Cyberattacks strike networks in Brazil, revealing vulnerability across Latin America
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Latin America’s vulnerability to cyberattacks was laid bare in recent weeks as government networks in several countries were hacked or temporarily shut down, and hackers threatened to go after more.
On June 21, the hackers group LulzSec claimed on Twitter that it had shut down Brazil’s federal government portal and the website of President Dilma Rousseff. Both sites were still not loading properly until Wednesday, demonstrating that Brazil was unable to secure the public online face of its government for more than a week.
Websites for Brazil’s tax collection agency, statistics agency, army, and state oil company Petrobras were also targeted, reports said (link in Spanish), although Petrobras sought to deny the breach. The attacks have been primarily ‘denial of service’ swarms in which a site is overloaded with users and thus shut down.
Yet reports said hackers have also accessed sensitive information, such as Brazilian military personnel’s private data. Brazil’s federal IT agency Serpo said in a statement that, in all, 25 attacks were carried out against government sites between June 22 and 26 (link in Portuguese).
According to a Foreign Policy Digest report in February, governments across Latin America remain deeply vulnerable to cyberwarfare, with Brazil, with its large economy and population, said to be particularly at risk.
Worldwide hacker groups such as Anonymous now appear to have cells in various Latin American countries and have carried out or threatened cyberattacks on government sites, usually announcing their plans via Twitter and YouTube. Two weeks ago, hackers shut down the Colombian Senate’s website for a day (link in Spanish). On Tuesday, Anonymous shut down the website of Argentina’s Senate in protest of a proposed tax on digital consumer products. The site was still not loading properly as of Thursday morning.
Attacks were also threatened on government or industry sites in Peru, Chile, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Mexico, although these did not appear to be carried out. Anonymous had said it would strike Peru and Chile an an operation called ‘Andes Libre’ for what it said was those governments’ monitoring of social networking activity, while Anonymous said it would go after Venezuela and Nicaragua for those leftist governments’ support of Moammar Kadafi in Libya.
LulzSec appears to have had a short lifespan, calling it quits after 50 days of activity, reports The Times.
Twitter accounts tied to supposed Anonymous cells in Latin America, however, remain active, with a threatened attack looming Thursday against a government-private development project in Mexico called Iniciativa Mexico.
-- Daniel Hernandez in Mexico City