Microsoft says on Hackers.
Microsoft has revealed that hackers backed
by Russia and North Korea have targeted pharmaceutical companies involved in
the COVID-19 vaccine development efforts.
The technology giant said Friday that the
attacks targeted seven companies in the U.S., Canada, France, India and South
Korea. But while it blocked the “majority” of the attacks, Microsoft
acknowledged that some were successful.
Microsoft said it had notified the affected
companies, but declined to name them.
“We think these attacks are unconscionable
and should be condemned by all civilized society,” said Tom Burt, Microsoft’s
customer security and trust chief, in a blog post.
The technology giant blamed the attacks on
three distinct hacker groups. The Russian group, which Microsoft calls
Strontium but is better known as APT28 or Fancy Bear, used password spraying attacks to target
their victims, which often involves recycled or reused passwords. Fancy Bear
may be best known for its disinformation and hacking operations in the run-up
to the 2016 presidential election, but the group has also been blamed for a string of other high-profile attacks against media
outlets and businesses.
The other two groups are backed by the
North Korean regime, one of which Microsoft calls Zinc but is better known as the Lazarus Group, which used targeted
spearphishing emails disguised as recruiters in an effort to steal passwords
from their victims. Lazarus was blamed for the Sony hack in 2016 and the WannaCry
ransomware attack in 2017, as well as other malware-driven attacks.
But little is known about the other North
Korea-backed hacker group, which Microsoft calls Cerium. Microsoft said the
group also used targeted spearphishing emails masquerading as representatives
from the World Health Organization, charged with coordinating the effort to
combat the COVID-19 pandemic.
A Microsoft spokesperson acknowledged it
was the first time the company had referenced Cerium, but the company did not
offer more.
This is the latest effort by hackers trying
to exploit the COVID-19 pandemic for their own goals. Earlier this year, the
FBI and Homeland Security warned that hackers would try to steal coronavirus vaccine
research.
Today’s news coincides with the Paris Peace
Forum, where Microsoft president Brad Smith will urge governments to do more to
combat cyberattacks against the healthcare sector, particularly during the
pandemic.
“Microsoft is calling on the world’s leaders to affirm that international law protects health care facilities and to take action to enforce the law,” Burt said. “We believe the law should be enforced not just when attacks originate from government agencies but also when they originate from criminal groups that governments enable to operate — or even facilitate — within their borders.”
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