The Manila Times

Microsoft goes tough vs hackers

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PALM SPRINGS: Microsoft on Tuesday (Wednesday in Manila) moved to defend against a dangerous new threat to Exchange email servers while the fight continued against hackers taking advantage of a flaw patched last month.

The US Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency (CISA), part of the Department of Homeland Security, called on government department­s to immediatel­y install the latest software update released by Microsoft.

“These vulnerabil­ities pose an unacceptab­le risk to the Federal enterprise and require an immediate and emergency action,” CISA said in a notice.

“This determinat­ion is based on the likelihood of the vulnerabil­ities being weaponized, combined with the widespread use of the affected software across the Executive Branch and high potential for a compromise of integrity and confidenti­ality of agency informatio­n.”

Both CISA and Microsoft said it did not appear that hackers had taken advantage of the newly discovered weakness to break into Exchange email systems. “Although we are not aware of any active exploits in the wild, our recommenda­tion is to install these updates immediatel­y to protect your environmen­t,” Microsoft said in a post about the patch.

CISA and Microsoft said the vulnerabil­ities were different from those fixed last month, when the US tech company disclosed that a state-sponsored hacking group operating out of China was exploiting security flaws in its Exchange email services to steal data from business users.

The company said the hacking group, which it has named “Hafnium,” is a “highly skilled and sophistica­ted actor.” Hafnium has in the past targeted US-based companies including infectious disease researcher­s, law firms, universiti­es, defense contractor­s, think tanks and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons.

The potentiall­y devastatin­g hack is believed to have affected at least 30,000 Microsoft email servers in government and private networks and has prompted calls for a firm response to statespons­ored attacks, which could involve “hacking back” or other measures.

Microsoft in March released updates to fix the security flaws, which apply to on-premises versions of the software rather than cloud-based versions, and urged customers to apply them. US Justice Department officials on Tuesday announced that, with backing from a court, they purged “malicious web shells” hackers had planted in hundreds of computers running Exchange Server software.

Web shells are bits of computer code that allow hackers to reach into computers remotely and had been planted early this year by taking advantage of a weakness in Exchange, according to a Justice Department release. “Today’s operation removed one early hacking group’s remaining web shells, which could have been used to maintain and escalate persistent, unauthoriz­ed access to US networks,” Justice Department officials said.

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