On Friday, February 2nd, AnyDesk put out a public statement that some production systems had been compromised. AnyDesk, a remote desktop application, is used by many Managed Service Providers (MSPs) to provide remote assistance, system management, and monitoring to their end clients. AnyDesk reported they believe their services are safe to use and that end-user devices were not impacted. With this announcement, AnyDesk also noted they are revoking all certificates, potentially indicating that a threat actor gained access to their private key for certificate signing.
After AnyDesk’s statement, Blackpoint’s SOC immediately began an investigation and found that we had blocked applications running the old certificate over 2,000 times since May of 2023. After reviewing the security blocks in place, we found no evidence suggesting that threat actors are currently using the compromised certificate to deploy their own malware against the partners and end clients we protect.
Since the announcement on February 2nd, we blocked over 200 attempted executions with the old certificate. We blocked and reported these actions to our partners, advising them to update to the latest version of AnyDesk. Any customers using Blackpoint’s Managed Application Control offering with AnyDesk blocked are protected from malicious usage of the old certificate. Taking into consideration the potential for abuse, on Friday we started blocking the old certificate in a new category, ensuring protection for customers who opted out of blocking AnyDesk.
For a behind-the-scenes look at how the certificate can be used to add extra validity to malware, view the SOC’s video here: