Medusa attacks Rosens Diversified Inc.

Incident Date: Dec 05, 2023

Attack Overview
VICTIM
Rosens Diversified Inc
INDUSTRY
Agriculture
LOCATION
USA
ATTACKER
Medusa
FIRST REPORTED
December 5, 2023

Medusa Ransomware Attack on Rosens Diversified Inc

Medusa claimed a ransomware attack against Rosens Diversified Inc. No further information was made publicly available. Founded in 1946, Rosens Diversified Inc (RDI) provides agriculture products, operates a beef processing company, conducts a fleet of semi-trailer trucks, has a line of performance pet products, and has acquired an in-house marketing agency.

Medusa Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS)

Medusa is a RaaS that made its debut in the summer of 2021 and has evolved to be one of the more active RaaS platforms in late 2022, but attack volumes have been inconsistent in the first half of 2023. The attackers restart infected machines in safe mode to avoid detection by security software as well preventing recovery by deleting local backups, disabling startup recovery options, and deleting VSS Shadow Copies to thwart encryption rollback.

Medusa ramped up attacks in the latter part of 2022 and have been one of the more active groups in the first quarter of 2023 but appear to have waned somewhat in the second quarter. Medusa typically demands ransoms in the millions of dollars which can vary depending on the target organization’s ability to pay.

Techniques and Targets

The Medusa RaaS operation (not to be confused with the operators of the earlier MedusaLocker ransomware) typically compromises victim networks through malicious email attachments (macros), torrent websites, or through malicious ad libraries. Medusa can terminate over 280 Windows services and processes without command line arguments (there may be a Linux version as well, but it is unclear at this time.)

Medusa targets multiple industry verticals, especially healthcare and pharmaceutical companies, and public sector organizations too. Medusa also employs a double extortion scheme where some data is exfiltrated prior to encryption, but they are not as generous with their affiliate attackers, only offering as much as 60% of the ransom if paid.

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