Seoul police say the hackers were also able to plant malicious code into
the computers in an attempt to use them as 'zombie' machines
SEOUL, South Korea – North
Korean hackers managed to steal thousands of records from private firms
and state agencies in the South including defense industry information
and files from Korean Air, Seoul police said Monday, June 13.
The hacking originated from 16 servers
based in the North's capital Pyongyang, police said, adding the North
had stolen more than 42,000 internal records.
The North gained access to the internal
systems of the firms and agencies at some point after hacking in 2014
into computer management software developed by a Seoul IT firm,
according to the police.
The breach was discovered earlier this year.
The hackers also planted 33 types of
malicious code into the computers in an apparent bid to use them as
"zombie" machines to launch future cyberattacks on other organizations
in the South, it said.
The companies that were hacked include
South Korea's flagship air carrier Korean Air and SK Networks, a sister
company of South Korea's top wireless operator, SK Telecom, Yonhap news
agency said.
"We worked with the organizations that
were targeted to recover the lost records and fortify their computer
security to prevent further infiltration," the police said in a
statement.
Some of the stolen records however
contained information about the defense industry or network data
essential to stage cyberattacks, it added.
The records include designs of military aircraft and Internet facilities at South Korean army barracks, according to the Yonhap.
Police added that some of the 16 servers
in Pyongyang had the same IP addresses as those that had staged a
crippling cyberattack on Seoul's banks and TV broadcasters in 2013.
Seoul has in recent years blamed the
North's hackers for a series of cyberattacks on military institutions,
banks, state agencies, TV broadcasters, media websites, and a nuclear
power plant.
The attack in March 2013 left the
websites and tens of thousands of computers at several TV stations and
banks paralyzed for hours.
Pyongyang has angrily denied involvement
in the attacks and accused Seoul of spreading fabrications aimed at
slandering its leader.
The North operates an army of more than
1,000 hackers who stage hacking or cyberattacks targeting Seoul's major
institutions or key officials, according to the South's spy agency.
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