Cybercrime Wave ‘Unstoppable’ by Design: Cities and Corporations Across America Being Cyberattacked into Communication Paralysis
Who’s doing it and why?
SOTN Editor’s Note: There’s a HUGE war going on under the radar that’s potentially as dangerous and destructive as any on the planet.Deep State agents, foreign intelligence agencies and contracted cybercriminals both foreign and domestic are working in concert to terrorize cities and corporations across the USA.
The pattern of criminal cyberattacks indicates a variety of motives which make this crime spree more difficult to solve. However, that only means that this type of cyber-warfare is being used more frequently and with greater effect.
That Baltimore, Maryland has been successfully targeted for nearly 3 weeks demonstrates the high degree of proficiency of these mercenary cyber-criminals. It also shows how close to the nation’s capital the perps are willing to go. See: Here’s how cyber-weaponry has literally shut down a major American city
This burgeoning cybercrime wave is actually a highly complex conspiracy with multiple state actors (not Russia) that requires a dedicated exposé which is forthcoming. In the meantime, what follows is the MSM spin from the ever-prevaricating NYT.
State of the Nation
May 26, 2019
In Baltimore and Beyond, a Stolen N.S.A. Tool Wreaks Havoc
By Nicole Perlroth and Scott ShaneThe New York Times
For nearly three weeks, Baltimore has struggled with a cyberattack by digital extortionists that has frozen thousands of computers, shut down email and disrupted real estate sales, water bills, health alerts and many other services.
But here is what
frustrated city employees and residents do not know: A key component of
the malware that cybercriminals used in the attack was developed at
taxpayer expense a short drive down the Baltimore-Washington Parkway at
the National Security Agency, according to security experts briefed on
the case.
Since 2017, when the N.S.A. lost control of the tool,
EternalBlue, it has been picked up by state hackers in North Korea,
Russia and, more recently, China, to cut a path of destruction around
the world, leaving billions of dollars in damage. But over the past
year, the cyberweapon has boomeranged back and is now showing up in the
N.S.A.’s own backyard.
It is not just in Baltimore. Security experts say EternalBlue attacks have reached a high,
and cybercriminals are zeroing in on vulnerable American towns and
cities, from Pennsylvania to Texas, paralyzing local governments and
driving up costs.
The N.S.A.
connection to the attacks on American cities has not been previously
reported, in part because the agency has refused to discuss or even
acknowledge the loss of its cyberweapon, dumped online in April 2017 by a
still-unidentified group calling itself the Shadow Brokers.
Years later, the agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation still
do not know whether the Shadow Brokers are foreign spies or disgruntled
insiders.
Thomas
Rid, a cybersecurity expert at Johns Hopkins University, called the
Shadow Brokers episode “the most destructive and costly N.S.A. breach in
history,” more damaging than the better-known leak in 2013 from Edward
Snowden, the former N.S.A. contractor.
“The
government has refused to take responsibility, or even to answer the
most basic questions,” Mr. Rid said. “Congressional oversight appears to
be failing. The American people deserve an answer.”
The N.S.A. and F.B.I. declined to comment.
Since
that leak, foreign intelligence agencies and rogue actors have used
EternalBlue to spread malware that has paralyzed hospitals, airports,
rail and shipping operators, A.T.M.s and factories that produce critical
vaccines. Now the tool is hitting the United States where it is most
vulnerable, in local governments with aging digital infrastructure and
fewer resources to defend themselves.
On May 7, city workers in Baltimore had their computers frozen by hackers. Officials have refused to pay the $100,000 ransom.
Before
it leaked, EternalBlue was one of the most useful exploits in the
N.S.A.’s cyberarsenal. According to three former N.S.A. operators who
spoke on the condition of anonymity, analysts spent almost a year
finding a flaw in Microsoft’s software and writing the code to target
it. Initially, they referred to it as EternalBluescreen because it often
crashed computers — a risk that could tip off their targets. But it
went on to become a reliable tool used in countless
intelligence-gathering and counterterrorism missions.
EternalBlue
was so valuable, former N.S.A. employees said, that the agency never
seriously considered alerting Microsoft about the vulnerabilities, and
held on to it for more than five years before the breach forced its
hand.
The Baltimore attack, on May 7, was a classic ransomware
assault. City workers’ screens suddenly locked, and a message in flawed
English demanded about $100,000 in Bitcoin to free their files: “We’ve
watching you for days,” said the message, obtained by The Baltimore Sun. “We won’t talk more, all we know is MONEY! Hurry up!”
Today,
Baltimore remains handicapped as city officials refuse to pay, though
workarounds have restored some services. Without EternalBlue, the damage
would not have been so vast, experts said. The tool exploits a
vulnerability in unpatched software that allows hackers to spread their
malware faster and farther than they otherwise could.
North
Korea was the first nation to co-opt the tool, for an attack in 2017 —
called WannaCry — that paralyzed the British health care system, German
railroads and some 200,000 organizations around the world. Next was
Russia, which used the weapon in an attack — called NotPetya — that was
aimed at Ukraine but spread across major companies doing business in the
country. The assault cost FedEx more than $400 million and Merck, the
pharmaceutical giant, $670 million.
The
damage didn’t stop there. In the past year, the same Russian hackers
who targeted the 2016 American presidential election used EternalBlue to
compromise hotel Wi-Fi networks. Iranian hackers have used it to spread
ransomware and hack airlines in the Middle East, according to
researchers at the security firms Symantec and FireEye.
“It’s
incredible that a tool which was used by intelligence services is now
publicly available and so widely used,” said Vikram Thakur, Symantec’s
director of security response.
One
month before the Shadow Brokers began dumping the agency’s tools online
in 2017, the N.S.A. — aware of the breach — reached out to Microsoft
and other tech companies to inform them of their software flaws.
Microsoft released a patch, but hundreds of thousands of computers
worldwide remain unprotected.
Hackers
seem to have found a sweet spot in Baltimore, Allentown, Pa., San
Antonio and other local, American governments, where public employees
oversee tangled networks that often use out-of-date software. Last July,
the Department of Homeland Security issued a dire warning
that state and local governments were getting hit by particularly
destructive malware that now, security researchers say, has started
relying on EternalBlue to spread.
Microsoft,
which tracks the use of EternalBlue, would not name the cities and
towns affected, citing customer privacy. But other experts briefed on
the attacks in Baltimore, Allentown and San Antonio confirmed the
hackers used EternalBlue. Security responders said they were seeing
EternalBlue pop up in attacks almost every day.
Amit
Serper, head of security research at Cybereason, said his firm had
responded to EternalBlue attacks at three different American
universities, and found vulnerable servers in major cities like Dallas,
Los Angeles and New York.
The costs
can be hard for local governments to bear. The Allentown attack, in
February last year, disrupted city services for weeks and cost about $1
million to remedy — plus another $420,000 a year for new defenses, said
Matthew Leibert, the city’s chief information officer.
He
described the package of dangerous computer code that hit Allentown as
“commodity malware,” sold on the dark web and used by criminals who
don’t have specific targets in mind. “There are warehouses of kids
overseas firing off phishing emails,” Mr. Leibert said, like thugs
shooting military-grade weapons at random targets.
The
malware that hit San Antonio last September infected a computer inside
Bexar County sheriff’s office and tried to spread across the network
using EternalBlue, according to two people briefed on the attack.
This
past week, researchers at the security firm Palo Alto Networks
discovered that a Chinese state group, Emissary Panda, had hacked into
Middle Eastern governments using EternalBlue.
“You
can’t hope that once the initial wave of attacks is over, it will go
away,” said Jen Miller-Osborn, a deputy director of threat intelligence
at Palo Alto Networks. “We expect EternalBlue will be used almost
forever, because if attackers find a system that isn’t patched, it is so
useful.”
Until a decade or so ago,
the most powerful cyberweapons belonged almost exclusively to
intelligence agencies — N.S.A. officials used the term “NOBUS,” for
“nobody but us,” for vulnerabilities only the agency had the
sophistication to exploit. But that advantage has hugely eroded, not
only because of the leaks, but because anyone can grab a cyberweapon’s
code once it’s used in the wild.
Some
F.B.I. and Homeland Security officials, speaking privately, said more
accountability at the N.S.A. was needed. A former F.B.I. official
likened the situation to a government failing to lock up a warehouse of
automatic weapons.
In an interview in
March, Adm. Michael S. Rogers, who was director of the N.S.A. during
the Shadow Brokers leak, suggested in unusually candid remarks that the
agency should not be blamed for the long trail of damage.
“If
Toyota makes pickup trucks and someone takes a pickup truck, welds an
explosive device onto the front, crashes it through a perimeter and into
a crowd of people, is that Toyota’s responsibility?” he asked. “The
N.S.A. wrote an exploit that was never designed to do what was done.”
At
Microsoft’s headquarters in Redmond, Wash., where thousands of security
engineers have found themselves on the front lines of these attacks,
executives reject that analogy.
“I
disagree completely,” said Tom Burt, the corporate vice president of
consumer trust, insisting that cyberweapons could not be compared to
pickup trucks. “These exploits are developed and kept secret by
governments for the express purpose of using them as weapons or
espionage tools. They’re inherently dangerous. When someone takes that,
they’re not strapping a bomb to it. It’s already a bomb.”
Brad Smith, Microsoft’s president, has called for a “Digital Geneva Convention”
to govern cyberspace, including a pledge by governments to report
vulnerabilities to vendors, rather than keeping them secret to exploit
for espionage or attacks.
Last year,
Microsoft, along with Google and Facebook, joined 50 countries in
signing on to a similar call by French President Emmanuel Macron — the
Paris Call for Trust and Security in Cyberspace — to end “malicious
cyber activities in peacetime.”
Notably
absent from the signatories were the world’s most aggressive
cyberactors: China, Iran, Israel, North Korea, Russia — and the United
States.
A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Cities Hijacked By Tool Stolen From the N.S.A.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/25/us/nsa-hacking-tool-baltimore.html
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