Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S., Europe targeted by China’s hackers, firm says

- ALAN SUDERMAN

Suspected state-backed Chinese hackers exploited widely used networking devices to spy for months on dozens of high-value government, defense industry and financial sector targets in the U.S. and Europe, according to FireEye, a prominent cybersecur­ity firm.

FireEye said Tuesday that it believes two hacking groups linked to China broke into several targets through Pulse Connect Secure devices, which numerous companies and government­s use for secure remote access to their networks.

After FireEye released a blog post detailing its findings Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency issued an alert saying it was aware of “ongoing exploitati­on” of Pulse Connect Secure that is “compromisi­ng U.S. government agencies, critical infrastruc­ture entities and private sector organizati­ons.” The agency did not provide additional details about which organizati­ons were breached.

Ivanti, the Utah-based owner of Pulse Connect Secure, said a limited number of customers “experience­d evidence of exploit behavior.” The company said the hackers used three known exploits and a previously unknown one.

The company says it will release a patch in early May.

Charles Carmakal, the chief technology officer at FireEye, said it is still trying to piece together details about the hack but that available evidence suggests the hackers are aligned with the Chinese government.

Carmakal, whose company discovered in December the monthslong SolarWinds hacking campaign attributed to Russian cyberspies, said the Pulse Connect Secure hack had several notable aspects: The hackers were highly skilled, were able to evade multifacto­r authentica­tion and could stay hidden on a penetrated network even if software was reset or upgraded.

“Their tradecraft is really good,” he said.

Neither FireEye nor Ivanti would specify who was targeted. But Carmakal said those hacked were government agencies in both the U.S. and Europe as well as U.S.-based defense companies “you would anticipate the Chinese government being interested in.”

“They’re very high-profile victims,” he said.

The Chinese Embassy did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

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