Russian Hackers Use Twitter To Hack U.S. Government Computers


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According to Reuters, a group of Russian government-backed hackers gained access to important U.S. government and defense industry computers by using a method of infiltration and communication that involved online photo data and social media site Twitter Inc (NYSE: TWTR). Cybersecurity company FireEye Inc (NASDAQ: FEYE), which has been investigating the Russian group, has discovered that the hackers used stenographic tweets to convey instructions to previously infected computers.

Tweeting in code
FireEye says that the hackers created algorithms that checked different Twitter accounts every day looking for specific messages. Russian agents would then access these Twitter accounts and tweet coded messages that contained hidden instructions for the computers running the algorithms.

How it worked
According to FireEye, the tweets would contain a web address, a number and a handful of letters. The computer running the algorithm would then go to the specified website and search for a photo in the site with the specific dimensions of the numbers contained in the tweet. Finally, once the correct photo was identified, the computer would use the letters contained in the tweet to decode hidden messages in the digital display data of the photo.

‘Advanced persistent threat’
FireEye has identified the latest scheme as the work of a known group of Russian hackers it calls APT29, an acronym for “advanced persistent threat.” This group could also be working with other Russian hacking groups as well, such as APT28 which has used vulnerabilities in Adobe Systems Inc (NASDAQ: ADBE)’s Flash software gain access to valuable information.

Symantec Corp (NASDAQ: SYMC) has also reportedly identified the use of coded Twitter messages as a means of communication for hackers.

Cybersecurity market booming
While data breaches will continue to cause billions of dollars of damage to international businesses and governments, the cybersecurity business is booming. FireEye’s stock is up 46.0 percent in 2015, and the PureFunds ISE Cyber Security ETF (NYSE: HACK) is up 14.7 percent this year.


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New research shows the biggest crypto buyers are back. And this time? They could hold for the possibility that Bitcoin will surpass $100,000 in 2024. You don’t want to miss the next massive crypto bull run like we saw in 2020 and 2021. To know exactly what’s going on and what to buy… Get Access To Benzinga’s Best Crypto Research and Investments For Only $1.


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