Toronto Star

Criminals exploiting pandemic online

Foreign government­s, hackers, Mafia veering more into cybercrime

- PETER EDWARDS

Organized criminals and hostile government­s are launching waves of increasing­ly sophistica­ted and aggressive internet attacks to profit from the fear and chaos surroundin­g the COVID-19 pandemic, a new report says.

“It’s like a heyday for organized crime,” said Charity Wright, a cybersecur­ity expert formerly with the U.S. National Security Agency who’s now a threat analyst with IntSights, a global security intelligen­ce firm specializi­ng in the “dark web.”

“These criminals have been waiting for opportunit­ies like this,” Wright said in a telephone interview.

Wright is a co-author of a recent report for IntSights that found coronaviru­s-themed phishing attacks, malware infections, intrusions, scams and disinforma­tion campaigns have become rampant since January.

“Cybercrimi­nals and statespons­ored advanced threat groups are exploiting the COVID-19 pandemic to attack networks around the world for both financial and strategic gain,” the report concluded. “What started as simple phishing attacks and hand sanitizer scams now involves several well-known threat actors,” it said.

By January, only 1,400 internet domains containing some version of “corona” and “COVID” had been registered, according to IntSights.

That number hit 5,000 in February and rocketed to 38,000 in March.

Wright, who studied cyberattac­ks while working for the NSA at a top-secret undergroun­d facility in Hawaii that was hidden under pineapple fields, said it’s a combinatio­n of organized criminals and hostile government­s that are exploiting the pandemic on the Dark Web, a collective term for those online networks that can’t be reached through a normal search engine and typically require special software and authorizat­ion to access.

She also agreed with the suggestion that some existing criminal groups are likely to move heavily into cybercrime to extort and hawk bogus antiCOVID-19 products in a push to make up for income lost during the pandemic through other businesses like sports gambling.

Wright noted that the Dark Web was already fertile ground for money laundering and that some establishe­d drug cartels were already collaborat­ing with hackers.

For now, she said, there is no way of knowing how many of the current internet scams come from hackers, traditiona­l organized crime and how much is state-sponsored — informatio­n that may be classified.

Among other attacks, IntSight researcher­s found a malware tool from Russia which masquerade­s as the legitimate COVID-19 dashboard put out by the Johns Hopkins University.

In the early days of the pandemic, researcher­s found dozens of scams for fake hand sanitizers and face masks. There were fake coronaviru­s detectors that look like a mini-hair dryer, and even instances of people peddling blood and saliva as a potential COVID-19 cure.

That has grown to more sophistica­ted schemes using the

Dark Web.

Wright noted that two undisclose­d Canadian law firms recently had their computers locked by hackers, shutting down their email and locking their files.

“Both have been asked to pay an enormous ransom,” she said.

The IntSight report quotes an exchange in which a hacker taunts a target by texting: “To start off with, I know all of your passwords. I am aware of your whereabout­s, what you eat, with whom you talk, every little thing you do in a day.”

Then the hacker turns up the heat, texting: “If I want, I could even infect you whole family with the CoronaViru­s, reveal all of your secrets. There are countless things I can do.”

Then the hacker instructs the target to pay $4,000 in bitcoin within 24 hours. If not, the cyber-extortioni­st says, “I will completely ruin your life.”

Private informatio­n that makes such crimes possible is sold regularly on the Dark Web, Wright said.

“It’s very easy to sell it,” Wright said. “Hackers are always looking for it.”

Other times, hackers simply sell informatio­n — on how to penetrate the security of an institutio­n like a hospital, say — on an online auction to the highest bidder, she said. She acknowledg­ed that a few hacker groups have promised not to attack hospitals and pharmaceut­ical companies during the pandemic — but added that it’s a mistake to assume there’s any sacred ground or taboo topic for Dark Web criminals.

“Most of them are very financiall­y motivated and they don’t operate by this moral code,” Wright said.

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? A man walks out of Union Station, largely empty because of COVID-19. In the early days of the pandemic, researcher­s found dozens of scams for fake hand sanitizers and face masks.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO A man walks out of Union Station, largely empty because of COVID-19. In the early days of the pandemic, researcher­s found dozens of scams for fake hand sanitizers and face masks.

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