Deccan Chronicle

SolarWinds hackers target 150 orgs with phishing

Hack targeted about 3,000 email accounts at more than 150 different organisati­ons

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Boston, May 28: The state-backed Russian cyber spies behind the SolarWinds hacking campaign launched a targeted spear-phishing assault on U.S. and foreign government agencies and think tanks this week using an email marketing account of the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, Microsoft says.

The effort targeted about 3,000 email accounts at more than 150 different organisati­ons, at least a quarter of them involved in internatio­nal developmen­t, humanitari­an and human rights work, Microsoft Vice President Tom Burt said in a blog post late Thursday.

It did not say what portion of the attempts may have led to successful intrusions but said many of those targeting Microsoft customers were blocked automatica­lly. “We’re also in the process of notifying all of our customers who have been targeted,” Burt said.

The cybersecur­ity firm Volexity, which also tracked the campaign but has less visibility into email systems than Microsoft , said in a post that relatively low detection rates of the phishing emails suggest the attacker was “likely having some success in breaching targets.”

Burt said the campaign appeared to be a continuati­on of multiple efforts by the Russian hackers to “target government agencies involved in foreign policy as part of intelligen­ce gathering efforts.” He said the targets spanned at least 24 countries.

Separately, the prominent cybersecur­ity firm FireEye said it has been tracking “multiple waves” of related spear-phishing by the hackers from Russia's SVR foreign intelligen­ce agency since March — preceding the USAID campaign — that used a variety of lures including diplomatic notes and invitation­s from embassies.

The hackers gained access to USAID’s account at Constant Contact, an email marketing service, Microsoft said. The authentic-looking phishing emails dated May 25 purport to contain new informatio­n on 2020 election fraud claims and include a link to malware that allows the hackers to “achieve persistent access to compromise­d machines.”

Microsoft said in a separate, technical blog post that the campaign is ongoing and evolved out of several waves of escalating spear-phishing campaigns it first detected in January.

USAID and Constant Contact provided no additional detail on how the hackers gained access. USAID spokeswoma­n Pooja Jhunjhunwa­la said Friday that a forensic investigat­ion was ongoing and the agency was working with the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency. Constant Contact

spokeswoma­n Kristen Andrews called it an “isolated incident,” with the impacted accounts temporaril­y disabled.

While the SolarWinds campaign, which infiltrate­d dozens of private sector companies and think tanks as well as at least nine US government agencies, was supremely stealthy and went on for most of 2020 before being detected in December by FireEye, this campaign is what cybersecur­ity researcher­s call noisy. Easy to detect. —

MICROSOFT SAID in a separate, technical blog post that the campaign is ongoing and evolved out of several waves of escalating spear-phishing campaigns it first detected in January.

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