Menu

  • Alerts
  • Incidents
  • News
  • APTs
  • Cyber Decoded
  • Cyber Hygiene
  • Cyber Review
  • Cyber Tips
  • Definitions
  • Malware
  • Threat Actors
  • Tutorials

Useful Tools

  • Password generator
  • Report an incident
  • Report to authorities
No Result
View All Result
CTF Hack Havoc
CyberMaterial
  • Education
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Definitions
  • Information
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
  • Insights
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Tips
    • Tutorials
  • Support
    • Contact Us
    • Report an incident
  • About
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
Get Help
Hall of Hacks
  • Education
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Definitions
  • Information
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
  • Insights
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Tips
    • Tutorials
  • Support
    • Contact Us
    • Report an incident
  • About
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
Get Help
No Result
View All Result
Hall of Hacks
CyberMaterial
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Akira Ransomware Made 244 Million Dollars

November 14, 2025
Reading Time: 3 mins read
in News
Akira Ransomware Made 244 Million Dollars

The Akira ransomware group has been identified as a highly prolific and financially successful threat actor, having generated over $244 million in illicit proceeds from its malicious activities. This updated intelligence comes from a joint advisory issued by government agencies across the US, France, Germany, and the Netherlands. Active since at least March 2023, Akira originally gained notoriety for deploying a specialized ransomware variant targeting VMware ESXi servers, focusing their attacks on businesses and critical infrastructure across North America, Europe, and Australia. The sheer scale of their financial success underscores the significant and ongoing threat they pose to the international digital landscape.

This year has marked a considerable expansion of the group’s operational scope and technical toolkit. While continuing its core activities, Akira was recently observed deploying a new variant tailored for Nutanix Acropolis Hypervisor (AHV) environments. Furthermore, the threat actors significantly broadened their initial access capabilities by exploiting a critical vulnerability in SonicWall firewalls ($CVE-2024-40766$) and four other vulnerabilities impacting software from Cisco, Windows, VMware, and Veeam Backup & Replication. Initial access is also frequently achieved through non-exploit methods, including the use of access brokers, brute-forcing VPN endpoints, and deploying tools like SharpDomainSpray for targeted password spraying across targeted domains.

Once inside a victim’s network, the Akira operators employ a highly sophisticated and multi-staged approach to network compromise. They leverage well-known remote access tools such as AnyDesk and LogMeIn for persistent access, execute discovery commands using tools like nltest and Impacket’s wmiexec.py, and utilize tunnelling services like Ngrok for command-and-control (C&C) server communication. A critical step in their process involves evading detection by uninstalling Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) products and establishing persistence by creating new, highly-privileged user accounts, often added directly to the administrator group.

The advisory also highlighted the group’s advanced techniques for escalating privileges and stealing sensitive credentials. The threat actors were observed exploiting specific vulnerabilities in Veeam services and demonstrating a highly sophisticated method for bypassing Virtual Machine Disk (VMDK) file protection. In a reported incident, they temporarily powered down a domain controller’s VM, copied the VMDK files, and attached them to a new VM to successfully extract the NTDS.dit file and the SYSTEM hive. This sequence of actions effectively allowed them to compromise a highly privileged domain administrator’s account, giving them complete control over the environment.

The final stages of the attack often occur rapidly, with the group capable of exfiltrating significant amounts of victim data within as little as two hours of initial network access. Following data theft, the Akira ransomware is executed to encrypt the victim’s files, appending various extensions such as .akira, .powerranges, .akiranew, or .aki. The attack concludes with the deployment of ransom notes placed in the root directory and user home directories, demanding payment for decryption and promising not to publish the stolen data.

Reference:

  • Akira Ransomware Group Collected 244 Million In Ransom Payments
Tags: Cyber NewsCyber News 2025Cyber threatsNovember 2025
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Akira Ransomware Made 244 Million Dollars

Skripal Hacker Arrested In Thailand

November 14, 2025
Akira Ransomware Made 244 Million Dollars

Claude AI Linked To Chinese Espionage

November 14, 2025
UK Unveils Cyber Security Bill

Google Sues Text Message Scammers

November 13, 2025
Google Sues Cybercriminals Behind Lighthouse

Google Sues Cybercriminals Behind Lighthouse

November 13, 2025
Google Sues Cybercriminals Behind Lighthouse

Police Take Down Major Malware Operations

November 13, 2025
UK Unveils Cyber Security Bill

UK Unveils Cyber Security Bill

November 12, 2025

Latest Alerts

Imunify360 Flaw Puts Sites At Risk

Safery Extension Steals Crypto Wallets

ChatGPT Flaw Exposed Core Infrastructure

Firefox Chrome Fix High Severity Bugs

CISA Warns Of WatchGuard Fireware Flaw

Npm Package Targets GitHub Repos

Subscribe to our newsletter

    Latest Incidents

    Hackers Breach NY State Texting Service

    Doordash Hit By October User Data Breach

    Synnovis Reports Data Theft In Attack

    Hyundai Breach Risks Drivers Data

    Hackers Demand 200K From Doctor Alliance

    GlobalLogic Confirms Data Breach

    CyberMaterial Logo
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Jobs
    • Legal and Privacy Policy
    • Site Map

    © 2025 | CyberMaterial | All rights reserved

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password?

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In

    Add New Playlist

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Definitions
    • Malware
    • Cyber Tips
    • Tutorials
    • Advanced Persistent Threats
    • Threat Actors
    • Report an incident
    • Password Generator
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise with us

    Copyright © 2025 CyberMaterial