Tag: Hackers

  • Over 100 Banks Hit By Sophisticated Cyber Attack

    Over 100 Banks Hit By Sophisticated Cyber Attack

    A sophisticated global cyberattack struck more than 100 banks in 30 countries stealing hundreds of millions of dollars, The New York Times reported Saturday.

    Citing a soon to be released report from computer security company Kaspersky Lab, the newspaper said the attack involved malicious software that gave hackers long-term access to banking systems.

    A group of Russians, Chinese and Europeans was able to siphon off around $300 million in one of the world’s largest bank robberies, the report said.

    The money was transferred to bank accounts around the world in small-value amounts to avoid detection.

    Hackers largely focused on banks in Russia, but millions of dollars were also taken from banks in Japan, the Netherlands, Switzerland and the United States as well, the Times said.

    Hackers had such advanced access to the banks’ systems that they could force ATM machines to dispense cash at specific times and locations where hackers could pick it up.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Anonymous Hackers Target Social Media Accounts Linked To IS

    Anonymous Hackers Target Social Media Accounts Linked To IS

    Hacking group Anonymous has claimed responsibility for taking down hundreds of social media accounts allegedly linked to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militants, including some belonging to Malaysians, media reported on Tuesday.

    “ISIS, we will hunt you, take down your sites, accounts, emails and expose you,” the group warns in a two-minute video posted on YouTube, saying that its campaign targeting the militants under the name #OpISIS is continuing.

    Anonymous has published a list of 800 Twitter accounts, Google Plus accounts, recruitment websites, Facebook accounts and email addresses that it had exposed and targeted, the Daily Mirror reported on Monday.

    Some of the 11 Facebook accounts revealed were believed to be owned by Malaysians, according to Sin Chew Daily.

    The video was Anonymous’ second warning in two months against ISIS, which has built up a large social media presence with accounts on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Instagram, BBC reported.

    The Islamists, who have seized large swaths of Iraq and Syria, used the Internet as a channel for disseminating propaganda, circulating brutal videos of hostages being killed and as a tool for radicalising and recruiting new members.

    Anonymous “declared war” on websites run by ISIS last month after an attack on a magazine’s offices in Paris.

    Yet the hacking group’s efforts did not manage to silence ISIS on the Internet, as the Islamists have recently released a social media guide to help members create accounts that are not easy to detect.

    Anonymous is made up of activists and hackers claiming to defend and protect democracy.

    “We are Muslims, Christians, Jews, we are hackers, crackers, Hacktivist, phishers, agents, spies, or just the guy from next door,” says the voice in Anonymous video.

    “Remember the terrorists that are calling themselves Islamic State are not Muslims.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Islamic State Hackers Target Twitter And Youtube Accounts Of Key US Military Command Agencies

    Islamic State Hackers Target Twitter And Youtube Accounts Of Key US Military Command Agencies

    WASHINGTON — Hackers claiming to work on behalf of Islamic State militants seized control of the Twitter and YouTube sites of the military’s US Central Command yesterday (Jan 12). The Pentagon swiftly suspended the sites and said it appears that no classified material was breached.

    The hacker group, which calls itself CyberCaliphate, appears to be the same one that is under FBI investigation for hijacking the websites or Twitter feeds of media outlets in the last month, including a Maryland television station and a New Mexico newspaper.

    Defence officials said yesterday that they have been in contact with the FBI, and that the previous breaches by the group raises questions about whether the hackers have any real connection to the Islamic State militants that are under US and coalition attack in Iraq and Syria.

    FBI spokesman Joshua Campbell said the bureau is investigating the Central Command Twitter and YouTube breaches and is working with the Pentagon to determine the scope of the incident.

    The Central Command Twitter site was filled with threats that said “American soldiers, we are coming, watch your back”. Other postings appeared to list names, phone numbers and personal email addresses of military personnel as well as PowerPoint slides and maps.

    Most of the material was labelled “FOUO”, which means “For Official Use Only”, but none of it appeared to be classified or sensitive information, suggesting the hackers did not breach classified material. US Central Command said that none of the information and documents posted on the hacked site were from the command’s Internet servers or social media sites.

    The breach only affected the Twitter and YouTube sites, which reside on commercial, non-Defense Department Internet servers. US Central Command said its operational and military networks were not compromised, but officials are notifying law enforcement about the possible release of personal information that was posted on the Twitter site.

    One of the documents appeared to be slides developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Lincoln Laboratory, a federally funded research and development centre focused on national security. The slides appeared to depict what it called “scenarios” for conflict with North Korea and China. It’s not clear where the documents came from or how long ago they might have been taken, since some of the information was as much as a year old.

    “This is little more than a prank or vandalism. It’s inconvenient and it’s an annoyance. But that’s all it is,” said Colonel Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman. “It in no way compromises our operations in any way shape or form.”

    Col Warren said Pentagon officials are in contact with Twitter and YouTube to ensure that military passwords and other security for such public websites are adequate.

    The tweets came shortly after US Central Command posted its own tweets about the US and partner nations continuing to attack Islamic State terrorists in Iraq and Syria and one repeating a report that said France will deploy an aircraft carrier to the fight.

    The hackers titled the Central Command Twitter page “CyberCaliphate” with an underline that said “i love you isis”. And the broader message referred to the ongoing airstrikes against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria and threatened, “We broke into your networks and personal devices and know everything about you. You’ll see no mercy infidels. ISIS is already here, we are in your PCs, in each military base.”

    It added: “US soldiers! We’re watching you!”

    The intrusion on the military Twitter account carried the same logo, CyberCaliphate name and photo that appeared on the Albuquerque Journal’s website in late December when one of its stories was hacked. And earlier this month, it appeared that the same hackers breached the Journal’s Twitter account and also took over the website and Twitter feed of WBOC-TV in Salisbury, Maryland.

    Mr Frank Fisher, an FBI spokesman in Albuquerque, said the agency continues to investigate the case involving the Albuquerque Journal but he declined to provide any details. WBOC said it was also in contact with the agency.

    Some IS militant videos also were posted on the Central Command’s YouTube site, purporting to show military operations and explosions.

    “This is something we’re obviously looking into, and something we take seriously,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. But he cautioned against comparisons to the broader hack attack against Sony. “There’s a pretty significant difference between what is a large data breach and the hacking of a Twitter account,” he said.

    The military suspended the Central Command Twitter site and terminated the YouTube site. This is not the first time that US government websites or other accounts have been hacked. It was not clear whether the site was attacked by the insurgent group or by sympathisers.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com