Wednesday, January 22, 2025
HomeCyber Security NewsOrganization Hacked Following Accidental Hiring of North Korean Remote IT Worker

Organization Hacked Following Accidental Hiring of North Korean Remote IT Worker

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

A company has fallen victim to a cyberattack after unknowingly hiring a North Korean cybercriminal as a remote IT worker.

The unidentified firm, based in the UK, US, or Australia, discovered the breach after the hacker downloaded sensitive data and issued a ransom demand.

The incident highlights the growing threat of North Korean operatives infiltrating Western companies under pretenses.

Deceptive Hiring Leads to Data Breach

The hacker, who secured the position by falsifying employment history and personal details, was hired as a contractor in the summer.

Analyse Any Suspicious Links Using ANY.RUN’s New Safe Browsing Tool: Try for Free

He swiftly downloaded critical data once granted access to the company’s network through remote working tools.

The firm, which has chosen to remain anonymous, reported receiving ransom emails demanding a six-figure sum in cryptocurrency to prevent the publication or sale of the stolen information. It remains undisclosed whether the ransom was paid. 

According to the BBC report, this breach is part of a broader trend where North Korean workers pose as Western professionals to secure jobs and funnel earnings back to their regime.

Secureworks, a cybersecurity firm involved in responding to the incident, emphasized the severity of this case.

Rafe Pilling, Director of Threat Intelligence at Secureworks, noted that this represents a significant escalation in tactics used by fraudulent North Korean IT workers.

Growing Threat of North Korean Infiltration

Since 2022, authorities have warned about an increase in North Korean operatives infiltrating Western companies.

These workers often take on multiple roles remotely to generate income for their government while circumventing international sanctions.

Cybersecurity company Mandiant recently reported that numerous Fortune 100 companies have inadvertently hired North Koreans using fake profiles. 

Cyber researchers at Mandiant uncovered this fake IT worker profile
Cyber researchers at Mandiant uncovered this fake IT worker profile

Despite these warnings, incidents involving these operatives turning against their employers are relatively rare.

However, this case underscores the potential risks associated with such hires.

It follows another incident in July where a North Korean IT worker attempted to hack their employer, KnowBe4, which promptly disabled access upon detecting suspicious activity.

As more companies embrace remote work, experts urge employers to exercise increased vigilance when hiring new staff.

Thorough background checks and verification processes are essential to mitigate risks associated with remote hires. Authorities continue to stress the importance of awareness and due diligence in preventing similar incidents.

How to Choose an ultimate Managed SIEM solution for Your Security Team -> Download Free Guide(PDF)

Divya
Divya
Divya is a Senior Journalist at GBhackers covering Cyber Attacks, Threats, Breaches, Vulnerabilities and other happenings in the cyber world.

Latest articles

Security Researchers Discover Critical RCE Vulnerability, Earn $40,000 Bounty

Cybersecurity researchers Abdullah Nawaf and Orwa Atyat, successfully escalated a limited path traversal vulnerability...

IBM i Access Client Solutions Might Be Leaking Your Passwords

A potential security flaw in IBM i Access Client Solutions (ACS) has raised serious...

Weaponized VS Code Impersonate Zoom App Steals Cookies From Chrome

A newly identified extension for Visual Studio Code (VS Code) has been found to...

PoC Exploit Released for TP-Link Code Execution Vulnerability(CVE-2024-54887)

A security researcher, exploring reverse engineering and exploit development, has successfully identified a critical...

API Security Webinar

Free Webinar - DevSecOps Hacks

By embedding security into your CI/CD workflows, you can shift left, streamline your DevSecOps processes, and release secure applications faster—all while saving time and resources.

In this webinar, join Phani Deepak Akella ( VP of Marketing ) and Karthik Krishnamoorthy (CTO), Indusface as they explores best practices for integrating application security into your CI/CD workflows using tools like Jenkins and Jira.

Discussion points

Automate security scans as part of the CI/CD pipeline.
Get real-time, actionable insights into vulnerabilities.
Prioritize and track fixes directly in Jira, enhancing collaboration.
Reduce risks and costs by addressing vulnerabilities pre-production.

More like this

Security Researchers Discover Critical RCE Vulnerability, Earn $40,000 Bounty

Cybersecurity researchers Abdullah Nawaf and Orwa Atyat, successfully escalated a limited path traversal vulnerability...

IBM i Access Client Solutions Might Be Leaking Your Passwords

A potential security flaw in IBM i Access Client Solutions (ACS) has raised serious...

Weaponized VS Code Impersonate Zoom App Steals Cookies From Chrome

A newly identified extension for Visual Studio Code (VS Code) has been found to...