8 November 2024 09:48 am Views - 347
Japan Times - Singapore Telecommunications, Singapore’s largest mobile carrier, was breached by Chinese state-sponsored hackers this summer as part of a broader campaign against telecommunications companies and other critical infrastructure operators around the world, according to two people familiar with the matter.
The previously undisclosed breach was discovered in June, and investigators believe it was pulled off by a hacking group known as Volt Typhoon, according to the two people, who asked not to be identified to discuss a confidential investigation.
Officials in the United States, Australia, Canada, the U.K. and New Zealand — the "Five Eyes” intelligence-sharing alliance — warned earlier this year that Volt Typhoon was embedding itself inside compromised IT networks to give China the ability to conduct disruptive cyberattacks in the event of a military conflict with the West.
The breach of Singtel, a carrier with operations throughout Southeast Asia and Australia, was seen as a test run by China for further hacks against U.S. telecommunications companies, and information from the attack has provided clues about the expanding scope of suspected Chinese attacks against critical infrastructure abroad, including in the U.S., the people said.
A Singtel spokesperson confirmed that malware on the company’s network was detected in June and that the incident was reported to authorities. No data was taken and there was no impact to Singtel’s services, the spokesperson wrote in an emailed statement.
"Like any other large organization and key infrastructure service provider around the world, we are constantly probed,” the spokesperson said. "Network resilience is critical to our business, and we adopt industry best practices and work with leading security partners to continuously monitor and address the threats that we face on a daily basis. We also regularly review and enhance our cybersecurity capabilities and posture to protect our critical assets from evolving threats.”
The spokesperson added that the company "cannot confirm or ascertain if this is the exact same event listed in your story with the cited threat actors and intended targets.”
A spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, Liu Pengyu, said he wasn’t aware of the specifics, but that in general, China firmly opposes and combats cyberattacks and cybertheft.
The U.S. is currently battling its own suspected Chinese attacks of political campaigns and telecommunications companies. Officials have described the telecom breaches as one of the most damaging campaigns on record by suspected Chinese hackers and one that they are still seeking to fully understand and contain.
In the U.S. telecommunications attacks, which investigators have attributed to another Chinese group called Salt Typhoon, AT&T and Verizon Communications are among those breached, and the hackers potentially accessed systems the federal government uses for court-authorized network wiretapping requests, The Wall Street Journal reported in early October. U.S. intelligence officials think the Chinese hacking group that Microsoft dubbed Salt Typhoon may have been inside U.S. telecommunications companies for months and found a route into an access point for legally authorized wiretapping, according to a person familiar with their views.
AT&T declined to comment. Verizon didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Through those intrusions, the hackers are believed to have targeted the phones of former President Donald Trump, running mate JD Vance and Trump family members, as well as members of Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign staff and others, The New York Times has reported.
In the case of the alleged Singtel breach, one of the people familiar with that incident said the attack relied on a tool known as a web shell.
In August, researchers at Lumen Technologies said in a blog post they assessed with "moderate confidence” that Volt Typhoon had used such a web shell. A sample of the malware was first uploaded to VirusTotal, a popular site for security experts to research malicious code, on June 7 by an unidentified entity in Singapore, according to Lumen researchers. The web shell allowed hackers to intercept and gather credentials to gain access to a customer’s network disguised as a bona fide user, they said.
The hackers then breached four U.S. firms, including internet service providers, and another in India, according to Lumen researchers.
Gen. Timothy Haugh, director of the National Security Agency, said in early October that the investigations into the latest telecommunications breaches were at an early stage. Later that month, the FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) said they had identified specific malicious activity by actors affiliated with the Chinese government and immediately notified affected companies and "rendered technical assistance.”
A spokesperson for the National Security Council last week referred to the "ongoing investigation and mitigation efforts,” but directed further questions to the FBI and CISA.
Singtel uncovered the breach of its network after detecting suspicious data traffic in a core back-end router and finding what it believed was sophisticated, and possibly state-sponsored, malware on it, according to the other person familiar with the investigation. The malware was in "listening” mode and didn’t appear to have been activated for espionage or any other purpose, the person said, adding that it reinforced a suspicion that the attack was either a test run of a new hacking capability or that its purpose was to create a strategic access point for future attacks.
There is evidence that Salt Typhoon reached the U.S. at least as early as spring 2024, and possibly long before, and investigators tracking the group think it has infiltrated other telecommunications companies throughout Asia, including in Indonesia, Nepal, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam, according to two people familiar with those efforts.
The NSA has warned since 2022 that telecommunications infrastructure was vulnerable to Chinese hacking. Volt Typhoon has been active since at least mid-2020, having attacked sensitive networks in Guam and elsewhere in the U.S. with a goal of burrowing into critical infrastructure and staying undetected for as long as possible.
The hacks by both Chinese Typhoon groups have alarmed Western officials and raised concerns about the number and severity of backdoors — a way to get around security tools and gain high-level access to a computer system — that China has placed inside critical IT systems. Those entry points could be used to conduct espionage or prepare the battlespace for use in a potential military conflict with the West.
Chinese hackers have long been accused of conducting espionage attacks against the U.S. — including, most notably, the theft of security clearance applications for tens of millions of U.S. government workers held by the Office of Personnel Management. But officials say the latest hacks go a step further and in some cases suggest China may be amassing capabilities to disrupt or degrade critical services in the U.S. and abroad.
Paul Nakasone, a retired general who led the NSA for nearly six years until February, told reporters in October that the latest telecommunications hacks by Salt Typhoon were distinguished by their scale, and that the two Chinese groups represent a tremendous challenge for the government. "I am not pleased in terms of where we’re at with either of the Typhoons,” he said.