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Russia's Sandworm Hackers Attempted a Third Blackout In Ukraine (wired.com) 40

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: More than half a decade has passed since the notorious Russian hackers known as Sandworm targeted an electrical transmission station north of Kyiv a week before Christmas in 2016, using a unique, automated piece of code to interact directly with the station's circuit breakers and turn off the lights to a fraction of Ukraine's capital. That unprecedented specimen of industrial control system malware has never been seen again -- until now: In the midst of Russia's brutal invasion of Ukraine, Sandworm appears to be pulling out its old tricks.

On Tuesday, the Ukrainian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-UA) and the Slovakian cybersecurity firm ESET issued advisories that the Sandworm hacker group, confirmed to be Unit 74455 of Russia's GRU military intelligence agency, had targeted high-voltage electrical substations in Ukraine using a variation on a piece of malware known as Industroyer or Crash Override. The new malware, dubbed Industroyer2, can interact directly with equipment in electrical utilities to send commands to substation devices that control the flow of power, just like that earlier sample. It signals that Russia's most aggressive cyberattack team attempted a third blackout in Ukraine, years after its historic cyberattacks on the Ukrainian power grid in 2015 and 2016, still the only confirmed blackouts known to have been caused by hackers.

ESET and CERT-UA say the malware was planted on target systems within a regional Ukrainian energy firm on Friday. CERT-UA says that the attack was successfully detected in progress and stopped before any actual blackout could be triggered. But an earlier, private advisory from CERT-UA last week, first reported by MIT Technology Review today, stated that power had been temporarily switched off to nine electrical substations. Both CERT-UA and ESET declined to name the affected utility. But more than 2 million people live in the area it serves, according to Farid Safarov, Ukraine's deputy minister of energy. [...] The revelation of Sandworm's attempted blackout attack provides more evidence that Russia's invasion of Ukraine has been accompanied by a new wave of cyberattacks on the country's networks and critical infrastructure, though with only mixed success.

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Russia's Sandworm Hackers Attempted a Third Blackout In Ukraine

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  • by Babel-17 ( 1087541 ) on Wednesday April 13, 2022 @12:22AM (#62442336)

    Bomber groups instead of hacker groups. But any kind of escalation, expansion of operations, is cause for concern.

    Those of us that get to live lives infinitely less strife-full feel tormented by mere spot shortages of goods, and disruptions of our internet connections. Even getting just brushed by a war, and not actually maimed or killed by it, is so much worse that few of us can easily remember having a hardship deserving of mention in the same breath.

    • the world economy is a war economy. but at least less so of late. the level of sanctions being used now were unthinkable 40 years ago. it was easier to let people fight it out then collect jewelry and gold teeth after the fact.

      • I heard a an old saying long ago from an eastern nation leadership.."why have gold teeth if you are not strong enough to keep them?"

  • This shows they didn't learn from the first time. How many more times does it take for people to get a clue?
  • by psergiu ( 67614 ) on Wednesday April 13, 2022 @12:40AM (#62442364)
  • by Bu11etmagnet ( 1071376 ) on Wednesday April 13, 2022 @03:11AM (#62442474)

    Are they working for the Harkonnen?

  • hacker or terrorist ?
  • That they "declined to name" is very suspicious. Did they shut off power to the steel mill where 5000 Nazis are holed up, rather than carpet bomb the infrastructure?

    Or did they target children's hospitals all over Ukraine?

    See, context is king. Transparency is needed for outsiders to take anyone seriously in a war. Propaganda is as real as bombs.

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