
Enlarge / The Senate’s IT security team can’t protect senators’ and staffers’ own devices and accounts. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) wants to change that. (credit: Martin Falbisoner / Wikimedia Commons)
According to Wyden, his office had discovered that “at least one major technology company” had recently detected targeted attacks against members of the Senate and their staffers—and that these attacks had apparently been staged by groups tied to foreign intelligence agencies.
Microsoft reported thwarting spear-phishing attacks staged by a group tied to Russia’s Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) against members of the Senate in August. And the US Senate’s own systems have been targeted in the past, including a June 2017 effort by the same GRU group (known as “Fancy Bear,” “Pawnstorm,” and “Sofacy”) that created a server spoofing the Senate’s own Windows Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS), according to a report from Trend Micro.
Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments