Russian Hackers Continue With Attacks Despite Biden Warning (bloomberg.com) 104
Security researchers say they have uncovered an ongoing hacking campaign carried out by suspected Russian spies who are continuing to stage attacks amid U.S. pressure on the Kremlin to curtail its alleged cyber-intrusions. From a report: The California-based cybersecurity firm RiskIQ Inc. said in a report released on Friday that it had uncovered more than 30 command and control servers -- used by cybercriminals to send orders to compromised networks or receive stolen data -- associated with the state-sponsored hacking group, which is known as APT29 or Cozy Bear. The group is using the servers to deploy malicious software named WellMess, according to RiskIQ. APT stands for "advanced persistent threat," and is a term often used to describe state-sponsored hacking groups.
In July last year, government agencies from the U.S., U.K., and Canada, said that APT29 was "almost certainly" part of the Russian intelligence services and accused it of hacking organizations involved in the development of the Covid-19 vaccine and stealing intellectual property. The same group was also allegedly involved in the 2016 hack on the Democratic National Committee and the breach of SolarWinds, which was disclosed last year, according to U.S. officials. The Russian embassy in Washington referred to an earlier statement, in which it urged journalists to stop "sweeping accusations" and said it was confident that discussions with the U.S. related to cyberspace would "improve the security of the information infrastructure of our countries."
In July last year, government agencies from the U.S., U.K., and Canada, said that APT29 was "almost certainly" part of the Russian intelligence services and accused it of hacking organizations involved in the development of the Covid-19 vaccine and stealing intellectual property. The same group was also allegedly involved in the 2016 hack on the Democratic National Committee and the breach of SolarWinds, which was disclosed last year, according to U.S. officials. The Russian embassy in Washington referred to an earlier statement, in which it urged journalists to stop "sweeping accusations" and said it was confident that discussions with the U.S. related to cyberspace would "improve the security of the information infrastructure of our countries."
In Soviet Russia we warn you! (Score:2)
In Soviet Russia we warn you!
What? How? (Score:4, Funny)
How can that possibly be? Biden didn't scare them straight? Surely that must be a typo.
Re:What? How? (Score:5, Insightful)
It is still better than thanking them for doing it to us.
Shocked, shocked, to hear that... (Score:3)
Actually, making threats and then failing to back them up could be comparably bad to thanking them for "doing it to us". But we don't know that, either.
The problem with covert action these days is that it's getting too hard to plausibly deny things. Isn't there some way that being a lesser liar could be a good thing?
Oh well. Does anyone have a better reference than Cyber War by Richard Clarke? It's gotta be regarded as obsolete by now, but I still haven't found a better overview (and I've read many).
(But
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Don asked Putin to find Hillary's "missing emails".
Details matter (Score:4, Informative)
Trump publicly (on national television, rather than in some closed secret meeting) JOKED that maybe the Russians could find Hillary's missing emails...AFTER it was public knowledge that [1] She had been illegally using a private server for all her government work, [2] the server had been hacked, [3] she had been served with subpoenas for the emails, [4] she claimed not to have them anymore after having her servers wiped and destroying her phones with hammers.
It was so obviously a political joke and a "dig" at her and her flagrant violation of laws, that the large rally audience burst out in laughter (they would have been mystified and quiet had all the info about her and her servers not already been publicly known). It was clearly NOT a call for the Russians to hack her servers, since they'd already been wiped clean and a time machine would have been needed to perform such a hack. The presumption was that Russia already had all her emails but the American people, who owned all her work product, did NOT have them... in other words, the damage was already done and if the Americans could get copies from Russia at least the American people would find out what they had a right to know and what the Russians already knew. In fact, it was also a tragic dig at the justice department, which used to at least pretend to enforce laws equally against people no matter if they were on the left or the right, but who had repeatedly let Hillary get away with numerous felonies in broad daylight; there's not a single Slashdot reader who could avoid jail time after deliberately destroying aver 30,000 pieces of evidence that were the subject of a subpoena.
Saying "Don asked Putin to find Hillary's "missing emails"." is wildly misleading. I would recommend people go to YouTube to watch the rally video and see exactly what Trump said and pay attention to the response of the crowd, but it's probably a bit of history that's been erased by our tech oligarch overlords...
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He always says he was joking when it backfires. Wolf.
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"How can that possibly be? Biden didn't scare them straight? Surely that must be a typo."
He "almost certainly" did scare them straight.
Running short on options [Re:What? How?] (Score:2)
"How can that possibly be? Biden didn't scare them straight? Surely that must be a typo."
He "almost certainly" did scare them straight.
The US sanctions are in fact hurting Russia pretty badly, and Putin would indeed like to get rid of them (despite Putin proclaiming the opposite, that the sanctions have no effect at all.)
The problem is that the U.S. is already sanctioning Russia, and has been since the Ukraine invasion in 2014. https://fas.org/sgp/crs/row/IF... [fas.org] Short of actual acts of war-- and nobody is suggesting that, or anything like that, the U.S. is running short of new ways to sanction Russia.
Here is the current status:
https:// [whitehouse.gov]
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There are quite a few sanctions that can be enacted...
no need for war at all..
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Yeah what ever. Clearly the sanctions had allowed Russia to develop it's own industries, free from competition. Now that was a sound move on the part of the west, yep, uh huh. All too late now, that horse has bolted and they are continuing to develop independently from the west. That independent part, well, they have lots of resources and they are building their industries for local supply free from competition, except from China.
In fact I do not get the latest bout of propaganda at all, it is like the US d
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That's a reasonable step: give them a stern and clear warning. If they ignore it, then start hacking back, and/or kidnap their hackers.
Cut Russia off from internet (Score:2)
It's not just Biden, but other national leaders that are concerned about persistent hacking. So, tell any company routing traffic through Russia to stop routing. No, you won't get all traffic, but if you hit major communication routes, it might make traffic in+out of Russia slower and more expensive .
Perhaps increasing Russian costs of staying connected to the internet will get some official Russian attention put on stopping Russian hacking groups.
Putin versus Biden (Score:1)
I am sure Putin is afraid of a warning from Biden.
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Biden made a list, and made it VERY CLEAR items on the list were not to be touched! The letter was very stern!
Any reports of attacks must be fabricated.
(MSM, under Trump) "Russia, Russia, Russia, RUUUUSSIA!!!"
(MSM, under Biden)
* crickets *
Hope that makes it VERY CLEAR as to the media clusterfuck Democrats created, that deserve every tanked rating.
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Wonder why...
https://www.theguardian.com/wo... [theguardian.com]
Vladimir Putin personally authorised a secret spy agency operation to support a “mentally unstable” Donald Trump in the 2016 US presidential election during a closed session of Russia’s national security council, according to what are assessed to be leaked Kremlin documents.
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...according to what are assessed to be leaked Kremlin documents.
Note:
1. The passive voice ("are assessed") - assessed by whom? We don't find out.
2. The way the attribution (such as it is) gets tacked onto the end, after the reader has absorbed the allegation.
Good technique!
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Also note that "ArchieBunker" (heh) is taking a British tabloid seriously. And not just any British tabloid, but The Guardian. It's more credible than, say, The Daily Fail, but less so than The Onion.
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The Grauniad is the house organ of the UK government, jsut as Pravda and Izvestia were of the Soviet government.
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The Grauniad is the house organ of the UK government,....
Which parallel universe did you post from? Or did I miss the sarcasm tag?
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Invasion (Score:2)
So the US is going to invade Russia to go after some ransomware hackers? When does invading Russia ever go well?
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They might not, but Putin might, or he might not. He might test Biden's mettle by letting attacks go through, figuring even if they shut down a state-sponsored hacking operation, it's pretty cheap and easy to build another one.
If I were Biden, I wouldn't give that much of a shit about Russian hackers themselves. I'd start getting my own hackers fucking up Russian pipelines and other infrastructure. But part of statecraft is always giving an opponent a face-saving way out, and for someone like Putin, this is
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This back-and-forth tit-for-tat was called The Cold War last time. I guess we didn't learn the lessons of history very well, because we are about to repeat them. We can call it Cold War II.
This time there will be more technological warfare (hacking) but I expect that there will still be plenty of physical black ops work (sabotage, kidnapping, assassinations, etc.) The major players will be USA, Russia, China, and the EU.
Welcome to the new world order.... it's a lot like the old world order.
There is only one answer: Hammer Time (Score:2)
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Yeah, that worked so well... Uh... In Iraq? Afghanistan (the US time, not the Russian time)? Panama?
Give me a minute, I'm sure a good example will come to mind....
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The Shouwa Emperor remained on the throne until his death in 1989. We very specifically avoided the kind of approach you suggest, in order to avoid totally destabilizing Japan. We dictated a new constitution and a lot of other changes, but we did not kick out the emperor or most of his advisors.
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No, he was very much the one deciding when to continue the war and when to surrender. He decided to surrender after we nuked two of his cities. Do you think Russia would respond the same way?
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If you're referring to the attempt to kidnap the Emperor before he could order the unconditional surrender, that was some mid-level officers, and they never got very far with their plot. He did overrule members of the cabinet, who voiced strong disapproval of the unconditional surrender, but he won out because, well, he was the Emperor. At the end of the day, the buck stopped with him, though the US and Japanese governments put a lot of effort after the fact into minimizing his role.
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Uh, no. In the final days of WWII, Emperor Hirohito basically took direct control, and after Nagasaki, ordered his cabinet to unconditionally surrender. Prior to that, members of the cabinet had wanted a negotiated surrender (in part to protect the Emperor, who they were certain the US would forced to be removed, and in part to cover their own asses), and indeed, even after Hiroshima that debate still went on. But after Nagasaki, the Emperor ordered the unconditional surrender on his own personal authority.
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I'm not denying that, what I'm saying is that the Emperor, at least in the final days, had considerable power. He wasn't merely a figurehead. How much authority he held for much of his pre-surrender reign is hard to measure, but there is some evidence out there that he was fairly approving of Japan's military aspirations.
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what I'm saying is that the Emperor, at least in the final days, had considerable power. He wasn't merely a figurehead.
And what the other comments are saying is that this point is not at all universally accepted by historians, many of whom say that he was merely a figurehead.
How much authority he held for much of his pre-surrender reign is hard to measure
But you just confidently stated the opposite, that he had "considerable power".
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also, we nuked them first to take away their will to fight. That will work wondrously on the Russians who also have no nuclear capability, yeah?
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I would like to why you believe their missiles are unable to be launched in practice.
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So your proof is YOUR speculation. Gotcha. Basically everyone just needs to ignore your comment and move on.
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"Analysis" through the eyes of a fool has a street-name and that is idiocy, but whatever. Please put more foolish and moronic statements out here, but I really need a good laugh since it is Friday.
Commence rambling in three....two...one....
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Removing a dictator is easier than military occupation, but occupation can work too.
Removing, is easier?
Putin would let 1,000 nukes off the chain before that happens.
You should know this, because the response would be the exact same if that kind of threat were made against the US President and the United States from a foreign power. Especially a communist one.
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You make up nonsense out of your ass. Russia has 4300 active nuclear weapons ready to go. We'll believe U.S. intelligence over your ignorance.
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I am not the one starting a nuclear war or using the claims as a basis for deflection. These hacks are Russia's attacks against the US that admit they can not fight any other way.
Deflection is Communist 101, and "these hacks" are how the world's superpowers attack each other today, because none of them would tolerate a ground attack, and you know it. Red Dawn was a fucking movie.
You're delusional if you think that country has a "dozen" nukes. If they were that weak, Israel would be taking them over.
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Russians attack with malware without reprisal and gain wealth and intelligence. No downside as with nuclear war, which Russia is more than capable of doing, U.S. intelligence reports they are modernizing their arsenal. Russia continues to spend $65 billion on military, that is not where any budget cutbacks are. Spending grown 175 percent since year 2000
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Did you watch the shit show that was the European powers trying to participate the Libya operation, after having not done a whole lot better in Afghanistan over the years?
Putin's Russia would likely be quite successful against the first world powers. If the NATO was not a thing and the United States elected to just sit it out. (strategically that will never happen NATO or no NATO) but Russia even if they have to use a lot of now almost comically obsolete equipment; I'd still give them pretty good odds for r
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That isn't whataboutism. It's pointing out that every time the US has meddled with other countries the outcome was worse for everyone involved.
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Re:There is only one answer: Hammer Time (Score:5, Insightful)
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Russia hasn't been the dominant threat to world security since the collapse of the Soviet Union. It is a significant regional threat, but its ability to project force (at least in terms of conventional warfare) is far less than it was thirty years ago. It simply does not have the economy capable of supporting that kind of military infrastructure. China, on the other hand, most certainly represents the most significant geopolitical challenge for the West.
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No wonder Don worships him.
It's too bad for the Russian people because they are relatively well educated and industrious. They could have had a real country. Maybe it's not too late...
When the hammer hits the jello! (Score:2)
Recently read an interesting book on those two examples, Upheaval by Jared Diamond. Spoiler: He basically argues Germany is doing better by accepting reality and the blame while Japan is still struggling with legacy denial (and projection?).
Interesting example of the legacy last night. Watched an amusingly panic-stricken press conference in Tokyo by Suga. He can't even get the reporters to follow his rules as he begs all of the Japanese in Kanto to play his game? But much more importantly, he hasn't yet f
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Well, there are some differences. With Germany, Allied forces could basically force many Germans to view the death camps and other actions of the Nazis, so it was much more visceral for the German people. With Japan, some of the most significant war crimes were committed in China, the Korean Peninsula and other occupied parts of Asia. There was no way to parade Japanese citizens in front of the activities of Unit 731.
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Yes, but I believe most of the worst German atrocities sites were outside of Germany, too.
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The US must remove Vladimir Putin from power, and remove every one of his associates in order as they take the mantle. Expand that directive to include the top leadership in all Putin-allied governments as necessary.
Why?
And how?
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Re: There is only one answer: Hammer Time (Score:2)
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So, you're saying there should be bodies in Red Square on a continual basis?
Hmm. Ok.
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Do you want open warfare? Because that's how you get open warfare.
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I'm sure we can all agree that having a nation with thousands of nuclear weapons in complete disarray fighting over who is in charge would be in everyone's best interests. What could possibly go wrong?
"almost certainly" (Score:1)
Heh, this shit never ends...
We need a treaty and make them pay real money (Score:2)
Nations need to take responsibility for the behavior of their citizens. If its proven a US or any other country's citizen intentionally broke international law, the nation should pay for the damage and both recover money from the wrongdoers and "rehabilitate" them. Same thing for every other country.
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We'd owe for a lot of damages... Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, about 2 dozen other countries....
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About as effective as a ban on gain of function research on bat coronaviruses.
Re:Bwah hah! (Score:4, Insightful)
So telling them that certain types of attacks (but not others?!?) were "off limits" didn't work, eh?
I am shocked, shocked.
Had this worked, everyone would have been shocked. But, it's a thing you gotta say before letting the NSA off the leash. Now whether that actually has any chance of working is a different story, and if done properly, we'll never know anyway, one way or the other.
A Biden is exactly what Putin wanted. And got. He loves this.
Hmm. So given the choice of "ineffectual blowhard" vs "Putin suck-up actively undermining US foreign policy", Putin chooses... who? Any actual election interference aside, you just have to look at the coverage of the election campaign in the Russian state media to see where the rooting interests were at.
Iraq (Score:2)
Iraq had nukes, 23 of them. Almost cetainly. Tony just couldn't find them, but they WERE there. Somewhere.
This is a correct and valid statement (Score:2)
Look, sometimes the bad guys are out to get you.
Like right now.
Honeypots (Score:2)
Pretty obviouis (Score:2)
Hardly surprising (Score:2)
Since Biden's warning was basically, "Stop, or I'll say 'stop' again."
Can't scare Biden by blackmailing Hunter (Score:2)
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Remove your Fox Switch.
Who's afraid of Joe Biden? (Score:1)