| Yes a few, very few compared to the rest. You will note I said most of them don't use 0 days and even 1 days. A lot attempt exploitation in some form of another, typically for vulns older than a few months. It's simply too easy to use other means of delivery. Look at drive by: https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1189/ In most cases the only thing exploited is the sites hosting their malware (typical joomla/wp sites). Spear phishing attachment: https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1193 I see about 3 examples out of 40 that use exploits. Spearphishing link: https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1192/ 2/20 https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1190/ only 5 examples for public facing asset exploit,mostly sql injection. Mitre is not a complete list but they do a good job of keeping up with APT techniques. The most famous ones indeed use 0days and that is one of the reasons they're famous. But the end of the day they should be noteworthy based on damage done not "coolness" of the hack. Software exploitation is a thing but not only is it seen less and less, modern mitigations are making a lot of the techniques obsolete. Look at the fall of exploit kits as an example. |
Watering holes can be depending on how the malware is delivered once the user visits the site. If it just tries to download it and hope they click, that is not advanced IMO.
I do agree that this is what most organizations face as threats though. Resources like these are for people who want to eventually sell exploits, hunt for bugs, or learn enough to analyze them effectively. I do not think these are for teaching someone to teach corp users to not run docms.