenses and inflicted significant impact. Defending against hybrid cyberattacks requires comprehensive security controls beyond simply patching vulnerabilities. Organizations should focus on limiting movement within the environment, detecting abuse of trusted applications, and preventing end-user manipulation.

Sources

  • 700+ education and tech websites hijacked in huge ClickFix malware campaign

  • Under the engineering hood: Why Malwarebytes chose WordPress as its CMS

  • Think before you Click(Fix): Analyzing the ClickFix social engineering technique

  • Ghost CMS Vulnerability Exploited to Infect 700 Sites With ClickFix Malware

Article

Threat Actors Leverage Fake JPEG Files for Initial Access

In a recent campaign, researchers observed threat actors using fake JPEG image files as a delivery mechanism to initiate the deployment of additional malicious components. The false JPEG files are typically distributed via phishing emails or other social engineering-based lures, and are actually PowerShell-based malware that deploys a trojanized version of ConnectWise ScreenConnect to establish and maintain persistence in the compromised environment. 

What’s Notable and Unique

  • This campaign leverages JPEG images as the initial lure, where the images are not merely decoys but part of the infection workflow. Victims are typically led to download or open an image that triggers hidden execution logic or redirects them to a payload-delivery sequence that initiates later stages of the intrusion chain. 

  • The attack chain is designed to blend into legitimate environments, making detection more difficult. Execution typically relies on scripted or native Windows components, often including PowerShell or other living-off-the-land binaries, enabling fileless or near-fileless execution and reducing forensic artifacts on disk.

  • The multistage design ensures that the initial JPEG does not directly contain the full payload but instead triggers retrieval or decryption steps that progressively assemble the final malicious components in memory.

Analyst Comments

This campaign illustrates how threat actors continue to blur the line between legitimate file handling and malicious execution chains, indicating potential overlap with remote management or administrative tooling. The use of JPEG-based staging combined with script-based execution reflects a broader evolution toward a stealth-first intrusion design, in which file formats serve as triggers rather than payload containers.

Sources

  • OPERATION SILENTCANVAS : JPEG BASED MULTISTAGE POWERSHELL INTRUSION

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