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January 5, 2021

How McLaren Racing Counters Advanced Email Threats

Learn how Darktrace helps McLaren Racing counter advanced email threats, ensuring robust cybersecurity for their operations.
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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.
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05
Jan 2021

Securing our team’s inboxes has long been a challenge at McLaren Racing. Even before COVID-19 hit, our workforce was incredibly dynamic; we’d been used to effectively setting up a remote office at tracks around the world every other weekend for the last 30 years. We were therefore used to people emailing at an extremely high rate while not always being centralised in a single location.

Collaboration is key for this team, with both our partners and key suppliers. Sharing data happens every day and a variety of methods are used – ranging from sensitive car designs to confidential track-side data.

The email attacks targeting our users have advanced considerably in the last year or two, with attackers seeking to solicit fraudulent payments, or trying to access our own intellectual property. Increasingly sophisticated social engineering attempts meant that our users continued to engage with these phishing and spoofing emails, despite having an array of tools and procedures in place to avoid such an eventuality.

Last year we extended Darktrace’s coverage to our inbox, and now have an intelligent AI security solution understanding ‘patterns of life’ for every Microsoft 365 user in order to spot attacks. Darktrace has allowed the security team here to stay ahead of the most advanced email threats, rather than respond retrospectively to attacks that manage to slip through traditional defences.

Training our workforce to spot attacks

Previously we relied on threat intelligence feeds and retrospective security tools that blocked malicious addresses, domains and URLs, but regardless, a small volume of phishing emails would still reach user mailboxes. Typically, these emails would be well-researched and highly contextualised, targeted to the recipient and sometimes indistinguishable from genuine communications. Despite running employee awareness programs, a proportion of these malicious emails would be acted on by users, leading to account compromises and fraud attempts. Our security resources were then consumed with reacting to these incidents rather than proactively improving security at McLaren Racing.

We run cyber awareness weeks, in collaboration with many of our partners, simulating our own phishing campaigns to teach our workforce how to spot attacks. But these education programs have become harder to communicate with the increase of remote working. Employee engagement was always key and that meant a larger resource strain on our security team, who would typically spend a lot of time with our senior stakeholders, helping them identify spoof emails and working with them on putting business processes in place.

This was a long and arduous process, and it’s difficult to expect our employees to spot the increasingly subtle signs of an email attack. With the sophistication of modern email attacks, the research that goes into them, and the level of social engineering in play, phishing attacks do inevitably still get through both humans and rudimentary defences.

Turning to cyber AI

Working with our partner Darktrace, we deployed their email security technology, Darktrace/Email, and worked on the configuration and installation together. We were able to see results in days. The volume of phishing emails reported by users fell substantially, and over time with Autonomous Response, the regular reviews of Darktrace/Email’s actions has led us to discover many phishing campaigns that we were previously unaware of.

Darktrace’s actions are taken in the context of the business, holding back emails only as a last resort (less than 1% in our environment), and catching only the genuinely malicious emails rather than producing a load of false positives. The actions are also targeted and proportionate, varying from moving emails to junk to converting attachments and locking links, giving us the flexibility we need.

With Darktrace/Email constantly learning and stopping advanced email attacks, the pressure has been taken off the rest of the team, who can now spend their time working with the business supporting new initiatives and collaborating on new areas of innovation.

Stopping a targeted credential-grabbing attack targeting the C-suite

As with many organisations, it’s often our C-suite that gets targeted by the most malicious mails, and Darktrace/Email recently detected an email sent to one of our executives, prompting them to sign a financial document. The email appeared to come from DocuSign, and contained a malicious link hidden behind the text ‘Review Document’.

Figure 1: An interactive snapshot of Darktrace/Email’s user interface surfacing the email
Figure 2: A screenshot of the email in question

If the link is clicked on, two types of scenarios usually follow from these kind of email attacks. Either the user is led to a fake (and often very convincing) login page which captures credentials, or the document itself contains a legitimate-looking invoice, but with one crucial element changed – the bank details. Accounts teams and CFOs are targeted with this kind of attack on a regular basis, but in this case, the attackers were after the executive’s credentials.

Had the executive clicked through and attempted to log in, they would unknowingly have been sending their credentials to the attacker, who then could have used this information to gather sensitive data from their inbox or other SaaS accounts, or send additional malicious emails from the account to make further inroads into our organisation.

The email was sent over the Imola GP race weekend, which was a high-pressured 48 hours for the whole team, as we ran in a new format without Friday practice, bringing a new intensity to the race weekend. However, Darktrace/Email was on guard, recognising the sender as a new contact and deeming the link to be suspicious. With suitable concerns over the email, Darktrace’s AI double locked the link and automatically moved the email to the executive’s Junk folder. All without having to alert the on-call cyber security team over the weekend.

With attacks like this coming in every day, relying on McLaren’s workforce to distinguish real from fake will never realistically protect us from every single threat. With credential harvesting and account takeover on the rise, it really felt like a matter of time before just one phishing email was successful and the floodgates were opened. But with Darktrace/Email, we can rest assured that we have a powerful AI solution keeping us safe, on and off the track.

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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.
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Cloud

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June 12, 2025

Breaking Silos: Why Unified Security is Critical in Hybrid World

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Hybrid environments demand end-to-end visibility to stop modern attacks

Hybrid environments are a dominant trend in enterprise technology, but they continue to present unique issues to the defenders tasked with securing them. By 2026, Gartner predicts that 75% of organizations will adopt hybrid cloud strategies [1]. At the same time, only 23% of organizations report full visibility across cloud environments [2].

That means a strong majority of organizations do not have comprehensive visibility across both their on-premises and cloud networks. As a result, organizations are facing major challenges in achieving visibility and security in hybrid environments. These silos and fragmented security postures become a major problem when considering how attacks can move between different domains, exploiting the gaps.

For example, an attack may start with a phishing email, leading to the compromise of a cloud-based application identity and then moving between the cloud and network to exfiltrate data. Some attack types inherently involve multiple domains, like lateral movement and supply chain attacks, which target both on-premises and cloud networks.

Given this, unified visibility is essential for security teams to reduce blind spots and detect threats across the entire attack surface.

Risks of fragmented visibility

Silos arise due to separate teams and tools managing on-premises and cloud environments. Many teams have a hand in cloud security, with some common ones including security, infrastructure, DevOps, compliance, and end users, and these teams can all use different tools. This fragmentation increases the likelihood of inconsistent policies, duplicate alerts, and missed threats. And that’s just within the cloud, not even considering the additional defenses involved with network security.

Without a unified security strategy, gaps between these infrastructures and the teams which manage them can leave organizations vulnerable to cyber-attacks. The lack of visibility between on-premises and cloud environments contributes to missed threats and delayed incident response. In fact, breaches involving stolen or compromised credentials take an average of 292 to identify and contain [3]. That’s almost ten months.

The risk of fragmented visibility runs especially high as companies undergo cloud migrations. As organizations transition to cloud environments, they still have much of their data in on-premises networks, meaning that maintaining visibility across both on-premises and cloud environments is essential for securing critical assets and ensuring seamless operations.

Unified visibility is the solution

Unified visibility is achieved by having a single-pane-of-glass view to monitor both on-premises and cloud environments. This type of view brings many benefits, including streamlined detection, faster response times, and reduced complexity.

This can only be accomplished through integrations or interactions between the teams and tools involved with both on-premises security and cloud security.

AI-driven platforms, like Darktrace, are especially well equipped to enable the real-time monitoring and insights needed to sustain unified visibility. This is because they can handle the large amounts of data and data types.

Darktrace accomplishes this by plugging into an organization’s infrastructure so the AI can ingest and analyze data and its interactions within the environment to form an understanding of the organization’s normal behavior, right down to the granular details of specific users and devices. The system continually revises its understanding about what is normal based on evolving evidence.

This dynamic understanding of normal means that the AI engine can identify, with a high degree of precision, events or behaviors that are both anomalous and unlikely to be benign. This helps reduce noise while surfacing real threats, across cloud and on-prem environments without manual tuning.

In this way, given its versatile AI-based, platform approach, Darktrace empowers security teams with real-time monitoring and insights across both the network and cloud.

Unified visibility in the modern threat landscape

As part of the Darktrace ActiveAI Security Platform™, Darktrace / CLOUD works continuously across public, private, hybrid, and multi-cloud deployments. With real-time Cloud Asset Enumeration and Dynamic Architecture Modeling, Darktrace / CLOUD generates up-to-date architecture diagrams, giving SecOps and DevOps teams a unified view of cloud infrastructures.

It is always on the lookout for changes, driven by user and service activity. For example, unusual user activity can significantly raise the asset’s score, prompting Darktrace’s AI to update its architectural view and keep a living record of the cloud’s ever-changing landscape, providing near real-time insights into what’s happening.

This continuous architectural awareness ensures that security teams have a real-time understanding of cloud behavior and not just a static snapshot.

Darktrace / CLOUD’s unified view of AWS and Azure cloud posture and compliance over time.
Figure 1. Darktrace / CLOUD’s unified view of AWS and Azure cloud posture and compliance over time.

With this dynamic cloud visibility and monitoring, Darktrace / CLOUD can help unify and secure environments.

Real world example: Remote access supply chain attacks

Sectop Remote Access Trojan (RAT) malware, also known as ‘ArchClient2,’ is a .NET RAT that contains information stealing capabilities and allows threat actors to monitor and control targeted computers. It is commonly distributed through drive-by downloads of illegitimate software via malvertizing.

Darktrace has been able to detect and respond to Sectop RAT attacks using unified visibility and platform-wide coverage. In one such example, Darktrace observed one device making various suspicious connections to unusual endpoints, likely in an attempt to receive C2 information, perform beaconing activity, and exfiltrate data to the cloud.

This type of supply chain attack can jump from the network to the cloud, so a unified view of both environments helps shorten detection and response times, therefore mitigating potential impact. Darktrace’s ability to detect these cross-domain behaviors stems from its AI-driven, platform-native visibility.

Conclusion

Organizations need unified visibility to secure complex, hybrid environments effectively against threats and attacks. To achieve this type of comprehensive visibility, the gaps between legacy security tools across on-premises and cloud networks can be bridged with platform tools that use AI to boost data analysis for highly accurate behavioral prediction and anomaly detection.

Read more about the latest trends in cloud security in the blog “Protecting Your Hybrid Cloud: The Future of Cloud Security in 2025 and Beyond.”

References:

1. Gartner, May 22, 2023, “10 Strategic Data and Analytics Predictions Through 2028

2. Cloud Security Alliance, February 14, 2024, “Cloud Security Alliance Survey Finds 77% of Respondents Feel Unprepared to Deal with Security Threats

3. IBM, “Cost of a Data Breach Report 2024

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About the author
Pallavi Singh
Product Marketing Manager, OT Security & Compliance

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OT

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June 11, 2025

Proactive OT security: Lessons on supply chain risk management from a rogue Raspberry Pi

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Understanding supply chain risk in manufacturing

For industries running Industrial Control Systems (ICS) such as manufacturing and fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG), complex supply chains mean that disruption to one weak node can have serious impacts to the entire ecosystem. However, supply chain risk does not always originate from outside an organization’s ICS network.  

The implicit trust placed on software or shared services for maintenance within an ICS can be considered a type of insider threat [1], where defenders also need to look ‘from within’ to protect against supply chain risk. Attackers have frequently mobilised this form of insider threat:

  • Many ICS and SCADA systems were compromised during the 2014 Havex Watering Hole attack, where via operators’ implicit trust in the trojanized versions of legitimate applications, on legitimate but compromised websites [2].
  • In 2018, the world’s largest manufacturer of semiconductors and processers shut down production for three days after a supplier installed tainted software that spread to over 10,000 machines in the manufacturer’s network [3].
  • During the 2020 SolarWinds supply chain attack, attackers compromised a version of Orion software that was deployed from SolarWinds’ own servers during a software update to thousands of customers, including tech manufacturing companies such as Intel and Nvidia [4].

Traditional approaches to ICS security have focused on defending against everything from outside the castle walls, or outside of the ICS network. As ICS attacks become more sophisticated, defenders must not solely rely on static perimeter defenses and prevention. 

A critical part of active defense is understanding the ICS environment and how it operates, including all possible attack paths to the ICS including network connections, remote access points, the movement of data across zones and conduits and access from mobile devices. For instance, original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and vendors often install remote access software or third-party equipment in ICS networks to facilitate legitimate maintenance and support activities, which can unintentionally expand the ICS’ attack surface.  

This blog describes an example of the convergence between supply chain risk and insider risk, when a vendor left a Raspberry Pi device in a manufacturing customer’s ICS network without the customer’s knowledge.

Case study: Using unsupervised machine learning to detect pre-existing security issues

Raspberry Pi devices are commonly used in SCADA environments as low-cost, remotely accessible data collectors [5][6][7]. They are often paired with Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) for monitoring and tracking [8]. However, these devices also represent a security risk because their small physical size and time-consuming nature of physical inspection makes them easy to overlook. This poses a security risk, as these devices have previously been used to carry out USB-based attacks or to emulate Ethernet-over-USB connections to exfiltrate sensitive data [8][9].

In this incident, a Darktrace customer was unaware that their supplier had installed a Raspberry Pi device on their ICS network. Crucially, the installation occurred prior to Darktrace’s deployment on the customer’s network. 

For other anomaly detection tools, this order of events meant that this third-party device would likely have been treated as part of the customer’s existing infrastructure. However, after Darktrace was deployed, it analyzed the metadata from the encrypted HTTPS and DNS connections that the Raspberry Pi made to ‘call home’ to the supplier and determined that these connections were  unusual compared to the rest of the devices in the network, even in the absence of any malicious indicators of compromise (IoCs).  

Darktrace triggered the following alerts for this unusual activity that consequently notified the customer to the pre-existing threat of an unmanaged device already present in their network:

  • Compromise / Sustained SSL or HTTP Increase
  • Compromise / Agent Beacon (Short Period)
  • Compromise / Agent Beacon (Medium Period)
  • Compromise / Agent Beacon (Long Period)
  • Tags / New Raspberry Pi Device
  • Device / DNS Requests to Unusual Server
  • Device / Anomaly Indicators / Spike in Connections to Rare Endpoint Indicator
Darktrace’s External Sites Summary showing the rarity of the external endpoint that the Raspberry Pi device ‘called home’ to and the model alerts triggered.  
Figure 1: Darktrace’s External Sites Summary showing the rarity of the external endpoint that the Raspberry Pi device ‘called home’ to and the model alerts triggered.  

Darktrace’s Cyber AI Analyst launched an autonomous investigation into the activity, correlating related events into a broader incident and generating a report outlining the potential threat along with supporting technical details.

Darktrace’s anomaly-based detection meant that the Raspberry Pi device did not need to be observed performing clearly malicious behavior to alert the customer to the security risk, and neither can defenders afford to wait for such escalation.

Why is this significant?

In 2021 a similar attack took place. Aiming to poison a Florida water treatment facility, attackers leveraged a TeamViewer instance that had been dormant on the system for six months, effectively allowing the attacker to ‘live off the land’ [10].  

The Raspberry Pi device in this incident also remained outside the purview of the customer’s security team at first. It could have been leveraged by a persistent attacker to pivot within the internal network and communicate externally.

A proactive approach to active defense that seeks to minimize and continuously monitor the attack surface and network is crucial.  

The growing interest in manufacturing from attackers and policymakers

Significant motivations for targeting the manufacturing sector and increasing regulatory demands make the convergence of supply chain risk, insider risk, and the prevalence of stealthy living-off-the-land techniques particularly relevant to this sector.

Manufacturing is consistently targeted by cybercriminals [11], and the sector’s ‘just-in-time’ model grants attackers the opportunity for high levels of disruption. Furthermore, under NIS 2, manufacturing and some food and beverage processing entities are now designated as ‘important’ entities. This means stricter incident reporting requirements within 24 hours of detection, and enhanced security requirements such as the implementation of zero trust and network segmentation policies, as well as measures to improve supply chain resilience [12][13][14].

How can Darktrace help?

Ultimately, Darktrace successfully assisted a manufacturing organization in detecting a potentially disruptive 'near-miss' within their OT environment, even in the absence of traditional IoCs.  Through passive asset identification techniques and continuous network monitoring, the customer improved their understanding of their network and supply chain risk.  

While the swift detection of the rogue device allowed the threat to be identified before it could escalate, the customer could have reduced their time to respond by using Darktrace’s built-in response capabilities, had Darktrace’s Autonomous Response capability been enabled.  Darktrace’s Autonomous Response can be configured to target specific connections on a rogue device either automatically upon detection or following manual approval from the security team, to stop it communicating with other devices in the network while allowing other approved devices to continue operating. Furthermore, the exportable report generated by Cyber AI Analyst helps security teams to meet NIS 2’s enhanced reporting requirements.  

Sophisticated ICS attacks often leverage insider access to perform in-depth reconnaissance for the development of tailored malware capabilities.  This case study and high-profile ICS attacks highlight the importance of mitigating supply chain risk in a similar way to insider risk.  As ICS networks adapt to the introduction of IIoT, remote working and the increased convergence between IT and OT, it is important to ensure the approach to secure against these threats is compatible with the dynamic nature of the network.  

Credit to Nicole Wong (Principal Cyber Analyst), Matthew Redrup (Senior Analyst and ANZ Team Lead)

[related-resource]

Appendices

MITRE ATT&CK Mapping

  • Infrastructure / New Raspberry Pi Device - INITIAL ACCESS - T1200 Hardware Additions
  • Device / DNS Requests to Unusual Server - CREDENTIAL ACCESS, COLLECTION - T1557 Man-in-the-Middle
  • Compromise / Agent Beacon - COMMAND AND CONTROL - T1071.001 Web Protocols

References

[1] https://www.cisa.gov/topics/physical-security/insider-threat-mitigation/defining-insider-threats

[2] https://www.trendmicro.com/vinfo/gb/threat-encyclopedia/web-attack/139/havex-targets-industrial-control-systems

[3]https://thehackernews.com/2018/08/tsmc-wannacry-ransomware-attack.html

[4] https://www.theverge.com/2020/12/21/22194183/intel-nvidia-cisco-government-infected-solarwinds-hack

[5] https://www.centreon.com/monitoring-ot-with-raspberry-pi-and-centreon/

[6] https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9107689

[7] https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/webicc-scada-integration-industrial-raspberry-pi-devices-mryff

[8] https://www.rowse.co.uk/blog/post/how-is-the-raspberry-pi-used-in-the-iiot

[9] https://sepiocyber.com/resources/whitepapers/raspberry-pi-a-friend-or-foe/#:~:text=Initially%20designed%20for%20ethical%20purposes,as%20cyberattacks%20and%20unauthorized%20access

[10] https://edition.cnn.com/2021/02/10/us/florida-water-poison-cyber/index.html

[11] https://www.mxdusa.org/2025/02/13/top-cyber-threats-in-manufacturing/

[12] https://www.shoosmiths.com/insights/articles/nis2-what-manufacturers-and-distributors-need-to-know-about-europes-new-cybersecurity-regime

[13] https://www.goodaccess.com/blog/nis2-require-zero-trust-essential-security-measure#zero-trust-nis2-compliance

[14] https://logisticsviewpoints.com/2024/11/06/the-impact-of-nis-2-regulations-on-manufacturing-supply-chains/

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About the author
Nicole Wong
Cyber Security Analyst
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