Kaspersky uncovers five-year cyber espionage campaign, Red October

Kaspersky has uncovered an advanced cyber espionage network that rivals
the sophistication of last year's infamous Flame malware but is perhaps
more devious, as each attack is
handcrafted for its victim to help ensure its success. Referred to as
Operation Red October (abbreviated as "Rocra"), the campaign has been
ongoing since at least May 2007 and carefully targets victims in over
two dozen countries who hold positions in government, military,
aerospace, research, trade and commerce, nuclear, oil and other such
industries. Investigators aren't sure who's behind the attacks, but it's
believed that the exploits used may have been created by Chinese
hackers, while the various malware modules deployed seem to have been
created by folks who speak Russian. Kaspersky can't identify the source
of the operation at this point because it's being run through at least
two layers of proxy servers across Russia, Germany and Austria. In other
words, the location of the primary command and control center (dubbed
the "mothership" C&C) remains unknown. Whoever they are, the
operators clearly know what they're doing if they've been secretly
lurking on the systems of major governments and industries around the
globe for half a decade. During that time, they used at least two
different exploits in Microsoft Word and one in Excel to infect targets
through spear phishing schemes. After compromising a system, the
attackers would harvest whatever sensitive data they could through a
series of persistent and one-time tasks conducted with over a thousand
modules (malicious files). Some examples of the tasks include swiping
information from USB drives (even deleted files), recording keystrokes,
taking screenshots, retrieving email from Outlook and mail servers,
collecting browsing history and saved passwords, scanning networks to
find more potential victims and so on. In addition to being in the dark
about who's pulling the strings, Kaspersky isn't sure what they're doing
with all this info, besides maybe selling it on the black market. The
outfit says there's no evidence that the campaign is state sponsored.
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