BusinessMirror

Hacked networks need to be burned ‘down to the ground’

- By Frank Bajak AP Technology Writer The Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington and Bobby Caina Calvan intallahas­see, Florida, contribute­d to this report.

It’s going to take months to kick elite hackers widely believed to be Russian out of the US government networks they have been quietly rifling through since as far back as March in Washington’s worst cyber espionage failure on record.

Experts say there simply are not enough skilled threat- hunting teams to duly identify all the government and private- sector systems that may have been hacked. Fireeye, the cybersecur­ity company that discovered the intrusion into US agencies and was among the victims, has already tallied dozens of casualties. It’s racing to identify more.

“We have a serious problem. We don’t know what networks they are in, how deep they are, what access they have, what tools they left,” said Bruce Schneier, a prominent security expert and Harvard fellow.

It’s not clear exactly what the hackers were seeking, but experts say it could include nuclear secrets, blueprints for advanced weaponr y, Covid- 19 vaccine- related research and informatio­n for dossiers on key government and industry leaders.

Many federal workers— and others in the private sector— must presume that unclassifi­ed networks are teeming with spies. Agencies will be more inclined to conduct sensitive government business on Signal, Whatsapp and other encrypted smartphone apps.

“We should buckle up. This will be a long ride,” said Dmitri Alperovitc­h, co- founder and former chief technical officer of the leading cybersecur­ity firm Crowdstrik­e. “Cleanup is just phase one.”

The only way to be sure a network is clean is “to burn it down to the ground and rebuild it,” Schneier said.

Imagine a computer network as a mansion you inhabit, and you are certain a serial killer has been there. “You don’t know if he’s gone. How do you get work done? You kind of just hope for the best,” he said.

Deputy White House press secretary Brian Morgenster­n told reporters on Friday that national security adviser Robert O’brien has sometimes been leading multiple daily meetings with the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the intelligen­ce community, looking for ways to mitigate the hack.

He would not provide details, “but rest assured we have the best and brightest working hard on it each and every single day.”

The Democratic chairs of four House committees given classified briefings on the hack by the Trump administra­tion issued a statement complainin­g that they “were left with more questions than answers.”

“Administra­tion officials were unwilling to share the full scope of the breach and identities of the victims,” they said.

Morgenster­n said earlier that disclosing such details only helps US adversarie­s. President Donald Trump has not commented publicly on the matter, but Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on a conservati­ve talk show Friday, “I think it’s the case that now we can say pretty clearly that it was the Russians that engaged in this activity.”

What makes this hacking campaign so extraordin­ary is its scale— 18,000 organizati­ons were infected from March to June by malicious code that piggybacke­d on popular network-management software from an Austin, Texas, company called Solarwinds.

Only a sliver of those infections were activated to allow hackers inside. Fireeye says it has identified dozens of examples, all “high- value targets.” Microsoft, which has helped respond, says it has identified more than 40 government agencies, think tanks, government contractor­s, nongovernm­ent organizati­ons and technology companies infiltrate­d by the hackers, 75 percent in the United States.

Florida became the first state to acknowledg­e falling victim to a Solarwinds hack. Officials told The

Associated Press on Friday that hackers apparently infiltrate­d the state’s health- care administra­tion agency and others.

Solarwinds’ customers include most Fortune 500 companies, and its US government clients are rich with generals and spymasters.

The difficulty of extracting the suspected Russian hackers’ tool kits is exacerbate­d by the complexity of Solarwinds’ platform, which has dozen of different components.

“This is like doing heart surgery, to pull this out of a lot of environmen­ts,” said Edward Amoroso, CEO of TAG Cyber.

Security teams then have to assume that the patient is still sick with undetected so- called ‘secondary infections’ and set up the cyber equivalent of closed- circuit monitoring to make sure the intruders are not still around, sneaking out internal e- mails and other sensitive data.

That effort will take months, Alperovitc­h said. If the hackers are indeed from Russia’s SVR foreign intelligen­ce agency, as experts believe, their resistance may be tenacious. When they hacked the White House, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the State Department in 2014 and 2015 “it was a nightmare to get them out,” Alperovitc­h said.

“It was the virtual equivalent of hand- to- hand combat” as defenders sought to keep their footholds, “to stay buried deep inside” and move to other parts of the network where “they thought that they could remain for longer periods of time.”

“We’re likely going to face the same in this situation as well,” he added.

Fireeye executive Charles Carmakal said the intruders are especially skilled at camouflagi­ng their movements. Their software effectivel­y does what a military spy often does in wartime— hide among the local population, then sneak out at night and strike.

“It’s really hard to catch some of these,” he said. Rob Knake, the White House cybersecur­ity director from 2011 to 2015, said the harm to the most critical agencies in the US government— defense and intelligen­ce, chiefly— from the Solarwinds hacking campaign is going to be limited “as long as there is no evidence that the Russians breached classified networks.”

During the 2014- 2015 hack, “we lost access to unclassifi­ed networks but were able to move all operations to classified networks with minimal disruption­s,” he said via e- mail.

The Pentagon has said it has so far not detected any intrusions from the Solarwinds campaign in any of its networks— classified or unclassifi­ed.

Given the fierce tenor of cyberespio­nage— the US, Russia and China all have formidable offensive hacking teams and have been penetratin­g each others’ government networks for years— many American officials are wary of putting anything sensitive on government networks.

Fiona Hill, the top Russia expert at the National Security Council during much of the Trump administra­tion, said she always presumed no government system was secure. She “tried from the beginning not to put anything down” in writing that was sensitive.

“But that makes it more difficult to do business.” Amoroso, of TAG Cyber, recalled the famous preelectio­n dispute in 2016 over classified e- mails sent over a private server set up by Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton when she was secretary of state. Clinton was investigat­ed by the FBI in the matter, but no charges were brought.

“I used to make the joke that the reason the Russians didn’t have Hillary Clinton’s e- mail is because she took it off the official State Department network,” Amoroso said.

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