FireEye Hack Portends a Scary Era of Cyber-Insecurity

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Unless you’re an information technology guru, or someone whose professional duties include protecting computer networks from cyberattacks, you may not have heard of FireEye Inc., a little Milpitas, California, company specializing in digital warfare.

But you should pay attention to what happened to FireEye recently, because it speaks volumes about persistent threats to private and public security — and the high-stakes robberies that plague even the most sophisticated operators.

FireEye’s chief executive officer, Kevin Mandia, disclosed Tuesday that his company’s servers had been hacked. Given that FireEye is a go-to enterprise for governments and corporations bloodied by their own hacks, and rely on FireEye to defend or rescue them by identifying and blocking breaches, Mandia’s disclosure is revealing.

“Based on my 25 years in cybersecurity and responding to incidents, I’ve concluded we are witnessing an attack by a nation with top-tier offensive capabilities. This attack is different from the tens of thousands of incidents we have responded to throughout the years,” Mandia said. “The attackers tailored their world-class capabilities specifically to target and attack FireEye. They are highly trained in operational security and executed with discipline and focus. They operated clandestinely, using methods that counter security tools and forensic examination. They used a novel combination of techniques not witnessed by us or our partners in the past.”

Wow. Who are these guys?

While the Federal Bureau of Investigation would attribute the FireEye hack only to an “actor” that seemed to be a “nation-state,” reporters with the Washington Post were more specific: It was Russia. And not just any Russians, but a group known as “APT29” or “Cozy Bear,” hackers affiliated with the Kremlin’s intelligence services. Cozy Bear’s pedigree includes past hacks of the State Department and White House during the Barack Obama administration and, perhaps most famously, of the Democratic National Committee’s servers during the 2016 presidential campaign. (Who did the State Department and the White House recruit to clean up the earlier breaches? FireEye.)

FireEye said the hackers pilfered its so-called Red Team tools. That’s the stuff companies like FireEye use to test vulnerabilities of computer networks to make them more resilient. The tools are meant to mimic a complex assault, and now they’re in the hands of a hostile player. FireEye said the hackers focused primarily on information from its government clients, and it released 300 countermeasures for its customers and the public to use against hacks enabled by the stolen tools. The company also said it hadn’t seen any of its tools used yet for break-ins, and none involved “zero-day” exploits — meaning the malware wasn’t used to sneak into and derail a network before defensive patches could be applied.

“We do not believe that this theft will greatly advance the attacker’s overall capabilities,” FireEye noted.

Maybe. We won’t really know how attackers might use the goodies they ripped off from FireEye until they start trying. The Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency, a federal body that monitors digital security, said the thieves could use FireEye’s tools to “take control of targeted systems.” EternalBlue, a hacking tool the U.S. National Security Agency developed to exploit vulnerabilities in Microsoft Corp.’s Windows operating system, got out into the wild after the NSA itself was infiltrated in 2017. Hackers successfully used EternalBlue to attack networks for at least a year after the tool was leaked.

In addition to the federal government, FireEye’s customers have included the city and county of San Francisco, the University of South Carolina, the Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Sony Corp. and Equifax Inc. The company says it has more than 9,600 customers in 103 countries, including more than 50% of the Forbes Global 2000. It also provides digital protection to more than 1,000 government and law enforcement agencies worldwide.

And if FireEye itself can be hacked, who can’t be? Investors aren’t happy with the company. Its share price has plunged more than 13% since it disclosed the attack.

FireEye presumably had lots of complex malware source code on its servers, and either it was lax about leaving sensitive data connected to a network outsiders could access or its vaunted security protocols weren’t bulletproof. It’s also possible that the hackers weren’t after FireEye’s Red Team tools or even client data. They may have simply wanted to learn how much confidential information FireEye had in its vaults about the world’s most sophisticated digital marauders — folks like Cozy Bear.

In a world populated with Cozy Bears, there are plenty of potential targets.

FireEye isn’t the first security firm to be breached. RSA Security, the company that makes SecurIDs, was hacked back in 2011, for example. Duplicates of RSA’s compromised tokens were used to hack Lockheed Martin Corp., a major defense contractor. This year alone, North Korea and Russia have repeatedly tried to hack the servers of pharmaceutical companies pursuing a Covid-19 vaccine. U.K. and U.S. cybersecurity agencies accused Cozy Bear in July of trying to hack a number of unidentified groups involved in developing a coronavirus vaccine. Pfizer Inc. said Wednesday that coronavirus vaccine documentation it turned over to Europe’s top drug regulator was hacked in a cyberattack on the agency. The NSA recently warned other administrators of national security and defense systems that they were at risk because Russian hackers were exploiting vulnerabilities in products made by VMware Inc., a software company.

The lesson in all this may be that no person or entity can avoid being hacked if the forces of well-resourced and deft nation-states are on the prowl.

In the most optimistic scenario, all of us may be permanently mired in a never-ending cat-and-mouse game between digital security guards and hackers. The bleaker scenario is endless cyberwarfare among countries such as the U.S., Russia and China — conflicts that have the power to undermine democracy, upend personal privacy, compromise national security, leave societies awash in misinformation, and turn that mobile phone you’re holding into a time bomb.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Timothy L. O'Brien is a senior columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.

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