The SWIFT messaging system plans to ask banks to make sure they are following recommended security practices following an unprecedented cyberattack on Bangladesh’s central bank that yielded US$81 million, a spokeswoman for the group said on Sunday.
Brussels-based SWIFT, a cooperative owned by about 3,000 global financial institutions, was set to issue a written advisory yesterday asking banks to review internal security, the spokeswoman said.
SWIFT staff will also begin calling banks to highlight the importance of reviewing security measures after the attack in Bangladesh, she added.
PHOTO: REUTERS
“Our priority at this time is to encourage customers to review and, where necessary, to reinforce their local operating environments,” the spokeswoman added.
Unknown hackers breached the computer systems of Bangladesh Bank and in early last month attempted to steal US$951 million from its account at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which it uses for international settlements. Some attempted transfers were blocked, but US$81 million was transferred to accounts in the Philippines in one of the largest cyberheists in history.
SWIFT has so far said little about the attack, except that it was related to “an internal operational issue” at Bangladesh Bank and that there was no compromise in its core messaging system.
SWIFT prepared a summary of previously issued recommendations for implementing security measures to thwart hackers, which advises members to pay close attention to best practices, the spokeswoman said.
While SWIFT can advise members to follow certain minimum security standards, there is no organization with regulatory oversight of how central banks and other financial institutions secure their networks, said independent security consultant Shane Shook.
That means that security is not uniform among central banks, making some more vulnerable to cyberattacks, said Shook, who has helped investigate some of the biggest financial breaches.
A confidential interim report on the investigation, which forensics experts submitted to the bank on Wednesday, said that attackers took control of the bank’s network, stole credentials for sending SWIFT messages and used “sophisticated” malicious software to attack the computers it uses to process and authorize transactions.
Investigators said in the report that they expect to continue their investigation for another two weeks and believe the attackers have targeted other financial institutions.
The report was prepared by FireEye Inc and World Informatix, which were hired by Bangladesh’s central bank to investigate the massive theft.
The investigators did not identify other victims or name the hackers, but said that forensic evidence suggests they were also behind other recent cyberattacks on financial institutions.
“FireEye has observed these same suspected FIN threat actors within other customer networks in the financial industry, where these threat actors appear to be financially motivated and well organized,” said an interim report sent to the bank last week.
Representatives of Bangladesh Bank and FireEye declined to comment on the confidential report and their probe into the Feb. 4 heist.
World Informatix Chief Executive Rakesh Asthana said that he could not discuss the investigation, but that he expected Bangladesh Bank to issue a news release yesterday.
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