产品展示
  • 汽车贴纸创意鬼爪子抓痕引擎盖拉花个性改装装饰车身车贴大灯贴纸
  • 大众22款新迈腾B8门槛条B7专用改装配件迎宾踏板内饰装饰汽车用品
  • 铃木雨燕车贴 车身划痕贴纸 雨燕 汽车拉花 SX4 奥拓 改装 全车贴
  • 汽车低音炮8寸10寸12寸有源空箱木箱试音箱车载有源试音箱低音箱
  • 大众途岳门槽垫汽车用品车内装饰改装内饰配件2021款21防滑水杯垫
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

产品中心

NK hacking group stole email accounts of about 1,500 S. Koreans: police

2024-06-06 21:51:18      点击:799

Gettyimagesbank

A North Korean hacking group has stolen the email accounts of nearly 1,500 South Korean people, including dozens of government officials, this year after taking control of about 500 transit servers at home and abroad, the Korean National Police Agency (KNPA) said Tuesday.

The North's hacking organization, identified as "Kimsuky," was also found to have attempted to steal the victims' virtual assets, as well as their personal information, IDs and passwords, the KNPA said, though the virtual asset theft attempts failed due to strict security procedures.

A total of 1,468 South Koreans, including 57 former and current government officials, had their email accounts stolen by Kimsuky in 2023, marking a nearly 30-fold increase from only 49 victims reported to the authorities last year.

Last year's victims were mostly diplomacy and security experts but Kimsuky has indiscriminately expanded the target of its hacking attacks to the general public, the agency said, adding 1,411 ordinary citizens, including company employees and self-employed people, suffered damage this year.

Kimsuky sent malicious emails to the victims under the feigned names of government organizations, reporters and research institutes after changing its IP address via 576 servers at home and abroad, the KNPA said. The hacking group then gained access to the victims' attached documents, address directories and other data, though there were no confidential materials among the stolen information.

Notably, Kimsuky's hacking method has become far more sophisticated, as some of the victims were induced by attached URLs to access fake websites imitating trustworthy organizations or portals, the agency noted.

The North's hackers attempted to steal virtual assets from 19 of the victims by fraudulently accessing their virtual asset exchange accounts but those attempts were not successful due to strict security procedures, the KNPA said.

The agency has also confirmed that Kimsuky has earned less than 1 million won ($775) by secretly running a virtual asset mining program on 147 transit servers taken over through hacking. (Yonhap)

NK leader says ICBM launch shows what option he has if US makes wrong decision
NK says spy satellite took photos of US bases in San Diego, Japan