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Security The Military

Hacktivists Say They Hacked Belarus Rail System To Stop Russian Military Buildup (arstechnica.com) 71

Hacktivists in Belarus said on Monday they had infected the network of the country's state-run railroad system with ransomware and would provide the decryption key only if Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko stopped aiding Russian troops ahead of a possible invasion of Ukraine. Ars Technica reports: Referring to the Belarus Railway, a group calling itself Cyber Partisans wrote on Telegram: "BelZhD, at the command of the terrorist Lukashenko, these days allows the occupying troops to enter our land. As part of the 'Peklo' cyber campaign, we encrypted the bulk of the servers, databases and workstations of the BelZhD in order to slow down and disrupt the operation of the road. The backups have been destroyed [...]." The group also announced the attack on Twitter.

A representative from the group said in a direct message that the Peklo cyber campaign targets specific entities and government-run companies with the goal of pressuring the Belarus government to release political prisoners and stop Russian troops from entering Belarus to use its ground for the attacks on Ukraine. "The government continues to suppress the free will of Belarusians, imprison innocent people, they continue to unlawfully keep... thousands of political prisoners," the representative wrote. "The major goal is to overthrow Lukashenko's regime, keep the sovereignty and build a democratic state with the rule of law, independent institutions and protection of human rights."

At the time this post went live, several services on the railway's website were unavailable. Online ticket purchases, for instance, weren't working [...]. The representative said that besides ticketing and scheduling being disrupted, the cyberattack also affected freight trains. According to reports, Russia has been sending military equipment and personnel by rail into Belarus, which shares a border with Ukraine. @belzhd_live, a group of Belarus Railway workers that tracks activity on the 5,512-km railway, said on Friday that in a week's time, more than 33 Russian military trains loaded with equipment and troops had arrived in Belarus for joint strategic exercises there. The worker group said at the time that it expected a total of 200 so-called echelons to arrive in the coming days.

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Hacktivists Say They Hacked Belarus Rail System To Stop Russian Military Buildup

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  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Monday January 24, 2022 @06:29PM (#62204299)

    This is one of the very few times hacking is justified. Anything to slow or stop the moves of a dictator is a good thing.

    In this case, it will give Ukraine more time to disperse all those NLAWS, Javelins, and Stingers across their forces. A welcoming gift for Vasily and his buddies. Who knows which one they'll receive.

    • Is it? Well 'good use' is in the eye of the beholder, just like a terrorist is for some people a freedom fighter and for others, well, a terrorist. All it really does is getting yourself on a deathlist, as you can bet they will try to find you and stop you.
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      Putin is not a nice man but... Eastern Ukraine is mostly Russian speaking and its mostly old soviet industry still heavily tied Russian business. Its not the least bit clear a majority of the people who live there would not rather be Russians! Though opinion has soured some since the Crimea. Of course Western Ukraine is tightly coupled to Europe. For economic reasons Kiev would never voluntarily give up the eastern industrial area. So what you have here is disperse majority with its concentration far away t

      • Countering Chinese aggression toward Taiwan has much much clearly national security interests.

        Does it now? Europe is one of the biggest markets for US products and services on the planet. Any major shooting war in Europe, courtesy of Putin, will severely affect the US economy. The US has major national security and economic interests in there being no shooting war in Europe.

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          ah but there is effectively a 0% change of Russia expanding a shooting war into NATO territory. The market that matters to the US is Western Europe.

          Meanwhile if China took control of Taiwan they would have such complete control of key supply chain, that we'd be a marionette puppet with China at the strings. Having a market to sell other than ag products into would be quite literally the least of our worries.

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      There's one problem. Well, two problems.

      First, America. The Republicans will win in November, and the Republicans back Trump and Putin. There's a decent chance a Republican Congress would provide material support to Russia or to Ukrainians who favour a dictatorship. They will certainly curtail any support of a pro-democracy movement in Ukraine, just as they oppose democracy in America itself.

      Second, you're assuming Ukraine hasn't been infiltrated at this point and that all of those weapons are in the hands

      • 1) The Republicans have about a 55% chance of winning a majority of Congress or the Senate. Trump will NOT be in power, no matter what. Biden will still be in charge and has the power to continue to fight back.

        2) The weapons is a good argument. There is the chance that bad actors will end up with them. But the 'no good guys or bad guys' is total bull shit. That is an argument you will lose. It is pushed by the bad guys, mainly by pointing out to the many circumstances where both sides are bad guys

    • by surfcow ( 169572 )

      Do you really want *anyone* using the national transportation system as a weapon?

      When Russians do this on US soil, you may feel less certain.

      I would rather hackers stayed out of warfare and politics entirely.

      Too many good hackers turn out to be stupid people. Or sell out.

  • Hacks from one side or the other do pretty nasty things .. while a response to the other's sides acts is warranted , fact is that what we accuse of Russia of doing .. we do. One side ain't better than the other.

    • One side ain't better than the other.

      Truly, activists who peacefully delay the army of an authoritarian regime on its way to invade a democratic neighbor are no better than the invaders themselves. gtfowts

    • Wars don't decide who is right. Only who is left.
  • by Whateverthisis ( 7004192 ) on Monday January 24, 2022 @08:07PM (#62204497)
    This shows a lack of strategic thinking. There was no way this was a false flag or the work of the US State Department as others are suggesting. This was absolutely the work of amateurs who know nothing about the value of an attack.

    1) the rail website, at least in English, is up and you can buy tickets. So good job, replaced in a few hours.

    2) Russia is stationing troops to up the ante and force the West to agree to it's terms. It's unlikely to invade in at least the next 1-2 weeks as the US has promised a response by Jan 30. Any damage this hack would cause would be fixed if they do mount an attack, and the Russians already have overwhelming force (~100,000 troops and armor and air support) in the theater.

    3) At best, this slows down the forces moving from Siberia, but again it won't slow down an actual attack because the servers would be repaired and fixed before it goes up and the Serbian forces would be 2nd wave anyways.

    4) I've never ridden Belarusian rail, but i imagine it's on the older side. Meaning the Russians don't need to buy tickets, they just commandeer the trains, run them on manual, and tell all other trains to get the hell out of the way.

    5) meanwhile the new servers will be hardened and protected and watched so this won't happen again very easily.

    This is an annoyance and doesn't change the WHY Russian troops are there. it doesn't change anyone's strategic calculus, and it's both too late to stop the buildup and to early to stop the invasion. What a stupid waste of time.

    • 1) They hacked the systems that control the trains, the fact that you can buy tickets is worthless.

      2) This is about slowing the deployment of additional Russian troops, which it HAS done.

      3) Yes, that it what it is supposed to do. How much do you expect civilians to be able to do? But slowing supplies and troops is a HUGE effect. It is the difference between having 100k soldiers facing 50k, killing them with losses, then having to repeat it 3 times, and having 100k soliders face 200k and losing.

      4) Any idi

      • You are just going along with the fantasy these hackers have, that by hacking they can actually stop Russia from what it's doing.

        The actual articles state that the only thing affected was teh services to issue electronic travel documents; meaning tickets. That's all they affected. The hackers themselves state that "automation and security systems were not affected to avoid an emergency situation". Ok, so the trains can still be managed and run because not all systems were affected. Therefore the Rus

  • Trains can run without computers, computers just make it easy.

    You want to bring their rail network down?

    Create some simultaneous train derailments and disable or obfuscate their switching and signaling systems.

    Or even better, remove some actual tracks or bring some bridge crossings out of commission.

    Disabling their website is kids games.

    • my thoughts exactly - do they even do this using computers? jokes aside, they of course might but I bet actual traffic controls are mostly not wired over internet even if some can interface with modern systems.
  • In just a headline, tell me a critical state service is using Windows without telling me they're using Windows.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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