Times Colonist

CRA expects online services back Wednesday following cyberbreac­hes

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OTTAWA — The Canada Revenue Agency expects online services to be fully restored by Wednesday after fraudsters used thousands of pilfered usernames and passwords to obtain government services.

About 5,600 CRA accounts were targeted in what the federal government describes as “credential stuffing” schemes, in which hackers used passwords and usernames from other websites to access Canadians’ revenue agency accounts.

The suspension of CRA’s online services comes as many Canadians are relying on the revenue agency’s website to access financial support related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

People can still apply for benefit programs including the Canada Emergency Student Benefit and the Canada Emergency Response Benefit by calling 1-800-959-8281, said Annette Butikofer, chief informatio­n officer of the revenue agency.

In addition, employers can apply for the latest wage subsidy as planned, she said during a briefing Monday on the cyberattac­ks.

“We know employers are counting on these funds.”

The government is advising Canadians to use unique passwords for all online accounts and to check for suspicious activity.

Federal officials have been grappling for the last week with the credential stuffing attacks, made possible through informatio­n that was previously stolen from non-government accounts.

The technique, often beginning with huge caches of usernames and passwords found in the darker reaches of the Internet, takes advantage of peoples’ tendency to reuse passwords.

Fraudsters then use automated web bots to hammer websites with various credential­s until they hit upon the right combinatio­n and get in, said Marc Brouillard, acting chief informatio­n officer of Canada.

Once in, the attacker can take over these accounts and steal personal informatio­n or undertake activities as that user, he told the briefing.

The first of three attacks in the last week took aim at the GCKey service, which is used by about 30 federal department­s and allows Canadians to access services like the My Service Canada account.

By using the previously stolen usernames and passwords, the perpetrato­rs were able to fraudulent­ly acquire about 9,000 of the some 12 million GCKey accounts, one-third of which accessed federal services and are being further examined for suspicious activities, Brouillard said.

Affected GCKey accounts were cancelled, and the government is contacting users whose credential­s were compromise­d with instructio­ns on how to obtain a new GCKey.

Separately, CRA’s system was hit by credential stuffing attacks. The perpetrato­rs were able to use previously hacked credential­s to access the CRA portal. They were also able to exploit a vulnerabil­ity that allowed them to bypass the CRA security questions and get into thousands more accounts.

In addition, early Saturday morning, the CRA portal was directly targeted with a large amount of traffic trying to attack the services through credential stuffing.

“Out of an abundance of caution the CRA portal was shut down to contain the attack and implement measures to protect CRA services,” Brouillard said.

Credential stuffers are difficult to detect because they are not trying to sneak through a back door, he said.

“They are applying credential­s just like normal users. So it’s very hard to detect that pattern from all of the good traffic. But we have systems to monitor and look for these behaviours and identify when patterns don’t seem to make sense and that’s how this particular (attack) was identified.”

The government is looking at greater use of two-factor authentica­tion, where a user trying to log in to a system enters not only a password but receives a message with a code or link they must act on before being allowed in.

But putting this in place for all programs could be challengin­g, Brouillard suggested.

“We also have to worry about making our systems accessible and easy to use, so it is a balancing act,” he said. “We’re looking at ways of strengthen­ing our systems to be able to address these issues.”

Several federal agencies are investigat­ing the incidents and since their work is ongoing, nothing will be said about the suspected perpetrato­rs, said Scott Jones, head of Canadian Centre for Cyber Security.

The RCMP was notified of unusual activity on Aug. 11, Butikofer said.

“The confidence and trust that individual­s and businesses have in the CRA are the cornerston­es of Canada’s tax system,” she said.

She said the revenue agency’s teams have been “working around the clock to resolve these issues and protect the confidenti­al informatio­n of Canadians.”

Accounts of affected individual­s have been revoked and letters have been sent to these people, she added.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Marc Brouillard, chief technology officer for the Government of Canada, on Parliament Hill on Monday joins fellow officials from the Treasury Board of Canada Secretaria­t, the Canada Revenue Agency and the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security to provide an update about cyber attacks.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Marc Brouillard, chief technology officer for the Government of Canada, on Parliament Hill on Monday joins fellow officials from the Treasury Board of Canada Secretaria­t, the Canada Revenue Agency and the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security to provide an update about cyber attacks.

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