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CyberWire Daily

Following DOJ indictment, a look back on NotPetya and Olympic Destroyer research. [Research Saturday]

CyberWire Daily

N2K Networks, Inc.

Daily News, Tech News, News, Technology

4.61K Ratings

🗓️ 12 December 2020

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

From US Department of Justice: "On Oct. 15, 2020, a federal grand jury in Pittsburgh returned an indictment charging six computer hackers, all of whom were residents and nationals of the Russian Federation (Russia) and officers in Unit 74455 of the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU), a military intelligence agency of the General Staff of the Armed Forces. These GRU hackers and their co-conspirators engaged in computer intrusions and attacks intended to support Russian government efforts to undermine, retaliate against, or otherwise destabilize: (1) Ukraine; (2) Georgia; (3) elections in France; (4) efforts to hold Russia accountable for its use of a weapons-grade nerve agent, Novichok, on foreign soil; and (5) the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympic Games after Russian athletes were banned from participating under their nation’s flag, as a consequence of Russian government-sponsored doping effort. Their computer attacks used some of the world’s most destructive malware to date, including: KillDisk and Industroyer, which each caused blackouts in Ukraine; NotPetya, which caused nearly $1 billion in losses to the three victims identified in the indictment alone; and Olympic Destroyer, which disrupted thousands of computers used to support the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics. The indictment charges the defendants with conspiracy, computer hacking, wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and false registration of a domain name." Returning to Research Saturday this week to discuss their research of NotPetya and Olympic Destroyer are Cisco Talos' Craig Williams and Matt Olney. The indictment and Cisco's research can be found here: Six Russian GRU Officers Charged in Connection with Worldwide Deployment of Destructive Malware and Other Disruptive Actions in Cyberspace New Ransomware Variant "Nyetya" Compromises Systems Worldwide The MeDoc Connection Who Wasn’t Responsible for Olympic Destroyer? Olympic Destroyer Takes Aim At Winter Olympics

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're listening to the CyberWire Network, powered by N2K.

0:07.0

Today's episode is sponsored by SRM, your first call for cybersecurity and

0:18.1

investigations. Threats today are evolving faster than ever before and since 2005 SRM has pioneered

0:25.3

tailored security solutions for global corporations and their executives.

0:29.5

Whether it's defending against cyber attacks with their award-winning team of ethical hackers and incident response specialists,

0:36.4

or navigating the murky waters of compliance and ESG challenges,

0:40.9

SRMs, Insight and Straight straightforward advice will help you navigate complex risks

0:46.4

and emerge more resilient.

0:48.4

Their secret, a culture that nurtures the sharpest minds, giving them access to the newest technologies and the freedom

0:55.3

to solve problems in new ways, enabling them to craft simple effective solutions for your

1:01.4

unique cyber challenges.

1:03.7

Search your first call to discover how SRM can help your business. Hello everyone and welcome to the CyberWire's research Saturday.

1:25.0

I'm Dave Bitner and this is our weekly conversation with researchers and analysts

1:29.0

tracking down threats and vulnerabilities, solving some of the hard problems of protecting ourselves in a rapidly

1:35.2

evolving cyberspace.

1:37.3

Thanks for joining us.

1:38.4

The amount of time between horrible campaigns and ones that aren't as bad is shrinking

1:48.0

because bad guys are learning from each other and if there's one method that works better than others

1:52.4

to get either the

1:53.4

reaction you want or the profit that you want that's the avenue being pursued.

1:57.7

Joining us this week are Craig Williams and Matt Olney from Cisco Talos.

2:02.2

We're discussing their not-peche and Olympic destroyer research.

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