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SKorean police: Hackers extracted data in attacks
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-07-14 16:47 SEOUL, South Korea: Hackers extracted lists of files from computers that they contaminated with the virus that triggered cyberattacks last week in the United States and South Korea, police in Seoul said Tuesday. The attacks, in which floods of computers tried to connect to a single Web site at the same time to overwhelm the server, caused outages on prominent government-run sites in both countries. The finding means that hackers not only used affected computers for Web attacks, but also attempted to steal information from them. That adds to concern that contaminated computers were ordered to damage their own hard disks or files after the Web assaults. Still, the new finding does not mean information was stolen from attacked Web sites, such as those of the White House and South Korea's presidential Blue House, police said. It also does not address suspicions about the DPRK's involvement, they said.
"It's like hackers taking a look inside the computers," An said. "We're trying to figure out why they did this." Extracted file lists were sent to 416 computers in 59 countries, 15 of them in South Korea. Police have found some file lists in 12 receiver computers and are trying to determine whether hackers broke into those systems and stole the lists, An said. Investigators have yet to identify the hackers or determine for sure where they operated from. Dozens of high-profile US and South Korean Web sites were targeted. There have been no new Web attacks since the last wave launched Thursday evening. South Korea's spy agency, the National Intelligence Service, lowered the country's cyberattack alert Monday as affected Web sites returned to normal. The DPRK is suspected of involvement. The spy agency told lawmakers last week that a DPRK military research institute had been ordered to destroy the South's communications networks, local media reported. The agency said in a statement Saturday that it has "various evidence" of the DPRK involvement, but cautioned it has yet to reach a final conclusion. |