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Home - News & Analysis - FBI Disables ‘Sophisticated’ Russian Snake Cyberspying Tool
News & Analysis Attacks Data Protection Emerging Threats Spyware Threats and Vulnerabilities

FBI Disables ‘Sophisticated’ Russian Snake Cyberspying Tool

Olivia WilliamBy Olivia WilliamMay 10, 2023Updated:August 22, 20243 Mins Read
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FBI Disables 'Sophisticated' Russian Snake Cyberspying Tool
FBI Disables 'Sophisticated' Russian Snake Cyberspying Tool
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U.S. officials announced on Tuesday that they had destroyed a worldwide network of compromised computers that Russian intelligence personnel had used to spy on the U.S. and its allies for over 20 years.

It has been reported that a branch of Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) stole classified material from hundreds of infiltrated computer networks in at least 50 countries by using malicious software known as Snake.

According to the Russian government, the compromised computers belonged to NATO member governments, journalists, and other individuals of interest.

Russian FSB cyber actors are deploying cyberespionage malware targeting over 50 countries. Take action to keep FSB’s Snake malware out of your networks. Learn how to detect and mitigate associated malicious activities. https://t.co/hzzQpo1vBc pic.twitter.com/4eUb5oiums

— NSA Cyber (@NSACyber) May 9, 2023

The information was sent back to Russia using hacked computers in the United States and elsewhere.

According to the Department of Justice, Snake is the “leading cyberespionage malware implant” used by the FSB.

“The Justice Department, together with our international partners, has dismantled a global network of malware-infected computers that the Russian government has used for nearly two decades to conduct cyber-espionage, including against our NATO allies,” said Attorney General Merrick Garland. In response to the Russian regime’s efforts to undermine U.S. and allied security, “continued strengthening of our collective defenses” will be implemented.”

The Justice Department announced that the FBI’s Operation MEDUSA successfully dissolved the Snake network with judicial approval. The operation used a tool developed by the FBI called PERSEUS to remove the Snake virus from infected machines.

Officials have stated that the department is collaborating with foreign governments in order to inform further people who have contracted the Snake sickness.

For more than twenty years, the FBI has monitored Snake and other malware programs, eventually creating the means to decrypt and decode communications involving Snake.

In a statement, Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco claimed that the takedown “has neutralized one of Russia’s most sophisticated cyber-espionage tools, used for two decades to advance Russia’s authoritarian objectives.”

“By combining this action with the release of the information victims need to protect themselves, the Justice Department continues to put victims at the center of our cybercrime work and take the fight to malicious cyber actors,” Monaco said.

The FSB Turla unit, according to court records unsealed on Tuesday, operated the Snake robot out of a known FSB base in the Russian city of Ryazan to carry out everyday espionage activities.

In order to maintain its status as “Turla’s most sophisticated long-term cyberespionage malware implant,” the unit has modified and changed the virus on multiple occasions, as stated by the Justice Department.

Conclusion

On Tuesday, the U.S. government disrupted a global network infected by Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) Snake virus. Snake, the “most sophisticated cyber espionage tool,” was created by Turla (aka Iron Hunter, Secret Blizzard, SUMMIT, Uroburos, Venomous Bear, and Waterbug), a Russian state-sponsored entity the U.S. government attributes to Center 16 of the FSB. The threat actor has previously focused on Europe, the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), and NATO countries.

Still, it has recently expanded to include Middle Eastern nations considered a threat to Russia-supported regional countries. “For nearly 20 years, this unit has used versions of the Snake malware to steal sensitive documents from hundreds of computer systems in at least 50 countries, which have belonged to North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member governments, journalists, and other targets of interest to the Russian Federation,” the Justice Department said. “After stealing these documents, Turla exfiltrated them through a covert network of unwitting Snake-compromised computers in the United States and worldwide.”

Olivia William
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