Business Standard

How Belltrox became top spy for hire

- NEHA ALAWADHI

Until earlier this month, chances are you would've never heard of Sumit Gupta and his firm Belltrox Infotech Services. This little-known firm based in the Shakurpur area of New Delhi has been accused of being one of the largest “spyfor-hire” operations ever exposed.

However, the cybersecur­ity community in India was not surprised. “It’s just a matter of who gets caught. A lot of people do this kind of work, but it’s a matter of covering your tracks well,” says a Mumbai-based hacker.

According to revelation­s made by Canada-based Citizen Lab, and first reported by Reuters, the underlying technology Belltrox used to allegedly target “thousands of individual­s and organisati­ons on six continents, including senior politician­s, government prosecutor­s, CEOS, journalist­s, and human rights defenders” is phishing.

Phishing attacks could either be in the form of an e-mail from a trusted source asking for informatio­n, such as passwords, bank details, and personal details, or it could mimic an existing website or webpage and trick a user into entering confidenti­al informatio­n.

Gupta, however, has a bit of history. In 2015, he was charged, along with five others, with a conspiracy involving email hacking. The Department of Justice's press release dated February 11, 2015, said Gupta, who apparently hails from Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh, and a person called Trent Williams were hired by two private investigat­ors “to hack into the victims’ e-mail accounts, Skype accounts, and protected computers. In addition to that conduct, the defendants allegedly installed and used a keylogger — a tool that intercepts and logs the particular keys struck on a keyboard in a covert manner so that the person using the keyboard is unaware that his or her actions are being monitored”. While the private investigat­ors pleaded guilty to conspiring to hack into computers, Gupta and two others continued to face charges of conspiracy as of July 2015.

While US federal prosecutor­s never specified how Gupta was hired, a web portal called Global News reported in May 2015 that he responded to a listing on a freelancin­g website that offered between $250-$750 for a software program that would compromise computer systems operating Home windows and Microsoft Workplace.

“When a company looks for hackers, it goes to freelancin­g websites where hackers put up their projects. Among the ways companies test these hackers are by giving them tasks like getting into someone’s website, getting hold of (a rival's) customer data and so on,” said Sunny Vaghela, founder and CEO, cybersecur­ity consulting firm Techdefenc­e Labs. “They may also ask hackers to find things on the dark web. For example: As an initial assignment, a hacker may be asked to get data from the dark web that was already breached by someone. They may then be asked to find people who haven't changed their passwords from that list, and monitor their compromise­d accounts and do a kind of espionage.”

People familiar with the way Gupta worked said he kept a small team comprising young members, who offered a range of services — from e-mail hacking to espionage. They were assigned tasks, without being told the identity of the client.

According to Vaghela, 13- to 15-year olds can easily learn hacking and take assignment­s to make quick money. The minimum amount a hacker expects for a task is $500, and for the maximum, the sky's the limit, depending on the criticalit­y of the job and willingnes­s of the person asking. A large corporate targeting rivals, for example, could even be willing to pay over ~2-3 crore for a single task.

According to Google's Threat Analysis Group report, in the first quarter of 2020, “there was new activity from 'hack-for-hire' firms, many based in India, that have been creating Gmail accounts spoofing the World Health Organisati­on,” an indication that hacking activity originatin­g in India is increasing.

However, despite the negative connotatio­n around the word hacker, the community has also done great work in preventing cybercrime.

According to a recent report by crowdsourc­ed security platform Bugcrowd, there was an 83 per cent increase in the number of hackers living in India, making it the top country for hackers in the world. It also reported $8.9 billion worth cybercrime prevented by hackers on the platform in the last 12 months.

Many of them participat­e in programmes called bug bounties, which are monetary rewards offered by technology companies to geeks who spot bugs, errors and security flaws before malicious hackers or cyber criminals spot them. The fine line between doing the task ethically and unethicall­y makes all the difference.

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 ??  ?? Belltrox's Sumit Gupta kept a small team comprising young members, who offered a range of services — from e-mail hacking to espionage. They were assigned tasks, without being told the identity of the client
Belltrox's Sumit Gupta kept a small team comprising young members, who offered a range of services — from e-mail hacking to espionage. They were assigned tasks, without being told the identity of the client

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