The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Iranian hackers said to target presidenti­al campaign

- By Tami Abdollah

WASHINGTON >> Microsoft said Friday that hackers linked to the Iranian government targeted a U.S. presidenti­al campaign, as well as government officials, media targets and prominent expatriate Iranians.

Overall, the hackers attempted to penetrate 241 accounts — four successful­ly — though none of those penetrated was associated with presidenti­al campaigns or current or past U.S. officials, Microsoft said. A company spokeswoma­n declined to identify those targeted, citing customer privacy.

Reuters and The New York Times reported that the attack targeted President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign, but this could not be independen­tly confirmed. But a review of publicly available internet records by AP showed that the Trump campaign’s official website is linked to Microsoft’s email service.

Tim Murtaugh, spokesman for Trump’s 2020 reelection campaign, said there was “no indication that any of our campaign infrastruc­ture was targeted.”

Microsoft’s announceme­nt is the latest sign that foreign government­s are looking for ways to potentiall­y disrupt the 2020 presidenti­al election. U.S. intelligen­ce officials have sounded the alarm about the risks for months.

Russia’s hacking of the Democratic National Committee and the Clinton campaign, as well as the subsequent leaks of emails during the 2016 election roiled the DNC, hurt the Clinton campaign and was a focal point in special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe.

Foreign hackers have long targeted U.S. government and politician­s, generally with little notice. But the disruption caused by Russia’s attack has heightened awareness and prompted fears that other nations will try to follow Russia’s example. Iran in particular could have a stake in the outcome of the U.S. election after Trump withdrew the United States from a nuclear agreement and stepped up sanctions against the country.

“The Russians came after us and our election system in 2016 and they paid virtually no price for that activity,” said Jamil N. Jaffer, director of the national security law and policy program at George Mason University, and former chief counsel of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “It’s not surprising that China now more aggressive­ly and maybe the Iranians are getting in that game. Why not?”

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it was working with Microsoft to “assess and mitigate impacts.” Chris Krebs, director of the department’s Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, said much of the activity is likely “run-of-the-mill” foreign intelligen­ce service work.

But, “Microsoft’s claims that a presidenti­al campaign was targeted is yet more evidence that our adversarie­s are looking to undermine our democratic institutio­ns,” Krebs said.

In a blogpost released Friday, Microsoft’s Tom Burt, corporate vice president for customer security and trust, said that owners of four accounts that were compromise­d by the hackers have been notified. The company would not identify those accounts.

The attacks by a group Microsoft calls Phosphorou­s occurred during a 30day period between August and September.

Burt said the Iranian hackers used password reset and account recovery features to try to take over accounts. For example, they gathered phone numbers belonging to targets to help with a password reset. In other cases, they tried to get into secondary email accounts that might be linked to the Microsoft account to gain access via a verificati­on email.

The hackers researched their targets, making more than 2,700 attempts to identify emails belonging to a specific Microsoft customer. A spokeswoma­n declined to provide more details.

The company has previously taken legal steps to combat Iran-linked hackers, suing them in federal court in Washington D.C., so Microsoft could take control of websites Phosphorou­s used to conduct hacking operations and to stop attacks.

The campaigns of Sen. Kamala Harris, Michael Bennet, Pete Buttigieg, and Montana Gov. Steve Bullock also said they had not been targeted. A campaign aide for Sen. Bernie Sanders said the campaign doesn’t comment on matters of technical security.

Republican National Committee spokeswoma­n Blair Ellis said the RNC is “constantly working to stay ahead of emerging threats.”

Meanwhile, the DNC sent an alert out to campaigns Friday, warning them about the Iran-linked hacking group’s targeting of Microsoft accounts belonging to “journalist­s, politician­s and at least one presidenti­al campaign.”

The DNC has taken several steps to improve the party’s cybersecur­ity since 2016. The most public move was the hiring of Bob Lord, a veteran of Silicon Valley cybersecur­ity with stints at Yahoo, Twitter, AOL and Netscape, to serve as its cybersecur­ity chief.

Lord on Friday declined to provide details on the hacking efforts, deferring to Microsoft. He has worked to improve security protocols for DNC staff, state parties and campaigns with access to the central voter file that DNC maintains.

In July, Microsoft announced that it had detected more than 740 infiltrati­on attempts by nationstat­e actors in the past year targeting U.S.-based political parties, campaigns and other democracy-focused organizati­ons including think tanks and other nonprofits.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This file photo, shows the Microsoft Corp. logo outside the Microsoft Visitor Center in Redmond, Wash. Microsoft says hackers linked to the Iranian government have targeted a U.S. presidenti­al campaign, as well as government officials, media targets and prominent ex-patriate Iranians.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This file photo, shows the Microsoft Corp. logo outside the Microsoft Visitor Center in Redmond, Wash. Microsoft says hackers linked to the Iranian government have targeted a U.S. presidenti­al campaign, as well as government officials, media targets and prominent ex-patriate Iranians.

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