CYBER ATTACK ON GERMAN GOVERNMENT SOUGHT MORE SENSITIVE DATA THAN 2015 HACK: LAWMAKER
Cyber attack on German government sought more sensitive data than 2015 hack - lawmaker |
The latest hack of German
government networks involved complex malicious software and targeted more
sensitive data than a 2015 breach of the German parliament, a leading member of
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives said on Thursday.
Patrick Sensburg, a
member of the parliamentary committee that oversees German intelligence
agencies, told broadcaster ZDF it would take time to analyze the incident that
the German government on Wednesday said had been “isolated” and contained.
He said it was
premature to link the cyber attack -- as German media reports have done -- to a
Russian hacking group known as APT28, although he said there was sufficient
evidence that the group had links to a Russian spy agency.
“One has to
carefully examine a software like this one that is extremely complex,” Sensburg
told the broadcaster.
Germany on Wednesday
said security officials were investigating an isolated attack on its government
computer networks, but the incident had been brought under control. It did not
confirm that the foreign and defense ministries were affected by the attack.
Sensburg said there
had been rumors about a possible breach of government networks, but his
high-level committee had not been informed about the attack by government
officials.
The panel will
receive a closed-door briefing from the government around midday. A separate
panel on digital issues also called an extraordinary meeting to discuss the
breach.
WAR IN THE INTERNET.
“We have a sort of
war going on in the Internet,” Sensburg said, adding that it remained unclear
whether any data was stolen as a result of the breach, and if so, what sort of
data.
At the same time, he
said this attack was clearly focused on more sensitive data than the 2015 hack
of the Bundestag, the lower house of parliament, that resulted in the loss of
16 gigabytes of data, and which German officials have blamed on the APT28
hacking group, also known as Fancy Bear or Sofacy.
Cyber attack on German government sought more sensitive data than 2015 hack |
Bild newspaper said
security officials were struck by the sophistication of the attack, which
exceeded levels previously seen, and therefore assumed it was not carried out
by the same group that carried out the 2015 hack.
Benjamin Read, head
of cyber espionage analysis at FireEye, a U.S.-based cyber security firm, said
the German incident could be part of a series of attacks carried out by APT28
against U.S. and European government-related entities in 2016 and 2017.
German intelligence
officials have warned about possible meddling by Russia in last year’s federal
election.
Western governments
and security experts have linked APT28 to a Russian spy agency and have blamed
it for an attack on the Democratic National Committee ahead of the 2016 U.S.
elections.
Moscow has
previously denied in any way having been involved in cyber attacks on the
German political establishment.
Conservative
lawmaker Roderich Kiesewetter told Die Welt newspaper the attack showed that
government agencies needed more funding and personnel to be able to respond.
Top German
intelligence officials have also urged lawmakers to give them greater legal
authority to “hack back” in the event of cyber attacks from foreign powers.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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