

Ukrainian Hackers Claim To Have Destroyed Major Russian Drone Maker's Entire Network (theregister.com) 93
Ukrainian hacker group BO Team, with help from the Ukrainian Cyber Alliance and possibly Ukraine's military, claims to have wiped out one of Russia's largest military drone manufacturers, destroying 47TB of production data and even disabling the doors in the facility. "Or, as described by the hacking collective (per Google translate), they 'deeply penetrated' the drone manufacturer 'to the very tonsils of demilitarization and denazification,'" reports The Register. From the report: BO Team (also known as Black Owl) announced the breach on its Telegram channel, and claimed to have carried out the operation alongside fellow hackers the Ukrainian Cyber Alliance "and one very well-known organization, the mention of which makes Vanya's bottle receivers explode," according to a Google translation of the Russian text. While the "very well-known organization" isn't named, BO Team included a link to Ukraine's Ministry of Defence.
The military intelligence agency, working alongside the attackers, "carried out large-scale work to capture the entire network and server infrastructure of Gaskar Group, collect valuable information about the UAVs being produced and prospective, and then destroy the information and disable this infrastructure," the Telegram post continued. This reportedly included 47TB of technical information about the production of Russian drones, and BO Team claims to have destroyed all of the information on Gaskar's servers, including 10TB of backup files. "By the way, from the information we received, China is providing assistance in the production and training of specialists of Gaskar Group," the hackers added via Telegram. BO Team also posted what they claim to be confidential employee questionnaires [PDF].
On their own Telegram channel, the Ukrainian Cyber Alliance said they also stole "all the source code" before destroying everything. "The network went down so thoroughly that the doors in the building were blocked," the pro-Ukraine crew wrote, per Google translate. "To open them, the administration had to turn on the fire alarm. Most likely, the defense order is on the verge of failure, and thousands of drones will not get to the front in the near future."
The military intelligence agency, working alongside the attackers, "carried out large-scale work to capture the entire network and server infrastructure of Gaskar Group, collect valuable information about the UAVs being produced and prospective, and then destroy the information and disable this infrastructure," the Telegram post continued. This reportedly included 47TB of technical information about the production of Russian drones, and BO Team claims to have destroyed all of the information on Gaskar's servers, including 10TB of backup files. "By the way, from the information we received, China is providing assistance in the production and training of specialists of Gaskar Group," the hackers added via Telegram. BO Team also posted what they claim to be confidential employee questionnaires [PDF].
On their own Telegram channel, the Ukrainian Cyber Alliance said they also stole "all the source code" before destroying everything. "The network went down so thoroughly that the doors in the building were blocked," the pro-Ukraine crew wrote, per Google translate. "To open them, the administration had to turn on the fire alarm. Most likely, the defense order is on the verge of failure, and thousands of drones will not get to the front in the near future."
Bottle receivers... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Also cute to say "denazification" since that is one of the potpourri of justifications the Kremlin has used for the war.
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It was a bizarely hypocritical claim from the Kremlin since their previouslty favorite mercenary group was literally run by a neo-nazi. And pretty much any military anywhere in the world is going to have members of pretty much any political affiliation you could imagine, so yeah, that was a stupid accusation.
Azov Brigade (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, let's give "removing Nazis" as the reason to invade a country that just elected a Jewish president, while having the Wagner group(named after Hitler's favorite composer) play a leading role in the operation.
The Azov Brigade/Regiment, based in Mariupol, was indeed a far-right group, nationalist, that seemed to like Nazi symbology. To be fair, liking Nazi symbols isn't unusual, the Nazis themselves stole most of them because they looked cool.
Seemed to substitute hating Russians for hating jews. To be fair, Russians actually pulled a lot of shit with Ukraine and the region (See Holodomor, and more)
Anyways, Ukraine was presented with a dilemma with their politics being problematic but being a dedicated fighting force in a time when Ukraine needed just that. Reading between the lines they came up with a very interesting and useful solution for it.
They integrated the Brigade, and promoted it to being a Regiment.
By being made officially part of the government, Azov obviously got a lot more support - resources, manpower, and such. But by being part of the government, they had to accept government rules for things like recruitment. Even the wiki notes this: [wikipedia.org] observers noted a government strategy of integrating far-right militias into the regular military while attempting to limit ideological influence.
And Ukraine promptly expanded it from a few hundred to a couple thousand. Which with the new rules on joining, meant that a lot of non-hardline right wingers joined up, diluting the hard-right nature of the Brigade way down in the new Regiment.
As in, Ukraine through a "absorb and dilute" strategy had taken care of the problem already when Russia invaded.
And the Azov proceeded to sell themselves incredibly dearly in fighting against the Russians, leading to memes similar to the Spartan 300. There aren't many of the hardliners left, they died fighting against their favored enemy. Fairly gloriously, I'd argue.
Meanwhile, The Wagner group ended up revolting against Russia and Putin. Oops.
Re:Azov Brigade (Score:4, Interesting)
I already addressed the Nazi symbology:
The Azov Brigade/Regiment, based in Mariupol, was indeed a far-right group, nationalist, that seemed to like Nazi symbology. To be fair, liking Nazi symbols isn't unusual, the Nazis themselves stole most of them because they looked cool.
For example, take the picture, which your video isn't actually a video of the patch, but a talk radio guy talking about the patch.
The Totenkopf actually predates the Nazis almost as much as the swastika does.
I mean, remember the skull and crossbones of Pirate fame?
Hussars were running around with it in the 1700s.
It's cool.
Obviously, they aren't very Nazi-like if Zelensky feels safe hanging around with them as bodyguards.
As for Wagnar: The difference here is that The Wagner group was named that by Prigozhin because he admired Hitler, but obviously couldn't name his mercenary group the "Hitler Group" so kind of like how 88 is special to neo-nazis, he went with Wagner.
It's the difference between naming your sports team the "German Shepards" because you like the breed and because Hitler owned a bunch.
And the wagner group didn't get folded into the military until AFTER the little revolt by its leader. Who everybody figures Putin had killed.
In either case, like I said, Ukraine had the group under control and was busily, if quietly and gradually, de-naziing them. Russia didn't need to invade.
Holodomor is a fairy tale for capitalist children you should have outgrown before Santa.
Ah, here we go, Genocide denial. [wikipedia.org]
And you can't even keep your arguments focused. I listed it as a reason why Ukrainians might hate Russians. It isn't a reason for me to hate Russians, but I recognize that it might be a bit more personal to them. Why the heck would the Ukrainians care about a famine in a different country half a century earlier? It was their own people that starved because of the Russians.
1M Irish is a bit less than the 3.5-5M Ukrainions estimated to have starved to death during the Holodomor famine. 1932-1933 is a lot more recent than the Irish potato famine of 1845-1852.
While still exporting food is a problem, at least there was actually crop failures for the potato famine, while Holodomor was deliberate government action.
Basically, you're engaging in Whataboutism.
Assasination threat? (Score:3)
I went ahead and looked, but could not find any credible evidence of anybody associated with Azov threatening to assassinate Zelensky, who ran more on normalizing and expanding relations with the west, while relations with Russia was more a thing for his political opponent.
IE Zelensky was the more "anti-Russia" candidate available. Even then, of course, he didn't run on having any hostilities with Russia. That's a bit like a Mexican or Canadian politician running on being hostile with the USA.
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I'm spitting indisputable facts, gullible muppet.
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Holodomor is a fairy tale for capitalist children you should have outgrown before Santa
I must have missed that bit in "The wealth of nations". History doesn't just not exist because you agree with the politics of the perpetrators.
Anyway, maybe try deproramming yourself and not hating people based on lists? Not everyone has to blindly hate people from a country because their leader is bad.
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The words do not mean here anything, what means is what those people do. In this context, for example, "Azov" did a lot of good in protecting the freedom of Ukraine. "Wagner" did a lot of bad by killing a lot of Syrians, Ukrainians, and even russians. There are no literal "Evil" and "Good", but I can c
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Noooooo, like "socialist", "Nazi" has a well defined definition. I'm not some shitlib who's been abusing the term for a full decade now on Trump and his supporters. Ukraine has a literal, not neo, Nazi problem. The country openly worships Stepan Bandera who helped Hitler kill hundreds of thousands of Poles and Jews in WWII. Nazis who openly guard Zelensky while wearing Nazi patches. Even NATO warned you of Ukraine's Nazi problem and literal Hitler Youth camps via their Altantic Council think tank:
https://ww [atlanticcouncil.org]
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The fact that they are literal, not neo Nazis. Western media used to be awash with reports on their Nazi problem before it was time to memory hole that to pretend Russia took unprovoked action. Even NATO got in on the action with a report on literal Hitler Youth camps:
https://www.atlanticcouncil.or... [atlanticcouncil.org]
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I did nothing whatsoever of the kind, dipshit. NATO on Hitler Youth camps:
https://www.atlanticcouncil.or... [atlanticcouncil.org]
BBC on fair right hate groups in Poland and Ukraine two years before the Maidan coup:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programm... [bbc.co.uk]
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Ukraine's far-right unified in the last election under the Svoboda party. They won 2,16% of the vote [wikipedia.org], putting Ukraine the weakest electoral performance by the far right [lemde.fr] in all of Europe.
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From the Wikipedia article on Utkin:
Z... not-Z (Score:2)
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This references the tradition of russian police to sit people they do not like on empty bottles to make them uncomfortable.
That is *so* much better than where I thought you were going. Apologies to Russian police.
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Wonder how possible it would be to hack the drones to turn against them. I know that both sides like to keep their best drone pilots back from the front line and use a link to the actual drone deployment point. Imagine if they could turn around 500 or 1000 drones to attack the owners all at once.
The current state of the art drones in the ware are using a trailing fiber optic link with direct control (so limited ability to remotely hack the drones).
Uh oh...just wait (Score:1)
All your base^H^H^H^Hdrones ... (Score:2)
... are belong to us
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Somebody set up us the bomb.
Uh oh (Score:3)
Sounds like we should expect news about yet another senior Russian official "committing suicide" soon... or accidentally falling out a window.
Calling it "denazification" makes no sense (Score:1, Troll)
Calling it "denazification" makes no sense. The Russians are fiercely anti-Nazi. In fact one of their justifications for invading Ukraine was "denazification". Here, from NBC news: https://www.nbcnews.com/think/... [nbcnews.com] "Ukraine's Nazi problem is real, even if Putin's 'denazification' claim isn't"
Re:Calling it "denazification" makes no sense (Score:4, Insightful)
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Did Ukraine invade russia to stop russians from using their language?
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In fact one of their justifications for invading Ukraine was "denazification".
So you're a Putin-Dicksucking little bitch who's too fucking stupid to understand that Putin the Nazi Shitbag's "denazification" claims were a smokescreen. Fucking kill yourself you disgusting Putin-Dicksucking Genocidal Little Nazi Bitch.
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Hitler wasn't exactly a fan of any Slavic people so pretty much all of Eastern Europe is fiercely anti-Nazi if that's what we are calling Russia still, including Ukraine who lost like 8 million themselves in WWII.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re: Calling it "denazification" makes no sense (Score:2)
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I live in Eastern Europe and all the old people I talked with and lived in that times, they agree Russian occupation was much worse than Nazi occupation.
Re:Calling it "denazification" makes no sense (Score:4, Interesting)
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That IS reality, fool. Its right there on video. Gaslighting yourself is just embarrassing. You also in denial of the fact the Canadian parliament welcomed and applauded a literal Nazi? Your willful ignorance is a you problem.
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It's. Right. There. On. Video. Stop embarrassing yourself.
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"saying police broke the law makes no sense. They enforce the law, so they can't possibly have ever broken a law".
Are you sure you don't want to maybe think about this idea a bit...?
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Maybe Russians aren't Nazi, but they definitely are fascist. And "denazification" wasn't a justification for invading Ukraine, it was a pretense.
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Cyber warfare (Score:3)
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if the destruction is what they claim to be, that is. so they pwn a drone factory, acces 47tb of data, including sensible communications, steal "all the source" and all they show is a couple of totally uninteresting job application forms from 2023 that don't even have the company name on them? mkay ...
i guess cyberwar operations are indeed at play, but both sides will want to be very discreet and we don't get to know about them. this is probably just a group bragging for lulz, or propaganda, or both.
Warning (Score:2)
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Would secret sabotage be better? (Score:1)
Imagine if instead of doing something so noticeable, you secretly modified the drone firmware etc so that they do stuff like malfunction or blow up on launch if it's X days after the manufacture date or after a particular date, whichever is later.
That way the Russians might not know better and ship out pwned drones to their frontlines.
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Actual damage? (Score:2)
It's one thing to delete a bunch of technical information that, if the organization is half-competent has an off-site backup. It's another thing entirely to get into the actual machines and put them in a state outside the normal envelope of operation to cause physical damage, such as with Stuxnet.
This event sounds more like the former, and less like the latter. Unless, of course, triggering the fire alarms engaged sprinkler systems and flooded the place. That might have caused some physical damage.
The bi