Sunday, May 15, 2011

Hackers used Amazon server for Sony attack


New York: Amazon.com's web services cloud-computing unit was used by hackers in last month's attack against Sony's online entertainment systems, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
Hackers using an alias signed up to rent a server through Amazon's EC2 service and launched the attack from there, said the person, who requested anonymity because the information is confidential. The account has been shut down, the person said.
The development sheds light on how hackers used the so-called cloud to carry out the second-biggest online theft of personal information to date. The incursion, which compromised the personal accounts of more than 100 million Sony customers, was "a very carefully planned, very professional, highly sophisticated criminal cyber attack," Sony has said.
Drew Herdener, a spokesman for Seattle-based Amazon, declined to comment.
Investigation
"We're continuing to work with law enforcement in an ongoing investigation into the situation," said Patrick Seybold, a US spokesman for Tokyo-based Sony. "As such, we will not comment further on this matter."
The hackers didn't break into the Amazon servers, the person said. Rather, they signed up for the service just as a legitimate company would, using fake information.
Even so, the breach at Amazon is likely to call attention to concerns some businesses have voiced over the security of computing services delivered via others' remote servers, referred to as cloud computing.
Cloud security is Amazon's top priority, Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos said at an event sponsored by Consumer Reports magazine this week.
"Data security is one of these great dynamic situations where the bad guys get better, and the good guys have to keep getting better too — it's not a static situation," Bezos said, Fast Company's website reported.
"I don't think this is ever going away — it's like trying to say that you're going to get crime to go away."
Cyber security
The use of a hijacked or rented server to launch attacks is typical for sophisticated hackers. The proliferation of server farms around the globe has made such misdirection easier, said E.J. Hilbert, president of the security company Online Intelligence and a former FBI cyber-crime investigator.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation will likely subpoena Amazon, or it may try to obtain a search warrant, Hilbert said. "The subpoena will give law enforcement a history of the transactions," or who had access to the specific internet address at that time, Hilbert said.

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