In computer attacks, clues point to frequent culprit: North Korea

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Security experts at Symantec, which in the past has accurately identified attacks mounted by the United States, Israel and North Korea, found early versions of the ransomware, called WannaCry, that used tools that were also deployed against Sony Pictures Entertainment, a Bangladesh Central Bank last year and Polish banks in February.
American officials said Monday that they had seen the same similarities.
All of those attacks were ultimately linked to North Korea; President Barack Obama formally charged the North in late 2014 with destroying computers at Sony in retaliation for a comedy, "The Interview," that envisioned a C.
plot to kill Kim Jong-un, the country`s president.
The computer code used in the ransomware bore some striking similarities to the code used in those three attacks.
That code has not been widely used, and has been seen only in attacks by North Korean-linked hackers.
Researchers at Google and Kaspersky, a Moscow-based cybersecurity firm, confirmed the coding similarities.
Those clues alone are not definitive, however.
Hackers often borrow and retrofit one another`s attack methods, and government agencies are known to plant "false flags" in their code to throw off forensic investigators.
"At this time, all we have is a temporal link," said Eric Chien, an investigator at Symantec who was among the first to identify the Stuxnet worm, the American- and Israeli-led attacks on Iran`s nuclear program, and North Korea`s effort to steal millions from the Bangladeshi bank.
"We want to see more coding similarities,`` he said, "to give us more confidence.
`` The new leads about the source of the attacks came as technology executives d raised an alarm about another feature of the attacks: They were based on vulnerabilities in Microsoft systems that were found by the N.
and apparently stolen from it.
In a blog post on Microsoft`s website over the weekend, Brad Smith, the company`s president, asked what would happen if the United States military lost control of "some of its Tomahawk missiles" and discovered that a criminal group was using them to threaten a damaging strike.
It was a potent analogy, and an unusually public airing of the newest split in the Silicon Valley-Washington divide.
Over the past few months, it has become clear that the intelligence community`s version of Tomahawks — the "vulnerabilities" the N.
have spent billions of dollars to develop to break into foreign computers and foil Iranian nuclear programs or North Korean missiles — are being turned against everyday computer users around the world.
More from the New York Times:The fallout from a global cyberattack: `A battle we`re fighting every day`Ransomware`s aftershocks feared as U.
warns of complexityHackers hit dozens of countries exploiting stolen NSA tool "We have seen vulnerabilities stored by the C.
show up on WikiLeaks," Mr.
Smith wrote, "and now this vulnerability stolen from the N.
has affected customers around the world.
`s tools were published last month by a hacking group calling itself The Shadow Brokers, which enabled hackers to bake them into their ransomware, which then spread rapidly through unpatched Microsoft computers, locking up everything in its wake.
There is no evidence that the North Koreans were involved in the actual theft of the N.
There are many theories, but the favorite hypothesis among intelligence officials is that an insider, probably a contractor, stole the information, much as Edward J.
Snowden lifted a different trove of information from the N.
four years ago.
But hackers quickly seized on the published vulnerabilities to wreak havoc on computer systems that were not "patched`` in recent months, after the N.
quietly told Microsoft about the flaw in their systems.
The damage wreaked in recent days could well escalate into the billions of dollars, security experts say, particularly now that any criminal, terrorist, or nation state has the ability to tease the tools apart and retrofit them into their own hacking tools.
Not surprisingly, government officials say it is not entirely their fault.
They will not confirm or deny what Mr.
Smith says outright: That these "vulnerabilities" come out of America`s growing cyberarsenal.
At a news conference at the White House on Monday, Thomas Bossert, President Trump`s Homeland Security adviser, told reporters, "This was not an exploit developed by the N.
to hold organizations ransom," he said.
"This was a vulnerability exploit that was part of a much larger tool put together by the culpable parties.
" "The provenance of the underlying vulnerability is not of as much concern to me," Mr.
Bossert said, stepping around the delicate question of the N.
The weapons used in the attacks that started Friday, government officials insist, were cobbled together from many sources.
And the fault, they argue, lies with whoever turned them into weapons — or maybe with Microsoft itself, for not having a system in place to make sure that when they issue a patch that neutralizes such attacks, everyone around the world takes the time to fix their systems.
Or with the victims, who failed to run their security updates made available two months ago, or who continue to use so-called "legacy" software that Microsoft no longer supports.

Dramelin

Developer

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