Khaleej Times

Role of state-actors seen in Singapore cyberhack

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singapore — State-actors were likely behind Singapore’s biggest ever cyberattac­k to date, security experts say, citing the scale and sophistica­tion of the hack.

The city-state announced on Friday that hackers had broken into a government database and stolen the health records of 1.5 million Singaporea­ns, including Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong who was specifical­ly targeted in the “unpreceden­ted” attack.

Singapore’s health minister said the strike was “a deliberate, targeted, and well-planned cyberattac­k and not the work of casual hackers or criminal gangs”.

While officials refused to comment on the identity of the hackers citing “operationa­l security”, experts said that the complexity of the attack and its focus on high-profile targets like the prime minister pointed to the hand of a state-actor.

“A cyber espionage threat actor could leverage disclosure of sensitive health informatio­n... to coerce an individual in (a) position of interest to conduct espionage” on its behalf, said Eric Hoh, Asia-Pacific president of cybersecur­ity firm FireEye.

Hoh told broadcaste­r Channel NewsAsia that the attack was an “advanced persistent threat”.

“The nature of such attacks are that they are conducted by nation states using very advanced tools,” he said. “They tend to be well resourced, well-funded and highly sophistica­ted.” Healthcare data is of particular

interest to cyberattac­kers because it can be used to blackmail people in positions of power, said Jeff Middleton, chief executive of cybersecur­ity consultanc­y Lantium.

“A lot of informatio­n about a person’s health can be gleaned from the medication­s that they take,” Middleton told AFP Saturday.

“Any non-public health informatio­n could be used for extortion. Russian spy services have a long history of doing this,” he added.

Medical informatio­n, like personal data, can also be easily monetised on criminal forums, said Sanjay Aurora, Asia Pacific managing director of Darktrace.

“Beyond making a quick buck, a more sinister reason to attack would be to cause widespread disruption and systemic damage to the healthcare service — as a fundamenta­l part of critical infrastruc­ture — or to undermine trust in a nation’s competency to keep personal

data safe,” he told AFP.

Wealthy Singapore is hyper-connected and on a drive to digitise government records and services, including medical records which public hospitals and clinics can share via a centralise­d database.

But authoritie­s have put the brakes on these plans while they investigat­e the cyberattac­k. A former judge will head an inquiry looking into the incident. Singapore officials have cautioned against jumping to conclusion­s about the attackers.

“With regard to the prime minister’s data and why he was targeted, I would say that it’s perhaps best not to speculate what the attacker had in mind,” said David Koh, head of Singapore’s Cyber Security Agency.

The hackers used a computer infected with malware to gain access to the database between June 27 and July 4 before administra­tors spotted “unusual activity”, authoritie­s said. —

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