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May 19, 2020

Understanding a SaaS Attack and How AI Can Investigate

The Cyber AI Platform recently detected and investigated two incidents of SaaS account takeover in real-time. Learn about the importance of cyber security here!
Inside the SOC
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
Max Heinemeyer
Global Field CISO
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19
May 2020

Executive summary

  • Darktrace has observed a significant increase in attacks against SaaS platforms, including file storage, collaborative work, and email solutions.
  • This blog post details two example threats that are representative of the current threat landscape: an Office 365 business email compromise and a Box.com file sharing account compromise.
  • Organizations are recommended to enable multi-factor authentication to combat credential stuffing attacks and the re-use of stolen credentials from data dumps. It is further advised to actively monitor SaaS environments for in-progress cyber-attacks.
  • SaaS exacerbates the skill gap in security – identifying and investigating threats in SaaS environments is a different skill to traditional security operations skill-sets.

Introduction

The digital transformation – whether planned naturally or forced by the global pandemic – has increased the use of Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solutions in modern organizations. The annual growth rate of the SaaS market is currently 18%, and as the workforce becomes increasingly remote throughout 2020, this is set to skyrocket.

Attackers have been targeting SaaS solutions for a long time – but almost nobody talks about how the Techniques, Tools & Procedures (TTPs) in SaaS attacks differ significantly from traditional TTPs seen in networks and endpoint attacks.

How do you create meaningful detections in SaaS environments that don’t have endpoint or network data? How can you investigate threats in a SaaS environment as an analyst? What does a ‘good’ SaaS event look like, and what does a threat look like? Finding skilled security analysts that can work in traditional IT environments is already hard – it gets even harder when trying to hire security people with SaaS domain knowledge.

SaaS consumers are left with only a few choices: either use the native SaaS security controls provided in each SaaS solution – and rely on the (non-)maturity of the SaaS provider – or go with a third party SaaS security solution, often in the form of Cloud Access Security Brokers (CASBs). Both cases are often not ideal.

This blog outlines two attacks we have recently observed in SaaS environments that are representative for the broader SaaS threat landscape: a Microsoft (Office) 365 business email compromise (BEC) and the compromise of a corporate Box.com account. The analysis serves to illuminate the sharp distinction between a traditional network attack and a SaaS compromise – demonstrating how using machine learning to detect anomalies in behavior offers crucial hope for defenders as SaaS applications define this new era of work.

Anonymized SaaS Threat 1: Office 365 Business Email Compromise

Figure 1: The timeline of attack for the Microsoft 365 Compromise

In this case of a classic BEC attack, a threat-actor infiltrated an employee’s Microsoft 365 account to access sensitive financial documents hosted in SharePoint, including pay slip and banking details. The attacker went on to make configuration changes to the hacked inbox, deleting items and making updates that may have allowed them to cover their tracks.

Darktrace first observed the employee’s account log in from unusual IP ranges. The particular account had never logged in from Bulgaria before, and the peer accounts belonging to those from the same department had not exhibited similar behavioral traits. This in itself was a low-level anomaly and not necessarily indicative of malicious activity – employees might change locations after all.

The unusual login location was then accompanied by an unusual login time and a new user-agent. All of these anomalies triggered Cyber AI Analyst – Darktrace’s automated threat investigation technology – to launch a deeper analysis.

Darktrace then identified that the account was starting to access highly sensitive information, including payroll information on a Sharepoint. Two examples that were highlighted by AI Analyst are shown below:

  • hxxps://anonymised[.]sharepoint[.]com/anonymised/pages/Understanding-my-payslip[.]aspx
  • hxxps:// anonymised [.]sharepoint[.]com/anonymised /pages/Changing-my-bank-details[.]aspx

The attacker tried to gain insights about payment information and credit card details, with the likely intention of changing the payroll details to an attacker-controlled bank account. But with its ability to automatically analyze events to piece together attack narratives, Cyber AI Analyst was able to put together these weak signals of a threat and illuminate the likely account compromise. The security team was then able to lock the account and alert the user, who subsequently changed their credentials.

Anonymized SaaS Threat 2: Box.com Compromise

Figure 2: The timeline of attack for the Box.com Compromise

Darktrace observed a case of unauthorized access to a corporate Box.com file storage account belonging to an employee of a global supply company. The Box.com account login took place in the US – the same country that this organization operates in – but from an unusual IP space and ASN. Made suspicious by this low-level anomaly, Cyber AI Analyst did further, ongoing investigations into the user’s activity.

The actor behind the account logged in to Box.com successfully, and then proceeded to download expense reports, invoices, and other financial documents. It became evident that the account started accessing files that were highly unusual for the account to access. Darktrace recognized that neither the account itself, nor its peer group were usually accessing the file called ‘PASSWORD SHEET.xlsx’.

With Cyber AI’s bespoke knowledge of ‘self’ for every member of the organization’s workforce, the technology was able to identify the threat immediately. The Darktrace Cyber AI Platform detected that the activity occurred at a highly unusual time for the legitimate user, and that the location of the actor’s IP address was also anomalous compared to the employee’s previous access locations for this particular SaaS service.

While accessing these documents may have been normal for the employee in another context, Darktrace Cyber AI’s deep understanding of user behavior and granular visibility within the Box.com application allowed it to spot the subtle signs of account compromise. Moreover, when Darktrace’s Cyber AI Analyst automatically investigated the threat, it was able to illuminate the wider narrative, understanding that each unauthorized file exposure was part of a connected incident and highlighted the breach as a key concern for the security team.

Conclusion

Traditional detection approaches like ‘more than X failed logins from Y’ are not enough to ensure sufficient security across SaaS applications. Keeping threat intelligence lists up to date is even more difficult, as most SaaS attacks don’t involve any Command & Control – just indiscriminate logins from remote devices. Attackers may use VPN, Tor, other compromised devices, dynamic DNS, or virtual private servers to further mask their tracks.

A more intricate and effective approach to SaaS security requires understanding the dynamic individual behind the account. SaaS applications are fundamentally platforms for humans to communicate – allowing them to exchange and store ideas and information. Abnormal, threatening behavior is therefore impossible to detect without a nuanced understanding of those unique individuals: where and when do they typically access a SaaS account, which files are they like to access, who do they typically connect with?

Cyber AI asks these questions, continuously analyzing data not only across SaaS platforms, but from the unique ‘patterns of life’ of every user and device in the organization as a whole. With this context, it can chain together seemingly disparate anomalies – unusual login times, login locations, access of new or unusual files, and hundreds of other indicators of threat. These anomalies then act as a trigger for more in-depth investigations via Cyber AI Analyst that can link the anomalies together and create a coherent attack narrative.

Both of the above SaaS attacks were comprehensively but succinctly investigated and fully reported on by the Darktrace’s Cyber AI Analyst, which then surfaced an easy-to-understand incident report, ready for executive review. For a more in-depth look at how Cyber AI Analyst investigated an emerging APT threat in the wild, read: Catching APT41 exploiting a zero-day vulnerability.

Inside the SOC
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
Max Heinemeyer
Global Field CISO

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April 2, 2026

How Chinese-Nexus Cyber Operations Have Evolved – And What It Means For Cyber Risk and Resilience 

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Cybersecurity has traditionally organized risk around incidents, breaches, campaigns, and threat groups. Those elements still matter—but if we fixate on individual incidents, we risk missing the shaping of the entire ecosystem. Nation‑state–aligned operators are increasingly using cyber operations to establish long-term strategic leverage, not just to execute isolated attacks or short‑term objectives.  

Our latest research, Crimson Echo, shifts the lens accordingly. Instead of dissecting campaigns, malware families, or actor labels as discrete events, the threat research team analyzed Chinese‑nexus activity as a continuum of behaviors over time. That broader view reveals how these operators position themselves within environments: quietly, patiently, and persistently—often preparing the ground long before any recognizable “incident” occurs.  

How Chinese-nexus cyber threats have changed over time

Chinese-nexus cyber activity has evolved in four phases over the past two decades. This ranges from early, high-volume operations in the 1990s and early 2000s to more structured, strategically-aligned activity in the 2010s, and now toward highly adaptive, identity-centric intrusions.  

Today’s phase is defined by scale, operational restraint, and persistence. Attackers are establishing access, evaluating its strategic value, and maintaining it over time. This reflects a broader shift: cyber operations are increasingly integrated into long-term economic and geopolitical strategies. Access to digital environments, specifically those tied to critical national infrastructure, supply chains, and advanced technology, has become a form of strategic leverage for the long-term.  

How Darktrace analysts took a behavioral approach to a complex problem

One of the challenges in analyzing nation-state cyber activity is attribution. Traditional approaches often rely on tracking specific threat groups, malware families, or infrastructure. But these change constantly, and in the case of Chinese-nexus operations, they often overlap.

Crimson Echo is the result of a retrospective analysis of three years of anomalous activity observed across the Darktrace fleet between July 2022 and September 2025. Using behavioral detection, threat hunting, open-source intelligence, and a structured attribution framework (the Darktrace Cybersecurity Attribution Framework), the team identified dozens of medium- to high-confidence cases and analyzed them for recurring operational patterns.  

This long-horizon, behavior-centric approach allows Darktrace to identify consistent patterns in how intrusions unfold, reinforcing that behavioral patterns that matter.  

What the data shows

Several clear trends emerged from the analysis:

  • Targeting is concentrated in strategically important sectors. Across the dataset, 88% of intrusions occurred in organizations classified as critical infrastructure, including transportation, critical manufacturing, telecommunications, government, healthcare, and Information Technology (IT) services.  
  • Strategically important Western economies are a primary focus. The US alone accounted for 22.5% of observed cases, and when combined with major European economies including Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK, over half of all intrusions (55%) were concentrated in these regions.  
  • Nearly 63% of intrusions of intrusions began with the exploitation of internet-facing systems, reinforcing the continued risk posed by externally exposed infrastructure.  

Two models of cyber operations

Across the dataset, Chinese-nexus activity followed two operational models.  

The first is best described as “smash and grab.” These are short-horizon intrusions optimized for speed. Attackers move quickly – often exfiltrating data within 48 hours – and prioritize scale over stealth. The median duration of these compromises is around 10 days. It’s clear they are willing to risk detection for short-term gain.  

The second is “low and slow.” These operations were less prevalent in the dataset, but potentially more consequential. Here, attackers prioritize persistence, establishing durable access through identity systems and legitimate administrative tools, so they can maintain access undetected for months or even years. In one notable case, the actor had fully compromised the environment and established persistence, only to resurface in the environment more than 600 days after. The operational pause underscores both the depth of the intrusion and the actor’s long‑term strategic intent. This suggests that cyber access is a strategic asset to preserve and leverage over time, and we observed these attacks most often inin sectors of the high strategic importance.  

It’s important to note that the same operational ecosystem can employ both models concurrently, selecting the appropriate model based on target value, urgency, intended access. The observation of a “smash and grab” model should not be solely interpreted as a failure of tradecraft, but instead an operational choice likely aligned with objectives. Where “low and slow” operations are optimized for patience, smash and grab is optimized for speed; both seemingly are deliberate operational choices, not necessarily indicators of capability.  

Rethinking cyber risk

For many organizations, cyber risk is still framed as a series of discrete events. Something happens, it is detected and contained, and the organization moves on. But persistent access, particularly in deeply interconnected environments that span cloud, identity-based SaaS and agentic systems, and complex supply chain networks, creates a major ongoing exposure risk. Even in the absence of disruption or data theft, that access can provide insight into operations, dependencies, and strategic decision-making. Cyber risk increasingly resembles long-term competitive intelligence.  

This has impact beyond the Security Operations Center. Organizations need to shift how they think about governance, visibility, and resilience, and treat cyber exposure as a structural business risk instead of an incident response challenge.  

What comes next

The goal of this research is to provide a clearer understanding of how these operations work, so defenders can recognize them earlier and respond more effectively. That includes shifting from tracking indicators to understanding behaviors, treating identity providers as critical infrastructure risks, expanding supplier oversight, investing in rapid containment capabilities, and more.  

Learn more about the findings of Darktrace’s latest research, Crimson Echo: Understanding Chinese-nexus Cyber Operations Through Behavioral Analysis, by downloading the full report and summaries for business leaders, CISOs, and SOC analysts here.  

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About the author
Nathaniel Jones
VP, Security & AI Strategy, Field CISO

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April 1, 2026

AI-powered security for a rapidly growing grocery enterprise

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Protecting a complex, fast-growing retail organization

For this multi-banner grocery holding organization, cybersecurity is considered an essential business enabler, protecting operations, growth, and customer trust. The organization’s lean IT team manages a highly distributed environment spanning corporate offices, 100+ stores, distribution centers and  thousands of endpoints, users, and third-party connections.

Mergers and acquisitions fueled rapid growth, but they also introduced escalating complexity that constrained visibility into users, endpoints, and security risks inherited across acquired environments.

Closing critical visibility gaps with limited resources

Enterprise-wide visibility is a top priority for the organization, says the  Vice President of Information Technology. “We needed insights beyond the perimeter into how users and devices were behaving across the organization.”

A security breach that occurred before the current IT leadership joined the company reinforced the urgency and elevated cybersecurity to an executive-level priority with a focus on protecting customer trust. The goal was to build a multi-layered security model that could deliver autonomous, enterprise-wide protection without adding headcount.

Managing cyber risk in M&A

Mergers and acquisitions are central to the grocery holding company’s growth strategy. But each transaction introduces new cyber risk, including inherited network architectures, inconsistent tooling, excessive privileges, and remnants of prior security incidents that were never fully remediated.

“Our M&A targets range from small chains with a single IT person and limited cyber tools to large chains with more developed IT teams, toolsets and instrumentation,” explains the VP of IT. “We needed a fast, repeatable, and reliable way to assess cyber risk before transactions closed.”

AI-driven security built for scale, speed, and resilience

Rather than layering additional point tools onto an already complex environment, the retailer adopted the Darktrace ActiveAI Security Platform™ in 2020 as part of a broader modernization effort to improve resilience, close visibility gaps, and establish a security foundation that could scale with growth.

“Darktrace’s AI-driven approach provided the ideal solution to these challenges,” shares the VP of IT. “It has empowered our organization to maintain a robust security strategy, ensuring the protection of our network and the smooth operation of our business.”

Enterprise-wide visibility into traffic  

By monitoring both north-south and east-west traffic and applying Self-Learning AI, Darktrace develops a dynamic understanding of how users and devices normally behave across locations, roles, and systems.

“Modeling normal behavior across the environment enables us to quickly spot behavior that doesn’t fit. Even subtle changes that could signal a threat but appear legitimate at first glance,” explains the VP of IT.

Real-time threat containment, 24/7

Adopting autonomous response has created operational breathing room for the security team, says the company’s Cybersecurity  Engineer.

“Early on, we enabled full Darktrace autonomous mode and we continue to do so today,” shares the IT Security Architect. “Allowing the technology to act first gives us the time we need to investigate incidents during business hours without putting the business at risk.”

Unified, actionable view of security ecosystem

The grocery retailer integrated Darktrace with its existing security ecosystem of firewalls, vulnerability management tools, and endpoint detection and response, and the VP of IT described the adoption process as “exceptionally smooth.”

The team can correlate enterprise-wide security data for a unified and actionable picture of all activity and risk. Using this “single pane of glass” approach, the retailer trains Level 1 and Level 2 operations staff to assist with investigations and user follow-ups, effectively extending the reach of the security function without expanding headcount.

From reactive defense to security at scale

With Darktrace delivering continuous visibility, autonomous containment, and integrated security workflows, the organization has strengthened its cybersecurity posture while improving operational efficiency. The result is a security model that not only reduces risk, but also supports growth, resilience, and informed decision-making at the business level.

Faster detection, faster resolution

With autonomous detection and response, the retailer can immediately contain risk while analysts investigate and validate activity. With this approach, the company can maintain continuous protection even outside business hours and reduce the chance of lateral spread across systems or locations.

Enterprise-grade protection with a lean team

From cloud environments to clients to SaaS collaboration tools, Darktrace provides holistic autonomous AI defense, processing petabytes of the organization’s network traffic and investigating millions of individual events that could be indicative of a wider incident.

Today, Darktrace autonomously conducts the majority of all investigations on behalf of the IT team, escalating only a tiny fraction for analyst review. The impact has been profound, freeing analysts from endless alerts and hours of triage so they can focus on more valuable, proactive, and gratifying work.

“From an operational perspective, Darktrace gives us time back,” says the Cybersecurity Engineer. More importantly, says the VP of IT, “it gives us peace of mind that we’re protected even if we’re not actively monitoring every alert.”

A strategic input for M&A decision-making

One of the most strategic outcomes has been the role of cybersecurity on M&A. 90 days prior to closing a transaction, the security team uses Darktrace alongside other tools to perform a cyber risk assessment of the potential acquisition. “Our approach with Darktrace has consistently identified gaps and exposed risks,” says the VP of IT, including:

  • Remnants of previous incidents that were never fully remediated
  • Network configurations with direct internet exposure
  • Excessive administrative privileges in Active Directory or on critical hosts

While security findings may not alter deal timelines, the VP of IT says they can have enormous business implications. “With early visibility into these risks, we can reduce exposure to inherited cyber threats, strengthen our position during negotiations, and establish clear remediation requirements.”

A security strategy built to evolve with the business

As the holding group expands its cloud footprint, it will extend Darktrace protections into Azure, applying the same AI-driven visibility and autonomous response to cloud workloads. The VP of IT says Darktrace's evolving capabilities will be instrumental in addressing the organization’s future cybersecurity needs and ability to adapt to the dynamic nature of cloud security.

“With Darktrace’s AI-driven approach, we have moved beyond reactive defense, establishing a resilient security foundation for confident expansion and modernization.”

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