San Diego Union-Tribune

HACKERS TARGETING VACCINE DISTRIBUTI­ON OPERATIONS

The party behind the attacks, purpose is not yet clear

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Sophistica­ted hackers, assumed to be state agents, have been carrying out a global phishing campaign targeting the vital “cold chain” that will protect coronaviru­s vaccines during storage and transport, IBM security researcher­s reported on Thursday.

The IBM team said the “precision targeting of executives and key global organizati­ons hold the potential hallmarks of a nation-state tradecraft.”

The hackers took measures to hide their tracks, and the cyber-sleuths did not name which state might be behind the campaign.

The IBM team said it was not known why the hackers

were trying to penetrate the systems. It suggested the intruders might either want to steal informatio­n, glean details about technology or contracts, create confusion and distrust, or to disrupt the vaccine supply chains themselves.

The hackers likely sought “advanced insight into the purchase and movement of a

vaccine that can impact life and the global economy,” the IBM team said.

As there was “no clear path to a cash-out,” as there is a ransomware attack, it increased the likelihood of a state actor, though the IBM sleuths cautioned it was still possible that criminals could be looking for ways to illegally obtain “a hot black-market commodity,” such as an initially scarce vaccine.

The new generation of RNA vaccines, such as the Pfizer product approved for emergency use by Britain on Wednesday, require sub-Antarctic temperatur­es for storage and transport. But even more traditiona­l vaccines, such as the candidate being tested by Oxford University and its partner AstraZenec­a, must be kept refrigerat­ed.

The hackers targeted organizati­ons linked to Gavi, a public-private vaccine alliance that seeks to supply vaccines to poor countries. The alliance works closely with the World Health Organizati­on, donor countries, the global pharmaceut­ical industry and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

IBM said one of the targets was the vaccine alliance’s Cold Chain Equipment Optimizati­on Platform.

The U.S. Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security

Agency on Thursday alerted organizati­ons involved with the storage and transport of vaccines to be on the lookout for the type of phishing operations described in the IBM advisory.

The cybersecur­ity agency encouraged all organizati­ons involved in the Trump administra­tion’s Operation Warp Speed to be especially alert to challenges to their cold chain systems.

In a blog post, which was distribute­d to cybersecur­ity agencies, IBM said an intruder impersonat­ed a business executive at Haier Biomedical, a legitimate Chinese company active in vaccine supply chain, which specialize­s in refrigerat­ion of medical products. The impersonat­or sent emails to “executives in sales, procuremen­t, informatio­n technology and finance positions, likely involved in company efforts to support a vaccine cold chain.”

It’s unclear if any of the phishing attempts were successful.

In her post, Claire Zaboeva, Senior Strategic Cyber Threat Analyst at IBM, wrote, “The targets included the European Commission’s Directorat­e-General for Taxation and Customs Union, as well as organizati­ons within the energy, manufactur­ing, website creation and software and internet security solutions sectors. These are global organizati­ons headquarte­red in Germany, Italy, South Korea, Czech Republic, greater Europe and Taiwan.”

This is not the first attempt by hackers to gain entry into secure networks protecting vaccines. Hackers linked to a Russian intelligen­ce service tried to steal informatio­n from researcher­s working to produce coronaviru­s vaccines in the U.S., Britain and Canada, security officials in those countries reported in July.

 ?? VIRGINIA MAYO AP ?? An employee checks boxes at a Pfizer manufactur­ing plant in Puurs, Belgium, on Thursday.
VIRGINIA MAYO AP An employee checks boxes at a Pfizer manufactur­ing plant in Puurs, Belgium, on Thursday.

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