Philippine Daily Inquirer

DICT ALSO TRACES CYBERATTAC­K TO ARMY, 2 COMPLAININ­G NEWS SITES SAY

- —JHESSET O. ENANO AND JEANETTE I. ANDRADE

Initial findings of an investigat­ion led by the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) have revealed that the cyberattac­ks on the websites of two alternativ­e news outfits originated from a computer network assigned to the Philippine Army, confirming an earlier digital forensics probe linking the military to the attacks.

In a joint statement, Bulatlat and Altermidya-People’s Alternativ­e Media Network slammed the military for alleged cybercrime­s against independen­t media and called for accountabi­lity.

The findings by the DICT’s Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-PH) echoed the investigat­ion by Swedish digital forensic group Qurium Media Foundation in June, which traced the series of attacks to block access to the sites, to the Army and the Department of Science and Technology (DOST).

Publicatio­n ‘necessary’

The report was marked “TLP: AMBER,” which meant that the informatio­n should be restricted to the involved parties. But Bulatlat and Altermidya, both of which have been Red-tagged, or labeled as fronts for the Communist Party of the Philippine­s, said they deemed it “necessary” to publish the findings.

“There is no reason to keep it confidenti­al especially if state agents used public funds and resources to infringe upon our right to publish and the people’s right to informatio­n,” the two outfits said on Thursday.

The Army, through its spokespers­on Col. Ramon Zagala, said it had never launched cyberattac­ks.

Zagala said what the two news sites had been alleging as cyberattac­ks was a mere visit to their sites by someone who had used the Army’s IP (internet protocol) address.

“Is it illegal to browse through their sites? Do they view that as a cyberattac­k?” he said.

DICT officials could not be reached by the Inquirer for comment.

Confirmed address

The incident notificati­on report, dated Aug. 11, said that even before it received the request for an investigat­ion, CERT-PH called the DOST and confirmed that the IP address was assigned to the Army.

The team said it coordinate­d with the military to seek “the right person to engage with” in the investigat­ion, but received no response to its requests in July.

“An additional analysis did not prosper due to the none (sic) establishe­d coordinati­on with the organizati­on currently using the said IP,” the report read.

Bulatlat and Altermidya said they took offense at the “duplicity” of the Army over the incident —“publicly professing respect for press freedom but launching vicious digital attacks, and never cooperatin­g with other government agencies.”

When the Qurium findings were released a few months ago, the military said it was taking the accusation seriously and would not tolerate such attacks against the press.

The two news outfits also said they had not received any communicat­ion from the DOST, which provides the infrastruc­ture to the military.

“The DOST should not allow its infrastruc­ture to be used to suppress the truth, and should impose penalties for agencies found to commit abuses,” they said.

‘Flooding’

Qurium, in its own investigat­ion, found at least five attacks against the two news sites and also on the website of human rights group Karapatan in May and June.

These were distribute­d denial of service (DDoS) attacks, in which perpetrato­rs “flood” targeted machines with superfluou­s requests to overload the host and disrupt its services, rendering these inaccessib­le to others.

Bulatlat called these cyberattac­ks “politicall­y motivated and state-sponsored.”

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