Comments
Hot_Mathematician357 t1_jebjcuq wrote
And it’s obvious which candidates are supporting Russia.
Routine_Steak_9697 t1_jebpyhz wrote
Like when the progressive caucus sent a letter to the president at the beginning of the conflict, calling for sanction relief for Russia? Both parties have elements of Russian supporters.
isowater t1_jec9rtn wrote
Tankies aren't progressive they just ate the propaganda
sight_ful t1_jedhdmf wrote
I think the letter was about asking Biden to continue attempting to negotiation wasn’t it? Not sanction relief.
Paranoidnl t1_jeefvus wrote
most likely. and they need to go as well. this standard whataboutism always has the same answer: Everyone that supports russia has to go, don't care what they are or represent. are you a democrat and think that the russian invasion is justified? BYEEEEE. are you a republican and think that the russian invasion is justified? BYEEEEE.
it's not hard. all traitors have to go, a crime is a crime. and this is what will you will hear from any proper progressive. you always have the nutjobs on each end of the spectrum but most level headed progressive people will tell you this.
[deleted] t1_jecuprs wrote
[removed]
autotldr t1_je9zeoc wrote
This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 74%. (I'm a bot)
> Threat actors aligned with Russia and Belarus are targeting elected US officials supporting Ukraine, using attacks that attempt to compromise their email accounts, researchers from security firm Proofpoint said.
> Raggi declined to identify the targets except to say they included elected US officials and staffers at the federal government level as well as European entities.
> "In several instances among both US and European targeted entities, the individuals targeted by these phishing campaigns are vocal supporters of Ukraine in the Russia/Ukraine War and/or involved in initiatives pertaining to the support of Ukraine on an international stage," he added.
Extended Summary | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: portal^#1 targeted^#2 European^#3 Proofpoint^#4 officials^#5
Friendly-Escape-4574 t1_jeae31r wrote
Wonder if we'll see an increase in this with China sending Russia a team of cybersecurity experts
zzlab t1_jedpoc6 wrote
Sent to Russia? Is there any limit to how Chinese can abuse their own people?!
rikashiku t1_jebpgfq wrote
Nothing new there. Russia have been at it for nearly 10 years.
carpcrucible t1_jebp90n wrote
Very good idea, I'm sure this would never backfire!
[deleted] t1_jebp0lv wrote
[removed]
LeftOnQuietRoad t1_jec7s03 wrote
Huh. Interesting.
bunkdiggidy t1_jeazr1x wrote
"If you know we exist, and you don't expect us to do this and prepare for it, then you deserve to get hacked." -Russia probably
thorofasgard t1_jeb9hto wrote
Slow news day?
BigBeerBellyMan t1_je9zqdr wrote
Email phishing is not computer hacking.
ActiveAd4980 t1_jea3ar0 wrote
Yet it works in so many places.
Phriend_of_Phoenix t1_jeanyf4 wrote
It kind of is though? No one really bothers with traditional attacks like man in the middle anymore cause it’s much easier to trick someone into giving you their password. The point of hacking is to get access to information on a computer, social engineering attacks do that.
Cognomifex t1_jeaskzq wrote
> It kind of is though?
If anything it's person hacking. There are still plenty of ways to go after the tech directly, but as you say generally the weakest point in a system from a security standpoint is the bag of meat operating it.
Kosh_Ascadian t1_jec79xl wrote
Social engineering is the term.
BigBeerBellyMan t1_jeapljo wrote
My point is, that anyone can trick a naive person to give up their password. They don't need to be a "Hacker" and they often aren't. The article's title is misleading and sensationalized.
Phriend_of_Phoenix t1_jeaq4fm wrote
You at right in the technical sense, but I think you are just nitpicking. If someone convinces grandma to give them her Facebook login, grandma says she got hacked, and would probably call that person a hacker. GPT isn’t really an AI, but we call it that anyways because how society uses words doesn’t stick to a single dictionary definition.
[deleted] t1_jeaxt7m wrote
[deleted]
BigBeerBellyMan t1_jeb2tk0 wrote
The title is sensationalized and misleading though:
There's no way to know the culprits were Pro-Russian.
There's no indication they were Hackers.
They didn't only target US government employees.
No mention if other (not pro-Ukraine) politicians were also targeted, or if it was only those who support the war.
It could just be that US officials were caught in a large drag-net operation.
Phriend_of_Phoenix t1_jebrk9j wrote
You have clearly read at least part of the article since you started this thread by claiming phishing is not hacking. The article also states that the group Proofpoint was tracking was at the very least Russia aligned. The scripts they were using were customized to target NATO and NATO aligned organizations. We know they were targeting pro NATO and pro Ukraine officials because they have attacked multiple countries, and all their targets fit that bill. This is in the first two paragraphs of the article.
[deleted] t1_jea1rsg wrote
[deleted]
[deleted] t1_jeancyx wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_jecutkc wrote
[removed]
ReturnOfSeq t1_jeak6v0 wrote
Nothing new. Russia has been hacking and attacking progressive US officials for at least 8 years