Russia may be using drones to hack the phones of NATO soldiers in Eastern Europe

William Gayde

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Staff

A string of cyber attacks has NATO soldiers deployed in Eastern Europe scrambling to secure their online accounts and mobile devices. The attacks have targeted the iCloud accounts, Facebook pages, and cell phones of about 4,000 NATO troops. The methods used in the attacks are relatively simple, but could expose classified data about troop movements and mission plans.

The incidents are believed to involve simple tactics like the Find My iPhone attack, phishing links, or fake social media profiles. These are common among simple criminals and basement hackers and are much less advanced than some previous attacks. The affected soldiers are stationed very close to the Russian border which has US officials believing there may be a political motive behind the hacks.

The Wall Street Journal, citing those US officials, believes drones may have also been used to simulate cell towers in a Stingray-like attack. If successful, this would give the attacker access to phone contacts, messages, call details, and other mobile network usage.

So far, six soldiers have confirmed that they were hacked with many more likely to come once further details are examined. They have had their contacts wiped and their locations tracked back to Russian IP addresses in Moscow.

Russia has used similar covert and low-level attacks in the past to spy on or hinder their enemies. Previous attacks have used Twitter posts with embedded malware links to target the Department of Defense, phishing attacks to steal secrets from the Clinton campaign, and other reported attacks against the Macron campaign in France.

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SIGH..why would the US automatically assume this is a state-sponsored attack? Russia is the galactic headquarters of organized cybercrime. How about we find out how many civilian locals were hacked as well before pointing the finger, eh? I understand that the phony cell tower thing is a concern but that says more about the horribly insecure nature of wireless tech than anything else. I was warning people about drone-borne eavesdropping and hacking years ago.
 
Though we won't get it I would like to know about all our hacks on the bad guys. I think we do it well cause I never hear or read of us being accused or caught
 
SIGH..why would the US automatically assume this is a state-sponsored attack? Russia is the galactic headquarters of organized cybercrime. How about we find out how many civilian locals were hacked as well before pointing the finger, eh? I understand that the phony cell tower thing is a concern but that says more about the horribly insecure nature of wireless tech than anything else. I was warning people about drone-borne eavesdropping and hacking years ago.

Because it's Russia. It would be foolish NOT to assume it's the FSB initially. I mean, is there any other explanation necessary? It's... Just what they do. Ask any military contractor the same question, and you'll get the same answer. Trust me...
 
So it seems we have the likes of Google, Facebook, and Microsoft et al., mining our data from inside the country whilst state and non-state sponsored actors steal our data from outside the country. The borders are getting blurry, is it like the pot calling the kettle black?
 
SIGH..why would the US automatically assume this is a state-sponsored attack? Russia is the galactic headquarters of organized cybercrime. How about we find out how many civilian locals were hacked as well before pointing the finger, eh? I understand that the phony cell tower thing is a concern but that says more about the horribly insecure nature of wireless tech than anything else. I was warning people about drone-borne eavesdropping and hacking years ago.

Good point so ..... we need to develop a missile guidance system that will follow the beam back to the source of hacking and take care of the hackers one at a time. Of course, if that missile ends up in the lobby of the Kremlin, well .... enough said!
 
Maybe they just need the info so after the invasion they can provide targeted advertisements to enhance our browsing experience
 
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