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Hacking is now so common that even small nations are doing it

         

tangor

2:52 am on May 2, 2017 (gmt 0)

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Russian state hackers get the headlines, but nations across the globe are pouring money into cyber espionage units, a development, security experts say, that is allowing smaller nations to close the espionage gap without the satellites or tech muscle of big nations.

“It’s very inexpensive. It’s very efficient,” said John Hultquist, a cyber espionage analyst who’s studied the growth of hacking among smaller nations for iSight Partners, a division of FireEye, a Milpitas, California, cybersecurity firm.

Hultquist said his firm was tracking several new players, which he declined to identify – “I’d get in trouble for naming them” – that had no prior experience in cyber espionage.

“These would be smaller developing countries that would appear to be building out their own capability,” Hultquist said. “It’s not just the Chinese anymore or the North Koreans. Some of them are quite good.”

[mcclatchydc.com...]
Don't know about the numbers in the article, but there's no doubt that hacker activity is revving up. Email the is most prominent target, but there's other avenues so....

Have you secured your website? Running HTTPS yet? Anything else you'd like to share regarding best practices to keep the wolves beyond the door?

Marshall

2:59 am on May 2, 2017 (gmt 0)

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DISCONNECT! But seriously - hackers are always a step ahead and, I believe becoming a "dime a dozen." The reward to cost ratio can be enormous - ask Netflix.

keyplyr

4:12 am on May 2, 2017 (gmt 0)

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The mechanism is already in place (the internet) so all a would-be hacker needs to do is to figure out the method.

TorontoBoy

10:45 am on May 2, 2017 (gmt 0)

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It is so easy to hide. I've been trying to track Chinese gov't hacker activity, but when they hide in civillian IP ranges it gets very difficult to differentiate. Most bad bots don't use unique UAs and hide in a sea of Mozilla. The internet infrastructure is just not designed to detect and therefore protect against hackers. It is so easy to jump countries, to combine countries in a coordinated attack. Too many places to hide, to obfuscate, to masquerade as a human browsing the internet.

Hacking is the new frontier, where all countries big and small are equal. It is also super cheap. All you really need is brains and a mission, and rent some space somewhere in the world that are not too picky about shady bots. If you are outed, pick up your luggage and move to another willing host.

webnovice007

7:07 am on Sep 3, 2017 (gmt 0)

5+ Year Member



The Chinese have a huge hacking operation. They also cooperate with other countries, predominately Russia; but also include Iran, Turkey, Egypt, Malaysia and Singapore. Back in 2008-2009 they also used Peru's and Chili"s IPs as they built their internet infrastructure. The big internet attack back in July of 2008, which was attributed to the North Koreans, in all likely hood was done at the request and assistance of the Chinese. Web sites related to Tibet all over the world were hacked and destroyed at the same instant. This was a time when demonstrations against the Chinese occupation of Tibet were happen, that followed the Olympic torch around the world that was heading to Beijing. The Chinese also, I firmly believe, use the services of Zhou Pizhong out of Kansas City. Zhou has been indicted for spamming and phishing, but still operates about 10,000 IPs which he uses for hacking as well as the spamming/phishing operations. He uses a lot of datashack IPs. I have been battling against them for almost 10 years. they recently made a huge uptick in their hacking activities following the publication of a book review in an internationally highly esteemed web site and magazine. They had one sentence in the review referring to the occupation of Tibet that was well documented in the book.