End-to-end encrypted email service ProtonMail has named one of the attackers behind a sustained distributed denial of service attack (DDoS) it suffered earlier this summer. The attack took its email service offline for up to several minute long stretches at a time, even with mitigation measures in place.
It says the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) arrested the teenager, George Duke-Cohan, who was a member of a criminal group called Apophis Squad, late last month.
“Earlier this week, the British National Crime Agency announced the arrest of George Duke-Cohan, also known by his aliases“7R1D3N7,”“DoubleParallax,” and, more recently, “optcz1,” it writes in a blog post published today.
“At ProtonMail, we unfortunately have to face off against cyberattacks on a daily basis. Over the course of this summer, no fewer than five separate groups have been conducting attacks against ProtonMail. Duke-Cohan was a key member of Apophis Squad, a criminal group which was involved in cyberattacks against ProtonMail.”
Earlier this week the 19-year-old pled guilty to making hoax bomb threats targeting UK schools.
ProtonMail founder Andy Yen tells TechCrunch it’s not clear what Duke-Cohan or Apophis Squad’s beef might have been with the encrypted email service — and according to its blog members of the group had in fact been users of the encrypted email service themselves — adding that “multiple threat actors were involved”.
“For DDoS specifically, we identified three separate threat actors this summer,” he tells us via email. “We have names/addresses for two of them now, including obviously George from Apophis.”
“Apophis was the least sophisticated threat actor, and from the attack traffic analysis, not related to any of the past or current threat actors we are contending with,” he continues, adding: “ProtonMail unfortunately is a popular target because we are well known as a highly hardened target, and there is a sizeable amount of “bragging rights” that comes with being able to cause us difficulty. This subsequently allows these threat actors to sell their “services” for more money or gain notoriety. Apophis likely falls into this category as they also subsequently took down the FBI’s mail servers.”
The group had also targeted cyber security journalist Brian Krebs’ website with DDoS attacks this year (among other targets), and blogging about the arrest Krebs — who collaborated with ProtonMail in tracking the hackers down — writes: “Unsophisticated but otherwise time-wasting and annoying groups like Apophis Squad are a dime a dozen. But as I like to say, each time my site gets attacked by one of them two things usually happen not long after: Those responsible get arrested, and I get at least one decent story out of it.”
The UK’s NCA seemingly got involved because in addition to DDoSing ProtonMail and Krebs’ website the group had been attacking government agencies in a number of countries.
And, well, bragging via Twitter that they were untouchable to the Feds…
Original Article : HERE ; This post was curated & posted using : RealSpecific
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