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Nasdaq Hackers Reportedly Penetrated Computer Network Multiple Times

PETER SVENSSON   02/ 5/11 06:21 PM ET   AP

Nasdaq Hackers

NEW YORK — Hackers broke into a Nasdaq service that handles confidential communications for some 300 corporations, the company said Saturday – the latest vulnerability exposed in the computer systems Wall Street depends on.

The intrusions did not affect Nasdaq's stock trading systems and no customer data was compromised, Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. said. Nasdaq is the largest electronic securities trading market in the U.S., with more than 2,800 listed companies.

A federal official told The Associated Press that the hackers broke into the service repeatedly over more than a year. Investigators are trying to identify the hackers, the official said. The motive is unknown. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the inquiry by the FBI and Secret Service is continuing.

The targeted service, Directors Desk, helps companies share documents with directors between scheduled board meetings. It also allows online discussions and Web conferencing within a board. Since board directors have access to information at the highest level of a company, penetrating the service could be of great value for insider trading.

Nasdaq OMX spokesman Frank DeMaria said the Justice Department had requested that the company keep silent about the intrusion until at least Feb. 14. However, The Wall Street Journal reported the investigation on its website late Friday, prompting Nasdaq to issue a statement and notify its customers.

DeMaria said Nasdaq OMX detected "suspicious files" during a regular security scan on U.S. servers unrelated to its trading systems and determined that Directors Desk was potentially affected. It pulled in forensic firms and federal law enforcement for an investigation. They found no evidence that customer information was accessed by hackers.

Rich Mogull, an analyst and CEO with the security research firm Securosis, said Web-accessible services like Directors Desk are a prime target for hackers, and have sometimes been a back door for systems that aren't directly connected to the Web. The presence of files on the Directors Desk system and the claim that no customer information was compromised could indicate that hackers were able to get in but not complete their attack, he said.

Computer security experts have long warned that many companies aren't doing enough to protect sensitive data, and recent events have underlined the point. The secret-spilling organization WikiLeaks has published confidential documents from banks in Switzerland and Iceland and claims to have incriminating documents from a major U.S. bank, possibly Bank of America.

In 1999, hackers infiltrated the websites of Nasdaq and the American Stock Exchange leaving taunting messages, but Nasdaq officials said then that there was no evidence the break-ins affected financial data.

Nasdaq OMX CEO Bob Greifeld said in a statement that cyber attacks against corporations and government are constant and the company is vigilant in maintaining security.

"We continue to evaluate and enhance our advanced security controls to respond to the ever increasing global cyber threat and continue to devote extensive resources to further secure our systems," he said.

Some of the Wall Street's technological scares have been unrelated to hackers. In June 2009, a computer glitch knocked out trading in 242 stocks on the New York Stock Exchange for several hours.

More recently, high-speed trading software precipitated a "flash crash" on May 6. One trade worth $4.1 billion touched off a chain of events that ended with 30 stocks listed in the S&P 500 index falling at least 10 percent within five minutes. The drop briefly wiped out $1 trillion in market value as some stocks traded as low as a penny.

___

Associated Press Writer Pete Yost contributed from Washington.

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NEW YORK — Hackers broke into a Nasdaq service that handles confidential communications for some 300 corporations, the company said Saturday – the latest vulnerability exposed in the compu...
NEW YORK — Hackers broke into a Nasdaq service that handles confidential communications for some 300 corporations, the company said Saturday – the latest vulnerability exposed in the compu...
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01:29 AM on 02/07/2011
So if I understand this right, hackers could get into NASDAQ and crash the price of A0L stock effectively leaving HP bankrupt??? Also how many different foil hats can you make with the average roll?
11:33 PM on 02/06/2011
Oh, you mean that 1,000 point drop that one day didn't give it away?!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotorhead1871
who are you jivin' with that cosmic debris?...
04:18 PM on 02/06/2011
COOL...I love to see the arrogant system get slapped....they think they are so above it all...you know insider trading goes on all the time....maybe someone else can get in on it!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
Alert, awake & paying attention to the details.
01:54 PM on 02/06/2011
The intrusions did not affect Nasdaq's stock trading systems and no customer data was compromise...this is a lie.  They have already been breaching the stock trading system and stealing.  It takes just a micro second.  Old freakin news.  Problem is they can't stop it.  Hackers have been injecting tiny amounts of latency into stocks so they can subtly--below the radar change the course of trading and pocket profits of millions of dollars in just a few seconds
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Soulsurfer
Solar Electrician,Longtime Surfin'Fool
10:06 AM on 02/06/2011
Are they 'good' hackers or 'bad' hackers? At any rate, please redirect all the money transfers to public radio station KCSM Jazz in San Francisco, they need the money.
09:51 AM on 02/06/2011
Probably insiders looking to rig the system further.
09:28 AM on 02/06/2011
You do know that the stock market is a ponzi scheme!.......
06:53 AM on 02/06/2011
Like many people are saying, "Not good!" Couldn't agree more...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl Baron
AGPCUK
06:43 AM on 02/06/2011
Thankyou for taking OUT my last post on this important issue without notification and reason HUFFINGTON POST.
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SageSpencer
Angel brought Him the leaden heart & the dead bird
05:17 AM on 02/06/2011
“hackers broke into the systems REPEATEDLY over more than a year.” …and they are still trying to identify the hackers. Not good!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimithing4u
Obviously you're not a golfer.
05:16 AM on 02/06/2011
why arent the feds putting in the same amount of effort to find the guys on wall street who "penetrated" us?
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yoyodyne666
Just here to spool you up.
02:08 AM on 02/06/2011
Since board directors have access to information at the highest level of a company, penetrating the service could be of great value for insider trading.


Oh my, only Goldman is allowed to do that, how dare those hackers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cccoyote
America couldn't be bought by corps.
11:14 PM on 02/05/2011
It's been penetrated more times than Jenna Jameson.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bring in swat
06:15 PM on 02/05/2011
if there's a lock...there's a key. Come On ANON...do your thing.
05:38 PM on 02/05/2011
A whole lot of scandalous information will hit Wikileaks in about a month...