Customers at Ukraine’s largest state-owned bank, Privatbank, and the state-owned Sberbank report problems with online payments and the banks’ apps


KYIV, Ukraine: A series of cyberattacks on Tuesday knocked the websites of Ukrainian government offices and major banks offline, Ukrainian authorities said, attacks that came amid strong tensions between Russia and the West over Ukraine.
It was too early to know, however, if the apparently low-level denial-of-service attacks might be a smokescreen for more serious and damaging cyber mischief.
Escalating fears about a Russian invasion of Ukraine eased slightly as Russia sent signals Tuesday that it might be pulling back from the brink, but Western powers demanded proof.
At least 10 Ukrainian websites were unreachable due to denial-of-service attacks, including those of the Defense Ministry, the Foreign Ministry, the Culture Ministry and Ukraine’s two largest state banks. In such attacks, websites are barraged with a flood of junk data packets, rendering them unreachable.
Customers at Ukraine’s largest state-owned bank, Privatbank, and the state-owned Sberbank reported problems with online payments and the banks’ apps.
“There is no threat to depositors’ funds,” the Ukrainian Information Ministry’s Center for Strategic Communications and Information Security said in a statement. The deputy minister, Victor Zhora, confirmed the cyberattacks.
The ministry suggested Russia could be behind Tuesday’s incident, without providing details. “It is possible that the aggressor resorted to tactics of petty mischief, because his aggressive plans aren’t working overall,” the statement said.
Oleh Derevianko, a leading private sector expert and founder of the ISSP cybersecurity firm, said it was not immediately clear if Tuesday’s cyberattacks were limited to a denial-of-service campaign.
“That’s exactly the question we always ask,” he said.
Ukraine has been subject to a steady diet of Russian aggression in cyberspace since 2014, when Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula and backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.
The attacks follow a Jan. 14 cyberattack that damaged servers at Ukraine’s State Emergency Service and at the Motor Transport Insurance Bureau with a malicious “wiper” cloaked as ransomware. The damage proved minimal — some cybersecurity experts think that was by design, given the capabilities of Russian state-backed hackers. A message posted simultaneously on dozens of defaced Ukrainian government websites said: “Be afraid and expect the worst.”
Serhii Demediuk, the No. 2 official at Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council, called the attack Tuesday “part of a full-scale Russian operation directed at destabilizing the situation in Ukraine, aimed at exploding our Euro-Atlantic integration and seizing power.”
Such attacks are apt to continue as Russian President Vladimir Putin tries to “degrade” and “delegitimize” trust in Ukrainian institutions, the cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike said in a blog post.
Ukraine has been the premier testing ground of cyberconflict. In the winters of 2015 and 2016, attacks on Ukraine’s power grid attributed to Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency temporarily knocked out power.
Russia’s GRU has also been blamed for perhaps the most devastating cyberattack ever. Targeting companies doing business in Ukraine in 2017, the NotPetya virus caused over $10 billion in damage worldwide. The virus, also disguised as ransomware, was a “wiper” virus that scrubbed entire networks.
SOURCE: AP NEWS

The war in Iran didn’t end; it became something new
- 20 minutes ago
Iran says US naval blockade has little impact on food supply
- 17 hours ago
Iran Guards say ‘seized’ two ships attempting to cross Strait of Hormuz
- 13 hours ago
China warns Middle East at ‘critical juncture’ after Trump extends ceasefire
- 17 hours ago

La-Z-Boy’s recliners and sofas are getting built-in Klipsch speakers
- 17 hours ago

Dyson’s back with a travel-size Supersonic hairdryer
- 2 hours ago

Birdfy’s new 4K feeder wants to teach you about the birds it identifies
- 17 hours ago

Canva’s CEO on its big pivot to AI enterprise software
- 17 hours ago
Death anniversary of Moin Akhtar being observed today
- 15 hours ago

Why are states unleashing millions of these fish?
- 20 minutes ago

US-Iran talks could be held in next three days: Trump
- 10 hours ago
Pakistan condemns storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque compound
- 16 hours ago

