BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  UK, MS warn Russian hacke
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Wed, 8 Apr 2026 09:58:35 -0500
-----------------------------------------------------------
'This puts organizations at risk of credential theft, data manipulation and
broader compromise': UK government, Microsoft warn Russian hackers are 
hitting TP-Link home routers to hijack internet traffic

Date:
Wed, 08 Apr 2026 10:24:24 +0000

Description:
SOHO endpoints are being used as gateways into corporate environments, where
credentials and sensitive data gets harvested.

FULL STORY
Russian state-sponsored threat actors are targeting poorly
protected Small Office/Home Office (SOHO) devices and using them to pivot 
into enterprise and corporate environments, experts have claimed. 

A report from Microsoft Threat Intelligence has warned about a large-scale
attack by Forest Blizzard (AKA APT28) targeting TP-Link routers. So far, more
than 200 organizations and more than 5,000 consumer devices have been 
impacted by the attack, Microsoft said, noting the group is mostly interested
in cyber-espionage and intelligence gathering.  The campaign apparently
started in August 2025, and instead of targeting corporate networks directly,
Forest Blizzard focused on edge devices such as home routers, which often 
lack strong security controls and oversight present in enterprise
environments. 

Microsoft did not explicitly say how the attackers break into these endpoints
but suggests they might have default or easy-to-crack passwords or known but
unpatched vulnerabilities that can easily be exploited. 

Once inside, they change the devices configuration to route Domain Name 
System (DNS) traffic through infrastructure they control, allowing them to
monitor, and even influence, how infected devices resolve domain names. 

By operating at this upstream level, APT28 gained broad visibility into
network activity across both consumer and enterprise environments. This not
only allows them to conduct passive surveillance at scale but also prepares
the terrain for more targeted follow-on attacks against organizations of
higher value.

The DNS acts like the internets address book. So, instead of sending requests
to legitimate DNS servers, compromised devices are actually being redirected
to servers under the attackers control. In more targeted cases, the threat
actors would manipulate DNS responses to redirect victims to fake versions of
legitimate services, resulting in whats known as an Adversary-in-the-Middle
(AitM) attack. 

This, in turn, allows APT28s operatives to intercept data as it moves between
the user and the real service. 

If the victim ignores browser warnings about invalid security certificates
(which, truth be told, many of us often do), the attackers may be able to
capture sensitive information, including login credentials and emails.
 
The campaign affects a wide range of sectors, Microsoft
stressed, including government agencies, information technology,
telecommunications, and energy. While thousands of home and small office
devices were compromised, Forest Blizzard appears to use the most intrusive
follow-on attacks selectively, focusing on high-value targets. 

They use AitM attacks to intercept emails and cloud data, but the sheer 
number of compromised devices give them a lot of maneuver space, for possibly
larger-scale campaigns in the future. 

While the number of organizations specifically targeted for TLS AiTM is only 
a subset of the networks with vulnerable SOHO devices, Microsoft Threat
Intelligence assesses that the threat actors broad access could enable
larger-scale AiTM attacks, which might include active traffic interception,
Microsoft warned. 

Targeting SOHO devices is not a new tactic, technique, or procedure (TTP) for
Russian military intelligence actors, but this is the first time Microsoft 
has observed Forest Blizzard using DNS hijacking at scale to support AiTM of
TLS connections after exploiting edge devices. 

To defend against DNS hijacking, Microsoft advises organizations enforce
trusted DNS servers, block malicious domains, maintain DNS logs, and avoid
SOHO devices in corporate networks. 

For AiTM and credential theft, they recommend centralizing identity
management, enabling Single Sign-On, enforcing multifactor authentication
(MFA) and passkeys, applying Conditional Access policies, and monitoring 
risky sign-ins with continuous access evaluation. Organizations should log
identity activity, protect privileged accounts with phishing-resistant MFA,
and follow Microsofts incident response best practices for recovering from
systemic identity compromises. Network protection via Microsoft Defender for
Endpoint is also recommended to block malicious sites.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/this-puts-organizations-at-risk-of-cred
ential-theft-data-manipulation-and-broader-compromise-uk-government-microsoft-
warn-russian-hackers-are-hitting-tp-link-home-routers-to-hijack-internet-traff
ic

$$
--- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
 * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/107)

-----------------------------------------------------------
[Voltar]