List of cyberattacks

A cyberattack is any type of offensive maneuver employed by individuals or whole organizations that targets computer information systems, infrastructures, computer networks, and/or personal computer devices by various means of malicious acts usually originating from an anonymous source that either steals, alters, or destroys a specified target by hacking into a susceptible system.

Indiscriminate attacks

These attacks are wide-ranging, global and do not seem to discriminate among governments and companies.

  • Operation Shady RAT
  • World of Hell
  • Red October, discovered in 2012, was reportedly operating worldwide for up to five years prior to discovery, transmitting information ranging from diplomatic secrets to personal information, including from mobile devices.[1]
  • WannaCry ransomware attack on 12 May 2017 affected hundreds of thousands of computers in more than 150 countries.[2]
  • 2017 Petya cyberattack

Destructive attacks

These attacks relate to inflicting damage on specific organizations.

  • Great Hacker War, and purported "gang war" in cyberspace
  • LulzRaft, a hacker group known for a low-impact attack in Canada
  • Operation Ababil, conducted against American financial institutions
  • TV5Monde April 2015 cyberattack
  • Vulcanbot
  • Shamoon, a modular computer virus, was used in 2012 in an attack on 30,000 Saudi Aramco workstations, causing the company to spend a week restoring their services.[3][4]
  • Wiper – In December 2011, the malware successfully erased information on hard disks at the Oil Ministry's headquarters.[5][6]
  • Stuxnet, a malicious computer worm believed to be a jointly built American-Israeli cyber weapon. It was designed to sabotage Iran's nuclear program with what would seem like a long series of unfortunate accidents.
  • Viasat hack, a February 2022 attack on the KA-SAT network of Viasat

Cyberwarfare

These are politically motivated destructive attacks aimed at sabotage and espionage.

Government espionage

These attacks relate to stealing information from/about government organizations:

Corporate espionage

These attacks relate to stealing data of corporations related to proprietary methods or emerging products/services.

Stolen e-mail addresses and login credentials

These attacks relate to stealing login information for specific web resources.

  • RockYou – in 2009, the company experienced a data breach resulting in the exposure of over 32 million user accounts.
  • Vestige (online store) – in 2010, a band of anonymous hackers has rooted the servers of the site and leaked half a gigabyte's worth of its private data.[19]
  • 2011 PlayStation Network outage, 2011 attack resulting in stolen credentials and incidentally causing network disruption
  • IEEE – in September 2012, it exposed user names, plaintext passwords, and website activity for almost 100,000 of its members.[20]
  • Yahoo! – in 2012, hackers posted login credentials for more than 453,000 user accounts,[21] doing so again in January 2013[22] and in January 2014.[23]
  • Adobe – in 2013, hackers obtained access to Adobe's networks and stole user information and downloaded the source code for some of Adobe programs.[24] It attacked 150 million customers.[24]
  • LivingSocial – in 2013, the company suffered a security breach that has exposed names, e-mail addresses and password data for up to 50 million of its users.[25]
  • World Health Organization – in March 2020, hackers leaked information on login credentials from the staff members at WHO.[26] In response to cyberattacks, they stated that “Ensuring the security of health information for Member States and the privacy of users interacting with us a priority for WHO at all times, but also particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.”[27]

Stolen credit card and financial data

  • 2017 Equifax data breach – In 2017, Equifax Inc. announced that a cyber-security breach occurred between May and mid July of that year. Cyber criminals had accessed approximately 145.5 million U.S. Equifax consumers' personal data, including their full names, Social Security numbers, credit card information, birth dates, addresses, and, in some cases, driver's license numbers.[28]
  • 2016 Indian Banks data breach – It was estimated 3.2 million debit cards were compromised. Major Indian banks- SBI, HDFC Bank, ICICI, YES Bank and Axis Bank were among the worst hit.[29]
  • 2014 JPMorgan Chase data breach, allegedly conducted by a group of Russian hackers
  • Goodwill Industries – in September 2014, the company suffered from a credit card data breach that affected the charitable retailer's stores in at least 21 states. Another two retailers were affected.[30][31]
  • Home Depot – in September 2014, the cybercriminals that compromised Home Depot's network and installed malware on the home-supply company's point-of-sale systems likely stole information on 56 million payment cards.[32]
  • StarDust – in 2013, the botnet compromised 20,000 cards in active campaign hitting US merchants.[33]
  • Target – in 2013, approximately 40 million credit and debit card accounts were impacted in a credit card breach.[34][35][36] According to another estimate, it compromised as many as 110 million Target customers.[37]
  • Visa and Mastercard – in 2012, they warned card-issuing banks that a third-party payments processor suffered a security breach, affecting up to 10 million credit cards.[38][39]
  • Subway – in 2012, two Romanian men admitted to participating in an international conspiracy that hacked into credit-card payment terminals at more than 150 Subway restaurant franchises and stole data for more than 146,000 accounts.[40]
  • MasterCard – in 2005, the company announced that up to 40 million cardholders may have had account information stolen due to one of its payment processors being hacked.[41][42][43][44]

Blockchain and cryptocurrencies

  • 2014 Mt. Gox exchange exploits
  • The DAO fork – in June 2016, users exploited a vulnerability in The DAO, a decentralized autonomous organization formed as a venture capital fund, to siphon a third of the fund's ether (about $50 million at the time of the hack).[45]
  • Poly Network exploit – in August 2021, anonymous hackers transferred over $610 million in cryptocurrencies to external wallets. Although it was one of the largest DeFi hacks ever, all assets were eventually returned over the following two weeks.[46]
  • Wormhole hack – in early February 2022, an unknown hacker exploited a vulnerability on the DeFi platform Wormhole, making off with $320 million in wrapped ether.[47][48]
  • Ronin Network hack – in March 2022, North Korean state-sponsored Lazarus Group used hacked private keys to withdraw $625 million in ether and USDC from the Ronin bridge,[49][50] an Ethereum sidechain built for the NFT-based video game Axie Infinity.
  • Nomad bridge hack – in early August 2022, hackers targeted a misconfigured smart contract in a "free-for-all" attack,[51] withdrawing nearly $200 million in cryptocurrencies from the Nomad cross-chain bridge.[52]
  • The Uncle Maker attack – an attack on Ethereum by the F2Pool mining pool, which lasted between 2020 and 2022, but was only discovered in 2022 by Aviv Yaish, Gilad Stern and Aviv Zohar.[53][54]
  • BNB Chain hack – in early October 2022, about $570 million in cryptocurrency was stolen from a bridge for the BNB Chain, a blockchain operated by the Binance exchange.[55] Because a majority of the tokens could not be transferred off-chain, the hacker ultimately made off with about $100 million.[56]

Ransomware attacks

Notable criminal ransomware hacker groups

Hacktivism

See also

Further reading

  • Maschmeyer, Lennart; Deibert, Ronald J.; Lindsay, Jon R. (2021). "A tale of two cybers - how threat reporting by cybersecurity firms systematically underrepresents threats to civil society". Journal of Information Technology & Politics. 18 (1): 1–20.
  • Oppenheimer, Harry (2024). "How the process of discovering cyberattacks biases our understanding of cybersecurity". Journal of Peace Research.

References

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  2. ^ "WannaCry Ransomware: What We Know Monday". NPR.org. Retrieved 2017-05-15.
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