Servers of the United Nations offices in Vienna and Geneva are exposed to piracy

avatar

Dozens of servers at international offices in Vienna and Geneva were hacked, and The Associated Press said they received a copy of confidential reports from the United Nations Information and Technology Office confirming it.

An internal document from the Information and Technology Office says 24 servers have been set up, and 25 servers are considered suspicious, almost all of which are in UN offices in Geneva and Vienna.

The agency, quoting a UN official who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the attack, which first surfaced in Dubai last summer, seemed complicated, and that because of the Navy. The extent of the damage is still unclear, noting that the UN has strengthened its security systems.

He added that the complexity of the population was high enough that a country could be left behind in the process.

According to human rights office spokesman Robert Coville, the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights was broken, but the hackers were not too much on their endeavors, emphasizing that there was no risk of danger. General Chat Chat Lounge

Hacks, at least in the HR office, seem to be limited to the active domain, including staff listings and details such as emails, but passwords are not hacked.

Authorities said the original domain that controlled all network activity was not hacked.

Also, UN Secretary-General Spokeswoman Stephen Dojaric said in an email that the attack was about "the destruction of essential infrastructure parts at the organization's offices in Geneva and Vienna" that it was a "serious" attack.
unitednations.jpg
Dojaric said the international agency does not have enough information to determine who is behind the violation, but added that "the methods and tools used in the attack indicate a high level of resources, capacity and design."



0
0
0.000
0 comments