বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৬ মার্চ, ২০১৭

Justice Department charges Russian spies and criminal hackers in Yahoo intrusion

Justice Department charges Russian spies and criminal hackers in Yahoo intrusion


                   
The Justice Department announced the indictments of two Russian spies and two criminal hackers in connection with the heist of 500 million Yahoo user accounts in 2014. (The Washington Post)

The Justice Department announced Wednesday the indictments of two Russian spies and two criminal hackers in connection with the heist of 500 million Yahoo user accounts in 2014, marking the first U.S. criminal cyber charges ever against Russian government officials.The indictments target two members of the Russian intelligence agency FSB, and two hackers hired by the Russians.

The charges include hacking, wire fraud, trade secret theft and economic espionage, according to officials. The indictments are part of the largest hacking case brought by the United States.

The charges are unrelated to the hacking of the Democratic National Committee and the FBI’s investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign. But the move reflects the U.S. government’s increasing desire to hold foreign governments accountable for malicious acts in cyberspace.





The United States does not have an extradition treaty with Russia, but officials have said that taking steps such as charges and imposing sanctions can be a deterrent. People also sometimes slip up and travel to a country that is able and willing to transfer them to the United States for prosecution.


Yahoo reported the 2014 hack last fall — in what was then considered the largest data breach in history. The company later disclosed another intrusion affecting more than 1 billion user accounts in 2013, far surpassing the 2014 event. Officials have not determined whether there is a link between the two.


The twin hacks clouded the prospects for the sale of Yahoo’s core business to telecommunications giant Verizon. The deal is proceeding after Verizon negotiated the price down in the wake of the breaches.
The compromised accounts may have affected more than just email. Breaking into a Yahoo account would give the hackers access to users’ activity on Flickr, Tumblr, fantasy sports and other Yahoo applications.


In the 2014 hack, the FSB — Russia’s Federal Security Service, and a successor to the KGB — allegedly sought the information for intelligence purposes, targeting journalists, dissidents and U.S. government officials, but allowed the criminal hackers to use the email cache for the officials’ and the hackers’ financial gain, through spamming and other operations.
The charges “illustrate the murky world of Russian intel services using criminal hackers in a wide variety of ways,” said Milan Patel, a former FBI Cyber Division supervisory special agent who is now a managing director at K2 Intelligence, a cyber firm.Although FBI agents have long suspected that the Russians have used cyber mercenaries to do their work, this case is among the first in which evidence is offered to show that.

The indicted FSB officers are Dmitry Dokuchaev and Igor Sushchin, his superior. Particularly galling to U.S. officials is that the men worked for the cyber investigative arm of the FSB — a rough equivalent of the FBI’s Cyber Division. That the agency that is supposed to investigate computer intrusions in Russia is itself engaged in hacking is “pretty sad,” one official said.
Dokuchaev, whose hacker alias was “Forb,” was arrested in December in Moscow, according to the news agency Interfax, on charges of state treason for passing information to the CIA. He had reportedly agreed to work for the FSB to avoid prosecution for bank card fraud.
Another man indicted in the case is Alexsey Belan, who is on the list of most-wanted cyber criminals and has been charged twice before, in connection with intrusions into three major tech firms in Nevada and California in 2012 and 2013. He was in custody in Greece for a time but made his way back to Russia, where he is being protected by authorities, officials said.
The other hacker-for-hire is Karim Baratov, who was born in Kazakhstan but has Canadian citizenship. He was arrested in Canada on Tuesday.
The indictments grew out of a nearly two-year investigation by the FBI’s San Francisco office with the aid of international law enforcement, officials said. Sanctions and criminal charges are two tools that the Obama administration began using to punish and deter nation state hackers.
“They have the effect of galvanizing other countries that are watching what’s happening,” said Luke Dembosky, a former deputy assistant attorney general for national security. “They show that we have the resources and capabilities to identify the people at the keyboard, even in the most sophisticated cases.”


Three years ago, the United States charged five Chinese military hackers with economic espionage, marking the first time cyber-related charges were levied against foreign government officials.

After the Chinese military hackers were indicted, officials said their activity seemed to dwindle. And the indictments, Dembosky said, helped wrest a pledge in 2015 from the Chinese to stop economic cyberespionage against U.S. firms.

In early 2015, the Obama administration imposed economic sanctions on North Korea for its cyberattack on Sony Pictures’ systems.

And in late December, the Obama administration levied economic sanctionson Moscow for its election-year meddling. At the same time, the government sanctioned two Russian criminal hackers with no apparent connection to the Kremlin’s interference campaign. They included Belan, who is one of the four indicted in the Yahoo case.

Russian Agents Were Behind Yahoo Hack, U.S. Says

Russian Agents Were Behind Yahoo Hack, U.S. Says


Marissa Mayer, Yahoo’s chief executive, lost her 2016 bonus and 2017 stock compensation after an investigation into a security breach of user accounts. CreditSimon Dawson/Bloomberg

SAN FRANCISCO — The Justice Department charged two Russian intelligence officers on Wednesday with directing a sweeping criminal conspiracy that stole data on 500 million Yahoo accounts in 2014, deepening the rift between American and Russian authorities on cybersecurity.

The Russian government used the information obtained by the intelligence officers and two other men to spy on a range of targets, from White House and military officials to executives at banks, two American cloud computing companies, an airline and even a gambling regulator in Nevada, according to an indictment. The stolen data was also used to spy on Russian government officials and business executives, federal prosecutors said.

Russians have been accused of other cyberattacks on the United States — most notably the theft of emails last year from the Democratic National Committee. But the Yahoo case is the first time that federal prosecutors have brought cybercrime charges against Russian intelligence officials, according to the Justice Department.

Particularly galling to American investigators was that the two Russian intelligence agents they say directed the scheme, Dmitry Aleksandrovich Dokuchaev and Igor Anatolyevich Sushchin, worked for an arm of Russia’s Federal Security Service, or F.S.B., that is supposed to help foreign intelligence agencies catch cybercriminals. Instead, the officials helped the hackers avoid detection.

“The involvement and direction of F.S.B. officers with law enforcement responsibilities makes this conduct that much more egregious,” said Mary B. McCord, the acting assistant attorney general, at a news conference in Washington to announce the charges.


The two other men named in the indictment include a Russian hacker already indicted in connection with three other computer network intrusions and a Kazakh national living in Canada. One of the hackers also conducted an extensive spamming operation, stole credit and gift card information, and diverted Yahoo users looking for erectile dysfunction drugs to a particular pharmacy.

Yahoo Says It Was Hacked. Here’s How to Protect Yourself.

Simple tips to follow if you think your personal information online has been exposed to hackers.

Nikolay Lakhonin, a spokesman for the Russian embassy in Washington, said that Moscow had no “official reaction” to the indictments. But Mr. Lakhonin did point a reporter to two articles posted Wednesday in the Russian-sponsored Sputnik News that were openly skeptical of the charges. One was headlined “Yahoo Hack: What US Mainstream Media Don’t Tell You About Russian ‘Spy.’”Indeed, one of the two Russian intelligence agents indicted in the Yahoo case, Mr. Dokuchaev, was arrested in early December in what amounted to a purge of the Center for Information Security, the cyberwing of the F.S.B. Mr. Dokuchaev, who was reportedly a former hacker recruited to work in the F.S.B. at least seven years ago, and a fellow officer were accused of treason for passing secret information to the United States.

United States officials said Wednesday that they were not certain if the Dmitry Dokuchaev arrested in December was the same man as the one named in the indictment.

The Justice Department’s 47-count indictment, which was filed under seal in Federal District Court in San Francisco on Feb. 28, immediately threatened to escalate diplomatic tensions over Russia’s meddling in the November election.

“The indictments are intended to be a clear, public signal of what we will not accept,” said James A. Lewis, a cybersecurity expert at the Center for Strategic Studies, a research organization in Washington. “If you’re one of these people, you can’t leave Russia. You know you’ve been caught. There is an Interpol warrant out for your arrest.”

Karim Baratov is the only one of the accused hackers who has been arrested in connection with the case. He was captured by the authorities in Canada on Tuesday. The chances of the United States taking the other three into custody any time soon appear slim, especially because the United States has no extradition treaty with Russia.

Document: Indictment in Yahoo Data Breach


The fourth person involved in the scheme, a Russian named Alexsey Belan, had been indicted twice before for three intrusions into American e-commerce companies. At one point, he was arrested in Europe, but he escaped to Russia before he could be extradited. Prosecutors said they had repeatedly asked the Russian government to hand over Mr. Belan but had gotten no response.

Nonetheless, officials said that they believe criminal charges serve as a powerful tool to deter cyber-attacks. For example, they said, China’s hacking against United States targets decreased after charges were brought against five military officials there in 2014 over damaging attacks against government and private-sector systems.

The action on Wednesday was the latest in a series of criminal prosecutions that American officials have brought since 2014 against cyber-attackers who they charge were acting on behalf of foreign governments, including China, North Korea, and Iran.

Yahoo disclosed the theft of its data in September and said it was working with the law enforcement authorities to trace the perpetrators. The hackers were able to use the stolen information, which included personal data as well as encrypted passwords, to create a tool that gave them access to 32 million accounts over a period of two years.
In a statement on Wednesday, Yahoo thanked the F.B.I. and the Justice Department for their work.

Jack Bennett, the special agent in charge of the F.B.I.’s San Francisco office, said that his investigators had worked on the case for two years, although the inquiry intensified last year.

It remains unclear why Yahoo users were not informed about the hack during that time. An internal investigation by the company’s board found that some senior executives and information security personnel were aware of the breach shortly after it occurred but “failed to properly comprehend or investigate” the situation. Two weeks ago, the company’s top lawyer, Ronald S. Bell, resigned over the episode, and its chief executive, Marissa Mayer, lost her 2016 bonus and 2017 stock compensation.
INTERACTIVE GRAPHIC
How Many Times Has Your Personal Information Been Exposed to Hackers?

Find out which parts of your identity may have been stolen in major hacking attacks over the last three years.

OPEN INTERACTIVE GRAPHIC

Mr. Bennett said the F.B.I. was still investigating a separate, larger breach of one billion Yahoo accounts that occurred in 2013 but was disclosed by the company only three months ago. Yahoo has said it has not been able to glean much information about that attack, which was uncovered by InfoArmor, an Arizona security firm.

The two thefts, the largest known breaches of a private company’s computer systems, had threatened to scuttle a deal that Yahoo struck last summer to sell its internet businesses to Verizon Communications. Verizon sought to shave $925 million from the original $4.8 billion deal following news of the attacks, but last month, the two companies finally agreed to a $350 million price reduction.

Ms. McCord and other officials would not discuss any connection between the charges in the Yahoo case and an ongoing investigation into Russia’s meddling in the November election and a large-scale hack at the Democratic National Committee. Some investigators believe that the F.S.B. orchestrated the D.N.C. hack to help President Trump win the election.

Democrats were quick to link the attacks. Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, said that with Russia blamed in the cyberattacks involving both Yahoo and the presidential election, “the United States must take steps not only to bring those responsible to justice but also ensure future attacks are not allowed to occur in the first place.”

The main purpose of the Yahoo hack was to gather political and economic intelligence, officials said. The hackers stole a database of 500 million Yahoo users and other Yahoo software code which they used to falsify cookies, a technique that gave them full access to millions of Yahoo accounts without needing the passwords.

400COMMENTS

They found accounts of interest by searching non-Yahoo, recovery email addresses that users provided, allowing them to target employees of specific companies or organizations for other attacks. At least 50 Gmail accounts were targeted, as were accounts at financial firms and other technology providers.

Mr. Belan, one of the F.B.I.’s most-wanted cybercriminals, was also making money on the side as part of the scheme, officials said. He used information from the Yahoo accounts to steal credit and gift card numbers, send spam and redirect searches for erectile dysfunction treatments to an online pharmacy that paid for the traffic, according to the indictment.
                                                                         Secure 

Steam Charts: Slam dunk (da funk)

Steam Charts: Slam dunk (da funk)

Criminals are a superstitious cowardly lot. So its disguise must be able to strike terror into their hearts. It must be a creature of the night, black, terrible… it’s only the weekly Steam charts! These are the ten games with the most cumulative sales over the past week.
This week: DON’T SHOOT THE MESSENGER.

10. Left 4 Dead 2
Well hello, old friend. Back again after a temporary $4.99 discount (it’s back up to $20/£15 now, I’m afraid, which not so long ago I would have met with a ‘bluh but how come not everyone in the known universe already owns this?’ query. That CSGO is in this chart week after week after week after week puts paid to such things, however.

My main memory of Left 4 Dead 2 is Kieron Gillen screaming blue murder at me because I raced ahead of the pack to kill zombos with a sword, and he felt that my back was getting in the way of his guns. Learn 2 Aim, more like.


9. Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands
What a dramatic fall for Ubisoft’s latest open-world psycho-soldier game! It made it to position six last week. I guess middling and even broadly negative reviews (such as ours) have knocked the wind out of its sails, eh?

8. Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands
Ah, silly me. Must be the deluxe edition. Still a bit of a drop. Let’s be honest, this game is clearly dead in the water. Why, I bet it was our Brendy who delivered the killing blow. THE POWER.

7. Blackwake


Last week I erroneously wrote that team sizes in this multiplayer nautical combat game were 16 each, instead of the actual 27. I got confused between the number of crew per ship, rather than the total per team. In order to correct this egregious oversight, I now make this claim:


BLACKWAKE HAS TEAM SIZES OF 90000!

6. Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands

Yeah, alright, but as Ubisoft’s big new game this should be at number one or it’s definitely a disaster and they’ll have to stop making Tom Clancy games forever and ever and ever.

5. Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands




Five? Five is nothing. My three year old daughter could make and release a videogame and it’d get to five. Bee tee dubs, all these entries are because of the additional split between pre-orders and full release last week, on top of the standard/deluxe/gold compartmentalisation.
4. NieR: Automata

A FUNNY STORY: earlier this morning, Adam was telling me how I should dust off my neglected PS4 to play Nioh, which he was certain was my sort of thing due its Dark Soulsiness. I was confused, as everything I’d read about it suggested a fast and furious combofest, a breed of game I struggle with due to mild condition that can affect my manual dexterity in some situations.

Eventually we established that he was talking about Team Ninja’s February release Nioh, while I was thinking of Platinum’s March release NieR (it’s already out on console, but doesn’t reach PC until this Friday, so this placement is based on pre-orders alone). Though I’m sure this unfortunate coincidence has caused complications for both games, I, as a videogames critic for 16 years, should have a complete handle on such things. First Blackwake, and now this.

That’s it: I resign.
3. Counter-Strike: Global Offensive



1. Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands



NieR:Automata is coming to Steam on 17th March 2017!

NieR:Automata is coming to Steam on 17th March 2017!


MARCH 3 - DANIELS
The headline says it all really but we’re happy to announce that NieR:Automata will be released for PC on 17th March 2017!


You can pre-purchase the Day 1 Edition right now on the NieR:Automata Steam page (and pre-order from other retailers) and it comes with the following awesome bonuses:

Machine Mask Accessory

Grimoire Weiss Pod

Cardboard Pod Skin

Retro Grey Pod Skin

Retro Red Pod Skin

If you purchase the Steam version of the game you also get a really cool exclusive Valve character accessory (available for a limited time only)! If you’ve seen the PC announcement trailer which we released at gamescom 2016, this might be a fun little Easter Egg for you. You basically have a valve accessory that you can attach to 2B’s head in four different positions show below:



It’s pretty cool right? Remember that you can only get the Valve character accessory if you purchase the Steam version of NieR:Automata for a limited time, so be sure to do that to make sure you don’t miss out! The Day 1 Edition also won’t be around forever so don’t hesitate if you want to pick up NieR:Automata on PC. 


Just in case you missed it on the Steam page, here’s the details on the recommended PC specs to run NieR:Automata:

System Requirements
OS
Minimum: Windows 7/8.1/10 64 bit
Recommended: Windows 8.1/10 64 bit
CPU
Minimum: Intel Core i3 2100 or AMD A8-6500
Recommended: Intel Core i5 4670 or AMD A10-7850K
RAM
Minimum: 4GB
Recommended: 8GB
Graphics
Minimum: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770 VRAM 2GB or AMD Radeon R9 270X VRAM 2GB
Recommended: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 VRAM or AMD Radeon R9 380X VRAM 4GB
DirectX
Minimum: DirectX 11
Recommended: DirectX 11
HDD/SSD
Minimum: 50GB
Recommended: 50GB


Rare and unseen pictures of lil’ Alia Bhatt

Rare and unseen pictures of lil’ Alia Bhatt

Our birthday girl, Alia Bhatt is hands down one of the cutest actresses Bollywood has ever seen. Now you’ve seen her divalicious avatars on our cover  and her fashioninsta moments too but here’s something that’ll make you love her even more. Rare, unseen and candid pictures of this cutie patoti. Check ‘em out! 

Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt

Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt

Alia Bhatt with Sister Shaheen Bhaitt

Alia Bhatt with sister Shaheen Bhaitt

Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt

Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt and Shaheen Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt with sister Pooja Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt and Shaheen Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt with mom Soni Razdan
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt with dad Mahesh Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt

Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt with Pooja Bhatt


Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt with Mahesh Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt


Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt with firends
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Pooja Bhatt,Shaheen Bhatt, Mahesh Bhatt and Alia Bhatt

Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt with friends
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt and Sonakshi Sinha

Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt
Alia Bhatt with friends


Jacqueline Fernanadez’ NFBA2017 vampire diaries will take your breath away

Jacqueline Fernanadez’ NFBA2017 vampire diaries will take your breath away

Donned in a creation by Hasan Hejazi,  Jacqueline Fernanadez attended the Nykaa Femina Beauty Awards 2017 last night. The gorgeous girl kept the look simple with just red lips and a loose mane. Definitely the best-dressed of the night for us. The actress took to Instagram to call her outing ‘vampire diaries’ – well, what a stunning Vampire she is.Jacqueline Fernandes

Jacqueline Fernandes

Jacqueline Fernandez

Jacqueline Fernandes

Jacqueline Fernandes
Jacqueline Fernandes
Jacqueline Fernandes

Jacqueline Fernandes
Jacqueline Fernandes