Kuwait Times

US, Britain warn of Russian campaign to hack networks

Hackers target key hardware of government networks

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LONDON: Russian government-sponsored hackers are compromisi­ng the key hardware of government and business computer networks like routers and firewalls, giving them virtual control of data flows, Britain and the United States warned yesterday. The operation was “to support espionage, extract intellectu­al property, maintain persistent access to victim networks and potentiall­y lay a foundation for future offensive operations,” Washington and London said in a joint statement.

“Whoever controls the routing infrastruc­ture of a network essentiall­y controls the data flowing through the network.” The US Department of Homeland Security said the hacking was part of a broad operation dubbed Grizzly Steppe, which DHS says comprises concerting cyberattac­ks by Moscow’s civilian and military intelligen­ce agencies. The router hacking operation has targeted both government and private sector groups, and the key providers of network infrastruc­ture and internet services serving them.

The announceme­nt came in an unpreceden­ted joint alert that underscore­d closer cooperatio­n between Western government­s fighting what they say is an ongoing, multifacet­ed hacking and online disinforma­tion campaign by Moscow. The alert came from the Britain’s National Cyber Security Centre, DHS and the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion. In came after more than one year of separate warnings over the attempted hacking of key infrastruc­ture like power and water utilities in Western countries. The two sides did not give any examples of systems that had been broken into, but said those compromise­d risked losing data, identities, passwords and even control of their own systems.

Critical components targeted

The hacking effort goes to the critical components of a computer network: the routers, switches and firewalls designed to safely and accurate deliver data from one computer to another. Taking over a router virtually would give a hacker the ability to manipulate, divert or stop any data from going through it. In an operation like an electric power plant, the hacker could shut down the service or physically damage a plant. A hacker could also “potentiall­y lay a foundation for future offensive operations,” the joint alert said. “The current state of US and UK network devices, coupled with a Russian government campaign to exploit these devices, threatens our respective safety, security, and economic wellbeing,” it said. Both countries have accused Moscow of concerted efforts to use social media to interfere with public affairs, particular­ly with the British Brexit referendum and US presidenti­al election in 2016. — AFP

West fighting multifacet­ed hacking campaign

 ??  ?? LONDON: Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May hosts a meeting with leaders and representa­tives of Caribbean countries, at 10 Downing Street in central London yesterday on the sidelines of the Commonweal­th Heads of Government meeting (CHOGM). — AFP
LONDON: Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May hosts a meeting with leaders and representa­tives of Caribbean countries, at 10 Downing Street in central London yesterday on the sidelines of the Commonweal­th Heads of Government meeting (CHOGM). — AFP
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