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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMounting evidence that russian hackers worked directly for russian government.
https://apnews.com/3bca5267d4544508bb523fa0db462cb2?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=APThe hackers who disrupted the U.S. presidential election last year had ambitions that stretched across the globe, targeting the emails of Ukrainian officers, Russian opposition figures, U.S. defense contractors and thousands of others of interest to the Kremlin, according to a previously unpublished digital hit list obtained by The Associated Press.
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from the popes representative in Kiev to the punk band Pussy Riot in Moscow. The targets were spread among 116 countries.
Its a wish list of who youd want to target to further Russian interests, said Keir Giles, director of the Conflict Studies Research Center in Cambridge, England, and one of five outside experts who reviewed the APs findings. He said the data was a master list of individuals whom Russia would like to spy on, embarrass, discredit or silence.
The AP findings draw on a database of 19,000 malicious links collected by cybersecurity firm Secureworks, dozens of rogue emails, and interviews with more than 100 hacking targets.
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In Russia, Fancy Bear focused on government opponents and dozens of journalists. Among the targets were oil tycoon-turned-Kremlin foe Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who spent a decade in prison and now lives in exile, and Pussy Riots Maria Alekhina. Along with them were 100 more civil society figures, including anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny and his lieutenants.
Everything on this list fits, said Vasily Gatov, a Russian media analyst who was himself among the targets. He said Russian authorities would have been particularly interested in Navalny, one of the few opposition leaders with a national following.
Many of the targets have little in common except that they would have been crossing the Kremlins radar: an environmental activist in the remote Russian port city of Murmansk; a small political magazine in Armenia; the Vaticans representative in Kiev; an adult education organization in Kazakhstan.
Its simply hard to see how any other country would be particularly interested in their activities, said Michael Kofman, an expert on Russian military affairs at the Woodrow Wilson International Center in Washington. He was also on the list.
If youre not Russia, he said, hacking these people is a colossal waste of time.
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The Secureworks data allowed reporters to determine that more than 95 percent of the malicious links were generated during Moscow office hours between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday to Friday.
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Even if only a small fraction of the 4,700 Gmail accounts targeted by Fancy Bear were hacked successfully, the data drawn from them could run into terabytes easily rivaling the biggest known leaks in journalistic history.
For the hackers to have made sense of that mountain of messages in English, Ukrainian, Russian, Georgian, Arabic and many other languages they would have needed a substantial team of analysts and translators. Merely identifying and sorting the targets took six AP reporters eight weeks of work.
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The notion that its just a lone hacker somewhere is utterly absurd, Rid said.
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