The Guardian (USA)

US energy department and other agencies hit by hackers in MoveIt breach

- Guardian staff and agencies

The US Department of Energy and several other government agencies were hit in a global hacking campaign that exploited a vulnerabil­ity in widely used file-transfer software, officials said this week.

Data was “compromise­d” at two entities within the energy department when hackers – attributed to a Russialink­ed criminal gang – gained access through a security flaw in MoveIt Transfer, the department said in a statement on Thursday.

The British energy giant Shell and the University System of Georgia, the Johns Hopkins University and the Johns Hopkins Health System were also hit, all three groups said in separate statements.

The latest victims add to a growing list of hacks on other US and internatio­nal entities that also targeted the MoveIt software. Known victims to date include Louisiana’s Office of Motor Vehicles, Oregon’s transport department, the Nova Scotia provincial government, British Airways, the BBC and the UK drugstore chain Boots.

Jen Easterly, director of the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency (Cisa), told reporters that unlike the meticulous, stealthy SolarWinds hacking campaign attributed to statebacke­d Russian intelligen­ce agents that was months in the making, this campaign was short, relatively superficia­l and caught quickly.

“Based on discussion­s we have had with industry partners … these intrusions are not being leveraged to gain broader access, to gain persistenc­e into targeted systems, or to steal specific high-value informatio­n – in sum, as we understand it, this attack is largely an opportunis­tic one,” Easterly said.

“Although we are very concerned about this campaign and working on it with urgency, this is not a campaign like SolarWinds that presents a systemic risk to our national security or our nation’s networks,” she added.

A senior Cisa official said neither the US military nor intelligen­ce community was affected. An energy department spokespers­on, Chad Smith, said two agency entities were compromise­d but did not provide more detail.

Louisiana officials said on Thursday that people with a driver’s license or vehicle registrati­on in the state probably had their personal informatio­n exposed. That included their name, address, social security number and birthdate. They encouraged Louisiana residents to freeze their credit to guard against identity theft.

The Oregon transport department confirmed on Thursday that the attackers accessed personal informatio­n, some sensitive, for about 3.5 million people to whom the state issued identity cards or driver’s licenses.

Cl0p, the Russian-linked ransomware syndicate behind the hack, announced last week on its dark web

site that its victims, who it suggested numbered in the hundreds, had until Wednesday to get in touch to negotiate a ransom or risk having sensitive stolen data dumped online.

The gang, among the world’s most prolific cybercrime syndicates, also claimed it would delete any data stolen from government­s, cities and police department­s.

US officials “have no evidence to suggest coordinati­on between Cl0p and the Russian government”, the official said.

MoveIt Transfer is a popular tool used by organizati­ons to share sensitive informatio­n with partners or customers. Hackers took advantage of a security flaw that its maker, Progress

Software, discovered late last month and issued a patch. A MoveIt spokespers­on said the company had “engaged with federal law enforcemen­t” and was working with customers to help them apply fixes to their systems.

But cybersecur­ity researcher­s say scores if not hundreds of companies could by then have had sensitive data quietly exfiltrate­d. “At this point, we are seeing industry estimates of several hundred of victims across the country,” the senior Cisa official said.

 ?? US energy department officials in December. Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images ??
US energy department officials in December. Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images

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