North Korean IT Workers Are Infiltrating Tech Companies

Plus: The Conti ransomware gang shuts down, Canada bans Huawei and ZTE, and more of the week’s top security news.

By Matt Burgess, Wired

As Russia's full-scale war in Ukraine heads towards its hundredth day, opposition from Ukrainian forces is as strong as ever. At the same time, hacktivists all around the world continue to breach Russian institutions and publish their files and emails. This week one hacktivist collective took a different—and slightly peculiar—approach: launching a service to prank-call Russian government officials. The new website uses leaked details to put two random Russian officials on a call with each other. It obviously won't make any difference to the outcome of the war, but the group that created it hopes the tool will cause some confusion and annoy those in Moscow.

New research from Google’s Threat Analysis Group has delved into the surveillance-for-hire industry and found that spyware vendors are targeting Android devices with zero-day exploits. State-sponsored actors in Egypt, Armenia, Greece, Madagascar, Côte d’Ivoire, Serbia, Spain, and Indonesia have all purchased hacking tools from the North Macedonian firm Cytrox, the Google team says. The malware has used five previously unknown Android exploits, alongside unpatched vulnerabilities. Overall, Google’s researchers say they’re tracking more than 30 surveillance-for-hire firms around the world.

In other malware news, academics at Germany’s Technical University of Darmstadt have figured out a way to track an iPhone’s location even when it is turned off. When you switch your iPhone off it doesn’t fully power down—instead chips inside run in a low-power mode. The researchers were able to run malware that can track the phone in this low-power mode. They believe their work is the first of its kind, but the method is unlikely to be much of a threat in the real world, as it first requires jailbreaking the targeted iPhone, which has generally become harder to do in recent years.


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