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Security The Military United States

Pentagon Discloses Network Breach By Russian Hackers 64

An anonymous reader writes: The Pentagon has disclosed that Russian hackers were able to breach one of its secure networks earlier this year, and referred to the attack as a "worrisome" incident. "Earlier this year, the sensors that guard DOD's unclassified networks detected Russian hackers accessing one of our networks," said defense secretary Ash Carter yesterday during a speech at Stanford University. Carter warned Russia that the U.S. Department of Defense would retaliate with cyber campaigns should it see fit. "Adversaries should know that our preference for deterrence and our defensive posture don't diminish our willingness to use cyber options if necessary," said Carter. He added in a prepared statement that the Russian hackers had been able to gain access to an "unclassified network" but had been "quickly identified" by a team of cyberattack experts who managed to block the hackers "within 24 hours." The cybersecurity response team had quickly analyzed the hack patterns and code and identified the intruders as Russian, before "kicking them off the network."
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Pentagon Discloses Network Breach By Russian Hackers

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    Apparently their definition of "secure network" is different from what I thought it was.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It isn't what you think - as an isolated network.

      There are thousands of connections between the secure net and the unclassified network due to the amount of data that must be transferred. Even where I worked 20 years ago, the amount of data being transferred by tapes was many GB per hour - and tape handling was too slow to keep up.

      And the summary is incorrect. The penetration was of an unclassified network. From the article itself:
      "The United States on Thursday disclosed a cyber intrusion this year by Russi

    • Apparently their definition of "secure network" is different from what I thought it was.

      A "secure network", depending on security and networking requirements, may be a "network" that -to be useful- is connected to external resources (thus "bad guys" may attempt to connect), and "secure" enough to detect unauthorized access, so further actions could be taken (i.e., dealing with the "bad guys").

  • If you're know they're in, wouldn't it be better to turn the "breach" into a honeypot?
    Let them into a secured system which looks useful, but in reality feeds them bad data.

  • by Trepidity ( 597 ) <delirium-slashdot@@@hackish...org> on Friday April 24, 2015 @12:52PM (#49546075)

    Sounds like an R-rated 1990s film.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday April 24, 2015 @12:54PM (#49546089)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Friday April 24, 2015 @12:55PM (#49546093)

    Carter cited the newly declassified incident during an address at Stanford University, in which he also warned the Pentagon was ready to help defend America's networks and to use cyber weaponry, if needed.

    so instead of hoarding exploits you are going to patch them? or will you hold companies liable for poorly written software? or maybe require CS students learn how to write secure software? or publish a free OS that is secure by default?

    the Department of Defense was previously named the Department of War for a good reason.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Don't you get it, it works the American way. Eye for an Eye. One person from a country attacks me, then I am allowed to attack anyone from that country for any reason and in any way, as well as attack all those from that country who would try to stop be attacking some one in that country.

      So in computer parlance, let's all play the electromagnetic pulse game because that is really going to work so well for everyone.

  • Rocky: "Hey, what's the meaning of this?"

    Agent: "Military intelligence. That phrase mean anything to you?"

    Rocky: "It sounds like a contradiction of terms."
  • Come on, so tell us (small US biz) how we can also prevent these attacks. Between virus (expensive to clean up) and anti-virus (expensive to buy), small biz in the US are under a lot of pressure.
  • ... is the root of all solutions.

  • Trademark of USG.

  • "Carter said that sensors guarding the Pentagon's unclassified networks detected the intrusion by Russian hackers, who discovered an old vulnerability that had not been patched."

    Maybe they were looking for evidence of the UFO coverup and the intrusion consisted of logging into a passwordless WindowsNT box. ref [theguardian.com]

    "On Thursday, Carter stressed the U.S. military needed closer cooperation with California's Silicon Valley, particularly after high-profile attacks on companies like Sony Pictures Entertainment.
  • Yawn, Pentagon gets hacked regularly I'm sure. This isn't news - it's been made news because some bigwig wants to demonise Russia, hence scary Russian hackers story.

    NSA, CIA of course never hack anybody.

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

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