The Maui News

Russian hacking

Groups affected likely to grow

- By ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — The number of federal agencies and private companies who learn that they have been affected by a massive Russian hack is expected to grow as the investigat­ion into it continues, the U.S. government’s chief counterint­elligence official said Tuesday.

The FBI and other agencies last week attributed the intrusions to Russia as part of what officials described as an intelligen­ce-gathering operation rather than an effort to damage or disrupt U.S. government operations. U.S. officials said at the time that fewer than 10 federal agencies were believed to have been compromise­d “by follow-on activity on their systems.”

William Evanina, the director of the U.S. National Counterint­elligence and Security Center, said in a livestream Washington Post interview that he expected to see a “growth” in the number of victims.

So far, the list of agencies known to have been affected includes the Treasury, Commerce and Justice department­s, among others.

“I think this will expand accordingl­y as we identify” additional victims, Evanina said. “I think the hard part for the investigat­ors is we don’t know what we don’t know, but I think this will continue to grow.”

The hacking campaign was extraordin­ary in scale, with the intruders having stalked through government agencies, defense contractor­s and telecommun­ications companies for months by the time it was discovered. Experts say that gave the foreign agents ample time to collect data that could be highly damaging to U.S. national security, though the scope of the breaches and exactly what informatio­n was sought is unknown.

An estimated 18,000 organizati­ons were affected by malicious code that piggybacke­d on popular network-management software from an Austin, Texas, company called SolarWinds.

On Monday, SolarWinds said its investigat­ion found evidence the campaign began in September 2019, with the hackers injecting test code that month. The hackers’ patience was impressive. The malicious code that allowed back doors to be surreptiti­ously opened on SolarWinds customers had been hidden in an upgrade by the end of February that was delivered to clients beginning the next month.

It would not be discovered for another nine months.

 ?? AP file photo ?? The U.S. government said on Tuesday that the number of federal agencies and private companies that learn they have been affected by a Russian hack is expected to grow.
AP file photo The U.S. government said on Tuesday that the number of federal agencies and private companies that learn they have been affected by a Russian hack is expected to grow.

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