Apple Magazine

NSA: RUSSIAN AGENTS HAVE BEEN HACKING MAJOR EMAIL PROGRAM

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The U.S. National Security Agency says the same Russian military hacking group that interfered in the 2016 presidenti­al election and unleashed a devastatin­g malware attack the following year has been exploiting a major email server program since last August or earlier.

The timing of the agency’s advisory was unusual considerin­g that the critical vulnerabil­ity in the Exim Mail Transfer Agent — which mostly runs on Unix-type operating systems — was identified 11 months ago, when a patch was issued.

Exim is so widely used — though far less known than such commercial alternativ­es as Microsoft’s proprietar­y Exchange — that some companies and government agencies that run it may still not have patched the vulnerabil­ity, said Jake Williams, president of Rendition Infosec and a former U.S. government hacker.

It took Williams about a minute of online probing to find a potentiall­y vulnerable government server in the U.K.

He speculated that the NSA might have issued to advisory to publicize the IP addresses and a domain name used by the Russian military group, known as Sandworm, in its hacking campaign — in hopes of thwarting their use for other means.

The Exim exploit allows an attacker to gain access using specially crafted email and install programs, modify data and create new accounts — gaining a foothold on a compromise­d network.

The NSA did not say who the Russian military hackers have targeted. But senior U.S. intelligen­ce officials have warned in recent months that Kremlin agents are engaged in activities that could threaten the integrity of the November presidenti­al election.

An NSA official reached by The Associated Press would only say that the agency is publicizin­g the vulnerabil­ity because, despite an October warning by British officials, it “has continued to be exploited and needs to be patched.” The hope, in now publicizin­g Sandworm’s role, is to further motivate patching, said the official, who spoke on condition they not be further identified.

Sandworm agents, tied to Russia’s GRU military intelligen­ce arm, wreaked havoc on the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election, stealing and exposing Democratic National Committee emails and breaking into voter registrati­on databases.

They also have been blamed by the U.S. and U.K. government­s for the June 2017 NotPetya cyberattac­k, which targeted businesses that operate in Ukraine. It caused at least $10 billion in damage globally, most notably to the Danish shipping multinatio­nal Maersk.

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