S. Korea Says Cyber Attack From North Wiped 48,700 Machines
wiredmikey writes "An official investigation into a major cyber attack on South Korean banks and broadcasters last month has determined that North Korea's military intelligence agency was responsible. An investigation into access records and the malware used in the attack pointed to the North's military Reconnaissance General Bureau as the source, the Korea Internet and Security Agency (KISA) said on Wednesday. To spread the malware, the attackers went through 49 different places in 10 countries including South Korea, the investigation found. The attacks used malware that can wipe the contents of a computer's hard disk (including Linux machines) and damaged 48,700 machines including PCs, ATMs, and servers."
But I'm sure most civilians prefer an empty computer rather than being dead...
Sometimes it's better not having signature
Symantec has an analysis of the linux component. It relies on extracting a history of ssh connections from windows machines from an application called mRemote, an open source, multi-protocol remote connections manager.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
Speaking as a civilian, I'd much rather prefer to both be alive and not have my livelyhood threatened, thanks. That's the worst false dichotomy I've heard all week and you should feel bad.
Just think about all of those hours lost playing StarCraft.
In other news, the entire population of South Korea is now looking for that 1 StarCraft CD so they can install it on all their machines again.
Well, like the old saying goes: If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
What I find amazing is that NK is technologically capable of causing that amount of damage both in terms of technology and infrastructure. I didn't believe they'd get enough bandwidth by using the soldiers to manually hand off the packets. I figured they'd be too busy eating grass and tree bark really.
Okay, okay. So I'm only a little kidding. I'm still surprised they had the tech chops to pull that off OR that they were so poorly defended. It could go either way I suppose.
"So long and thanks for all the fish."
logic fails you. these cyber attacks are preventable by proper security practices - the internet is a hostile place and there is no excuse for laziness in security by IT people. Do you keep your money stacked on the sidewalk in front of your house overnight, or do you make some effort to keep thieves from easily snatching it? your attitude is the problem we in IT face
It isn't so much a person's personal PC that is the danger, but of having his bank disrupted, and he can't get money. If food distribution is messed up, if drugs can't be accessed...all this stuff is interconnected.
Let's see what happens when some extremely urban center gets hit, say like NYC...the power goes out, food can't get in/out, and see how long it takes for things to go bad really fast.
Hell, with so many out there living cashless....what are they going to use for payment for things, if that system is down for awhile? That alone would bring a lot of misery, even if you discount the more tragic events I put forth above.
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
All the vulnerable machines were wiped. So now there are no vulnerable machines anymore. Second attack will be much harder. And the percentage of Korean users doing proper backups will probably be growing :-) (Not that I'm saying people in Korea are more negligent with backups than others).
"I can see nations targeting unprotected civilian computers in enemy nations."
The South should immediately retaliate and wipe all the North's computers, both of them.
Unless you're a buddhist.
You're a temporary arrangement of matter sliding towards oblivion in a cold, uncaring universe
Yeah just look at what happened at Royal Bank of Scotland last year. Some people at Ulster Bank (a subsidiary of RBS) where unable to access their account for the best part of a month.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_RBS_computer_system_problems
Now imagine that every bank is in the same situation as RBS along with VISA and Mastercard.
I would add that even having cash is no good if the power is out. These days even the till won't open, the scales won't weigh anything and the pump's won't pump the fuel. Heck even the water in the taps will stop flowing rather quicker than you might imagine without power.
So while I do have emergency cash and both VISA and Mastercard credit cards I am realistic that in the event of a total failure it won't get me that far.