Microsoft, Facebook disrupted activities of NKorean hackers:WH

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

American tech giants and acted recently on their own to disrupt the activities of North Korean hackers and prevent the operational execution of ongoing cyberattacks in the US, the said today.

said US had rallied allies and responsible tech companies around the world to increase the security and resilience of the Internet.


"Cooperation between industry and good governments will bring improved security, and we can no longer afford to wait," he said.

"We applaud our corporate partners, and especially, for acting on their own initiative last week without any direction by the US or coordination to disrupt the activities of North Korean hackers. acted before the attack in ways that spared many US targets," he said.

Bossert said and and other major tech companies acted to disable a number of North Korean cyber exploits and disrupt their operations as the North Koreans were still infecting computers across the globe.

"They shut down accounts the North Korean regime hackers used to launch attacks and patched systems," he said.

has done everything wrong as an on the global stage that a country can do, he added.

Bossert said US Trump had used "just about every lever you can use, short of starving the people of to death, to change their behaviour".

"So we don't have a lot of room left here to apply pressure to change their behaviour. It's, nevertheless, important to call them out to let them know that it's them and we know it's them," he said.

"At this point, some of the benefit that come from this attribution is letting them know that we're going to move to stop their behaviour," he said.

It also allows the US to galvanise the private sector, he said, adding that in this case, the private sector also acted.

took down accounts that stopped the operational execution of ongoing cyberattacks. And acted to patch existing attacks, not just the WannaCry attack initially, he said.

"So this is allowing us to call on all likeminded and good, responsible companies to stop supporting North Korean hackers, whether they're operating in or elsewhere," Bossert said.

He said it's also an opportunity to call on the other countries in the region that were affected to mobilise them to stop that same behaviour.

"Often, North Koreans can travel outside of to hack, or they can rely on people outside of the country with better access to the Internet to carry out this malicious activity. And we need other countries, not just other companies, to work with us," he added.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, December 20 2017. 00:00 IST