Santa Fe New Mexican

IBM: Phishing ploy targets vaccine distributi­on effort

- By Frank Bajak Reflective­Jewelry.com

BOSTON — IBM security researcher­s say they have detected a cyberespio­nage effort using targeted phishing emails to try to collect vital informatio­n on the World Health Organizati­on’s initiative for distributi­ng COVID-19 vaccine to developing countries.

The researcher­s said they could not be sure who was behind the campaign, which began in September, or if it was successful. But the precision targeting and careful efforts to leave no tracks bore “the potential hallmarks of nation-state tradecraft,” they said in a blog post Thursday.

The campaign’s targets, in countries including Germany, Italy, South Korea and Taiwan, are likely associated with the developmen­t of the “cold chain” needed to ensure coronaviru­s vaccines get the nonstop sterile refrigerat­ion they need to be effective for the nearly 3 billion people who live where temperatur­e-controlled storage is insufficie­nt, IBM said.

“Think of it as the bloodline that will be supplying the most vital vaccines globally,” said Claire Zaboeva, an IBM analyst involved in the detection.

The U.S. Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency later issued an advisory encouragin­g Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administra­tion’s vaccine program, and other organizati­ons involved in vaccine storage and transport, to review IBM’s findings.

Whoever is behind the operation could be motivated by a desire to learn how the vaccines are best able to be shipped and stored — the entire refrigerat­ion process — in order to copy it, said Nick Rossmann, the IBM team’s global threat intelligen­ce lead. Or they might want to be able to undermine a vaccine’s legitimacy or launch a disruptive or destructiv­e attack, he added.

In the ploy, executives with groups likely associated with the initiative known as Covax — created by the Gavi Vaccine Alliance, the World Health Organizati­on and other U.N. agencies — were sent spoofed emails appearing to come from an executive of Haier Biomedical, a Chinese company considered the world’s main cold-chain supplier, the analyst said.

The phishing emails posed as requests for price quotations and bore malicious attachment­s that prompted recipients to enter credential­s that could have been used to harvest sensitive informatio­n about partners vital to the vaccine-delivery platform.

Targets included the European Commission’s Directorat­e-General for Taxation and Customs Union and companies that make solar panels for powering portable vaccine refrigerat­ors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States