After a series of hacks against South Korea’s nuclear research and defense sectors, the cybersecurity firm TeamT5 said a group linked to North Korea likely used a previously unknown vulnerability and new malicious tools to break into the highly sensitive systems.
According to a report published on Wednesday, researchers said they believe a group labelled “CloudDragon” used a so-called zero-day exploit called MemzipRAT to install a backdoor and gain access to the organizations’ networks. The experts consider CloudDragon to be one of two sub-groups commonly referred to as Kimsuky, which has long been suspected of working on behalf of the DPRK.
After a series of hacks against South Korea’s nuclear research and defense sectors, the cybersecurity firm TeamT5 said a group linked to North Korea likely used a previously unknown vulnerability and new malicious tools to break into the highly sensitive systems.
According to a report published on Wednesday, researchers said they believe a group labelled “CloudDragon” used a so-called zero-day exploit called MemzipRAT to install a backdoor and gain access to the organizations’ networks. The experts consider CloudDragon to be one of two sub-groups commonly referred to as Kimsuky, which has long been suspected of working on behalf of the DPRK.
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