Lists of customers, source code and zero-day vulnerabilities made public.
The biggest security story of this week, and probably one of the biggest of the year, is the hack of Italian company
Hacking Team
. The story has been covered widely, for instance by
Wired
,
Ars Technica
,
The Register
and
Forbes
, as well as by many mainstream media outlets.
Security professionals rarely publicly condone hacks of companies, but in this case many have been happy to make an exception. Not only can
Hacking Team
‘s products (which perform unauthorised actions on a target’s computer or device) unambiguously be described as malware, the company also has a reputation for turning a blind eye when selling these products to governments with a dubious reputation when it comes to respecting human rights.
Indeed, the leaks confirm that
Hacking Team
sold their spyware to countries such as Sudan, Ethiopia and Bahrain. The leaks also made the source code of the companies’ products public and revealed passwords that weren’t exactly up to scratch. On top of that, a number of zero-day vulnerabilities used by the company have been found, including one in
Adobe
‘s
Flash Player
, which researcher Kafeine
reports
has since been added to no fewer than three different exploit kits.
Adobe
has released an
advisory
and promises to release a patch later on Wednesday.
Hacking Team
is well known among security researchers. At VB2013,
Kaspersky
researcher Sergey Golovanov presented a
paper
on
Hacking Team
and UK-based
Gamma International
. The video of that presentation is worth watching, not least for the song Sergey had written in ‘honour’ of the malware authors at those companies.
In 2014,
Hacking Team
was the topic of a three-part research project (
1
,
2
,
3
) by researchers from
Citizen Lab
. Their investigations had already uncovered many of the facts that have now become public and that had hitherto been denied by
Hacking Team
. The research was
nominated
for last year’s Péter Ször Award.
At VB2015, one of the authors of the research, Claudio Guarnieri, will give a Small Talk ‘
Helping the Helpless: Targeted Threats to Civil Society
‘, in which he looks at what can be done to help those whose governments are using tools like
Hacking Team
‘s to spy on them — something which in many countries can have grave consequences.

From Sergey Golovanov’s VB2013 presentation.
Posted on 08 July 2015 by
Martijn Grooten
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