Friday, September 5, 2008

Report: North Korea Used Spyware in Targeted Attack on S. Korean Military

Via DarkReading -

It has all the trappings of an old-fashioned spy novel: international espionage, seduction, stolen military secrets, and treason, except for the part about the spyware-laden email attachment.

According to published reports in South Korea, a military officer in charge of South Korea’s military command and control system last month was hit by a spyware attack originating from a North Korean email message. The victim is just one of several South Korean military officers who have experienced targeted attacks recently.

The spyware used in the attack automatically steals files once the recipient opens them.

[...]

If North Korea is indeed behind this attack, it certainly isn't the first nation to conduct cyber-espionage: there have been reports of Germany spying on Afghanistan, Belgium on China, and China on India, all using malware to spy on rival nations.

"It would appear from the article description that this sort of targeted spyware scenario was indicative of the extraordinarily simple efforts that can used by foreign entities to use clever social engineering to gain access to information,” says Paul Ferguson, advanced threats researcher for Trend Micro. “This shows that humans are still the primary security threat.”

[...]

"Is it likely that North Korea is using the internet to spy on other countries? Of course. But it is also likely that South Korea is doing the same right back,” wrote Graham Cluley, a senior technology consultant with Sophos, in his blog. “Espionage has been a fact of life for thousands of years. It would be naive to believe that nations would consider the Internet and spyware ‘off-limits’ as a tool for spying. Countries are spying on each other all across the world for political, commercial and military advantage -- and they would be crazy not to try and exploit the power of the Internet to increase their chances of success.”

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