Stabroek News

'Dumb mistake' exposed Iranian hand behind fake Proud Boys U.S. election emails –sources

- WA S H I N G T O N , ( Reuters)

- Government analysts and private sector investigat­ors were able to rapidly attribute to Iranian hackers a wave of thousands of threatenin­g emails aimed at U. S. voters because of mistakes made in a video attached to some of the messages, according to four people familiar with the matter.

Those failures provided a rare opportunit­y for the U.S. government to identify and publicly announce blame for a malicious cyber operation in a matter of days, something that usually requires months of technical analysis and supporting intelligen­ce.

"Either they made a dumb mistake or wanted to get caught," said a senior U.S. government official, who asked not to be identified. "We are not concerned about this activity being some kind of false flag due to other supporting evidence. This was Iran."

Attributio­n to Iranian hackers does not necessaril­y mean a group is working at the behest of the government there. Iranian officials denied the U.S. allegation­s.

"These accusation­s are nothing more than another scenario to undermine voter confidence in the security of the U.S. election, and are absurd," said Alireza Miryousefi, spokesman for Iran's mission to the United Nations in New York.

On Wednesday, U. S. Director of National Intelligen­ce John Ratcliffe said Russia and Iran have both tried to interfere in the campaign for the Nov. 3 election. U.S. intelligen­ce agencies are still analyzing exactly who in Iran commanded the operation and its intent, three of the sources said.

Within hours of the video being circulated this week, which purported to come from a American farright group known as The Proud Boys, intelligen­ce officials and major email platform providers, such as Alphabet Inc's Google and Microsoft Corp, began closely analyzing computer code that appeared in the hackers' video.

While the emails, which demanded that voters change their party affiliatio­n to the Republican Party and vote for President Donald Trump or "we will come after you," appeared to come from an official- looking Proud Boys email address, the address was inauthenti­c, security analysts said. The Proud Boys denied they were behind the messages.

How security analysts used intelligen­ce from the video to attribute the email scheme has not been previously reported.

A Microsoft spokespers­on declined to comment on the company's collaborat­ion with law enforcemen­t. A Google statement on Wednesday night said the activity was "linked to Iran." A Google spokespers­on said on Thursday the company was in contact with the FBI.

ATTEMPTS TO

BLUR

Despite attempts to blur aspects of the video to hide their identity, the hackers were unable to obfuscate all of the incriminat­ing informatio­n, the sources said.

The video showed the hackers' computer screen as they typed in commands and pretended to hack a voter registrati­on system. Investigat­ors noticed snippets of revealing computer code, including file paths, file names and an internet protocol (IP) address.

Security analysts found that the IP address, hosted through an online service called Worldstrea­m, traced back to previous Iranian hacking activity, the sources said.

Analysts then cross-referenced those clues left in the video with data from other intelligen­ce streams, including communicat­ions intercepti­ons, the government official said.

"This public disclosure of attributio­n to Iran by the government has been done with breakneck speed, compared to the usual process that takes months and often years," said Dmitri Alperovitc­h, a cofounder and former CTO of cybersecur­ity company CrowdStrik­e.

Two cybersecur­ity experts, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the press, independen­tly said they had seen Iranian hackers use infrastruc­ture from Dutch-based Worldstrea­m to launch cyberattac­ks in recent months.

Worldstrea­m's chief legal operations officer Wouter van Zwieten said in a statement that the account associated with the IP in question was suspended after Reuters got in touch and that the Dutch National Cyber Security Center was looking into the matter.

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