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Major hacking attack in US looms: expert survey

Cyber attacks might be taking a toll now, but just wait: a survey of experts says things are likely to get even worse in the US over the next decade.

A majority of cybersecurity experts surveyed in a poll see a likelihood of major damage from a cyber attack in the coming years, according to a Pew Research Center report.

From the 1,600 experts polled, 61 percent answered “yes” to the question: “By 2025, will a major cyber attack have caused widespread harm to a nation’s security and capacity to defend itself and its people?”

“Widespread harm,” the survey explained, would mean significant loss of life or property losses, damage, theft in the tens of billions of dollars.

“There was considerable agreement among these experts that individuals could be more vulnerable and businesses could persistently be under attack,” said Lee Rainie, a co-author of the report and director of the Pew Research Center’s Internet Project.

“They said essential utilities are a vulnerable target and theft and economic disruptions could be substantial.”

The remaining 39 percent surveyed said major damage from a cyber attack could be avoided.

“Some confidently pointed out that the threat of counterattack might deter the worst,” said Janna Anderson of Elon University’s Imagining the Internet Center, which conducted the study with Pew.

“And many used the Cold War as a metaphor, saying severe harm is unlikely due to the threat of mutually assured disruption. Some said cyber threats are being exaggerated by people who might profit most from creating an atmosphere of fear.”

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Some of the experts said the cyber threats are already here, or on the horizon.

“A bellicose China might ‘cyber invade’ the military capabilities of Japan and South Korea as part of the conflict around the China sea, leading to the need to reconfigure their electronics, at huge cost,” said Stowe Boyd, lead researcher for Gigaom Research.

“Israel and the United States have already created the Stuxnet computer worm to damage Iran’s nuclear refinement centrifuges.”

Those threats have already harmed the US as well, an expert pointed out.

“People have died from faulty equipment producing gas pipeline explosions and from drone bombings of civilians. US companies have lost billions worth of business as foreign customers no longer trust their products and services,” said Judith Perrolle, a professor at Northeastern University.

The report comes a day after the top US cyber official said the country’s military is looking to flex its muscles in cyberspace as a “deterrence” to hackers eying American targets.

Also this week, US security researchers said in two separate reports that the Russian and Chinese governments are likely behind widespread cyber-espionage that has hit targets in the United States and elsewhere.

One team of researchers led by the security firm Novetta Solutions said it identified a hacker group believed to act “on behalf of a Chinese government intelligence apparatus.”

A separate report by the security firm FireEye said a long-running effort to hack into US defense contractors, Eastern European governments and European security organizations is “likely sponsored by the Russian government.”

The Pew survey is part of a series of reports tied to the 25th anniversary of the World Wide Web. The survey was not a based on a random sample but a selected group of 1,642 experts and scholars.

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Israeli defense computer hit in cyber attack: data expert

Hackers attacked Israeli computers including one used by the defence ministry department dealing with civilians in the occupied West Bank, an Israeli data protection expert said on Monday.

“At the beginning of this month a number of mails were sent to a number of companies in Israel, including security organizations,” Aviv Raff, chief technology officer at Israeli cyber security firm Seculert told army radio.

“There was an attachment… and whoever opened it was infected with a virus, a Trojan Horse, which allowed the attackers to control those computers. One of the computers belonged to the Civil Administration,” he said in reference to the defence ministry department, which is staffed by the military.

Asked to comment on the report, the military said in a written statement to AFP: “The reports of the incident are currently being looked into.”

Raff did not identify the source of the attack but the radio said it was “apparently from Gaza” and added that 15 Israeli computers were targeted.

It said that only the Civil Administration’s public network was affected and that no classified communications were compromised.

Raff said that the virus allowed the attacker “complete control of the infected computers. The attackers could carry out any operation within that network.”

“The moment that we detected it we cancelled the hackers’ control and notified the relevant authorities,” he added.

Israeli politicians and security officials often warn of the dangers of hacking and say they have thwarted numerous attempted attacks.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told cabinet ministers on Sunday that during his visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos he found extensive interest in Israel’s cyber security capabilities.

“It is widely understood that in the information age information must be protected, otherwise there will be chaos; the jungle,” he said.

“The assessment is that Israel, due to our special circumstances, could offer various solutions in this area. It is clear that there is a great opportunity and challenge for us here.”

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Hackers hit UN atomic agency server, post expert details

By on Thursday, November 29th, 2012

The UN atomic agency said Wednesday that hackers had accessed one of its computer servers and posted the contact details of some of the watchdog’s experts online.

International Atomic Energy Agency spokeswoman Gill Tudor said “some contact details” related to experts working with the IAEA were published Sunday on a hacker site.

The hackers posted a statement on Cryptome.org calling for an investigation into the nuclear programme of Israel, the Middle East’s sole if undeclared nuclear-armed country, which is not a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

“The IAEA deeply regrets this publication of information stolen from an old server that was shut down some time ago. In fact, measures had already been taken to address concern over possible vulnerability in this server,” Tudor said.

She added that the IAEA’s technical and security teams “are continuing to analyse the situation and do everything possible to help ensure that no further information is vulnerable.”

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