Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Security Businesses Sony

Norse Security IDs 6, Including Ex-Employee, As Sony Hack Perpetrators 158

chicksdaddy writes Alternative theories of who is responsible for the hack of Sony Pictures Entertainment have come fast and furious in recent weeks -- especially since the FBI pointed a finger at the government of North Korea last week. But Norse Security is taking the debate up a notch: saying that they have conclusive evidence pointing to group of disgruntled former employees as the source of the attack and data theft. The Security Ledger quotes Norse Vice President Kurt Stammberger saying that Norse has identified a group of six individuals — in the U.S., Canada, Singapore and Thailand — that it believes carried out the attack, including at least one 10-year employee of SPE who worked in a technical capacity before being laid off in May. Rather than starting from the premise that the Sony hack was a state sponsored attack, Norse researchers worked their investigation like any other criminal matter: starting by looking for individuals with the "means and motive" to do the attack.

HR files leaked in the hack provided the motive part: a massive restructuring in Spring, 2014, in which many longtime SPE employees were laid off. After researching the online footprint of a list of all the individuals who were fired and had the means to be able to access sensitive data on Sony's network, Norse said it identified a handful who expressed anger in social media posts following their firing. They included one former employee — a 10-year SPE veteran who he described as having a "very technical background." Researchers from the company followed that individual online, noting participation in IRC (Internet Relay Chat) forums where they observed communications with other individuals affiliated with underground hacking and hacktivist groups in Europe and Asia. According to Stammberger, the Norse investigation was eventually able to connect an individual directly involved in conversations with the Sony employee with a server on which the earliest known version of the malware used in the attack was compiled, in July, 2014.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Norse Security IDs 6, Including Ex-Employee, As Sony Hack Perpetrators

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:18AM (#48688491)

    Cyber-hack against US subsidiary.
    'Obvious' perpetrator targeted by hardliners in government who leverage the blood-lust of the populace, and who pressure the president into immediate action.
    Actual perpetrators turn out to be a small group of disgruntled employees.

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:34AM (#48688571)

      this was my first thought as well, nothing so well executed could be done without inside information.

      Now for those who didn't realise before, this is why safecrackers find out what their target safe is and buy a duplicate to practice on first.

      • by mwvdlee ( 775178 )

        Really?

        So the fastest way to find whoever cracked a certain safe is to look in the purchase records for any middle-class individuals buying expensive safes?

        • You don't need the whole safe, just the lock.

    • Like an episode of 24...

      Following the story on Slashdot is like watching all of the "Previouslies..." but none of the episodes.

      You pretty much get the gist and save a shitload of time.

    • That can mean only one thing.... we need to invade Iraq.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:23AM (#48688515)

    Nothing anywhere near conclusive from the information provided.

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

      but clearly excludes direct State involvement.

    • by d1on1x ( 790202 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:12AM (#48688693)

      Nothing anywhere near conclusive from the information provided.

      While that is true, the same is true for the information released that suggested North-Korea is/was/would-be behind the hack.

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Never publish your real evidence that could compromise the investigation, just the circumstantial bits to get the public interested.

      If it was just circumstantial bits, then they can't come to a conclusion, of course. The presumption is they have more info

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        You can presume they have more. Perhaps Norse has a good enough reputation to merit that presumption. The other party's reputation, however, is quite a bit poorer, and I do not make that presumption about them.

    • by NoKaOi ( 1415755 )

      Nothing anywhere near conclusive from the information provided.

      More conclusive than, "A Korean IP address was involved, so it must have been the North Korean government!"

    • circumstantial yes, but far more substantial than the flimsy evidence the US Government used to declare it was NK.

  • any of them SAP developers? Seems their SpiritWORLD media systems was at the heart of the penetration. Also, TFA talks about them being able to "sneak terabytes of data off of the network without arousing notice." If your malware could take all the info it collects and sticks it together into some fake "media files" then the data being transferred might never have been noticed.
    • Re:lemme guess (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ancientt ( 569920 ) <ancientt@yahoo.com> on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:23AM (#48688769) Homepage Journal

      You're making this too hard. You can upload terabytes of data using good old SSL or encrypt files with zip tools like 7-zip and there is nothing in the stream of data that will be recognized... that's what encryption is for.

      The person wanting to get data out doesn't have to work hard at all to ensure it can't be recognized as it is being transmitted. The difficulty is in making sure that the users of the system don't notice the decrease in disk IO and loss of bandwidth. If they've got a good perimeter defense or the right heuristics for the server, they may notice "hey, that's more activity than usual" and respond, but that's about the only way to catch somebody in the act of transporting data out of a system.

      Unless they're stupid. Which, with Sony's security, they could have been.

      • Or unless sending terabytes of data out is routine. Sony Pictures makes movies. Movies are digital. Digital video loves disk space.

        So sending dozens of gigabytes a day to any random address may well be business as usual.

        • by cusco ( 717999 )

          I'd be surprised if they don't ship out big pile of bits for rendering on the AWS/Google/MS clouds, since it's so much cheaper than buying dedicated CPUs that will then sit unused until the next batch of rendering needs to be done. Much of the original Star Wars movies were actually rendered after hours on servers at Informix and ARC GIS networks, so it's nothing new.

          • There are some cloud rendering solutions out there, but most studios have their own render farms in-house... and a lot of the companies you think are studios are mainly just production companies that outsource most of the heavy lifting to specialized shops (who work on multiple projects simultaneously and have no problem keeping a render farm busy).

        • thanks, that's pretty much what I was saying. Huge data transfers are just part of their business.
        • by Optali ( 809880 )

          6-7 years ago I worked for the then biggest payment service provider, BIBIT, we were part of the Royal Bank of Scotland and had a massive datacentre in Scotland, I am now unable to tell how big, only that it was huge.

          Well every time Sony had a launch of some product (PS3, films, etc) they had to tell us in advance because they laid our whole datacentre flat. I recall once having to stay up in the middle of the night because we thought a massive DoS attack was going on as no other merchants were able to conn

  • from TFA (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jbmartin6 ( 1232050 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:28AM (#48688535)

    Stammberger was careful to note that his company’s findings are hardly conclusive

    Draw your own conclusion. At least he didn't throw in the old 'we have other information we won't reveal' claim the government always uses to mask its own speculation.

  • by bickerdyke ( 670000 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:33AM (#48688561)

    Now being skilled and being laid of automatically makes you a crime suspect for having "means and motive".

    For uns in IT business, we wouldn't be hired if we wouldn't have the knowledge that could also be used for blackhat purposes, and being laid of during a restructering is usually nothing an individual can control.

    Thank you....

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:42AM (#48688587)

      motive, means, opportunity:

      MOTIVE: disgruntled ex employees. Check.
      MEANS: prearmed with information on the machinations of SPE, not ordinarily known to the public. Check.
      OPPORTUNITY: High profile release with the potential to piss off a State leader and shift the blame onto him. Check.

      Yes, being a pissed off ex employee with inside information and the chance to make a high profile disruption to those who would risk your mortgage and pension with little to no personal risk is a big fucking bullseye.

      • by bickerdyke ( 670000 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:59AM (#48688633)

        Yes, but it shouldn't be THAT easy to produce people with those bullseyes.

        "Hey, let's fire a few IT guys. Just in case we need to bring up some capeable, disgruntled ex-employees as scapegoats if we ever get hacked."

        It's an effing huge diffrence if you are a suspect for something you are or do, or for something that someone else does to you.

        • "Hey, let's fire a few IT guys. Just in case we need to bring up some capeable, disgruntled ex-employees as scapegoats if we ever get hacked."

          It looks like somebody needs to look up the terms liable, slanderous and more then likely falsifying and suppressing evidence. The correct thing to do for anyone caught in the scenario you are describing is ... nothing. Just sit back and let them dig a hole so deep that you can comfortably retire.

          • Except juries are well known to have convicted people of crimes which they haven't committed with less-than-bullet-proof evidence -- usually because the media had already crucified the defendant publicly before the trial even started.

            Are you really going to sit by and let it build up until it's too late? Yeah, most likely you'll get a fat settlement. The downside risk, however, is spending ten years in jail for a crime you didn't commit. That gamble isn't worth it.
        • I think the point was that Norse Security looked at this as if it was a criminal investigation as opposed to a political finger pointing match. If the police were investigating a crime and found that an ex-employee had posted angry statements about being fired prior to the crime being committed (Motive) and had the means and opportunity to do so, they would definitely be investigated as a suspect. Rightfully so, too.

          Note that being investigated doesn't mean being charged with a crime. If the investigatio

          • I think the point was that Norse Security looked at this as if it was a criminal investigation as opposed to a political finger pointing match.

            Except those weren't their fingers they were pointing and waggling at each other.

          • I think the point was that Norse Security looked at this as if it was a criminal investigation as opposed to a political finger pointing match. If the police were investigating a crime and found that an ex-employee had posted angry statements about being fired prior to the crime being committed (Motive) and had the means and opportunity to do so, they would definitely be investigated as a suspect. Rightfully so, too.

            Absolutely right. But let's think this through to the end. So, if I ever get laid off I would
            a) not have the right to be "disgruntled" unless
            b) I make sure I'll be surrounded by a potential witness just in case I'm investigated and need to produce an alibi for any time an attack on my ex-employer might have happend.

            As you said, If I can't do that I wouldn't be dropped from the list of suspects unless "the investigation showed that the person had a good alibi or uncovered evidence that pointed away from that

            • You're right. In any serious investigation, there will be people investigated and harassed just on the basis of a few things. If your spouse is murdered, for example, the police are going to suspect and investigate you, and that's going to suck.

              What is likely to happen, if you're innocent, is that the police will not find sufficient evidence to indict, whether or not they find the guilty party. This isn't a Phoenix Wright game, where you can only get acquitted of murder if you can convince the judge s

              • Yes. But it's not only judge and jury. Friends, Neighbours, employers, media..... to all of them you will stay the guy who never got convicted for the murder of his wife, if the guilty party can't be found.

            • > a) not have the right to be "disgruntled" unless

              Note that the part of the post you quoted talks about posting "angry statements". E.g. don't publically claim you're gonna make them sorry. Stay off social media.

              BTW, this is not exclusive to cyberspace. In meatspace, if you go around badmouthing someone, talking about how you're "gonna make him pay", and that someone is soon found murdered, you're a potential suspect.

      • by znrt ( 2424692 )

        pissed off ex employee with inside information and the chance to make a high profile disruption to those who would risk your mortgage and pension with little to no personal risk is a big fucking bullseye.

        this simply narrows down your search, doesn't make anyone a suspect. it might turn out to be bogus and the motives totally different.

        but they claim to have found a connection, that's a lead. not a strong one, in my opinion, but they may have no better. anyone wondering how they got access to the irc content? duh ...

      • It's still speculation, and only circumstantial evidence.
      • motive, means, opportunity:

        MOTIVE: Maniacal leader, irrationally hates movie. Check.
        MEANS: l33t haxor squad. Check.
        OPPORTUNITY: disgruntled IT person sells info on computer network. Check.

        See, it's fun to connect dots.

        • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

          ok. Cite your sources. Mine are all in the summary.

          • I'm not going to cite sources for maniacal leader or l33t haxor squad. Those are well known. For disgruntled employee, I'm citing the summary as well. People laid off of work, complaining online, etc. The summary (and article) is conjecturing that disgruntledness alone is sufficient for carrying out a devastating attack. I'll conjecture that a NK operative located a disgruntled employee through web chats and bribed him to get the needed info. That's just as valid as your story.

    • That's absolutely correct. Again, means and motives. The intersection of those two sets would give you persons of interest. If a security researcher doesn't look at the admins in a breech, would you consider them competent?

      So you might be a 'suspect'. In the real word (as opposed the paranoid crazy version here) someone would politely sit down with you and discuss a few things. Then someone else might come over and discuss some more things. Your work logs might be reviewed. If you worked through home

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:03AM (#48688651)

        It DOESN'T mean that the swat team will barrel through your door or that the FBI will cart off your desk.

        Unless the local Sheriff's Department just took delivery of that surplus MRAP and M4s and wants to try them out.

      • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:13AM (#48688703)

        It DOESN'T mean that the swat team will barrel through your door or that the FBI will cart off your desk.

        And some times it does. Seems like the best thing is to make certain no one thinks you are disgruntled

        • "Seems like the best thing is to make certain no one thinks you are disgruntled"

          I was thinking of saying something similar, about not using social media. However it occurred to me that they could just as easily read your email if they wanted to. So it would require never writing any email saying anything negative about your former company, to anyone... Well that is not freedom of communication in the slightest.
          You would end up having to _believe_ that you actually weren't discruntled to be able to hide it s

      • Yes, but that's not how it happens in real life.

        Even if the full SWAT team is a rather rare, it's not unheard of. And those people who will sit down and politely ask some questions still probably may well arrive in police cars parked in front of my house. May be enough to have to look for a new neighbourhood to move to.

        But even that isn't more as an unlikely nuissance. Your name will most likely leak somewhere and each and every script kiddie that couldn't log into PSN on Christmas (not related, I know. but

      • by eth1 ( 94901 )

        So you might be a 'suspect'. In the real word (as opposed the paranoid crazy version here) someone would politely sit down with you and discuss a few things. Then someone else might come over and discuss some more things.

        If you're a 'suspect', and they want to talk to you, then at a minimum, you're forced to pay to retain counsel (unless you're stupid, and talk to them without one). So you're screwed no matter what at that point.

    • How would it not? Having means and motive does not make you guilty, though. A subtlety missed by many.

      • Read the headline. It's obviously enough to be "identified [...] as perpetrator". I know, I'm not a native english speaker, but doesn't that imply at least some level of guilt? The missed subtlety that the public misses is if he is found guilty by a scandinavian antivirus-company or by judge and jury. So if the name of that suspect leaks somehow (which is more than likely), he will be guilty in the eyes of the public. Including future potential employers.

        Way to easy to have your life ruined without being gu

        • Read the headline. It's obviously enough to be "identified [...] as perpetrator". I know, I'm not a native english speaker, but doesn't that imply at least some level of guilt?

          That sentence, as written, implies guilt, without any doubt. If I was the engineer who was accused, and everything was in the UK, I would sue for libel, and I would win.

    • by Optali ( 809880 )

      For uns in IT business, [...]

      Bisste Deutscher? LOL

  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:43AM (#48688589) Journal
    I was assured by numerous talking heads that this particular network intrusion against a Japanese multinational was not only state-sponsored; but an act of Cyber-terror-war against America and the Homeland, and something that could only be answered in a suitably apocalyptic fashion, lest our nation's honor be soiled!

    How could it possibly be something as pedestrian as upset employees?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Because in corporate America they are the same thing.

      • by zlives ( 2009072 )

        move along ACitizen nothing to see here. just be thankful that your glorious leaders has protected you from heinous and continuing cyber terror.
        also mod +1

    • by ColdWetDog ( 752185 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @11:15AM (#48689115) Homepage

      answered in a suitably apocalyptic fashion

      Cool. So the rumors that Kayne West and Kim Kardiashian are moving to Pyongyang are true?

    • Bang on the money. The well reasoned arguments here: http://marcrogers.org/2014/12/... [marcrogers.org]

      were made before the DPRK link was fixed in the news cycle. It was then instructive to watch workings of the new McCarthyist cheerleaders, even (especially) here on Slashdot. People seriously writing 'the FBI have all the incriminating evidence, they just can't share it with you' type-comments.

      The eleven years since the non-existence of WMDs may seem long time for the kiddies running the military's multiple personality s

  • by Nyder ( 754090 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:56AM (#48688625) Journal

    And yet I was called a North Korean and other things for saying what is obvious.

    Love the internet. So fuck you all. I was right and you FBI/President believing dumb fucks are wrong, again.

    As I said before, the USA owes the NK a big fucking apology.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:18AM (#48688735)

      I just talked with all the rest of the guys here on Slashdot, and we all agree: how could we be so stupid? We're all sorry and it definitely won't happen again; we'll pay really close attention to everything you say from here on out.

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

      but they won't. Sony won't even offer KJU any royalty for using his likeness in an entertainment (term used loosely) without his express consent. Why should they? No, seriously, why? Enquiring minds wish to know.

    • by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:40AM (#48688861)
      Umm, you think that the inconclusive opinions of a subsidiary of Monoc Security are positive proof?

      Seems to me you're doing exactly what the guys you're poo-pooing were doing - using your own opinions to turn next to no data into proof positive that you were right.

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        While you are correct that the opinions aren't conclusive, THEY ADMIT THAT. For that reason I'm willing to give their opinions reasonable credence, and scoff at those who believe the spokesman for the FIB.

    • by meta-monkey ( 321000 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:45AM (#48688897) Journal

      That sounds just like something a North Korean would say...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I like how you worked both "I told you so" and "I was right, you were wrong" in there. Wait, are you my girlfriend? Baby, is that you? Come back to bed honey, I didn't mean any of those awful things I said.

    • And yet I was called a North Korean and other things for saying what is obvious.

      Love the internet. So fuck you all. I was right and you FBI/President believing dumb fucks are wrong, again.

      As I said before, the USA owes the NK a big fucking apology.

      So some information comes out that it might be someone outside of NK or sponsored by NK (at least based on this little bit of information that isn't really even classifiable as evidence) and you are ready to beat your chest about how right you were? Sounds like you are exactly as right as everyone who said it was NK last week. I would start a slow clap, but...

    • by Deadstick ( 535032 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @11:05AM (#48689037)

      OK, let's see. A government agency issues an opinion on who did it: Obviously a lie.

      A commercial security company issues an opinion on who did it: Case closed.

      Love the Internet.

    • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

      As I said before, the USA owes the NK a big fucking apology.

      We just released a movie starring their beloved leader. Is that not enough?

  • Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:06AM (#48688665) Homepage Journal

    starting by looking for individuals with the "means and motive" to do the attack.

    The problem is that Sony is- I wanted to say incredibly lax about security, but that's clearly not right — egregiously careless about security, and also typically, boringly evil so the people with motive are legion. You could find people with motive and opportunity under any rock.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Yes. The "conclusions" are "This is not conclusive.", and I believe that. It's also a reasonable scenario, with reasonable amount of data (that's checkable if you care enough). This quite different from the pronouncement by the government.

      Your point, that it could be any number of other groups I also believe to be correct, though I haven't investigated.

  • Wait what?

    They searched through Sonys files, found a layoff... and that's a surprise?
    And then they found that there were some with "Technical background" that were laid off at the same time?
    Then they found that one of those had access to one of the first servers that got penetrated?
    Oh no! They were in a "hacking IRC channel"!!! That's like all... of the IRC channels. And he used his real name in the channel? I doubt that...

    In summary, they found out that Sony had a layoff that affected at least 1 sysadmin a

  • Your choice, co-ordinated propaganda campaign or massive incompetence.

  • by plsuh ( 129598 ) <plsuh@noSpAM.goodeast.com> on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:30AM (#48688799) Homepage

    Folks,

    The evidence here is really, really weak. The connection is tenuous enough and the original pool of possible suspects via their methodology is large enough that I sure as heck wouldn't rule out a connection via random chance. Until we get better evidence, this isn't worth very much.

    Norse Security says as much in The Fine Article:

    Stammberger was careful to note that his company's findings are hardly conclusive, and may just add wrinkles to an already wrinkled picture of what happened at Sony Pictures. He said Norse employees will be briefing the FBI on Monday about their findings.

    "They're the investigators," Stammberger said. "We're going to show them our data and where it points us. As far as whether it is proof that would stand up in a court of law? That's not our job to determine, it is theirs," he said of the FBI.

    --Paul

  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:41AM (#48688875) Journal
    Is working for Sony that bad?
    • If SPE fires talented people with a long tenure of service and puts them at risk of homelessness because reasons, then yes, I would say they probably are a bad company to work for, which is why I will not purchase any of SPE's products ever again. I will also favor changes in policies to give workers who are fulfilling their duties in the private sector more (not absolute) job security through concrete actions via lobbying officials at opportune moments and contributing capital to political movements that a

    • Is working for Sony that bad?

      Deja vu. This exact question was asked the last time Sony made the news.

      Yes. Yes it is.

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @11:03AM (#48689015)
    ... it looks like Norse found what they wanted to find, and not necessarily the reality of what happened.
  • by future assassin ( 639396 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @01:19PM (#48690227)

    and see where the stones fall, then post a disclaimer on the article saying "Well it might not be him" ????? Profit?

  • The US gov can not afford to admit a mistake, after executing a DOS attack against NK.

Remember to say hello to your bank teller.

Working...