Vietnam's neighbors, ASEAN, targeted by hackers: report
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[November 07, 2017]
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - A hacking
group previously linked to the Vietnamese government or working on its
behalf has broken into the computers of neighboring countries as well as
a grouping of Southeast Asian nations, according to cybersecurity
company Volexity.
Steven Adair, founder and CEO, said the hacking group was still active,
and had compromised the website of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) over several high-profile summit meetings. ASEAN is
holding another summit of regional leaders in the Philippines capital
Manila this week.
In May, cybersecurity company FireEye reported that the group, which it
calls APT32 and is also known as OceanLotus, was actively targeting
foreign multinationals and dissidents in Vietnam. FireEye said at the
time the group's activity was "of interest to the nation of Vietnam."
Adair told Reuters he had no basis to definitely say who was behind the
group but said its capabilities rivalled those of most other advanced
persistent threat (APT) groups, a term often used to refer to hacker
groups that are believed to have state support.
"What we can say is that this is a very well resourced attacker that is
able to conduct several simultaneous attack campaigns."
Vietnamese officials did not immediately respond to requests for
comment. But Hanoi has in the past denied accusations of cyber-attacks
against organizations or individuals, and said it would prosecute any
cases.
Adair said it was not clear how much information the group had stolen.
"We do not really have anything on the scale of data theft, but we can
tell you the scale and reach of the sites they have compromised is very
far reaching," he said.
Volexity said in a report that the group had compromised websites of
ministries or government agencies in Laos, Cambodia and the Philippines
so they would load malicious code onto the computers of targeted
victims.
This code would then direct them to a Google page which asked for their
permission to access their Google account. If the user agrees, the
hackers then have access to their contacts and emails.
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A hooded man holds laptop computer as cyber code is projected on him
in this illustration picture taken on May 13, 2017. REUTERS/Kacper
Pempel/Illustration
The ministries included Cambodia's ministries of foreign affairs, the
environment, the civil service and social affairs, as well as its national
police. In the Philippines it had compromised the websites of the armed forces
and the office of the president.
Three ASEAN websites, and the websites of dozens of Vietnamese non-government
groups, individuals and media, were similarly targeted. The group also infected
websites belonging to several Chinese oil companies.
Officials at ASEAN's headquarters in Jakarta were not immediately available for
comment.
Kirt Chanthearith, a spokesman for the Cambodian national police, said the
police website was hacked about six months ago but he did not know who was
responsible. "It was hacked and we lost some data", he said, without giving
further details.
Officials in Thailand said they were not aware of any hacking of government or
police websites.
In Manila, Allan Cabanlong, executive director of the Cybercrime Investigation
and Coordination Centre, said there was no damage to government web sites in the
Philippines but authorities were taking preventive measures.
"We've taken measures like cyber hygiene programs," he told Reuters. "We are
conducting due diligence in the Philippines and we are clearing our network."
(Reporting by Jeremy Wagstaff; Additional reporting by Chansy Chhorn in PHNOM
PENH, Matthew Tostevin in HANOI, Patpicha Tanakasempipat and Suphanida Thakral
in BANGKOK, Agustinus Beo Da Costa in JAKARTA and Neil Jerome Morales in MANILA;
Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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