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French presidential frontrunner’s campaign hit by phishing attempts from Russia-linked hackers
French presidential frontrunner’s campaign hit by phishing attempts from Russia-linked hackers
French presidential frontrunner Emmanuel Macron has
qualified for next month’s runoff election, but a Russian
government-linked group seems to eager to slow down the campaign’s
progress.
According to research from cybersecurity firm Trend
Micro, members of the hacking team known as Fancy Bear — called Pawn
Storm by the report’s author — created phishing domains related to the
Macron campaign, such as “onedrive-en-marche.fr,” plausibly similar to En Marche!, Macron’s
political party. The domains were spotted by the researchers as they
were created by the group, which likely used them in an attempt to steal
credentials and hack the Macron campaign.
“Pawn Storm is known to prepare their credential phishing
attacks well,” the report’s researcher, Feike Hacquebord, wrote in an
email to The Verge.
The Macron campaign’s digital director confirmed to the Wall Street Journal that phishing attempts were used against the campaign, and
said measures were taken to block emails leading to the fake domains.
The campaign has previously made allegations that Russia was launching
hacking campaigns against Macron staff.
The first round of the French election, in which all
candidates are given as choices, was held on Sunday. Macron edged out
the far-right candidate Marine Le Pen and is now expected to win a
runoff election between the two. Le Pen, a staunch EU critic, has
suggested France make a closer alignment with Russia.
Fancy Bear was infamously linked to hacks during the 2016
US presidential election, as emails from Hillary Clinton Campaign Chair
John Podesta and the Democratic National Committee were released and
later tied to interference from the group, which the US government has
alleged is back by the Russian government.
The article was published on : theverge
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