CoreTech Blog

CoreTech Blog

CoreTech has been serving the Bowling Green area since 2006, providing IT Support such as technical helpdesk support, computer support, and consulting to small and medium-sized businesses.

How Today’s Cybercriminals Actually Operate

How Today’s Cybercriminals Actually Operate

We’ve all seen the Hollywood version of a hacker. It’s usually a lone genius in a dark room, typing furiously into a glowing green screen, shouting "I'm in!" right before they bypass a mainframe.

It makes for great television. However, in the real world, this representation is completely wrong. Today's cybercriminal doesn't look like a movie villain. They look a lot more like a mid-level corporate executive. 

Cybercrime is no longer an amateur hobby; it is a highly organized, multi-billion-dollar global industry. These guys have org charts, help desks, performance KPIs, and marketing budgets.

If you are running a business in Kentucky, you aren't dealing with a bored kid trying to make a statement. You are dealing with a business enterprise whose sole product is stealing your data.

The Toolkit of the Modern Attacker

Because cybercrime is an industry, these antagonists no longer build everything from scratch. They buy their tools off the shelf, just like you buy your accounting software.

Here is what they are bringing to the fight every single day:

  • Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS): This is exactly what it sounds like. A group of highly skilled developers creates sophisticated encryption malware and rents it out to other criminals (called affiliates) for a cut of the profits.
  • AI-Powered Phishing Bots: Remember when phishing emails were easy to spot because of horrible grammar and broken English? Those days are gone. Criminals are utilizing generative AI to draft perfectly polished, highly convincing emails that mimic your vendors, your bank, or even your internal HR department.
  • Dark Web Credential Marketplaces: When a major website is breached, millions of email-password combinations are dumped onto the dark web. Criminals buy these lists for pennies, then use automated software to try those same passwords against hundreds of other business networks.

A Step-by-Step Guide to the Attack Process:

A cybercriminal rarely just stumbles into your network and blows things up. They follow a very specific, deliberate workflow.

It usually looks like this:

1. Reconnaissance

They start by researching your company using Open Source Intelligence (OSINT). They look at your company's LinkedIn page to see who works in finance, who handles IT, and what software you might be using.

2. Initial Access

Next, they look for a way in. Most of the time, they don't hack their way through a firewall; they simply log in. They do this by sending a targeted phishing email to an employee or by exploiting a known software vulnerability that hasn't been patched yet.

3. Lateral Movement and Staging

Once they get inside a single computer, they don't launch the attack right away. They sit quietly. They spend days, sometimes weeks, moving through your network, looking for your crown jewels—your customer data, financial records, and most importantly, your backups.

4. The Payload

Only after they have quietly copied your data and disabled your backups do they pull the trigger. They encrypt your files, lock you out of your systems, and drop a text file on your desktop demanding thousands of dollars in Bitcoin.

A quick note here… obviously, this isn’t a concrete routine that all cybercriminals will infallibly follow. This is simply the trend that many attacks have demonstrated of late. It is important that your protections are appropriately diversified so that all your weaknesses are covered. Fortunately, there are tools to help accomplish this.

Flipping the Script with the Right Defenses

If that sounds daunting, I get it. It’s a lot to worry about on top of just trying to run your business. The good news: you don't have to be defenseless.

Being targeted by a cybercriminal isn't your fault, but leaving the front door unlocked is.

To stop an organized adversary, you need an organized defense. The standard "antivirus and a prayer" approach doesn't cut it anymore. Businesses today need a layered security stack:

Managed Detection and Response

This isn't your standard antivirus that just scans for known bad files. MDR monitors your computers' behavior 24/7. If a computer suddenly starts encrypting thousands of files at 3:00 AM, MDR steps in and immediately isolates that machine.

Multi-Factor Authentication

This is one of the most important security controls you can implement. Even if a criminal buys your exact password on the dark web, MFA stops them dead in their tracks by requiring a secondary code from your physical device.

Immutable Cloud Backups

If the worst happens, your backups are your ultimate safety net. Of course, they have to be properly segmented. Immutable backups cannot be deleted or modified by a hacker, ensuring you can restore your business without paying a dime to a criminal.

We’re Here to Help You Fight Back

You don't need to become a cybersecurity expert to protect your business. You just need to partner with an organization that treats your security with the same seriousness as criminals bring to their attacks.

At CoreTech, we’re here to help small and medium-sized businesses navigate this chaotic technology landscape. We don't just sell you a piece of software and walk away; we take you by the hand, look at how your staff actually works, and implement a comprehensive security strategy that protects your people without getting in the way of their day-to-day productivity.

If you want to make sure your organization is properly defended against modern threats, let's have an honest, no-pressure conversation.

Give us a call at (270) 282-4926. Let’s make sure your business stays focused on its actual goals, not dealing with a cyber crisis.

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Wednesday, 24 June 2026

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CoreTech has been serving the Kentucky area since 2006, providing IT Support such as technical helpdesk support, computer support and consulting to small and medium-sized businesses. Our experience has allowed us to build and develop the infrastructure needed to keep our prices affordable and our clients up and running.

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