Two Russian agents, accused of massive hacking of Yahoo in the US
Two Russian agents, accused of massive hacking of Yahoo in the US
According to the US Department of Justice, Russian spies "protected, directed and paid criminal pirates" to carry out the invasion of Yahoo, whose ultimate goal was to reach journalists and government officials.
Two agents of the Russian intelligence service FSB and two hackers have been indicted this Wednesday for a cyber attack against the Yahoo system that affected some 500 million users, the US Department of Justice announced.
According to the authorities, Russian spies "protected, directed and paid criminal pirates" to carry out the invasion of Yahoo, whose ultimate goal was to reach journalists and government officials. The two agents were identified as Dmitry Dokuchaev and Igor Sushchin, who would be part of the intelligence body that replaced the KGB.
According to the US authorities, Dokuchaev and Sushchin hired Alexsey Belan and Karim Baratov to carry out the invasion, which was uncovered last year. The now indicted "aimed at Yahoo accounts of officials of the US and Russian governments, including cybersecurity, diplomatic and military personnel," Deputy Secretary of Justice Mary McCord told reporters.
They also sought to affect "Russian journalists, employees of other networks that they also wanted to invade and employees of commercial entities and financial services," said Justice Department officials. McCord said Baratov was arrested this week after an arrest warrant presented to Canada. At the moment there is no additional information about the other suspects.
The hacking of Yahoo is considered one of the most ambitious, and since last year authorities have claimed that behind the invasion there was a "nation-state".
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