Published on May 10th, 2019 📆 | 8610 Views ⚑
0Unconfirmed report claims top US anti-virus companies have been hacked
Stories of hacking and hacks have become so commonplace that they often barely rate a mention, but hereâs a truly disturbing case if itâs true: Three major U.S. anti-virus companies allegedly have been hacked.
The details of the alleged hack were first detailed Thursday by self-described security firm Advanced Intelligence LLC. The names of the companies werenât revealed, but the hacking group, âFxmsp,â was described as a high-profile Russian- and English-speaking âhacking collective.â
Fxsmp is said to be offering data from the hack, including exclusive source code related to the companiesâ software development, for $300,000. Yelisey Boguslavskiy, director of research at Advanced Intelligence, told Ars Technica that the firm had advised the companies allegedly hacked through partner organizations and had also provided the details to U.S. law enforcement agencies.
Why the companies werenât named wasnât explained. The sole source of information on the alleged hack, Advanced Intelligence, which claims to be based in New York City, literally appeared out of nowhere overnight. This is the first thing the organization wrote in its blog, and although a Whois check finds the domain was registered 12 months ago, the site first appears in Archive.org today, May 9.
Thereâs also no registered company by the name of Advanced Intelligence LLC, according to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Perhaps itâs a very early-stage startup, but the lack of visibility raises questions over whether this could be an elaborate prank.
Tim Erlin, vice president of product management and strategy at Tripwire Inc., told SiliconANGLE that security companies arenât immune from breaches either and certainly have sensitive data to protect.
âSource code for any security product, anti-virus included, is valuable to attackers working on ways to circumvent controls or avoid detection,â Erlin said. âIf an attacker knows the internals of how security tools work, they can build exploits to avoid them more easily.â
Image: Advanced Intelligence
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