North
Korea’s hacking operations has expanded to more countries including Nigeria, a
report by Russian cyber security firm Kaspersky has claimed.
The cyber
security firm said hackers backed by North Korea are targeting financial
institutions in 18 countries, including Nigeria.
According to
a report on the hacking claims by CNN, two international security experts
believe North Korea was likely spending the stolen funds were on its nuclear
weapons programme.
“Banks and
security researchers have previously identified four similar cyber-heists
attempted on financial institutions in Bangladesh, Ecuador, the Philippines and
Vietnam,” it read in part.
“But
researchers at Kaspersky now say the same hacking operation — known as
“Lazarus” — also attacked financial institutions in Costa Rica, Ethiopia,
Gabon, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Kenya, Malaysia, Nigeria, Poland, Taiwan,
Thailand, and Uruguay.”
Hackers were
traced to North Korea after Kaspersky detected a mistake, and a hacker from a
group operation known as “Lazarus” connected from North Korea, the United Press
International also reported on Tuesday.
According to
the report, the hackers had previously routed their attacks from computer
services in France, South Korea and Taiwan, a move which made it difficult for
security experts to identify the origin of the breaches.
It added
that Lazarus began to focus on banks late 2015, just before North Korea
conducted its fourth nuclear test then began to test-launch dozens of ballistic
missiles in 2016.

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