A flight of F-35 sâ éålth fighters conduct a training mission in this undated photo. PHOTO FROM FACEBOOK PAGE OF SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE DEBORAH LEE JAMES.
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SYDNEY, Australia â Sensitive data about Australiaâs F-35 sâ éålth fighter and P-8 surveillance aircraft programs were stolen when a defense subcontractor was hÀçked using a tool widely used by Chinese cyber criminals, officials said Thursday.
The 50-person aerospace engineering firm was compromised in July last year but the national cyber security agency, the Australian Signals Directorate (ASD), only became aware of the breach in November, technology website ZDNet Australia reported.
Some 30GB of âsensitive dataâ subjected to restricted access under the US governmentâs International Traffic in Arms Regulations rules were stolen, ASDâs Mitchell Clarke told a security conference Wednesday according to ZDNet.
Clarke, who worked on the case and did not name the subcontractor, said information about the F-35, the USâ latest generation of fighter jets, as well as the P-8, an advanced submarine hunter and surveillance craft, were lifted.
Another document was a wireframe diagram of one of the Australian navyâs new ships, where a viewer could âzoom in down to the captainâs chairâ.
The hÀçkers used a tool called âChina Chopperâ which according to security experts is widely used by Chinese actors, and had gained access via an internet-facing server, he said.
In other parts of the network, the subcontractor also used internet-facing services that still had their default passwords âadminâ and âguestâ.
Those brought in to assess the attack nicknamed the hÀçker Alf after a character on the popular Australian soap âHome and Awayâ, Clarke said. The three month period where they were unaware of the breach they dubbed âAlfâs Mystery Happy Fun Timeâ.
Defense Industry Minister Christopher Pyne told reporters in Adelaide âthe information they have breached is commercialâ.
âIt is not classified and it is not dangerous in terms of the military,â he said.
Pyne added that Australia was increasingly a target for cyber criminals as it was undertaking a massive Aus$50 billion (US$39 billion) submarine project which he described as the worldâs largest.
The nation has also committed to buy 72 F-35A aircraft for Aus$17 billion.
He would not comment who might be behind the breach, only stating that the government was spending billions of dollars on cyber security.
Western governments have long accused hÀçkers in China of plundering industrial, corporate and military secrets.
The revelations came just days after Assistant Minister for Cyber Security Dan Tehan said there were 47,000 cyber incidents in the last 12 months, a 15 percent jump from the previous year.
A key worry was 734 attacks that hit private sector national interest and critical infrastructure providers during the period, Tehan said.
Last year, the governmentâs Cyber Security Centre revealed that foreign spies installed malicious software on the Bureau of Meteorologyâs system and stole an unknown number of documents. /cbb source:http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/937401...ter-data-stolen-in-australia-defense-hÀçk/amp