Apple Magazine

MICROSOFT SERVER HACK HAS VICTIMS HUSTLING TO STOP INTRUDERS

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Victims of a massive global hack of Microsoft email server software — estimated in the tens of thousands by cybersecur­ity responders — hustled this week to shore up infected systems and try to diminish chances that intruders might steal data or hobble their networks.

The White House has called the hack an “active threat” and said senior national security officials were addressing it

The breach was discovered in early January and attributed to Chinese cyber spies targeting U.S. policy think tanks. Then in late February, five days before Microsoft issued a patch on March 2, there was an explosion of infiltrati­ons by other intruders, piggybacki­ng on the initial breach. Victims run the spectrum of organizati­ons that run email servers, from mom-and-pop retailers to law firms, municipal government­s, healthcare providers and manufactur­ers.

While the hack doesn’t pose the kind of national security threat as the more sophistica­ted SolarWinds campaign, which the Biden administra­tion blames on Russian intelligen­ce officers, it can be an existentia­l threat for victims who didn’t install the patch in time and now have hackers lingering in their systems. The hack poses a new challenge for the White House, which even as it prepares to respond to the SolarWinds breach, must now grapple with a formidable and very different threat from China.

“I would say it’s a serious economic security threat because so many small companies out there can literally have their business destroyed through a targeted ransomware attack,” said Dmitri Alperovitc­h, former chief technical officer of the cybersecur­ity firm CrowdStrik­e.

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Image: Jeenah Moon
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Image: Simon Dawson
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