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China-linked hackers used VPN flaw to target US defence industry, researchers say

  • Ivanti researchers say hackers utilised a VPN vulnerability to access systems belonging to some customers
  • FireEye researchers suspect at least one of the two hacking groups worked for Beijing

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The US Department of Homeland Security emblem is pictured at the National Cybersecurity & Communications Integration Centre (NCCIC) located just outside Washington in Arlington, Virginia, on September 24, 2010. Photo: Reuters

At least two groups of China-linked hackers have spent months using a previously undisclosed vulnerability in American virtual private networking devices to spy on the US defence industry, researchers and the devices’ manufacturer said Tuesday.

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Utah-based IT company Ivanti said in a statement the hackers took advantage of the flaw in its Pulse Connect Secure suite to break into the systems of “a very limited number of customers.”

The Ivanti logo and cyber binary codes are seen in this illustration taken on April 20, 2021. Photo: Reuters
The Ivanti logo and cyber binary codes are seen in this illustration taken on April 20, 2021. Photo: Reuters

Ivanti said that while mitigations were in place, a fix for the issue would be unavailable until early May.

Ivanti provided no detail about who might be responsible for the espionage campaign but, in a report timed to Ivanti’s announcement, cybersecurity company FireEye Inc said it suspected that at least one of the hacking groups operates on behalf of the Chinese government.

“The other one we suspect is aligned with China-based initiatives and collections,” said Charles Carmakal, a senior vice-president of Mandiant, an arm of FireEye, ahead of the report’s release.

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Tying hackers to a specific country is fraught with uncertainty, but Carmakal said his analysts’ judgment was based on a review of the hackers’ tactics, tools, infrastructure and targets – many of which echoed past China-linked intrusions.

Chinese Embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said China “firmly opposes and cracks down on all forms of cyberattacks,” describing FireEye’s allegations as “irresponsible and ill-intentioned.”

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