Gulf Times

Servers of Colonial Pipeline hacker Darkside forced down: security firm

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Servers for Darkside were taken down by unknown actors yesterday, a week after the cyber-extortioni­st forced the shutdown of a large US oil pipeline in a ransomware scam, a US cyber-security firm said. Recorded Future, the security firm, said in a post that the allegedly Russia-based Darkside had admitted in a Web post that it lost access to certain servers used for its Web blog and for payments.

Accessed via TOR on the Dark Web, the Darkside site address showed a notice saying that it could not be found.

Recorded Future threat intelligen­ce analyst Dmitry Smilyanets said he found a Russian language comment on a ransomware website ostensibly from “Darksupp”, described as the operator of Darkside.

“A few hours ago, we lost access to the public part of our infrastruc­ture, namely: Blog. Payment server. DOS servers,” Darksupp wrote.

“The Darkside operator also reported that cryptocurr­ency funds were also withdrawn from the gang’s payment server, which was hosting ransom payments made by victims,” said Recorded Future.

While there was no evidence of who might have forced down Darkside’s website, the twitter account of a US military cyber-warfare group, the 780th Military Intelligen­ce Brigade, retweeted the Recorded Future report yesterday.

Darkside, which only surfaced online late last year, was behind the attack on Colonial Pipeline that forced the shutdown of its network shipping gasoline, diesel and aviation fuel across much of the eastern half of the United States.

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