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Avast Blog_ViewPoints: A primer on cyber espionage across the planet
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State-backed cyber spying is pervasive – and its impact on geo-political affairs is deepening

Cyber espionage turned a corner this spring when Israeli fighter jets eradicated a building in the Gaza Strip believed to house Hamas cyber operatives carrying out attacks on Israel’s digital systems.

That May 10th air strike by the Israel Defense Force marked the first use of military force in direct retaliation for cyber spying. This development underscores that we’re in the midst of a new age of cyber espionage.

This comes as no surprise to anyone in the military or intelligence communities. State-sponsored cyber operations have been an integral part of global affairs for decades. And, in fact, cyber ops tradecraft has advanced in sophistication in lock step with our deepening reliance on the commercial Internet.

Here are a few things everyone should know about the current state of government-backed cyber ops.

Russia’s tradecraft

A lot of dots have been connected recently with respect to Russia’s cyber spying, initially thanks to Barack Obama’s leveling of sanctions on Russia for interfering in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections. Among more than two dozen Russians named as co-conspirators by the Obama sanctions were a pair of notorious cyber robbers, Evgeniy Bogachev of Russia and Alexsey Belan of Latvia.

At the time, both were well-known to the FBI as profit-motivated cyber thieves of the highest skill level. Bogachev led a band of criminals that used the Gamover Zeus banking Trojan to steal more than $100 million from banks and businesses worldwide. Then somewhere along the way, Bogachev commenced moonlighting as a cyber spy for the Russian government.

The Obama sanctions helped security analysts and the FBI piece together how Bogachev, around 2010, began running unusual searches on well-placed PCs he controlled, via Gameover Zeus infections. Bogachev’s searches explicitly sought out intelligence of direct strategic benefit to Russia – just prior to Russia making adversarial moves in the Republic of Georgia, the Ukraine and Turkey, respectively.

Meanwhile, details of Alexsey Belan’s Russian-backed escapades came to light in March 2017 when the FBI indicted Belan and three co-conspirators in connection with hacking Yahoo to pilfer more than 500 million email addresses and gain deep access to more than 30 million Yahoo accounts.

The Obama sanctions ultimately linked both Bogachev and Belan to the hack of the Democratic National Committee and several other organizations at the center of the 2016 U.S. presidential elections. The pair were not the first private-sector cybercriminals recruited to serve as Russian assets, and very likely won’t be the last, said Bryson Bort, CEO of security company SCYTHE, a supplier of attack simulation systems.

“Russia explicitly recruits folks already engaged in criminal activities, and once recruited, they are contracted and connected to military organizations for direction and oversight,” Bort told me. “Those activities have criminal end-goals of corporate espionage and theft, but to be clear, they are government-directed.”

Both Bogachev and Belan remain on the FBI’s most wanted cybercriminals list: Bogachev with a $3 million bounty and Belan with a $100,000 bounty. The assumption is that they both reside in Russia under the protection of the Russian government.

“We have not effectively deterred Russia, as a nation, from executing these operations,” Bort said. “So we can expect them to continue to recruit criminal hackers, grow their capabilities, and continue to use them.”
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