Darktrace cyber analysts are world-class experts in threat intelligence, threat hunting and incident response, and provide 24/7 SOC support to thousands of Darktrace customers around the globe. Inside the SOC is exclusively authored by these experts, providing analysis of cyber incidents and threat trends, based on real-world experience in the field.
Written by
Wayne Racey
Manager of IT Operations, City of St Catharines (Guest Contributor)
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08
Aug 2022
The City of St. Catharines is the largest city in Ontario, Canada’s Niagara Region. We strive to meet the needs of our over 140,000 residents. Cyber disruption could stop our municipality from functioning, so having a strong security stack is critical to our mission.
Globally, 44% of ransomware attacks target municipalities. In Canada, smaller cities have had to deal with increased attempts by threat actors to access information, without significant increases in security staff or budgets.
Data breaches incur an average cost totaling $6.35 million CAD because of ransomware payments, fines for leaked personally identifiable information, or recovery costs. That number does not quantify the additional reputational damage, PR setbacks, and other repercussions. Instead of resigning ourselves to accepting a greater cyber-risk, we turned to Darktrace to protect our network, email, and Microsoft 365 Suite.
How Self-Learning AI buys back time
I’m sure we as a municipality are grappling with the same issues that other cities of a similar size face from a budgetary standpoint. We do not have enough boots on the ground and our IT team is stretched thin. Investigating cyber security incidents takes a lot of time. We must find correlations between several old systems and manually go through security event logs to determine which incidents require follow-up. These factors greatly increased our response time.
When we first implemented Darktrace, we immediately saw that it does all the heavy lifting for us when it comes to the analysis of breach events. The Cyber AI Analyst shows a granular breakdown of the digital traffic coming into and out of the City, all on a single screen. This helps us separate the meaningful data from the noise.
I now start all my investigations with the Cyber AI Analyst. It sets me up with actionable insights that ensure I focus my time and energy in the most productive ways.
Darktrace also saves my team time and labor when it comes to responding to incidents. When it does detect attacks, it autonomously responds in seconds to contain them without interfering with any normal business operations.
We have been able to configure Darktrace’s settings to further streamline our workload. We’ve made several adjustments that reduce the number of helpdesk tickets my team receives, which ensures we’re spending our time on high-value work.
Darktrace not only makes up for the limited resources of our IT team, but also augments us. By simplifying our investigations and autonomously stopping attacks, Darktrace gives us more time to work on our other IT responsibilities without worrying about our security.
Darktrace/Network brings visibility and defense
Before Darktrace, we didn’t have visibility into the east-west traffic on our network. Once installed, it provided a view of traffic we had never anticipated, and we saw connections that we never even knew existed.
Darktrace/Network has insight into every laptop, server, phone, and user. The Self-Learning AI learns the “pattern of life” of our organization, so that it can recognize unusual activity that indicates a cyber-attack. In the case of a serious emerging attack, Darktrace RESPOND can take precise actions to stop it while otherwise allowing normal digital operations.
Darktrace/Network maps connections made within our network, whether between users and servers or between devices. It sorts users into groups that behave similarly, making it more obvious if one acts unusually. Darktrace/Email and Darktrace/Apps extend this coverage to our email and Microsoft 365 Suite, respectively. In this way, Darktrace allows us to see comprehensively into end-user traffic.
Darktrace can stop attempts to download malicious software, move malware laterally, upload private data, and everything in between. This means we are protected from attacks that are notoriously difficult to find, such as stealth attacks, machine speed ransomwares, insider threats, and zero-days.
Darktrace brings peace of mind
The Self-Learning AI has transformed my skepticism of AI into enthusiasm. I now see the possibilities with AI are limited only by one’s imagination, and the Darktrace team has harnessed it to create a great security tool.
Darktrace has proven to be the addition we needed to keep our digital landscape secure while contending with the limitations of budget and staffing during a time of increasingly frequent attacks targeting municipalities. My team’s support for Darktrace has been outstanding, and we have no regrets.
Darktrace gives us the assurance that no matter what rules we put in place regarding the flow of traffic on our network, it will always be present to reconfigure our defenses and safeguard our digital assets should an attack occur. It works 24/7, at machine speed, and augments our IT team. That defines peace of mind!
Darktrace cyber analysts are world-class experts in threat intelligence, threat hunting and incident response, and provide 24/7 SOC support to thousands of Darktrace customers around the globe. Inside the SOC is exclusively authored by these experts, providing analysis of cyber incidents and threat trends, based on real-world experience in the field.
Written by
Wayne Racey
Manager of IT Operations, City of St Catharines (Guest Contributor)
CastleLoader & CastleRAT: Behind TAG150’s Modular Malware Delivery System
TAG-150, a MaaS operator active since March 2025, uses CastleLoader and CastleRAT in multi-stage attacks. CastleLoader acts as a loader that retrieves and executes additional malware through deceptive domains and malicious GitHub repositories, while CastleRAT functions as a remote access trojan providing attackers with system control, command execution, and data theft capabilities. Darktrace detected and blocked early attack activity, leveraging Autonomous Response to prevent further compromise and protect enterprise networks.
Xillen Stealer Updates to Version 5 to Evade AI Detection
Xillen Stealer v4/v5 introduces advanced features to evade AI detection, steal credentials, cryptocurrency, and sensitive data across browsers, password managers, and cloud environments. With polymorphic engines, container persistence, and behavioral mimicking, this Python-based malware highlights evolving threats and future AI integration in cybercrime campaigns.
Earlier this year, Darktrace investigated the Vo1d malware campaign, tracing its activity from DGA-based DNS beaconing to major cloud infrastructure and ultimately to its C2 server communications. This blog explores how Darktrace detected Vo1d and presents a detailed timeline of Cyber AI Analyst’s investigation.
Protecting the Experience: How a global hospitality brand stays resilient with Darktrace
For the Global Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of a leading experiential leisure provider, security is mission critical to protecting a business built on reputation, digital innovation, and guest experience. The company operates large-scale immersive venues across the UK and US, blending activity-driven hospitality with premium dining and vibrant spaces designed for hundreds of guests. With a lean, centrally managed IT team responsible for securing locations worldwide, the challenge is balancing robust cybersecurity with operational efficiency and customer experience.
Brand buzz attracts attention – and attacks
Mid-sized, fast-growing hospitality organizations face a unique risk profile. When systems go down in a venue, the impact is immediate: hundreds of disrupted guest experiences, lost revenue during peak hours, and potential long-term reputation damage. Each time the organization opened a new venue, the surge of marketing buzz attracted attention in local markets and waves of sophisticated cyberattacks, including:
Phishing campaigns leveraging brand momentum to lure employees into clicking on malicious links.
AI-enhanced impersonation using advanced techniques to create AI-generated video calls and deep-researched, contextualized emails
Fake domains targeting leadership with AI-generated messages that contained insider context gleaned from public information.
“Our endpoint security and antivirus tools were powerless against these sophisticated AI-powered campaigns. We didn’t want to manage incidents anymore. We wanted to prevent them from ever happening.” - Global CTO
Proactive, preventative security with Darktrace AI
The company’s cybersecurity vision was clear: “Proactive, preventative – that was our mandate,” said the CTO. With a lean and busy IT group, the business evaluated several security solutions using deep-dive workshops. Darktrace proved the best fit for supporting the organization’s proactive mindset, offering:
Autonomy without added headcount: Darktrace provided powerful AI-driven detection and autonomous response functions with minimal manual oversight required.
Modular adoption: The company could start with core email and network protection and expand into cloud and endpoint coverage, aligning spend with growth.
Partnership and responsiveness: “We wanted people we trust, respect, and know will show up when we need them. Darktrace did just that,” said the CTO.
Affordability at scale: Darktrace offered reasonable upfront costs plus predictable, sustainable economics as the company and IT infrastructure expanded.
“The combination of AI capabilities, a scalable model, and a strong engagement team tipped the balance in Darktrace’s favor, and we have not been disappointed,” said the CTO.
Phased deployment builds trust
To minimize disruption to critical hospitality systems like global Point of Sales (POS) terminals and Audio-Visual (AV) infrastructure, deployment was phased:
Observation and human-led response: Initially, Darktrace was deployed in detection-only mode. Alerts were manually reviewed.
Incremental autonomous response: Darktrace Autonomous Response was enabled on select models, taking action on low-risk scenarios. Higher-risk subnets and devices remained under human control.
Full autonomous coverage: With tuning and reinforcement, autonomous response was expanded across domains, trusted to take decisive action in real time. Analysts retained the ability to review and contextualize incidents.
“Darktrace managed the rollout through detailed, professional, and responsive project management – ensuring a smooth, successful adoption and creating a standardized cybersecurity playbook for future venue launches,” said the CTO.
AI delivers the outcomes that matter
Measurable efficiency replaces endless alerts
Darktrace autonomous response significantly decreased false alerts and noise. “If it’s quiet, we’re confident there isn’t a problem,” said the CTO. Within six months, Darktrace conducted 3,599 total investigations, detected and contained 320 incidents indicative of an attack, resolved 91% of those events autonomously, and escalated only 9% to human analysts. The efficiency gains were enormous, saving analysts 740 hours on investigations within a single month.
Precision AI turns inbox chaos into calm
Darktrace Self-Learning AI modeled sender/recipient norms, content/linguistic baselines, and communication patterns unique to the organization’s launch cadence, resulting in:
Automated holds and neutralizations of anomalous executive-style messages
Rapid detection of novel templates and tone shifts that deviated from the organization’s lived email graph, even when indicators were not yet on any feed
Downstream reduction in help-desk escalations tied to suspicious email
Full visibility fuels real-time response
Darktrace gives IT direct visibility without extra licensing, and it surfaces ground truth across every venue, including:
Device geolocation and placement drift: Darktrace exposed devices and users operating outside approved zones, prompting new segmentation and access-control policies.
Guest Wi-Fi realities: Darktrace AI uncovered high-risk activity on guest networks, like crypto-mining and dark-web traffic, driving stricter VLAN separation and access hygiene.
Lateral-movement containment: Autonomous response fenced suspicious activity in real time, buying time for human investigation while keeping POS and AV systems unaffected.
Smarter endpoints for a smarter network
Endpoints once relied on static agents effective only against known signatures. Darktrace’s behavioral models now detect subtle anomalies at the endpoint process level that EDRs often miss, such as misuse of legitimate applications (commonly used in living-off-the-land attacks), unapproved application usage and policy violations. This increases the accuracy and fidelity of network-based investigations by adding endpoint process context alongside existing EDR alerts.
Autonomous response for continuous compliance
Across PCI, GDPR, and cross-border privacy obligations, Darktrace’s native evidencing is helping the team demonstrate control rather than merely assert it:
Asset and flow awareness: Knowing “what is where” and “who talks to what” underpins PCI scoping and data-flow diagrams.
Layered safeguards: Showing autonomous prevention, network segmentation, and rapid containment supports risk registers and control attestations.
Audit-ready artifacts: Investigations and autonomous actions produce artifacts that “tick the box” without additional tooling.
Defining the next era of resilience with AI
With rapid global expansion underway, the company is using its cybersecurity playbook to streamline and secure future venue launches. In the near term, IT is focused on strengthening prevention, using Darktrace insights to guide new policy updates and infrastructure changes like imposing stricter guest-network posture and refining venue device baselines.
For tech leaders charting their path to proactive cyber defense, the CTO stresses success won’t come from sidestepping AI, but from turning it into a core capability.
“AI isn’t optional – it’s operational. The real risk to your business is trying to out-scale automated adversaries with human speed alone. When applied to the right use case, AI becomes a catalyst for efficiency, resilience, and business growth.” - Global CTO
From Amazon to Louis Vuitton: How Darktrace Detects Black Friday Phishing Attacks
Why Black Friday Drives a Surge in Phishing Attacks
In recent years, Black Friday has shifted from a single day of online retail sales and discounts to an extended ‘Black Friday Week’, often preceded by weeks of online hype. During this period, consumers are inundated with promotional emails and marketing campaigns as legitimate retailers compete for attention.
Unsurprisingly, this surge in legitimate communications creates an ideal environment for threat actors to launch targeted phishing campaigns designed to mimic legitimate retail emails. These campaigns often employ social engineering techniques that exploit urgency, exclusivity, and consumer trust in well-known brands, tactics designed to entice recipients into opening emails and clicking on malicious links.
Additionally, given the seasonal nature of Black Friday and the ever-changing habits of consumers, attackers adopt new tactics and register fresh domains each year, rather than reusing domains previously flagged as spam or phishing endpoints. While this may pose a challenge for traditional email security tools, it presents no such difficulty for Darktrace / EMAIL and its anomaly-based approach.
In the days and weeks leading up to ‘Black Friday’, Darktrace observed a spike in sophisticated phishing campaigns targeting consumers, demonstrating how attackers combine phycological manipulation with technical evasion to bypass basic security checks during this high-traffic period. This blog showcases several notable examples of highly convincing phishing emails detected and contained by Darktrace / EMAIL in mid to late November 2025.
Darktrace’s Black Friday Detections
Brand Impersonation: Deal Watchdogs’ Amazon Deals
The impersonation major online retailers has become a common tactic in retail-focused attacks, none more so than Amazon, which ranked as the fourth most impersonated brand in 2024, only behind Microsoft, Apple, Google, and Facebook [1]. Darktrace’s own research found Amazon to be the most mimicked brand, making up 80% of phishing attacks in its analysis of global consumer brands.
When faced with an email that appears to come from a trusted sender like Amazon, recipients are far more likely to engage, increasing the success rate of these phishing campaigns.
In one case observed on November 16, Darktrace detected an email with the subject line “NOW LIVE: Amazon’s Best Early Black Friday Deals on Gadgets Under $60”. The email was sent to a customer by the sender ‘Deal Watchdogs’, in what appeared to be an attempt to masquerade as a legitimate discount-finding platform. No evidence indicated that the company was legitimate. In fact, the threat actor made no attempt to create a convincing name, and the domain appeared to be generated by a domain generation algorithm (DGA), as shown in Figure 2.
Although the email was sent by ‘Deal Watchdogs’, it attempted to impersonate Amazon by featuring realistic branding, including the Amazon logo and a shade of orange similar to that used by them for the ‘CLICK HERE’ button and headline text.
Figure 1: The contents of the email observed by Darktrace, featuring authentic-looking Amazon branding.
Darktrace identified that the email, marked as urgent by the sender, contained a suspicious link to a Google storage endpoint (storage.googleapis[.]com), which had been hidden by the text “CLICK HERE”. If clicked, the link could have led to a credential harvester or served as a delivery vector for a malicious payload hosted on the Google storage platform.
Fortunately, Darktrace immediately identified the suspicious nature of this email and held it before delivery, preventing recipients from ever receiving or interacting with the malicious content.
Figure 2: Darktrace / EMAIL’s detection of the malicious phishing email sent to a customer.
Around the same time, Darktrace detected a similar email attempting to spoof Amazon on another customer’s network with the subject line “Our 10 Favorite Deals on Amazon That Started Today”, also sent by ‘Deal Watchdogs,’ suggesting a broader campaign.
Analysis revealed that this email originated from the domain petplatz[.]com, a fake marketing domain previously linked to spam activity according to open-source intelligence (OSINT) [2].
Brand Impersonation: Louis Vuitton
A few days later, on November 20, Darktrace / EMAIL detected a phishing email attempting to impersonate the luxury fashion brand Louis Vuitton. At first glance, the email, sent under the name ‘Louis Vuitton’ and titled “[Black Friday 2025] Discover Your New Favorite Louis Vuitton Bag – Elegance Starts Here”, appeared to be a legitimate Black Friday promotion. However, Darktrace’s analysis uncovered several red flags indicating a elaborate brand impersonation attempt.
The email was not sent by Louis Vuitton but by rskkqxyu@bookaaatop[.]ru, a Russia-based domain never before observed on the customer’s network. Darktrace flagged this as suspicious, noting that .ru domains were highly unusual for this recipient’s environment, further reinforcing the likelihood of malicious intent. Subsequent analysis revealed that the domain had only recently registered and was flagged as malicious by multiple OSINT sources [3].
Figure 3: Darktrace / EMAIL’s detection of the malicious email attempting to spoofLouis Vuitton, originating from a suspicious Russia-based domain.
Darktrace further noted that the email contained a highly suspicious link hidden behind the text “View Collection” and “Unsubscribe,” ensuring that any interaction, whether visiting the supposed ‘handbag store’ or attempting to opt out of marketing emails, would direct recipients to the same endpoint. The link resolved to xn--80aaae9btead2a[.]xn--p1ai (топааабоок[.]рф), a domain confirmed as malicious by multiple OSINT sources [4]. At the time of analysis, the domain was inaccessible, likely due to takedown efforts or the short-lived nature of the campaign.
Darktrace / EMAIL blocked this email before it reached customer inboxes, preventing recipients from interacting with the malicious content and averting any disruption.
Figure 4: The suspicious domain linked in the Louis Vuitton phishing email, now defunct.
Too good to be true?
Aside from spoofing well-known brands, threat actors frequently lure consumers with “too good to be true” luxury offers, a trend Darktrace observed in multiple cases throughout November.
In one instance, Darktrace identified an email with the subject line “[Black Friday 2025] Luxury Watches Starting at $250.” Emails contained a malicious phishing link, hidden behind text like “Rolex Starting from $250”, “Shop Now”, and “Unsubscribe”.
Figure 5: Example of a phishing email detected by Darktrace, containing malicious links concealed behind seemingly innocuous text.
Similarly to the Louis Vuitton email campaign described above, this malicious link led to a .ru domain (hxxps://x.wwwtopsalebooks[.]ru/.../d65fg4er[.]html), which had been flagged as malicious by multiple sources [5].
Figure 6: Darktrace / EMAIL’s detection of a malicious email promoting a fake luxury watch store, which was successfully held from recipient inboxes.
If accessed, this domain would redirect users to luxy-rox[.]com, a recently created domain (15 days old at the time of writing) that has also been flagged as malicious by OSINT sources [6]. When visited, the redirect domain displayed a convincing storefront advertising high-end watches at heavily discounted prices.
Figure 7: The fake storefront presented upon visiting the redirectdomain, luxy-rox[.]com.
Although the true intent of this domain could not be confirmed, it was likely a scam site or a credential-harvesting operation, as users were required to create an account to complete a purchase. As of the time or writing, the domain in no longer accessible .
This email illustrates a layered evasion tactic: attackers employed multiple domains, rapid domain registration, and concealed redirects to bypass detection. By leveraging luxury branding and urgency-driven discounts, the campaign sought to exploit seasonal shopping behaviors and entice victims into clicking.
Staying Protected During Seasonal Retail Scams
The investigation into these Black Friday-themed phishing emails highlights a clear trend: attackers are exploiting seasonal shopping events with highly convincing campaigns. Common tactics observed include brand impersonation (Amazon, Louis Vuitton, luxury watch brands), urgency-driven subject lines, and hidden malicious links often hosted on newly registered domains or cloud services.
These campaigns frequently use redirect chains, short-lived infrastructure, and psychological hooks like exclusivity and luxury appeal to bypass user scepticism and security filters. Organizations should remain vigilant during retail-heavy periods, reinforcing user awareness training, link inspection practices, and anomaly-based detection to mitigate these evolving threats.
Credit to Ryan Traill (Analyst Content Lead) and Owen Finn (Cyber Analyst)