It is a reminder of the greedy appetite of Russian government officials for strategic information, as the Kremlin is more isolated on the international stage than it has been for decades. These hacking attempts have successfully penetrated defenses in 29% of cases, according to Microsoft. Of these successful breaches, a quarter resulted in network data theft. However, measuring the “success” of a Russian cyber-espionage is difficult, and Microsoft said it did not have a complete picture of the hacking because some customers were storing data on their own systems rather than on Microsoft’s cloud computing infrastructure. CNN turned to the Russian embassy in Washington for comment. Moscow has systematically denied the allegations of piracy. Various governments have likely stepped up their cyber-attack activities in connection with the Ukraine war, seeking information on how the fighting and its global impact are. The US military’s Cyber Command, a hacker unit, has carried out a “full range” of offensive, defensive and intelligence-backed support for Ukraine, the chief of staff confirmed this month. China has also trained some of its most capable hackers on targets related to the Ukraine war, according to cybersecurity researchers. According to cybersecurity company Secureworks, suspected Chinese hackers appeared to be trying to break into computers linked to officials in the Russian city of Blagoveshchensk, near the Chinese border.
title: “Microsoft Says Russia Has Stepped Up Cyber Espionage Against Us And Ukrainian Allies " ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-02” author: “Theo Greenlee”
It is a reminder of the greedy appetite of Russian government officials for strategic information, as the Kremlin is more isolated on the international stage than it has been for decades. These piracy attempts have successfully penetrated defenses in 29% of cases, according to Microsoft. Of these successful breaches, a quarter resulted in network data theft. However, measuring the “success” of a Russian cyber-espionage is difficult, and Microsoft said it did not have a complete picture of the hacking because some customers were storing data on their own systems rather than on Microsoft’s cloud computing infrastructure. CNN turned to the Russian embassy in Washington for comment. Moscow has systematically denied the allegations of piracy. Various governments have likely stepped up their cyber-attack activities in connection with the Ukraine war, seeking information on how the fighting and its global impact are. The US military’s Cyber Command, a hacker unit, has carried out a “full range” of offensive, defensive and intelligence-backed support for Ukraine, the chief of staff confirmed this month. China has also trained some of its most capable hackers on targets related to the Ukraine war, according to cybersecurity researchers. According to cybersecurity company Secureworks, suspected Chinese hackers appeared to be trying to break into computers linked to officials in the Russian city of Blagoveshchensk, near the Chinese border. US officials continue to study Russia’s efforts to supplement its kinetic war in Ukraine with cyber-operations. Significant Russian hacking incidents in Ukraine since the February invasion include a hack by a satellite operator, which shut down Internet service for tens of thousands of satellite modems as the invasion unfolded, and waves of hacking services targeting cybercriminals. Ukrainian officials have also accused the Russians of routing Internet traffic in the occupied territories of Ukraine through Russian Internet service providers and censoring those connections. Some of these tactics “may be part of China’s game book” in future Beijing efforts to assert power beyond its borders, according to Mieke Eoyang, deputy assistant defense minister for cyber policy. “The dimensions of its cyberspace [what Russia is trying doing in Ukraine] “It’s incredibly important for us, especially at the Department of Defense, to understand what a playbook could be if another cybercrime country tried to do that,” Eoyang said at a think tank event in Washington on Tuesday. Third Way.
NATO members focus on Russian hackers
NATO, the 30-nation military alliance that includes the United States, Canada and European allies, has been a particular target for Russian computer operators, according to a Microsoft report.
After the United States, Poland – a hub for humanitarian and military aid to Ukraine – was the NATO member most targeted by Russian hackers in recent months, Microsoft researchers have found.
Future, and not just today, NATO members had to be on the lookout for possible Russian cyber-attacks. The governments of Sweden and Finland have been vigilant about Russian hacking before and after announcing their intention to join NATO in May.
Swedish officials have been urging critical infrastructure operators for months to lower their thresholds for reporting suspicious cyber-activity to authorities, said Johan Turell, senior analyst at the Swedish Cyber Security Service. natural and man-made crises.
The Kremlin has warned Sweden and Finland, which share hundreds of miles of border with Russia, not to join NATO.
As Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke by teleconference to the Finnish parliament on April 8, a cyber-attack briefly shut down the websites of Finland’s foreign and defense ministries. Sites quickly returned to the internet. Some digital forensics experts linked the hack, which did not cause serious disturbance, to Russia.
“We do not know if this is a Russian patriot hacker or an entity most closely associated with [the] “The Russian government,” Mikko Hyppönen, a prominent Finnish cybersecurity official, told CNN. “But I have no doubt that the attack was Russian,” he said after examining the technical details.
“If Russia tries to scare us with these attacks, it fails,” said Hyppönen, chief researcher at cybersecurity company WithSecure.
This story has been updated with additional details.