VB2018 paper: From Hacking Team to hacked team to…?

It is good practice not to mock or laugh at hacking victims. But when the victim is a company that itself is in the business of hacking and has a habit of selling its products and services to governments with dubious human rights records, few could help but smile at the irony.

This was the case when

Hacking Team

was

breached

in 2015 and details of its customers were published. Worse, from the Italian company’s point of view, was the fact that its source code, including several zero-day vulnerabilities, was leaked.

While several of the leaked vulnerabilities were being used by other attackers (a

2017 paper

by researchers from

F-Secure

, for instance, looked how this was done by the Callisto group),

Hacking Team

managed to

secure new funding

, and early in 2018 new activities were

spotted

in the wild by

ESET

researcher Filip Kafka.


Figure 4.png


The size of Hacking Team’s ‘Scout’ first-stage malware changed between the pre- and post-leak versions.


Filip wrote a

technical paper

about these new activities, which he presented at VB2018 in Montreal last year. Today, we publish Filip’s paper in both

HTML

and

PDF

format and we have also uploaded the video of Filip’s presentation to our

YouTube

channel.

In Montreal, Filip’s presentation was followed by one from Masashi Nishihata and John Scott Railton of

The Citizen Lab

that we

previously published

. Their talk focused on digital threats to civil society, in which companies like

Hacking Team

play a dubious role, and thus nicely complements Filip’s technical presentation.

Have you analysed spyware used by governments? Or some other kind of digital threat? Why not submit an abstract for VB2019, which will take place in London, 2-4 October; the

call for papers

is open until 17 March.


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