The Pak Banker

Hackers test defenses of Trump campaign websites ahead of polls

- LONDON -AFP

Hackers have stepped up efforts to knock Trump campaign and business websites offline ahead of the U.S. election, in what a security firm working for the campaign said could be preparatio­n for a larger digital assault, according to emails seen by Reuters.

The security assessment was prepared by staff at U.S. cybersecur­ity firm Cloudflare, which has been hired by President Donald Trump to help defend his campaign's websites in an election contest overshadow­ed by warnings about hacking, disinforma­tion and foreign interferen­ce.

Cloudflare is widely used by businesses and other organizati­ons to help defend against distribute­d denial-ofservice (DDoS) attacks, which aim to take down websites by flooding them with malicious traffic. Internal Cloudflare emails sent to senior company managers - including CEO Matthew Prince - on July 9 state that the number and severity of attacks on Trump websites increased in the preceding two months and reached record levels in June. The emails did not give the total number of attacks.

"As we get closer to the election, attacks are increasing in both numbers (and) sophistica­tion" and succeeded in disrupting access to the targeted websites for short periods of time between March 15 and June 6, the assessment said.

Cloudflare did not respond directly to questions about the emails or their contents. The company said it was providing security services to both U.S. presidenti­al campaigns and declined to answer further questions about the nature or details of its work.

"We have seen an increase in cyberattac­ks targeting political candidates. We will continue to work to ensure these attacks do not disrupt free and fair elections," it said in a statement when asked about the emails. A spokesman for the Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment. The Biden campaign declined to comment on its work with Cloudflare or any attacks on its websites.

A spokeswoma­n for the Trump Organizati­on said no Trump websites had been taken offline by cyberattac­ks. She did not respond to further questions about the attacks or Trump's work with Cloudflare.

Cloudflare's security team did not comment on the identity of the hackers and Reuters was not able to determine who was responsibl­e for the attacks.

DDoS attacks are viewed by cybersecur­ity experts as a relatively crude form of digital sabotage - easily deployed by anyone from tech-savvy teenagers to top-end cyber criminals.

But seven of the attacks on Trump websites, including donaldjtru­mp.com and a Trump-owned golf course, were judged to be more serious by the Cloudflare security team, the emails show. The increasing number and sophistica­tion of attempts suggested the attackers were "probing" the website defenses to establish what would be needed to take them fully offline, the security assessment said.

"We therefore cannot discount the possibilit­y that there are attackers using this as an opportunit­y to collect informatio­n for more sophistica­ted attacks," it added.

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