India’s cyber trauma

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Recently, India’s Defence and other ministries were placed on high alert following concerted cyber attacks on the country’s government and commercial organisations by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA’s) Western Theatre Command that faces India all along its northern Himalayan borders.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) issued an alert to the army, navy and air force that a Chinese Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) group called Suckfly, based in Chengdu region where the Command is located, is targeting Indian agencies, with the defence establishment as its prime target. Suckfly, which carries out cyber espionage through a malware called Nidiran, camouflaged its attacks with certificates stolen from legitimate software developing firms in South Korea.

“This cyber espionage was undertaken by infecting computers of both government and commercial houses involved in e-commerce, finance, healthcare, shipping and technology,” the MoD alert cautioned. “Sensitive information from targeted computers and networks is being used to undermine national security and economic capabilities.” An APT is a network attack in which someone gains unauthorised access and stays there undetected for long, the intention being to steal data instead of causing damage to the network or organisation.

These mounting cyber onslaughts against India’s defence establishments have reaffirmed a proposal for the setting up of a dedicated tri-services command for cyber security. A proposal for such a command had indeed been drafted following a 2012 cyber attack by Chinese hackers, who managed to penetrate the commuter systems of the Indian Navy’s Eastern Command, where the country’s first indigenous nuclear submarine was constructed and is based…Click HERE to read full article.

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