Israeli Chief-of-Staff was Hacked by an Iranian State-Sponsored Cybercriminal

Israeli Chief-of-Staff was Hacked by an Iranian State-Sponsored Cybercriminal

According to the Times of Israel, an Iranian cybercriminal targeted the computer of a former IDF chief of staff and acquired access to his complete computer database. Yaser Balaghi was identified as the hacker by Channel 10. After the hack, he allegedly brags about it, while also unwittingly leaving a trail of his identity. Iran was compelled to stop a cyber operation that had targeted 1,800 persons around the world, including Israeli army generals, Persian Gulf human rights campaigners, and academics, due to this oversight. 

After Check Point, an Israeli cybersecurity firm, confirmed the Iranian hacking operation's existence two weeks ago, the Times of Israel was the first to report on it. The information from Check Point was also shown in a Channel 10 report on Tuesday. The attack began two months prior, according to Gil Shwed, CEO of Check Point Software Technologies, who told Israel Radio in late January that targets received email messages aimed at installing malware on their computers. More than a quarter of those who received the emails clicked them, unknowingly downloading spyware and allowing the hackers to steal data from their hard drives. 

Hezbollah and the Iranian regime have attacked Israel multiple times in the last two years. In the previous two years, Israel has been the target of several cyberattacks. Some of the infiltration attempts, according to officials, were carried out by hackers linked to Hezbollah and the Iranian government. 

Late in January, Israel's Electric Authority was the target of a significant cyberattack, according to Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz. He didn't say where the attack was coming from, though. ClearSky, an Israeli cybersecurity firm, said in June that it ..

Support the originator by clicking the read the rest link below.