Corporate News
By Reuters
In Summary
- While many internet users face attacks via email designed to steal personal data, journalists were "massively over-represented" among such targets, says Google engineer.
- Several U.S. news organizations have said they have been hacked in the past year, and Forbes, the Financial Times and the New York Times have all succumbed to attacks by the Syrian Electronic Army, a group of pro-government hackers
Twenty-one of the world's top-25 news
organizations have been the target of likely state-sponsored hacking
attacks, according to research by two Google security engineers.
While many internet users face attacks via email
designed to steal personal data, journalists were "massively
over-represented" among such targets, said Shane Huntley, a security
software engineer at Google.
The attacks were launched by hackers either
working for or in support of a government, and were specifically
targeting journalists, Huntley and co-author Morgan Marquis-Boire said
in interviews. Their paper was presented at a Black Hat hackers
conference in Singapore on Friday.
"If you're a journalist or a journalistic
organization we will see state-sponsored targeting and we see it
happening regardless of region, we see it from all over the world both
from where the targets are and where the targets are from," Huntley told
Reuters.
Both researchers declined to go into detail about
how Google monitors such attacks, but said it "tracks the state actors
that attack our users." Recipients of such emails in Google's Gmail
service typically receive a warning message.
Security researcher Ashkan Soltani said in an
earlier Twitter post that nine of the top-25 news websites use Google
for hosted email services. The list is based on traffic volumes measured
by Alexa, a web information firm owned by Amazon.com Inc.
California-headquartered Google also owns VirusTotal, a website that analyses files and websites to check for malicious content.
Tip of the iceberg
Several U.S. news organizations have said they have been hacked in the past year, and Forbes, the Financial Times and the New York Times have all succumbed to attacks by the Syrian Electronic Army, a group of pro-government hackers.
Huntley said Chinese hackers recently gained
access to a major Western news organization, which he declined to
identify, via a fake questionnaire emailed to staff.
Most such attacks involve carefully crafted emails
carrying malware or directing users to a website crafted to trick them
into giving up credentials.
Marquis-Boire said that while such attacks were
nothing new, their research showed that the number of attacks on media
organizations and journalists that went unreported was significantly
higher than those made public.
"This is the tip of the iceberg," he said, noting a
year-long spate of attacks on journalists and others interested in
human rights in Vietnam, including an Associated Press reporter. The
attacks usually involved sending the target an infected email attachment
masquerading as a human rights document.
While many of the world's biggest media players
have been targeted in these attacks, small news organizations, citizen
journalists and bloggers were also targeted, Huntley said, noting
hacking attacks on journalists in Morocco and Ethiopia
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