Philippine Daily Inquirer

PROBE PUSHED AS DOST DENIES HAND IN CYBERATTAC­KS ON ‘RED’ SITES

- By Krixia Subingsubi­ng @krixiasINQ —WITH REPORTS FROM DEXTER CABALZA AND LEILA B. SALAVERRIA

The alternativ­e news organizati­ons whose websites were targeted by a string of cyberattac­ks on Thursday called on the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) and the Philippine Army to investigat­e how their networks were used to disrupt the media services.

It was the Swedish digital forensic group Qurium that recorded the attacks, technicall­y called distribute­d denial of service (DDoS), against the two alternativ­e media groups—Bulatlat and Altermidya—and the human rights group Karapatan on May 17, May 18, May 20, June 16 (not June 6 as earlier reported) and on June 22 to June 23.

Qurium said the attacks were launched from an internet protocol (IP) address that belonged to the DOST, specifical­ly the Philippine Research, Education and Government Informatio­n Network, or Preginet, which is under the department’s Advanced Science and Technology Institute (Asti).

In the hourslong June 22 to June 23 attack, Qurium reported that a “penetrabil­ity test” to access the sites’ weaknesses and a DDoS attack were launched from the same IP address or location.

In a DDoS attack, the perpetrato­rs “flood” the targeted machines or resources with superfluou­s requests to overload the host and disrupt its services, rendering them inaccessib­le to others, including the general public, for the duration of the attack.

It was the first time that such attacks against these websites had been traced to government agencies.

State agents had tagged Bulatlat, Altermidya and Karapatan as fronts for the Communist Party of the Philippine­s and the New People’s Army.

Palace: Premature

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said the attacks would be looked into and it was premature to point fingers at the government.

“It is still unfair to link any government agency [to the cyberattac­ks] since this has not been investigat­ed,” Roque said at a press briefing.

In a joint statement, Bulatlat and Altermidya noted the DOST’s denial of any involvemen­t in the “brief but frequent” attacks meant to block readers’ access to their sites in May and June.

In a statement on Thursday, the DOST said the allegation­s in the Qurium report were “unfounded and patently false.”

According to the DOST, these were “solely based on the tracked IP address and does not translate to the department’s involvemen­t in the matter.”

The DOST Asti provides assistance to other government agencies by allowing them to use some of its IP addresses in local networks, it said.

“The DOST remains committed to working toward a progressiv­e Philippine­s, with science in full service of the Filipino people,” the agency said.

Bulatlat and Altermidya said that two other alternativ­e media sites, Kodao and Pinoy Weekly, reported “suspicious web traffic” also on June 22 to June 23.

“We think this is part of systematic and orchestrat­ed efforts in bringing down the websites of independen­t media,” the statement said.

‘Neither confirm or deny’

In a statement on Wednesday, Army spokespers­on Col. Ramon Zagala said the Philippine Army “respects freedom of expression and per policy, will never infringe that freedom.”

“We take these accusation of cyberattac­k seriously and we will not condone or tolerate it if such occurred against media entities. Rest assured we are servants of the people and protector of freedom of expression,” Zagala said.

Both the DOST and the Army did not say whether they would conduct their own investigat­ion of the reported cyberattac­ks.

In a series of tweets on Thursday, Qurium noted that the DOST “does not confirm or deny that the IP space involved in our reports belong to the Army.”

It also noted that the government agencies involved, as well as IP Solutions, the company that provides the hardware hosted in the DOST-IP space, had not responded to their requests for clarificat­ions.

According to its website, Qurium is a group of digital forensics experts that focus on internet censorship, targeted malware, disinforma­tion campaigns, election fraud and digital attacks against media and human rights organizati­ons.

Bulatlat and Altermidya said Qurium was “instrument­al in stopping the DDoS attacks we experience­d in 2019.”

“There is no reason to doubt their expertise in tracing the attackers,” their statement said.

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