Hackers 'targeting US mid-term elections'
At least
three congressional candidates have been targeted by hackers ahead of the US
mid-term elections, according to Microsoft.
Tom Burt, an
executive at the firm, made the revelation during a security conference panel
in Colorado.
The three
candidates appear to have been targeted by phishing attacks, he told the
audience.
One
cybersecurity expert said the hacking was probably an attempt to
"undermine the democratic process".
US voters
will go to the polls on 6 November to elect a swathe of new members of
Congress, senators and state governors.
The tech giant
discovered the apparent foul play after checking fake Microsoft web domains
that had been associated with espionage in 2016.
A group
exploiting the domains is known by many as "Fancy bear" but has been
dubbed "Strontium" by Microsoft.
Some
cybersecurity firms, including SecureWorks and Mandiant, believe the hackers
are linked to Russian intelligence.
Russia has
consistently denied allegations of hacking.
Mr Burt told
the Aspen Security Forum attendees: "Earlier this year, we did discover
that a fake Microsoft domain had been established as the landing page for
phishing attacks and we saw metadata that suggested those phishing attacks were
being directed at three candidates who were all standing for election in the
mid-term elections."
In other
words, the hackers tried to trick the candidates into visiting a bogus
Microsoft web page.
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Mr Burt did
not name the affected candidates but said they were all potentially
"interesting targets from an espionage standpoint".
He added
that the hackers were not successful in accessing the three candidates and that
the fake Microsoft domain had been taken down.
The hackers
might have been trying to gain access to the candidates' personal messages or
emails, for example, said cybersecurity expert Prof Alan Woodward at the
University of Surrey.
"If you
can grab emails... you can start making people look bad," he said.
"I
think the primary motive is to undermine the democratic process so it doesn't
matter which candidate they manage to subvert."
In comments
to the press during his visit to Helsinki earlier in the week, President Trump
said "no" when asked if he thought that Russia was continuing to
interfere in American elections.
However, his
press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders claimed that the president actually had
responded "no" to a query of whether he would be taking further
questions.
Last week,
the US Director of National Intelligence said Russian attempts at hacking US
targets remained "persistent... regardless of whether it is election time
or not".
Prof
Woodward told the Media: "Every single intelligence agency, including the
British ones, have said it's ongoing, it's an ongoing onslaught and the finger
seems to point at Russia."
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