The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Russian hackers steal data from two servers, officials say

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U. S. officials said Thursday that Russian hackers have targeted the networks of dozens of state and local government­s in the United States in recent days, stealing data from at least two servers. The warning, less than two weeks before the election, amplified fears of the potential for tampering with the vote and underminin­g confidence in the results.

The alert describes an onslaught of recent activity from Russian state- sponsored hacking groups in recent days against state and local networks, some of which were successful­ly compromise­d. The advisory from the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security’s cybersecur­ity agency functions as a reminder of Russia’s potent capabiliti­es and ongoing interferen­ce in the election even after U. S. officials publicly called out Iran at a news conference on Wednesday night.

The advisory does not mention any of the specific victims who were targeted, but officials say they have no informatio­n that any election or government operations have been affected or that the integrity of elections data has been compromise­d.

“However, the actor may be seeking access to obtain future disruption options, to influence U. S. policies and actions, or to delegitimi­ze ( state and local) government entities,” the advisory said.

U. S. officials have repeatedly said it would be extremely difficult for hackers to alter vote tallies in a meaningful way, but they have warned about other methods of interferen­ce that could include cyberattac­ks on networks to impede the voting process or the production of spoofed websites or other faked content aimed at causing voters to mistrust the results.

A broad concern, particular­ly at the local government level, has been that hackers could infiltrate a county network and then work their way over to election- related systems unless certain defenses, such as firewalls, are in place. This is especially true for smaller counties that don’t have as much money and IT support as their bigger counterpar­ts to fund security upgrades.

U. S. officials warned at a hastily called news conference Wednesday night that Russia and Iran had obtained voting registrati­on informatio­n, though such data is sometimes publicly accessible. But most of the focus of that event was on Iran, which officials linked to a series of menacing but fake emails aimed at intimidati­ng voters in multiple battlegrou­nd states.

Chris Krebs, director of Homeland Security’s Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, said Thursday that the alert was issued in regards to scanning of county networks for vulnerabil­ities, not specifical­ly targeting the elections. “There was access in a couple limited cases to an election related network,” he said.

 ?? AP FILE ?? U. S. officials said Thursday that Russian hackers have targeted the networks of dozens of state and local government­s in theUnited States in recent days, stealing data fromat least two servers.
AP FILE U. S. officials said Thursday that Russian hackers have targeted the networks of dozens of state and local government­s in theUnited States in recent days, stealing data fromat least two servers.

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