Cyberattacks - Proceeded the Gunfire

by BallyZACA | August 23, 2008 at 05:17 am | 281 views | 12 comments | 9 recommendations

There is pretty good evidence now to suggest that Russia had preplanned their invasion into Georgia, proceded by "Cyber-Attacks" before and during their military movements.  This is an interesting read, as our "Intelligence-Cyber-Nurds" of the NSA get a handle on who was behind these activities.  The reality of Cyber-warfare has arrived, its no longer the stuff of Hollywood!

By: John Markoff, Published in the New York Times, August 12, 2008.

Weeks before bombs started falling on Georgia, a security researcher in suburban Massachusetts was watching an attack against the country in cyberspace.

Jose Nazario of Arbor Networks in Lexington noticed a stream of data directed at Georgian government sites containing the message: “win+love+in+Rusia.”

Other Internet experts in the United States said the attacks against Georgia’s Internet infrastructure began as early as July 20, with coordinated barrages of millions of requests — known as distributed denial of service, or D.D.O.S., attacks — that overloaded and effectively shut down Georgian servers.

Researchers at Shadowserver, a volunteer group that tracks malicious network activity, reported that the Web site of the Georgian president, Mikheil Saakashvili, had been rendered inoperable for 24 hours by multiple D.D.O.S. attacks. They said the command and control server that directed the attack was based in the United States and had come online several weeks before it began the assault.

As it turns out, the July attack may have been a dress rehearsal for an all-out cyberwar once the shooting started between Georgia and Russia. According to Internet technical experts, it was the first time a known cyberattack had coincided with a shooting war.

But it will likely not be the last, said Bill Woodcock, the research director of the Packet Clearing House, a nonprofit organization that tracks Internet traffic. He said cyberattacks are so inexpensive and easy to mount, with few fingerprints, they will almost certainly remain a feature of modern warfare.

“It costs about 4 cents per machine,” Mr. Woodcock said. “You could fund an entire cyberwarfare campaign for the cost of replacing a tank tread, so you would be foolish not to.”

Exactly who was behind the cyberattack is not known. The Georgian government blamed Russia for the attacks, but the Russian government said it was not involved. In the end, Georgia, with a population of just 4.6 million and a relative latecomer to the Internet, saw little effect beyond inaccessibility to many of its government Web sites, which limited the government’s ability to spread its message online and to connect with sympathizers around the world during the fighting with Russia.

It ranks 74th out of 234 nations in terms of Internet addresses, behind Nigeria, Bangladesh, Bolivia and El Salvador, according to Renesys, a Manchester, N.H., firm that provides performance data on the state of Internet. Cyberattacks have far less impact on such a country than they might on a more Internet-dependent nation, like Israel, Estonia or the United States, where vital services like transportation, power and banking are tied to the Internet.

In Georgia, media, communications and transportation companies were also attacked, according to security researchers. Shadowserver saw the attack against Georgia spread to computers throughout the government after Russian troops entered the Georgian province of South Ossetia. The National Bank of Georgia’s Web site was defaced at one point. Images of 20th-century dictators as well as an image of Georgia’s president, Mr. Saakashvili, were placed on the site. “Could this somehow be indirect Russian action? Yes, but considering Russia is past playing nice and uses real bombs, they could have attacked more strategic targets or eliminated the infrastructure kinetically,” said Gadi Evron, an Israeli network security expert. “The nature of what’s going on isn’t clear,” he said.

The phrase “a wilderness of mirrors” usually describes the murky world surrounding opposing intelligence agencies. It also neatly summarizes the array of conflicting facts and accusations encompassing the cyberwar now taking place in tandem with the Russian fighting in Georgia.

In addition to D.D.O.S. attacks that crippled Georgia’s limited Internet infrastructure, researchers said there was evidence of redirection of Internet traffic through Russian telecommunications firms beginning last weekend. The attacks continued on Tuesday, controlled by software programs that were located in hosting centers controlled by a Russian telecommunications firms. A Russian-language Web site, stopgeorgia.ru, also continued to operate and offer software for download used for D.D.O.S. attacks.

Over the weekend a number of American computer security researchers tracking malicious programs known as botnets, which were blasting streams of useless data at Georgian computers, said they saw clear evidence of a shadowy St. Petersburg-based criminal gang known as the Russian Business Network, or R.B.N.

“The attackers are using the same tools and the same attack commands that have been used by the R.B.N. and in some cases the attacks are being launched from computers they are known to control,” said Don Jackson, director of threat intelligence for SecureWorks, a computer security firm based in Atlanta.

He noted that in the run-up to the start of the war over the weekend, computer researchers had watched as botnets were “staged” in preparation for the attack, and then activated shortly before Russian air strikes began on Saturday.

The evidence on R.B.N. and whether it is controlled by, or coordinating with the Russian government remains unclear. The group has been linked to online criminal activities including child pornography, malware, identity theft, phishing and spam. Other computer researchers said that R.B.N.’s role is ambiguous at best. “We are simply seeing the attacks coming from known hosting services,” said Paul Ferguson, an advanced threat researcher at Trend Micro, an Internet security company based in Cupertino, Calif. A Russian government spokesman said that it was possible that individuals in Russia or elsewhere had taken it upon themselves to start the attacks.

“I cannot exclude this possibility,” Yevgeniy Khorishko, a spokesman for the Russian Embassy in Washington, said. “There are people who don’t agree with something and they try to express themselves. You have people like this in your country.”

“Jumping to conclusions is premature,” said Mr. Evron, who founded the Israeli Computer Emergency Response Team.

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BallyZACA

Welcome to the 21st Century!  Today we're going to experience a Cyberattack.  Appears the age of internet warfare in cyberspace has taken a giant step forward.  Our nurds against their nurds... and let's not forget the terrorists-nurds!  Those lttle "101010101010's" are the bullets of the future.

Rhonda J Mangus
Rhonda J Mangus
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:01 on August 23rd, 2008

BallyZACA, I like this story. It's good stuff.

 

 

René
René
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:57 on August 23rd, 2008

BallyZACA, I like this story. It's good stuff. Spotted this weeks ago. For anyone who thinks Russia didn't pre-plan this, along with all their military exercises and buildup in the area.

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moonwolf

"Pretty good evidence" means supposition and nothing more, although I don't doubt the possibility.  Were these "attacks" launched by individual hackers who could be operating from anywhere, or were they launched by the Russian Government?  No one actually knows.

Are global governments and intelligence agencies mounting and preparing for such attacks all the time and testing each other's capabilities? Of course they are.  Does the USA engage in this type of behavior through CIA and NSA of course it does.

To think that the Russians were unaware of what the moron Kaashavili was planning to do is absurd.  They had made their preparations and were just waiting for him to fire the first shot, which is what the idiot did regardless of what anyone says or tries to say to redirect attention from who started shooting first.  Georgia attacked South Ossetia, period.


moonwolf
moonwolf
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 09:39 on August 23rd, 2008

BallyZACA, I like this story. It's good stuff.

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BallyZACA

 

amyjudd
  • super editor
amyjudd
flagged this story as Needs Improvement

at 13:31 on August 23rd, 2008

BallyZACA, this seems to be a straight copy and paste from here. Are you having trouble with the highlight tool?

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BallyZACA

Yes, have had problems with the EDIT tool... for some reason it has rejected my attempts to enter the authors name and date published, between the 1st and 2nd paragraphs of the posting.

 

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BallyZACA

... apparently it won't paste, will try to write it in and see if that works!

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BallyZACA

... OK, that worked... now how to highlite the body of the story?  Any suggestions?

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amyjudd

There is a great forum post about it here if you need some help.

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yuls.source

Maybe I am completely missing your point, but if experts are saying that "the nature of what is going on (with cyberspace attacks) is unclear," than how does it support the statement that "there is pretty good evidence now to suggest that Russia had preplanned their invasion into Georgia."And, if a criminal gang is being suspected of being behind the cyberspace attacks, than what relation does this suspicion have to Russian involvement in Georgia-South Ossetia conflict? Following the same logic, should US government be held responsible if a group of US hackers messes up websites in Italy or South Africa? The connection is missing, in my opinion. Thanks for giving your insight though.

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August 23, 2008 at 05:17 am by BallyZACA, 281 views, 12 comments

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