您现在的位置是:知識 >>正文
【】
知識6869人已围观
简介Why hack, when you can socially engineer your way in? And why even bother with social engineering, w ...
Why hack, when you can socially engineer your way in? And why even bother with social engineering, when you can just buy the access you want?
That appears to be the thinking of a least one Russian man, who the FBI arrested and who has been charged with attempting to pay a Tesla Gigafactory employee in Nevada to instal malware on the company's network.
The Department of Justice announced the arrest on Tuesday, and Electrek reported Thursday that the company in question was indeed Tesla.
"This was a serious attack," wrote Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
Tweet may have been deleted
We reached out to Tesla to confirm Electrek's reporting, but received no immediate response. Even so, the official complaint against 27-year-old Egor Igorevich Kriuchkov presents a detailed look into a modern day criminal effort to extort a global company.
According to the complaint, Kriuchkov allegedly traveled to Sparks, Nevada, the location of Tesla's Gigafactory, and rented a hotel room. While there, in early August, he met with an unnamed employee of "Company A" and proposed a "special project."
Kriuchkov, the complaint alleges, was going to give the employee malware. The employee would then install it on the company's computers. In an effort to distract the company's security teams, Kriuchkov and his unnamed co-conspirators would run a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack against the company (which, again, Electrek confirmed is Tesla) while this was all going down. Next, the malware would steal a bunch of info from the company's computers and send it to Kriuchkov's co-conspirators, who would then be able to extort the company for millions.
To sweeten the deal, the DOJ says Kriuchkov offered to pay the employee $1 million — in either cash or bitcoin — suggesting the size of the payout Kriuchkov hoped to get from Tesla was substantial.
Pretty simple, right? Well, except for the fact that the unnamed employee wanted nothing to do with it, and at some point started working with the FBI. The criminal complaint details various conversations that the employee had with Kriuchkov, and notes that they were "consensually recorded" — suggesting that the employee wore a wire.
SEE ALSO: Coronavirus 'exposure' soars at Tesla's Fremont plant, leak shows
Kriuchkov has been charged with conspiracy to intentionally cause damage to a protected computer, and faces the possibility of five years in prison plus a $250,000 fine.
The unnamed Tesla employee, presumably, still has a job.
UPDATE: Aug. 27, 2020, 4:44 p.m. PDT: This story has been updated to include comment from Elon Musk.
TopicsCybersecurityTesla
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://www.new.maomao321.com/news/33b51299454.html
相关文章
Florida hurricane forecast remains uncertain, but trends in state's favor
知識For days, a war has been raging between two of the premiere computer models used to help predict the ...
【知識】
阅读更多Amazon might make Alexa home phone with intercoms
知識Amazon reportedly has new tech in the works that could let you talk to anyone in any room in your ho ...
【知識】
阅读更多It's no dislike button, but we might get dislike reactions on Facebook Messenger
知識Besides stopping the spread of fake news, a dislike button is probably the feature Facebook users as ...
【知識】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Tributes flow after death of former Singapore president S.R. Nathan
- Sleeping intern gets Photoshopped into a meme by coworkers
- You guys, giraffe births are horrifying. Look away.
- Apple dropping lightning for a USB
- 'The Flying Bum' aircraft crashes during second test flight
- Sleeping intern gets Photoshopped into a meme by coworkers
最新文章
Watch MTV's Video Music Awards 2016 livestream
Sad military drone that just wanted to fly around for a bit crashes into tree :(
Weapons and ammo in 'Horizon: Zero Dawn' are confusing, so here's a guide
Watch this Texas sports anchor elegantly attack transphobic state laws
You can now play 'Solitaire' and 'Tic
Mayonnaise cafes? Ew