The fix is that the NSA's of the world MUST also participate in risk reduction 
to the world by submitting their newly found entry methods to the companies 
that can fix it!

The expectation that this stuff would not eventually make its way to the rest 
of the world, or that it wasn't already being exploited by 'the enemy' is 
ridiculous!

Cal

-----Original Message-----
From: listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:listsad...@lists.myitforum.com] On 
Behalf Of Kent, Larry J CTR USARMY 93 SIG BDE (US)
Sent: June 23, 2017 7:13 AM
To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com
Subject: RE: [Non-DoD Source] [NTSysADM] Thank you, NSA... (UNCLASSIFIED)

CLASSIFICATION: UNCLASSIFIED

Interesting article, but is there a fix for this?

-----Original Message-----
From: listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:listsad...@lists.myitforum.com] On 
Behalf Of Kurt Buff
Sent: Thursday, June 22, 2017 11:02 PM
To: ntsysadm <NTSysADM@lists.myitforum.com>
Subject: [Non-DoD Source] [NTSysADM] Thank you, NSA...

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Caution-https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/22/technology/ransomware-attack-nsa-cyberweapons.html

A Cyberattack ‘the World Isn’t Ready For’

NEWARK — There have been times over the last two months when Golan Ben-Oni has 
felt like a voice in the wilderness.

On April 29, someone hit his employer, IDT Corporation, with two cyberweapons 
that had been stolen from the National Security Agency.
Mr. Ben-Oni, the global chief information officer at IDT, was able to fend them 
off, but the attack left him distraught.

In 22 years of dealing with hackers of every sort, he had never seen anything 
like it. Who was behind it? How did they evade all of his defenses? How many 
others had been attacked but did not know it?

Since then, Mr. Ben-Oni has been sounding alarm bells, calling anyone who will 
listen at the White House, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the New Jersey 
attorney general’s office and the top cybersecurity companies in the country to 
warn them about an attack that may still be invisibly striking victims 
undetected around the world.

And he is determined to track down whoever did it.

“I don’t pursue every attacker, just the ones that piss me off,” Mr.
Ben-Oni told me recently over lentils in his office, which was strewn with 
empty Red Bull cans. “This pissed me off and, more importantly, it pissed my 
wife off, which is the real litmus test.”

Two weeks after IDT was hit, the cyberattack known as WannaCry ravaged 
computers at hospitals in England, universities in China, rail systems in 
Germany, even auto plants in Japan. No doubt it was destructive.
But what Mr. Ben-Oni had witnessed was much worse, and with all eyes on the 
WannaCry destruction, few seemed to be paying attention to the attack on IDT’s 
systems — and most likely others around the world.

The strike on IDT, a conglomerate with headquarters in a nondescript gray 
building here with views of the Manhattan skyline 15 miles away, was similar to 
WannaCry in one way: Hackers locked up IDT data and demanded a ransom to unlock 
it.

But the ransom demand was just a smoke screen for a far more invasive attack 
that stole employee credentials. With those credentials in hand, hackers could 
have run free through the company’s computer network, taking confidential 
information or destroying machines.

Worse, the assault, which has never been reported before, was not spotted by 
some of the nation’s leading cybersecurity products, the top security engineers 
at its biggest tech companies, government intelligence analysts or the F.B.I., 
which remains consumed with the WannaCry attack.

Were it not for a digital black box that recorded everything on IDT’s network, 
along with Mr. Ben-Oni’s tenacity, the attack might have gone unnoticed.

Scans for the two hacking tools used against IDT indicate that the company is 
not alone. In fact, tens of thousands of computer systems all over the world 
have been “backdoored” by the same N.S.A. weapons.
Mr. Ben-Oni and other security researchers worry that many of those other 
infected computers are connected to transportation networks, hospitals, water 
treatment plants and other utilities.

An attack on those systems, they warn, could put lives at risk. And Mr. 
Ben-Oni, fortified with adrenaline, Red Bull and the house beats of Deadmau5, 
the Canadian record producer, said he would not stop until the attacks had been 
shut down and those responsible were behind bars.

“The world is burning about WannaCry, but this is a nuclear bomb compared to 
WannaCry,” Mr. Ben-Oni said. “This is different. It’s a lot worse. It steals 
credentials. You can’t catch it, and it’s happening right under our noses.”

And, he added, “The world isn’t ready for this.”

Targeting the Nerve Center

Mr. Ben-Oni, 43, a Hasidic Jew, is a slight man with smiling eyes, a thick 
beard and a hacker’s penchant for mischief. He grew up in the hills of 
Berkeley, Calif., the son of Israeli immigrants.

Even as a toddler, Mr. Ben-Oni’s mother said, he was not interested in toys. 
She had to take him to the local junkyard to scour for typewriters that he 
would eventually dismantle on the living room floor. As a teenager, he aspired 
to become a rabbi but spent most of his free time hacking computers at the 
University of California, Berkeley, where his exploits once accidentally took 
down Belgium’s entire phone system for 15 minutes.

To his parents’ horror, he dropped out of college to pursue his love of hacking 
full time, starting a security company to help the city of Berkeley and two 
nearby communities, Alameda and Novato, set up secure computer networks.

He had a knack for the technical work, but not the marketing, and found it 
difficult to get new clients. So at age 19, he crossed the country and took a 
job at IDT, back when the company was a low-profile long-distance service 
provider.

As IDT started acquiring and spinning off an eclectic list of ventures, Mr. 
Ben-Oni found himself responsible for securing shale oil projects in Mongolia 
and the Golan Heights, a “Star Trek” comic books company, a project to cure 
cancer, a yeshiva university that trains underprivileged students in 
cybersecurity, and a small mobile company that Verizon recently acquired for 
$3.1 billion.

Which is to say he has encountered hundreds of thousands of hackers of every 
stripe, motivation and skill level. He eventually started a security business, 
IOSecurity, under IDT, to share some of the technical tools he had developed to 
keep IDT’s many businesses secure.
By Mr. Ben-Oni’s estimate, IDT experiences hundreds of attacks a day on its 
businesses, but perhaps only four each year that give him pause.

Nothing compared to the attack that struck in April. Like the WannaCry attack 
in May, the assault on IDT relied on cyberweapons developed by the N.S.A. that 
were leaked online in April by a mysterious group of hackers calling themselves 
the Shadow Brokers — alternately believed to be Russia-backed cybercriminals, 
an N.S.A. mole, or both.

The WannaCry attack — which the N.S.A. and security researchers have tied to 
North Korea — employed one N.S.A. cyberweapon; the IDT assault used two.

Both WannaCry and the IDT attack used a hacking tool the agency had code-named 
EternalBlue. The tool took advantage of unpatched Microsoft servers to 
automatically spread malware from one server to another, so that within 24 
hours North Korea’s hackers had spread their ransomware to more than 200,000 
servers around the globe.

The attack on IDT went a step further with another stolen N.S.A.
cyberweapon, called DoublePulsar. The N.S.A. used DoublePulsar to penetrate 
computer systems without tripping security alarms. It allowed N.S.A. spies to 
inject their tools into the nerve center of a target’s computer system, called 
the kernel, which manages communications between a computer’s hardware and its 
software.

In the pecking order of a computer system, the kernel is at the very top, 
allowing anyone with secret access to it to take full control of a machine. It 
is also a dangerous blind spot for most security software, allowing attackers 
to do what they want and go unnoticed. In IDT’s case, attackers used 
DoublePulsar to steal an IDT contractor’s credentials. Then they deployed 
ransomware in what appears to be a cover for their real motive: broader access 
to IDT’s businesses.

The N.S.A. campus in Fort Meade, Md. Tens of thousands of computer systems, 
some of which could be connected to public utilities, have been “backdoored” 
using the agency’s stolen cyberweapons. Patrick Semansky/Associated Press

Mr. Ben-Oni learned of the attack only when a contractor, working from home, 
switched on her computer to find that all her data had been encrypted and that 
attackers were demanding a ransom to unlock it. He might have assumed that this 
was a simple case of ransomware.

But the attack struck Mr. Ben-Oni as unique. For one thing, it was timed 
perfectly to the Sabbath. Attackers entered IDT’s network at 6 p.m. on Saturday 
on the dot, two and a half hours before the Sabbath would end and when most of 
IDT’s employees — 40 percent of whom identify as Orthodox Jews — would be off 
the clock. For another, the attackers compromised the contractor’s computer 
through her home modem — strange.

The black box of sorts, a network recording device made by the Israeli security 
company Secdo, shows that the ransomware was installed after the attackers had 
made off with the contractor’s credentials. And they managed to bypass every 
major security detection mechanism along the way. Finally, before they left, 
they encrypted her computer with ransomware, demanding $130 to unlock it, to 
cover up the more invasive attack on her computer.

Mr. Ben-Oni estimates that he has spoken to 107 security experts and 
researchers about the attack, including the chief executives of nearly every 
major security company and the heads of threat intelligence at Google, 
Microsoft and Amazon.

With the exception of Amazon, which found that some of its customers’
computers had been scanned by the same computer that hit IDT, no one had seen 
any trace of the attack before Mr. Ben-Oni notified them. The New York Times 
confirmed Mr. Ben-Oni’s account via written summaries provided by Palo Alto 
Networks, Intel’s McAfee and other security firms he used and asked to 
investigate the attack.

“I started to get the sense that we were the canary,” he said. “But we recorded 
it.”

Since IDT was hit, Mr. Ben-Oni has contacted everyone in his Rolodex to warn 
them of an attack that could still be worming its way, undetected, through 
victims’ systems.

“Time is burning,” Mr. Ben-Oni said. “Understand, this is really a war — with 
offense on one side, and institutions, organizations and schools on the other, 
defending against an unknown adversary.”

‘No One Is Running Point’

Since the Shadow Brokers leaked dozens of coveted attack tools in April, 
hospitals, schools, cities, police departments and companies around the world 
have largely been left to fend for themselves against weapons developed by the 
world’s most sophisticated attacker: the N.S.A.

A month earlier, Microsoft had issued a software patch to defend against the 
N.S.A. hacking tools — suggesting that the agency tipped the company off to 
what was coming. Microsoft regularly credits those who point out 
vulnerabilities in its products, but in this case the company made no mention 
of the tipster. Later, when the WannaCry attack hit hundreds of thousands of 
Microsoft customers, Microsoft’s president, Brad Smith, slammed the government 
in a blog post for hoarding and stockpiling security vulnerabilities.

For his part, Mr. Ben-Oni said he had rolled out Microsoft’s patches as soon as 
they became available, but attackers still managed to get in through the IDT 
contractor’s home modem.

Six years ago, Mr. Ben-Oni had a chance meeting with an N.S.A.
employee at a conference and asked him how to defend against modern-day 
cyberthreats. The N.S.A. employee advised him to “run three of everything”: 
three firewalls, three antivirus solutions, three intrusion detection systems. 
And so he did.

But in this case, modern-day detection systems created by Cylance, McAfee and 
Microsoft and patching systems by Tanium did not catch the attack on IDT. Nor 
did any of the 128 publicly available threat intelligence feeds that IDT 
subscribes to. Even the 10 threat intelligence feeds that his organization 
spends a half-million dollars on annually for urgent information failed to 
report it. He has since threatened to return their products.

“Our industry likes to work on known problems,” Mr. Ben-Oni said.
“This is an unknown problem. We’re not ready for this.”

No one he has spoken to knows whether they have been hit, but just this month, 
restaurants across the United States reported being hit with similar attacks 
that were undetected by antivirus systems. There are now YouTube videos showing 
criminals how to attack systems using the very same N.S.A. tools used against 
IDT, and Metasploit, an automated hacking tool, now allows anyone to carry out 
these attacks with the click of a button.

Worse still, Mr. Ben-Oni said, “No one is running point on this.”

Last month, he personally briefed the F.B.I. analyst in charge of investigating 
the WannaCry attack. He was told that the agency had been specifically tasked 
with WannaCry, and that even though the attack on his company was more invasive 
and sophisticated, it was still technically something else, and therefore the 
F.B.I. could not take on his case.

The F.B.I. did not respond to requests for comment.

So Mr. Ben-Oni has largely pursued the case himself. His team at IDT was able 
to trace part of the attack to a personal Android phone in Russia and has been 
feeding its findings to Europol, the European law enforcement agency based in 
The Hague.

The chances that IDT was the only victim of this attack are slim. Sean Dillon, 
a senior analyst at RiskSense, a New Mexico security company, was among the 
first security researchers to scan the internet for the N.S.A.’s DoublePulsar 
tool. He found tens of thousands of host computers are infected with the tool, 
which attackers can use at will.

“Once DoublePulsar is on the machine, there’s nothing stopping anyone else from 
coming along and using the back door,” Mr. Dillon said.

More distressing, Mr. Dillon tested all the major antivirus products against 
the DoublePulsar infection and a demoralizing 99 percent failed to detect it.

“We’ve seen the same computers infected with DoublePulsar for two months and 
there is no telling how much malware is on those systems,”
Mr. Dillon said. “Right now we have no idea what’s gotten into these 
organizations.”

In the worst case, Mr. Dillon said, attackers could use those back doors to 
unleash destructive malware into critical infrastructure, tying up rail 
systems, shutting down hospitals or even paralyzing electrical utilities.

Could that attack be coming? The Shadow Brokers resurfaced last month, 
promising a fresh load of N.S.A. attack tools, even offering to supply them for 
monthly paying subscribers — like a wine-of-the-month club for cyberweapon 
enthusiasts.

In a hint that the industry is taking the group’s threats seriously, Microsoft 
issued a new set of patches to defend against such attacks.
The company noted in an ominously worded message that the patches were 
critical, citing an “elevated risk for destructive cyberattacks.”

Mr. Ben-Oni is convinced that IDT is not the only victim, and that these tools 
can and will be used to do far worse.

“I look at this as a life-or-death situation,” he said. “Today it’s us, but 
tomorrow it might be someone else.”


CLASSIFICATION: UNCLASSIFIED

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