Washington: Hackers tied to the North Korean government are attacking ATMs globally to fund the cash-strapped country to keep up with its nuclear weapons programme, four US federal agencies have warned.
One North Korean hacking team has attempted to steal nearly $2 billion from ATMs in more than three dozen countries. The hackers are trying to rob banks across the globe by draining ATMs and initiating fraudulent money transfers, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
The campaign includes so-called spear-phishing attacks that use fraudulent email to infect a computer or persuade the victim to reveal a password or other information and social engineering schemes.
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"Since February, North Korea has resumed targeting banks in multiple countries to initiate fraudulent international money transfers and ATM cashouts," according to the joint alert issued by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), Treasury Department, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the US Cyber Command.
"Equally concerning, these malicious actors have manipulated and, at times, rendered inoperable, critical computer systems at banks and other financial institutions."
The agencies issued the joint technical alert about the ongoing ATM cash-out scheme by North Korean government cyber actors - referred to as "FASTCash 2.0: North Korea's BeagleBoyz Robbing Banks".