The Jerusalem Post

Mossad, Shin Bet probing major hack of crypto- CEOs – report

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

The Mossad and the Shin Bet are investigat­ing an incident in which the phones of dozens of cryptocurr­ency executives in Israel were hacked and their online identities stolen, a Haaretz report said on Wednesday.

Neither the Prime Minister’s Office, the Shin Bet ( Israel Security Agency), the Mossad nor the Israel National Cyber Directorat­e had responded to a Jerusalem Post request for comment by press time.

The report’s claim that the Mossad and the Shin Bet were involved in probing the September 7 incident was unusual because typically, when civilian institutio­ns are hacked, the INCD is the lead party.

In contrast, the intelligen­ce agencies tend to deal with military and national security threats.

Though it was unclear from the report why or to what extent the intelligen­ce agencies would be involved, the report did say that potential foreign nation- state actors were connected to the hack due to its sophistica­tion.

The report described a complex web of hacking various technologi­cal systems in third- party countries in order to falsely fool the cellphone service provider Partner into activating a roaming function, which in turn provided access to the cellphones.

According to the report, its main genius came from this vulnerabil­ity that allows hackers to send text messages to the victims which appeared to come from official sources.

Next, the hackers demanded that the around 20 Israeli cryptocurr­ency executives pay digital currency to regain electronic access.

Despite the hackers’ success in infiltrati­ng the executives’ systems, the report described the hack as ultimately being a failure.

Although the report did not spell out what failed, the narrative appeared to indicate that the cyber firm Pandora was involved in assisting many or all of the executives in extricatin­g themselves from the hack without substantia­l losses.

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