East Bay Times

U.S. gives warning on Iran-backed hackers

Advisory says group “targeting broad range of victims”

- By Eric Tucker, Alan Suderman and Frank Bajak

WASHINGTON >> Hackers linked to the Iranian government have been targeting a “broad range of victims” inside the United States, including by deploying ransomware, according to an advisory issued Wednesday by American, British and Australian officials.

The advisory says that in recent months, Iran has exploited computer vulnerabil­ities exposed by hackers before they can be fixed and targeted entities in the transporta­tion, health care and public health sectors. The attackers leveraged the initial hack for additional operations, such as data exfiltrati­on, ransomware and extortion, according to the advisory. The group has used the same Microsoft Exchange vulnerabil­ity in Australia, officials say.

The warning is notable because even though ransomware attacks remain prevalent in the U.S., most of the significan­t ones in the past year have been attributed to Russia-based criminal hacker gangs rather than Iranian hackers.

Government officials aren’t the only ones noticing the Iranian activity: Tech giant Microsoft announced Tuesday that it had seen six different groups in Iran deploying ransomware since last year.

Microsoft said one of the groups spends significan­t time and energy trying to build rapport with their intended victims before targeting them with spearphish­ing campaigns. The group uses fake conference invitation­s or interview requests and frequently masquerade as officials at think tanks in Washington, D.C., as a cover, Microsoft said.

Once rapport is built and a malicious link is sent, the Iranians are extra pushy at trying to get their victims to click on it, said James Elliott, a member of the Microsoft Threat Intelligen­ce Center.

“These guys are the biggest pain in the rear. Every two hours they’re sending an email,” Elliott said at the Cyberwarco­n cybersecur­ity conference Tuesday.

Earlier this year Facebook announced it had found Iranian hackers using “sophistica­ted fake online personas” to build trust with targets and get them to click on malicious links and often posed as recruiters of defense and aerospace companies.

Researcher­s at the Crowdstrik­e cybersecur­ity firm said they and competitor­s began seeing this type of Iranian activity last year.

The Iranian ransomware attacks, unlike those sponsored by North Korea’s government, are not designed to generate revenue so much as for espionage, to sow disinforma­tion, to harass and embarrass foes — Israel, chief among them —and to essentiall­y wear

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