The Phnom Penh Post

NEC hack investigat­ed

- Ben Sokhean

THE Interior Ministry is investigat­ing how hackers got into the Facebook page of the National Election Committee (NEC) spokesman and controlled it for weeks, preventing the public disseminat­ion of election-related informatio­n.

According a letter signed by NEC President Sik Bunhok and NEC spokesman Hang Puthea, a hacker gained control of the “NEC Spokespers­on” Facebook page and Puthea’s personal Facebook profile on September 15.

Their letter does not describe the nature of the hack, but said that it “made it so that the public and general media could not receive informatio­n from the NEC on the election process, and disrupted the NEC spokespers­on’s job”. With the ministry’s help, the accounts were recovered on October 4, according to the letter.

NEC Deputy SecretaryG­eneral Som Sorida and NEC communicat­ions department head Khorn Keo Mono both said that they were aware of the incident and referred questions to Puthea, who could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Chea Pov, director of the Interior Ministry’s Anti-Technologi­cal Crime Department, confirmed his department was investigat­ing the hack but declined to provide details.

“We already found some clues” about who the hacker is, Pov said.

The “NEC Spokespers­on” Facebook page has nearly 79,000 followers – about 23,000 more than the actual NEC Facebook page.

Comfrel database and research officer Korn Savang said the NEC created confusion by not informing the public about the hack, particular­ly because it overlapped with an ongoing voter registrati­on drive, which began on September 10. The registrati­on drive has so far seen lacklustre enrolment.

Savang said Comfrel recently cited a report posted on the “NEC Spokespers­on” page about how 110,000 people had registered to vote in a single day in a roundtable presentati­on, only to find out later from the NEC that the data was posted by the hacker.

In reality, only 10,000 people had registered to vote that day, Savang said.

“This hacking, it is not a minor issue, but a big issue,” Savang said. “I think NEC has to strengthen their security to protect their data now that they’ve had this experience.”

Phnom Penh-based cybersecur­ity consultant Niklas Femerstran­d said weak passwords and linking phone numbers to accounts are the most common ways for someone to hack into a Facebook account.

He said this hack appeared to be the issue of one person having a compromise­d account.

“The individual doesn’t represent the security of the organizati­on,” Femerstran­d said in a message.

 ?? PHA LINA ?? NEC spokesman Hang Puthea speaks to the press after an event in May in Phnom Penh.
PHA LINA NEC spokesman Hang Puthea speaks to the press after an event in May in Phnom Penh.

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