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Ukraine Official Urges 'IT Army' of World's Digital Talent To Attack Russian Energy and Financial Firms (venturebeat.com) 149

VentureBeat reports: In Ukraine today, Mykhailo Fedorov, the country's vice prime minister, announced on Twitter, "We are creating an IT army."

"We need digital talents," wrote Fedorov, who also holds the title of minister of digital transformation — sharing a link to a Telegram channel where he said operational tasks will be distributed. "We continue to fight on the cyber front." On the Telegram channel, the IT army reportedly posted its list of Russian targets — which were also translated into English "for all IT specialists from other countries...."

On Friday, Christian Sorensen, a former U.S. Cyber Command official, told VentureBeat that "hacktivists around the world [will be] working against Russia, because they are the aggressor.... I think things will ramp up against western targets, but Russia and Belarus will be targeted by these groups even more" said Sorensen, formerly the operational planning team lead for the U.S. Cyber Command....

[O]n Friday, a Bloomberg report said that a hacker group that was now forming to bring counterattacks against Russia had amassed 500 members. And today, we have the announcement of Ukraine's IT army — potentially including assistance from hackers around the globe. "Whether sanctioned or not, official or not, if people have or can get the right information, know-how, and desire — they can make an impact," Sorensen said on Friday, prior to the announcement of Ukraine's IT army. "We'll have to wait and see what they are able to do."

The next day Reuters reported that the official website of the Kremlin, "the office of Russian President Vladimir Putin....was down on Saturday, following reports of denial of service (DDoS) attacks on various other Russian government and state media websites.

"The outages came as Ukraine's vice prime minister said it had launched an 'IT army' to combat Russia in cyberspace."

But the Independent reports that the cyberattacks may have been even more extensive: Ukraine's state telecommunications agency announced on Saturday that six Russian government websites, including the Kremlin's, were down, according to The Kyiv Independent.

The agency also stated that the Russian media regulator's website had gone down, and that hackers had got Russian TV channels to play the Ukrainian music.


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Ukraine Official Urges 'IT Army' of World's Digital Talent To Attack Russian Energy and Financial Firms

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  • Amateurs should sit this one out on the sidelines.

    Unless you have a big stock of polonium-resistance pills.

    • by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @08:19AM (#62308399)

      And possibly a lawyer. What concerns me is people thinking that just because the cause is righteous , the law will be on side. I'm not convinced it would be, and worse, could even fall foul of foreign combattant type laws that where designed to stop idiots running off and joining ISIS or Al Quaida (which also snared people going off to join the Kurds and fight AGAINST ISIS. Although I do suspect a judge would be reluctant to throw the book at them on that charge, they well may still be on the hook for lesser generic "hacking" charges that can still carry a nasty sting in the tail if convicted.

      • by edis ( 266347 )

        What does law of war say? Don't go fighting, it doesn't?

      • If history has taught us anything, is that even soliciting help from Privateers gets answered later by charges of piracy. Make sure to ask for a get-out-of-jail-free card in advance.
      • by Mitreya ( 579078 )

        What concerns me is people thinking that just because the cause is righteous , the law will be on side.

        It worked for others
        I'll just mention this story which stuck in my mind, where a TikTok activist proudly deployed and publicized a DOS attack against Kellog's job website. I saw him being lauded as a hero, don't think he was charged with anything. INAL, so maybe this case is somehow different.
        https://www.thedailybeast.com/... [thedailybeast.com]

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        And the thing is those are good laws for good reason.

        While its not likely it is not impossible to imagine some do-gooder taking out some Russian infrastructure. Maybe they even doing meaning to cause a nuisance messing with some front office stuff, but they knock offer something like DNS or a certificate authority server accidentally or purposefully and next we find out the controls network isn't as segmented or has a dependancy nobody was aware of and soon half of Moscow has no water..

        Next there is a Russi

    • Amateurs should sit this one out on the sidelines.

      Unless you have a big stock of polonium-resistance pills.

      But don't forget that the cure for everything, be it polonium or 50-cal rounds, is ivermectin.

      • Amateurs should sit this one out on the sidelines.

        Unless you have a big stock of polonium-resistance pills.

        But don't forget that the cure for everything, be it polonium or 50-cal rounds, is ivermectin.

        ... but only in combination with Zinc and a shot-glass of bleach.

  • Ending trade with Russia is one thing. Attacking Russia is quite something else. Please don't turn this into WW3.

    • Unfortunately economic embargoes can turn into wars as well. The US shutting down exports of oil to Japan are what precipitated Pearl Harbor

      • But economic embargoes aren't war. I draw the line at attacking without being attacked. That's what Russia did.

        • Putin don't agree with you, he just claimed that the embargoes are "High-ranking officials in leading NATO countries have made aggressive statements about our country." followed by raising the preparedness on the Russian nukes. He is completely insane.
          • If you throw a fist at me because I won't buy your wares, then I can defend myself and will still have done nothing wrong, but you end up with a broken nose and in jail. If Putin initiates war against my country or another NATO country, he'll get what's justified. But I urge everyone who hasn't been attacked to not attack Russia. This war will cost Russia everything. I don't want it to cost us everything too.

            • by edis ( 266347 )

              The world order has been attacked. Agreements sent to the trash bin. Blatant aggression want to impose an order.
              Bet, your country and institutions have been attacked in the digital space not once by the gangsters from Russia.
              It is time to fight back, and enter new era, where novichok or killers on the promenades of Moskva-river are not norms to pursue.

              • "The world order" wouldn't even bleed if it existed. Shut your warmongering mouth.

                • by edis ( 266347 )

                  It is you lacking competence against my mouth. World has ideas about acceptable order, therefore Russia, and possibly Belarus,
                  already go into very serious isolation, as a remedy to significant deviation. You are wrong in your assumptions.

            • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @10:50AM (#62308745)

              in a sick and twisted kind of way, this could be a good thing, long term, for the world.

              ie, weaking and draining russia's power, bit by bit, over the years. yes, its gonna take years. get ready for another iraq, guys. yes, decades. but think of the benefits (so to speak) of this. we get to isolate russia from the whole fucking world! let that sink in. all except china and maybe india (wtf is up with india staying on the sidelines? seriously - wtf!)

              russia alreay was not doing well, economically. they will get worse and worse as their pariah status increases over time.

              cutting off swift was a biggie. that will cripple their people. their people will suffer and their businesses will be left behind while the world moves on.

              that's good stuff right there! yes, morbidly, but it has a good long-term effect of bombing them into the stone age, but not with bombs - but with isolation and boycotts. given enough time, they'll slowly starve (of the tech items, which is KEY, today).

              now, the bad part - russia wont take this lightly and so, well, its probably time to change passwords, add more firewalls and companies to start hardening their security FOR REAL, this time. like, for real real. (sigh, it wont happen, why even dream about ....)

              so yeah, there will be lots of bad shit on the net and lots of hacking from russia to - everyone else that's not on their side. be prepared for that. its gonna get bad, I suspect (just a wag).

              but again, they are going to suffer way more than the west is. as time goes on, their people will feel this more than the rest of the world will.

              just give this time.

              and once it finally ends, you have the benefit that pushed russia backwards during the isolation and that will have a lasting effect that they may NEVER overcome. not ever. if we keep it up and dont give up on OUR side too early, yes, we can make them suffer and they'll regret this over the years.

              its long overdue. I am not sad about russia getting their lessons taught to them. sad that their people have to pay the price, but its always that way, isn't it?

              let the economic ruin and isolation of russia begin!

              "first round of drinks are on me, boys. who has the vodak, here?"

              • by edis ( 266347 )

                Many of their folks did support Putin. Some are ashamed of this whole "operation", as they could have been about Crimea and fiddling with Eastern Ukraine.
                Yet majority was too ignorant of what tyranny is guiding them for tens of years. Therefore isolation is due and overall healthy for every party.
                As to increase of hacking - they were not modest in digital space, so possible surprises up their sleeve, but not pattern of major increase. Hopefully.

              • ie, weaking and draining russia's power, bit by bit, over the years. yes, its gonna take years. get ready for another iraq, guys. yes, decades. but think of the benefits (so to speak) of this. we get to isolate russia from the whole fucking world! let that sink in.

                No, Russia's power is not being weakened bit by bit. Actually over the last 20 years, Putin has been slowly building up diplomatic leverage. In fact, had he done this 5 years later, after Europe got all settled in and being highly dependent upon Russia's energy resources, things could very well be a lot different, as he could have used that as leverage to prevent Europe from doing anything at all. But over the last four days, Russia has lost pretty much all of its diplomatic leverage. So basically, the last

          • Well, I think it makes sense. When under threat, put your military on high alert, just to discourage your enemy in getting creative. Or this could be me in denial. Time will tell.
        • is it attacking, once the bully threw the FIRST punch?

          really? a bully punches a small guy and you think that coming to defend the small guy is 'attacking' a bully?

          please explain.

          • That's the logic that starts world wars. As I wrote before, this war will cost Russia everything. That's gotta be enough, unless you want it to cost the rest of the world everything too.

            • Indeed it is the logic that perpetuates world wars, but the alternative you propose would have been to let the Reich roll across Europe and perpetuate its genocide competitor unchecked. Was the second World war a price worth paying to stop that? I claim it was.

              • The world is not at the end of its means. Actually isolating Russia, not the pin-prick-like sanctions of the past, will have dire consequences for Russia. Also, NATO is increasing its immediate defensive abilities. We're not standing by while Russia takes Europe, but defense is not offense. Remember how the Soviet Union collapsed? We didn't attack it then, and we don't need to attack Russia now. There are forces that want other countries to join a war with Russia, because right now the situation is annoying

              • I hate getting Reichrolled.
        • this made me think what would be my line.

          thinking about it, my line that I would not want to cross is religious nutbags. ie, the whole middle east (and then some). those primates, you cannot even bargain with, the whole notion of good-faith is non-existent when sky daddies are involved.

          but putin is not about religion, its just political power. (heh, 'just'). but think about it, there are levels of sanity in the spectrum; and someone who thinks they'll go on to 42 virginians (not sure why james madison a

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Bullshit. Japan had been taking over the East Pacific years before they attacked Pearl Harbor and control of much of SE Asia and its resources including oil by Jan. of 1941. The Pearl Harbor attack was not until 7 Dec. 1941. They just didn't want the U.S. and Britain in the way of further expansion since they were the only countries that could oppose them.

        • >Bullshit ...

          I agree. It's never one or the other. Chicken or egg.

          It's not about attributing blame. Everyone is in it together, it's the only lasting way out of conflict.

    • by MeNeXT ( 200840 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @10:07AM (#62308647)

      Russia is the one deciding if there is a WW3 unless you think the world should just capitulate to Russia just because they issue such a threat. The world needs to stand up and say war has just got to stop.

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @10:11AM (#62308657)
      What I am appalled with is the words coming out of the mouths of our military leaders. On Friday I watched an interview where a Lt Col Danny Davis said Ukraine should prettymuch surrender, they had no chances of winning. WTF?!?! We are the nation of "Liberty or Death." We are the nation that believes it is better to die on our feet than live on our knees. To think a ranking member of OUR military suggesting Ukrainians should just roll over is revolting to me. Its Ukraines inalienable right to make Russia pay with blood for every inch they take. If they want to fight to the last citizen, that is their right. For fucks sake, they gave Bidens worthless drug addict of a son a cushy job he eas nowhere near qualified for, and this is how we repay them? Advice to get on their knees and beg??
      • His tweets [twitter.com] point out that the Russian military is vastly superior, and that Ukraine should *negotiate* (not unconditionally) surrender. I'm guessing that would put it back in the realm of international diplomacy at least for a while and give everyone some time to come to the table. That way, Ukraine and the rest of the world gets a little breathing room, Russia still has the option to invade later at its leisure, everybody wins.
        • His tweets [twitter.com] point out that the Russian military is vastly superior,

          It's not clear that's true. On paper they have the hardware to be superior, but discipline and operations from the Russian military has been poor. They've split their troops, they've had supply problems, they've had logistical problems. They've had difficulty crossing bridges. The advantage Russia has is a superior airforce, but it hasn't coordinated well with troops, and it has come under fire from the still existing anti-air defense in Ukraine. Last night the Russian army was actually pushed farther away

          • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

            Any operation with tens of thousands of troops is bound to run into a myriad of problems. The question is not whether it happens, but how often. And perhaps more importantly, who is affected more. We hear a lot of social media reports form Ukraine, but very little from the Russian side. Maybe the Ukrainians are having just as many issues, but they aren't being reported.

            As for the Ukrainian army becoming stronger, the mayor of Kiev says they're surrounded. What good will foreign weapons will do if they can't

            • Any operation with tens of thousands of troops is bound to run into a myriad of problems. The question is not whether it happens, but how often.

              You'd at least hope your troops know why they are there [thehill.com].

              • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

                Source: Ukrainian government

                The people who needs to do everything to keep morale up? The same people that said they suffered 0 casualties the first day? Retracting an earlier statement saying they suffered 300 casualties? The ones retweeting the "Ghost of Kiev" story that's literally a hoax invented by 4chan?

                I mean, it really doesn't matter if you want to believe them, but don't be surprised after a series of glorious Ukrainian victories in battle, Russia suddenly wins the war.

                • You seem to have a strong, uninformed opinion on Ukraine. Are you ok with that?

                  • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

                    It would really help if you could think a little before you trust a source, and maybe diversify a little.

                    This is a retired US general, being interviewed by US news media, both of which are heavily biased against Russia. He should not have access to current information on the ground from the US military, and even if he did, he would not at liberty to disclose that. His statement that the entirety of Ukraine is against Russia is simply false. A sizable minority wants closer ties to Russia and an even larger f

                    • It would really help if you could think a little before you trust a source, and maybe diversify a little.

                      Find your own source. At this point it's well verified that Russia is having trouble.

    • you are not YET at war with russia.

      like ... you think YOU have a choice in this?

      this is a world war in the making, like it or not. due simply to the player that's involved.

      sigh. there goes the next 20 years. dammitsomuch.

      • I may not have a choice about a war coming, but I can damn well choose not to initiate it from my side. Don't ask me to attack another country.

      • We are, however, at war with Eastasia. We have always been at war with Eastasia.
    • Ending trade with Russia is one thing. Attacking Russia is quite something else. Please don't turn this into WW3.

      If he succeeds with Ukraine you really think he's stopping there?

      Putin won't stop until he's been forced to. The only question is how to do that without him pulling out the nukes. It means the west can't intervene directly, and there might even be a limit to the lethal hardware we send Ukraine, but for everything else Putin is bluffing.

    • I really worry how this could escalate. Taking down websites of state media agencies makes a statement and doesn't hurt innocent people. But how long before some righteous hackers decide to try sabotaging an electric grid? Then you suddenly have a lot of innocent people suffering. And Russia would probably respond by doing the same thing to other countries. It could get really bad really fast.

      • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

        Taking down websites of state media agencies makes a statement and doesn't hurt innocent people. But how long before some righteous hackers decide to try sabotaging an electric grid? Then you suddenly have a lot of innocent people suffering.

        You know what? I'll grant that there are plenty of innocent people in Russia, but it's rather absurd to suggest "think of the innocents" when those innocents live within the borders of the nation that started this war. What about the "lot of innocent people suffering" in Ukraine?

        I'm no fan of making war on civilians, but ultimately "shooting back" is not an immoral act.

  • if Russia and Ukraine do finally reconcile peacefully.. that might not be enough to stop any 3rd party hacker collectives from continuing their digital war..

    Armies have orders.. Anonymous is not your personal army.. they do not get told when to start and certainly do not get told when to stop..

    • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @09:39AM (#62308571)

      Ukraine will never forgive Russia or Russians for this. First it was the Tsar, they had a brief flowering of freedom before the Bolshevik Red Army stamped on it. Then came Stalin. They finally had some freedom after the Soviet Union broke apart and only recently were able to free themselves of the Russian bootlickers running the country. They were building a new nice little country with a bright future. Now they have squat. There will be no forgiveness.

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        I agree with most, except this part:

        They were building a new nice little country with a bright future.

        Don't see that. Ukraine is one of the most corrupt countries on planet Earth, topping many African or 3rd world countries. Its economy was already shitty before this war, and while there was a glimmer of hope for the future, I wouldn't agree that it was so bright. It is/was a very troubled country.

  • by Tom ( 822 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @09:59AM (#62308617) Homepage Journal

    "The outages came as Ukraine's vice prime minister said it had launched an 'IT army' to combat Russia in cyberspace."

    But that is NOT what he is doing.

    An army is organized, has a chain of command, acts under the authority and flag of its country and takes responsibility for its actions.

    What he's launching is an unorganized mess of guerilla fighters with little to no coordination or communication. When they're on the side we don't like we call them terrorist cells.

    It's some dangerous and desperate shit. He has no way to control this, no way to prevent attacks on civilian targets - or even targets that aren't even Russian or are Russian but against the war.

    • by MeNeXT ( 200840 )

      no way to prevent attacks on civilian targets

      Like the missile that hit the residential building? I haven't seen a war that doesn't hit civilian targets. Pretending that war is between military forces is just naive. Just look at the refineries that are burning I'm pretty sure they were not just military.

      • >Like the missile that hit the residential building?

        Thank God it seems like it's only happened once so far.

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        Like the missile that hit the residential building?

        At the risk of sounding heartless: Collateral damage happens in every war. I wasn't referring to that, but to intentional (misguided, misinformed, but intentional) attacks on civilian targets.

    • by Mitreya ( 579078 )

      It's some dangerous and desperate shit.

      I will not disagree with you, but if there is anyone who has a legitimate claim to being desperate -- that's Ukraine right now.

    • ... takes responsibility for its actions.

      When you're the 800-pound gorilla, that doesn't mean 'faces consequences'.

      ... we call them terrorist cells.

      As sg_oneill (159032) notes, it's similar to joining ISIS and probably illegal. Ukraine is demanding protection through tyranny of the majority, since its allies don't want a 'hot' war. But one day, that majority will decide the USA or UK deserve punishment for their misdeeds and cyber-attack them. The freedom-fighters will then be labelled terrorists.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Calling for attacks on energy firms is very dangerous. How many Russian hospitals have decent backup generators that are properly maintained and fuelled? How long can they operate for?

    • An army is organized, has a chain of command, acts under the authority and flag of its country and takes responsibility for its actions.

      Except when Russian troops took Crimea and claimed it was local freedom fighters. WHich responsibility did Russia take for that act of agression?

  • by hughbar ( 579555 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @10:07AM (#62308645) Homepage
    I scraped this off my Twitter feed and transcribed them. Many appear to be offline already. DDOS with hulk or something will probably help them.

    https://www.gazprom.ru/ [gazprom.ru]
    https://lukoil.ru/ [lukoil.ru]
    https://magnit.ru/ [magnit.ru]
    https://www.nornickel.com/ [nornickel.com]
    https://www.tatneft.run/ [tatneft.run]
    https://www.evraz.com/ru [evraz.com]
    https://nmlk.com/ [nmlk.com]
    https://www.sibur.ru/ [sibur.ru]
    https://www.severstal.com/ [severstal.com]
    https://www.metalloinvest.com/ [metalloinvest.com]
    https://nangs.com/ [nangs.com]
    https://rmk-group.ru/ru/ [rmk-group.ru]
    https://www.tmk-group.ru/ [tmk-group.ru]
    https://ya.ru/ [ya.ru]
    https://www.polymetalinternati... [polymetalinternation.com]
    https://www.uralkali.com/ru/ [uralkali.com]
    https://www.eurosib.ru/ [eurosib.ru]
    https://omk.ru/ [omk.ru] https://www.sberbank.ru/ [sberbank.ru]
    https://www.vtb.ru/ [www.vtb.ru] https://www.gazprombank.ru/ [gazprombank.ru]
    https://www.gosuslug.ru/ [gosuslug.ru]
    https://www.mos.ru/uslugi/ [www.mos.ru]
    http://kremlin.ru/ [kremlin.ru]
    http://government.ru/ [government.ru]
    https://mil.ru/ [mil.ru]
    https://www.surgutneftegas.ru/ [surgutneftegas.ru]
  • Wonder how well a similar campaign against the US in Afghanistan and Iraq or Israel in Palestinian soil would be received
  • there was a time when, at my home static ip line, I had all kinds of sweeping netblocks in place. all of china, all of .ru and so on.

    maybe its time to put some of those back in place again.

    I'd like to see more than SWIFT punishment (heh). I'd like to see them removed from the ip network backbones.

    fuck it.

    just do it.

  • Does it mean Duplicate?
  • I've seen stories with way more votes than this, but this is the first story I've seen with a blue title.
  • Not your Personal Army

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