From: jya@pipeline.com (John Young)
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Raw Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 14:33:26 +0800
From: jya@pipeline.com (John Young)
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 14:33:26 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: TST on Cyber Terror Inquiry
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The article Winn Schwartau cited today and a related column:
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The Sunday Times (London), June 9, 1996, p. 1/8
Secret DTI inquiry into cyber terror [Insight Column]
The government has been holding a secret investigation into
attacks by "cyber terrorists" on the City of London for
more than two years. The Department of Trade and Industry
(DTI), Bank of England, GCHQ, the secret listening station,
and the Defence Research Agency (DRA) are involved in the
inquiry.
The existence of the investigation, which began in April
1994, emerged after The Sunday Times revealed last week
that banks, broking firms and investment houses had paid
millions of pounds to gangs that threaten to wipe out
computer systems.
Correspondence from the investigating authorities, seen by
Insight, include letters from civil servants saying they
are "extremely concerned" at the evidence of extortion
demands.
Yesterday the DTI issued a statement confirming the inquiry
and suggesting its work had been hampered by the lack of
co-operation from City institutions.
"We are very interested in the allegations of extortion
directed at City of London institutions which were brought
to our attention in 1994. We responded then by involving
many government organisations, including the DTI, the
police, the Bank of England and other agencies. So far, we
have not been presented with any hard evidence from
victims. We would urge those threatened to come forward,"
a spokesman said.
In one letter, dated May 1995, David Hendon, director of
DTI technical affairs, wrote to a company specialising in
computer security work stating that he was taking the City
extortion issue "extremely seriously". Insight has since
seen the evidence passed to the DTI and GCHQ which sparked
the investigation. In 1994, a consultant working for a
company which undertakes computer risk assessments for City
institutions compiled a table of 46 attacks on banks and
finance houses in New York, London and other centres,
starting in January 1993.
The list included details of raids on three British banks
and one American investment house. The documents suggested
that operations in the futures markets had been a focus for
some of the attacks.
Documents sent by the DRA, from the office of Professor
David Parks, a senior director, indicate that the agency is
especially interested in the "weaponry" deployed by the
cyber terrorists.
The agency believes high-intensity radio frequency (HIRF)
guns may have been used to black out trading positions in
City finance houses. The weapon disables a computer by
firing electromagnetic radiation at it and is a "black
programme" at the defence ministry, one of the highest
security classification levels.
Last December, Parks approached a company which specialises
in defensive measures against information warfare and
carries out work for GCHQ. For a L30,000 fee it was asked
to arrange a demonstration of a portable HIRF weapon in
Germany.
Details of the HIRF weaponry and its use in the City have
also been compiled by Computing magazine, which intends to
pass them to the DTI and other authorities.
[End]
----------
[Related column, p. 2/4]
Held to ransom by superhighway-men
Private Account [Column]
By Jeff Randall
Forget Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, the world's
financial institutions have a new type of bank robber to
deal with -- the cyber terrorist.
Before you start thinking it sounds like science fiction,
consider this: the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)
this weekend confirmed there is an official investigation
into "raids" by gangs of computer experts who threaten to
wipe out electronic information and trading systems, unless
they are paid off.
The DTI spoke out after last weekend's scoop by the Sunday
Times' Insight team revealing that some of London's best-
known institutions have paid huge ransoms to "electronic
highwaymen" to prevent the meltdown of computer networks.
These revelations have sent a shiver up the spines of the
City's top banks. Financiers are terrified the emergence of
a gaping hole in their systems will cause a loss of
investor and customer confidence -- and rightly so.
Can you imagine calling your stockbroker to buy a few
thousand ICI shares, only to be told its entire information
bank had been blown away by a Dick Turpin with a PhD in
electronic engineering?
If, like me, you know nothing about computer technology,
and care even less, the temptation is to dismiss the
problem as the creation of Arthur C Clarke. But the DTI has
acknowledged for the first time that an investigation into
these "attacks" has been under way for two years. The Bank
of England and GCHQ, the government's secret listening
station, are working alongside the DTI in the inquiry.
Agencies in Britain and America believe there have been
more than 40 raids on investment firms in New York, London
and other European financial centres since 1993. Victims
are understood to have paid up to L13m a time after
blackmailers showed their ability to bring electronic
trading in shares, bonds and commodities to a halt.
Futures-market systems have been a favoured target of the
space-age bandits. In some cases, the blackmailers have
used technology developed by military scientists.
But here is the paradox: the DTI has been hampered by the
reluctance of City firms involved to co-operate.
Extortionists have so frightened the investment houses,
they fear reprisals if they are discovered helping official
agencies track down the gangs. There is also concern that
an admission of the threats would diminish confidence in
the banking system and create a loss of face for the
victims. A banker told Insight: "You will never get a
financial institution to admit it has an extortion policy,
let alone that it has paid money."
That begs the question: who in London has paid up? Insight
has been told of at least four blue-chip firms caving in to
extortionists. For the time being, we have agreed to keep
certain information confidential to preserve the integrity
of the institutions while the agencies investigate. But the
names will eventually surface, and then there will be some
serious explaining to do.
[End]
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