Hackers leak private details of thousands in Israeli army, threaten Gantz

Read More

A group of hackers leaked the private details of hundreds of IDF servicemen and thousands of teenagers nearing enlistment age online on Tuesday, only a day after posting personal photographs of Defense Minister Benny Gantz, one of which showed the former army chief of staff pretending to milk a statue of a cow.

According to the Ynet news site, the group, which calls itself “Moses Staff,” posted the information to the so-called Dark Web, a part of the internet that is not indexed by popular search engines and is thus inaccessible for many users.

LISTEN: What the ‘Mossad ring’ busted in Turkey was doing there

In an online post, the hackers – who Ynet said are thought to be Iranian nationals – claimed that they had Gantz under surveillance, writing: “We know every decision you make and will hit you where you least expect it. We have secret Defense Ministry documents, operational military maps and troop deployment information and will publish your crimes to the world.”

According to the report, the data dump included soldiers’ ranks, units and contact details, as well as more private information relating to their personal lives which they had shared with their commanders.

A cyberattack shut down the computer system of Hadera’s Hillel Yaffe Medical Center last Monday, forcing staff to record and transmit all patient information by hand. A week earlier, Microsoft reported that hackers linked to Iran had tried to break into 250 Microsoft Office 365 accounts belonging to Israeli and American security companies using a hacking technique known as “password spraying.”

Microsoft said the targets of the attacks were defense companies that support American, European Union, and Israeli government partners producing military-grade radars, drone technology, satellite systems, and emergency response communication systems.

Microsoft said these attacks were identical to others conducted by hackers linked to Iran, alongside other signs that showed they acted under Iranian auspices.


Cyberattack sets major Israeli hospital back decades


Microsoft: Iran-linked hackers breached Israeli, U.S. security firms’ accounts


Iran may be behind cyberattack on company serving major names in Israeli tech, experts say

Israel is the seventh most targeted country in the world for cyber-attacks, and last year the number of such attacks by Iran against Israel quadrupled, said a report from Microsoft released just a few days before the announcement.

Citing research by cybersecurity firm Acronis, financial news site Calcalist reported last week that 36 percent of Israeli companies have experienced weekly cyberattacks.

Responding to the “Moses Staff” hack, the Israel National Cyber Directorate called upon organizations “to implement the latest critical updates that Microsoft has released to deal with these weaknesses, which is a simple, free update that can reduce the risk of this attack,” Ynet reported.

Related articles

You may also be interested in

Retail Sales up Solidly in October

U.S. retail sales rose last month at a healthy pace in the latest sign that consumer spending is driving the economy’s steady growth.[#item_full_content]

Headline

Never Miss A Story

Get our Weekly recap with the latest news, articles and resources.
Cookie policy

We use our own and third party cookies to allow us to understand how the site is used and to support our marketing campaigns.