FBI and NSA Disclose Malware Used by Russia’s ‘Fancy Bear’

Aug 13, 2020

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(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. National Security Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation warned that hackers from Russia’s military intelligence unit created malware to spy on Linux systems widely used by the U.S. defense industry.

The previously undisclosed malware is called “Drovorub” and was created by the Russian hacking group known as “Fancy Bear,” part of the GRU military intelligence unit. The disclosure on Thursday in a cybersecurity advisory is intended to “counter the capabilities of the GRU” -- a unit whose hackers became infamous for their cyber-attacks in the lead-up to the U.S. presidential election in 2016.

“This malware represents a very significant threat,” Keppel Wood, chief operations officer in the NSA’s cybersecurity directorate, said in an interview. She added that national security systems, the Department of Defense, the defense industrial base and the larger cybersecurity community rely on Linux-based systems, meaning that “this threat has potential to be widespread, especially if network defenders don’t take action against it.”

The advisory contains over 40 pages of technical detail about Drovorub, a name derived from the hacking code that translates to “woodcutter” or “to split wood.” The malware can take control of systems and move data on and off of them, and it is particularly dangerous because it is designed specifically to evade detection, according to the NSA.

The advisory calls out hackers from the GRU, which “continues to threaten the United States and U.S. allies as part of its rogue behavior.”

The public disclosure of the malware is intended to spur network defenders to take protective actions, such as updating their Linux systems. “By constructing this capability and providing attribution analysis, and mitigations, we hope to empower our customers, partners and allies to take action,” NSA Cybersecurity Director Anne Neuberger said in the advisory.

The release -- one of 19 such public disclosures since October -- is also part of a broader NSA attempt to be more transparent about its cybersecurity work. “We recognize that to be a strong partner we need to build trust with the greater cybersecurity community and be transparent about our contributions,” Wood said. “As an intelligence agency we have historically been reticent to talk publicly about our work as I’m sure has been apparent in the past, and that’s really changing right now.”

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