Old School Hackers spying on European governments
Kaspersky Lab's team of experts recently published a new research report
that analyzed that Cyber criminals have targeted government officials
in more than 20 countries, including Ireland and Romania with a new
piece of malware called 'MiniDuke'.
In a recent attack, malware has
infected government computers this week in an attempt to steal
geopolitical intelligence. The computers were infected via a modified
Adobe PDF email attachment, and the perpetrators were operating from
servers based in Panama and Turkey.
According to Kaspersky Lab CEO Eugene Kaspersky,"I
remember this style of malicious programming from the end of the 1990s
and the beginning of the 2000s. I wonder if these types of malware
writers, who have been in hibernation for more than a decade, have
suddenly awoken and joined the sophisticated group of threat actors
active in the cyber world."
Last week Adobe released an
update that patches the Adobe PDF bug (CVE-2013-6040) used in the
attack. Once it was opened, the MiniDuke malware would install itself on
a victim's computer. It is not known what information the attackers are
targeting.
MiniDuke attacks government
entities in Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Georgia, Germany,
Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Latvia, Lebanon, Lithuania,
Montenegro, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation, Slovenia, Spain,
Turkey, Ukraine, United Kingdom and United States.
The malware also compromised the
computers of a prominent research foundation in Hungary, two
thinktanks, and an unnamed healthcare provider in the US.
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