Microsoft has always been a highly prized target as it controls so much of the data and services used by governments and enterprises worldwide.
Russian hackers stole Microsoft corporate emails in month-long breach
- January 19, 2024
- 07:02 PM
- 1
Microsoft warned Friday night that some of its corporate email accounts were breached and data stolen by a Russian state-sponsored hacking group known as Midnight Blizzard.
The company detected the attack on January 12th, with Microsoft's investigation ultimately determining that the attack was conducted by Russian threat actors known more commonly as Nobelium or APT29.
- A password spray is a type of brute force attack where threat actors collect a list of potential login names and then attempt to log in to all of them using a particular password. If that password fails, they repeat this process with other passwords until they run out or successfully breach the account.
- Once the hackers gained access to the "test" account, Microsoft says the Nobelium hackers used it to access a "small percentage" of Microsoft's corporate email accounts for over a month.
Microsoft says the breached email accounts included members of Microsoft's leadership team and employees in the cybersecurity and legal departments, from which the hackers stole emails and attachments.
"The investigation indicates they were initially targeting email accounts for information related to Midnight Blizzard itself," the Microsoft Security Response Center shared in a report on the incident.
"We are in the process of notifying employees whose email was accessed."
- However, based on the limited information shared by Microsoft, it appears that a big part of the breach was caused by the poorly secured configuration of the breached account.
- While Microsoft is still investigating the breach, they said they will share additional details as appropriate.
Who is Nobelium
- The hackers rose to notoriety when the U.S. government linked them to the 2020 SolarWinds supply chain attack, which also impacted Microsoft at the time.
- Microsoft later confirmed that the SolarWinds attack allowed the hackers to steal source code for a limited number of Azure, Intune, and Exchange components.
- In June 2021, the hacking group once again breached a Microsoft corporate account, allowing them to access customer support tools.
Microsoft has always been a highly prized target as it controls so much of the data and services used by governments and enterprises worldwide.
More recently, Microsoft was targeted by Chinese hackers who stole a Microsoft signing key that allowed them to access the email accounts of two dozen organizations, including U.S. and Western European government agencies.
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