Politically motivated cyber attacks are on the rise, putting our elections at risk

More than 7 million distributed-denial-of service (DDoS) attacks were launched in the last six months of 2023—and an increasing number of them are politically motivated, a new new analysis finds.

The cybersecurity defense services provider NETSCOUT tracked the sectors in which victims worked, and the time at which they were attacked. It found that DDoS attacks rose 15% in the second half of 2023 compared to the first half. Many were politically motivated; it also determined that most of the cyberattacks traced back to a handful of bad actors.

“The months leading up to the biggest election year to date have seen a shift in the global cybersecurity landscape towards a trend of politically motivated DDoS attacks,” says Richard Hummel, threat intelligence lead at NETSCOUT. And some individual actors, supporting state interests, were behind many of those incursions. 

“An unprecedented number of attacks were launched by hacktivist groups such as NoName057(016) and Anonymous Sudan, targeting opponents for geopolitical causes, as well as waging political and religious war against any nation or official that stands in the way of their ideals,” says Hummel.

NoName057(016) topped the list of DDoS adversaries in 2023, targeting 780 websites across 35 countries according to NETSCOUT’s data. NoName057(016), Anonymous Sudan and the group Killnet have also all taken credit for DDoS attacks in Ukraine, Russia, Israel, and Palestine targeting communications infrastructure, hospitals, and banks.

Hummel says NoName057(016) appears to be affiliated with Russia—or at least, says that the attackers appear to have an affinity with the country. “These groups target countries that express support for Ukraine—in line with their pro-Russian agenda,” he says. (Killnet has also been linked to Russia.)

Ahead of Spain’s general election last year, NoName057(016) swamped a number of websites in the country with overwhelming volumes of web traffic and damaged government platforms, including attempted attack on the country’s electoral commission. “[The attackers were] citing the incumbent Spanish government’s support of Ukraine in the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict as their motive,” he says.

Poland also saw a surge in DDoS attacks by NoName057(016) following the swearing-in of its new prime minister, Donald Tusk, who’s been supportive of Ukraine.

Beyond Ukraine, other countries around the world experienced an uptick in incidents last year following major political or geopolitical events. Peru saw a 30% increase in attacks tied to protests against the release of its former president, Alberto Fujimori, despite an outcry of human rights violations during his autocratic rule.

Hummel only expects to see more politically-linked cyberattacks as the world sees a slate of elections in the coming months. “Cybercriminals will attempt to cause maximum disruption by launching attacks throughout these election campaigns, as well as following the event,” he says.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91114419/politically-motivated-ddos-attacks-on-the-rise-putting-our-elections-at-risk?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvořeno 16d | 29. 4. 2024 10:50:05


Chcete-li přidat komentář, přihlaste se

Ostatní příspěvky v této skupině

Google is rolling out its AI-native search to all users

Google said at its I/O developer event Tuesday that it’s rolling out its AI-native search to all users for the first time. Previously, users could try Google’s chatbot-based search (then called “S

14. 5. 2024 20:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Google gives its Gemini AI chatbot a longer memory and new skills

Google showed off some new skills in its Gemini AI chatbot at Tuesday’s I/O developer event, and previewed a new Gemini assistant that talks to you like a human assistant. 

The AI a

14. 5. 2024 20:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Meta is discontinuing Workplace to focus on AI and metaverse

Meta Platforms will discontinue its work-focused Workplace

14. 5. 2024 20:20:02 | Fast company - tech
Amazon AWS chief Adam Selipsky to step down

The chief of Amazon.com’s wildly profitable Amazon Web Services cloud computing unit will step down next month after a t

14. 5. 2024 17:50:12 | Fast company - tech
Search and destroy: Thoughts on Perplexity, media survival, and the comfort of mangroves

I love my job, but it comes with an unsettling occupational hazard: editing stories about technologies that threaten my own professional existence.

Such was the experience of working on

14. 5. 2024 13:20:09 | Fast company - tech
Hinge will stop letting you like new matches if you have too many unanswered chats

Hinge’s latest product rollout represents a big bet on quality over quantity. 

The Match Group-owned dating giant is testing a new feature that requires singles with eight or more u

14. 5. 2024 13:20:08 | Fast company - tech