Los Angeles Times

Cybersecur­ity agency warns of hack’s threat

U. S. authoritie­s are expressing increased alarm about intrusion suspected by Russia.

- By Brian Contreras

WASHINGTON — The federal government’s top cybersecur­ity agency issued its most urgent warning yet about a sophistica­ted and extensive computer breach, saying Thursday that it posed a “grave risk” to networks maintained by government­s, utilities and the private sector and could be difficult to purge.

Removing the malware from “compromise­d environmen­ts will be highly complex and challengin­g for organizati­ons,” the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, or CISA, said in an alert providing the most extensive details yet about the hack.

Over the weekend, reports emerged that hackers had broken into computer networks at multiple federal agencies, including the Treasury and Commerce department­s. The list of victims has continued to grow, and includes the Department of Homeland Security and the National Institutes of Health.

Federal law enforcemen­t officials have said Russia was behind the attack and are still assessing how much informatio­n was pilfered by Moscow.

The Russian Embassy has denied responsibi­lity. U. S. cybersecur­ity officials have not officially blamed the Kremlin, but the CISA alert noted that the attack came from “a patient, wellresour­ced, and focused adversary” that engaged in “operationa­l security and complex tradecraft.”

Cybersecur­ity experts said Russia was among the few countries that could support such an attack.

The security compromise­s began at least as early as March, according to CISA, with the infiltrato­rs gaining initial access through a compromise in a piece of software made by SolarWinds — a Texasbased company that sells network- monitoring cybersecur­ity software — although CISA said evidence indicates hackers had other access points.

When SolarWinds customers running the software installed updates, they unknowingl­y downloaded malicious code and granted hackers access to their network. Hundreds of thousands of organizati­ons use SolarWinds products, and U. S. agencies have been told to disconnect machines running the compromise­d program.

“Most of the sensitive folk have shut down SolarWinds, so now they’re f lying blind; they don’t have … their usual detection technology,” said Robert Cattanach, a cybersecur­ity expert and former special counsel to the secretary of the Navy. “It’s a very uncertain time right now.”

To further complicate things, SolarWinds was so ubiquitous in the cybersecur­ity sector that there’s not a clear, immediate substitute, Cattanach added.

The House Homeland Security and Oversight committees launched an investigat­ion into the hacks Thursday, warning that “based on preliminar­y reporting, it is evident that this latest cyber intrusion could have potentiall­y [ devastatin­g] consequenc­es for U. S. national security.”

 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? HACKERS have reportedly broken into networks at federal agencies, including the Treasury Department.
Patrick Semansky Associated Press HACKERS have reportedly broken into networks at federal agencies, including the Treasury Department.

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