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North Korean, Russian hackers target COVID-19 researchers: Microsoft


steven36

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hackers working for the Russian and North Korean governments have targeted more than half a dozen organizations involved in COVID-19 treatment and vaccine research around the globe, Microsoft  said on Friday.

 

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FILE PHOTO: A hacker, who asked not to have his name revealed, works on his laptop in his office in Taipei

 

The software company said a Russian hacking group commonly nicknamed “Fancy Bear” - along with a pair of North Korean actors dubbed “Zinc” and “Cerium” by Microsoft - were implicated in recent attempts to break into the networks of seven pharmaceutical companies and vaccine researchers in Canada, France, India, South Korea, and the United States.

 

Microsoft said the majority of the targets were organizations that were in the process of testing COVID-19 vaccines. Most of the break-in attempts failed but an unspecified number succeeded, it added.

 

Few other details were provided by Microsoft. It declined to name the targeted organizations, say which ones had been hit by which actor, or provide a precise timeline or description of the attempted intrusions.

 

The Russian embassy in Washington - which has repeatedly disputed allegations of Russian involvement in digital espionage - said in an email that there was “nothing that we can add” to their previous denials.

 

North Korea’s representative to the United Nations did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment. Pyongyang has previously denied carrying out hacking abroad.

 

The allegations of cyber espionage come as world powers are jockeying behind the scenes in the race to produce a vaccine for the virus.

 

They also highlight how Microsoft is pressing its case for a new set of global rules barring digital intrusions aimed at healthcare providers.

 

Microsoft executive Tom Burt said in a statement his company was timing its announcement with Microsoft President Brad Smith’s appearance at the virtual Paris Peace Forum, where he would call on world leaders “to affirm that international law protects health care facilities and to take action to enforce the law.”

 

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So we're going to ask governments, (including those who have "Hackers working for the Russian and North Korean government"),

“to affirm that international law protects health care facilities and to take action to enforce the law.”

You'd have more luck asking a burglar to watch your house while you go shopping!!:duh::duh::duh:

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Come on, researchers are not so stupid to do their work online or via internet.

Much of this work in done on a local connection system.

This is just a hearsay or  whatever

Unless the hacker is one of the researchers who are heavily guarded

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20 hours ago, cosy said:

Come on, researchers are not so stupid to do their work online or via internet.

Much of this work in done on a local connection system.

This is just a hearsay or  whatever

Unless the hacker is one of the researchers who are heavily guarded

Yes, within a team the work is likely shared on a local system, but it becomes less 'local' when several are involved and when it's time to share the data with external people for checking/review/publication/etc. Also, researchers are often not cyber-security experts.

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