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'Nitro' Attacks: China-Based Hacker Targeted Chemical Firms, Symantec Reports

Nitro Attacks

First Posted: 10/31/11 04:59 PM ET Updated: 10/31/11 04:59 PM ET

By Jim Finkle

(Reuters) - At least 48 chemical and defense companies were victims of a coordinated cyber attack that has been traced to a man in China, according to a new report from security firm Symantec Corp.

Computers belonging to these companies were infected with malicious software known as "PoisonIvy," which was used to steal information such as design documents, formulas and details on manufacturing processes, Symantec said on Monday.

It did not identify the companies, but said they include multiple Fortune 100 corporations that develop compounds and advanced materials, along with businesses that help manufacture infrastructure for these industries.

The bulk of the infected machines were found in the United States, Bangladesh and United Kingdom, Symantec said, adding that the victims include 29 chemicals companies, of which some developed advanced materials used in military vehicles.

"The purpose of the attacks appears to be industrial espionage, collecting intellectual property for competitive advantage," Symantec said in a white paper on the campaign, which the company dubbed the "Nitro" attacks.

The cyber campaign ran from late July through mid-September and was traced to a computer system in the United States that was owned by a man in his 20s in Hebei province in northern China, according to Symantec.

Researchers gave the man the pseudonym "Covert Grove" based on a literal translation of his name. They found evidence that the "command and control" servers used to control and mine data in this campaign were also used in attacks on human-rights groups from late April to early May, and in attacks on the motor industry in late May, Symantec said.

"We are unable to determine if Covert Grove is the sole attacker or if he has a direct or only indirect role," said Symantec's white paper. "Nor are we able to definitively determine if he is hacking these targets on behalf of another party or multiple parties."

The Nitro campaign is the latest in a series of highly targeted cyber attacks that security experts say are likely the work of government-backed hackers.

Intel Corp's security unit McAfee in August identified "Operation Shady RAT," a five-year coordinated campaign on the networks of 72 organizations, including the United Nations, governments and corporations.

In February, McAfee warned that hackers working in China broke into the computer systems of five multinational oil and natural gas companies to steal bidding plans and other critical proprietary information.

Symantec said on Monday that the Nitro attackers sent emails with tainted attachments to between 100 and 500 employees at a company, claiming to be from established business partners or to contain bogus security updates.

When an unsuspecting recipient opens the attachment, it installs "PoisonIvy," a Remote Access Trojan (RAT) that can take control of a machine and that is easily available over the Internet.

While the hackers' behavior differed slightly in each case, they typically identified desired intellectual property, copied it and uploaded it to a remote server, Symantec said in its report.

Symantec did not identify the companies that were targeted in its white paper and researchers could not immediately be reached. Dow Chemical Co was not immediately available to comment. A spokesman for DuPont declined comment, saying: "We don't comment on cyber security issues."

(Reporting by Jim Finkle. Additional reporting by Matt Daily. Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

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By Jim Finkle (Reuters) - At least 48 chemical and defense companies were victims of a coordinated cyber attack that has been traced to a man in China, according to a new report from security f...
By Jim Finkle (Reuters) - At least 48 chemical and defense companies were victims of a coordinated cyber attack that has been traced to a man in China, according to a new report from security f...
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11:24 AM on 11/01/2011
In order for this to be true I need to believe in two things:
A: Hackers who can brake into secure networks containing classified data don't know how to hide their identity from a anti-virus software maker
B: Investigators who conducted the trace did not stop once they got to China

It would seem this is a very interesting way for companies to get away from industrial espionage: just go through a proxy in China and you can be certain no investigation will continue after they get to that point.
09:40 PM on 10/31/2011
Gotta love the video and what they did.
Now there's going to be an "Occupy Chris Hansen" going around
05:35 PM on 10/31/2011
Let's we fine progressives cheer that the country that makes baby food out of lead is now stealing our formularies for the prescription drugs that keep us alive.

Viva la Revolution!
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SickHippie
No, YOUR micro-bio is empty.
05:40 PM on 10/31/2011
I think you mean "weapons that murder people".

From the article: "of which some developed advanced materials used in military vehicles."

Why do you feel the need to add information that's not indicated in the report? Do you have some names of companies which actually manufacture drugs affected by this virus, or are you making things up to justify more anger towards China?
05:49 PM on 10/31/2011
I am sorry your lobbying efforts are so transparent.
05:11 PM on 10/31/2011
Has everyone lost sight of the fact that China (The People's Republic of) is a Communist country? Why are we doing business with them in the first place? Why are our corporations so eager to cash in on the economic growth of a political system that is diametrically opposed to ours?
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SickHippie
No, YOUR micro-bio is empty.
05:41 PM on 10/31/2011
Because America is following half of Thomas Jefferson's advice: "Commerce with all nations, alliance with none, should be our motto."
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tooncesrocks
my micro bio is empty
06:42 AM on 11/01/2011
we aren't doing business with china... the chinese products coming into the US are being bade by United States Corporations.

US corporations open a branch in china and hire people (that's a US corporation... with chinese employees). The problem is with our structure of government here in the USA that allows this.

You may be interested in this vid:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=AzULm4d8h8w