Crypto-Mining Campaign Hits European Supercomputers
martyb writes:
Crypto-Mining Campaign Hits European Supercomputers:
Several supercomputers across Europe were taken offline last week after being targeted in what appears to be a crypto-mining campaign.
In a notice on Saturday, the Swiss National Supercomputing Centre (CSCS) revealed that it too has been hit, along with other HPC [High Performance Computing] and academic data centres of Europe and around the world."
CSCS said it detected malicious activity related to these attacks and it has decided to suspend external access until the issue is addressed.
[...] While CSCS' notice says that the background of the attack is currently unclear, the European Grid Infrastructure (EGI) security team issued an alert claiming that the purpose of the attack is cryptocurrency mining.
EGI mentions two security incidents that may or may not be correlated," which impact academic data centers, revealing that compromised SSH credentials are being used by the attackers to jump from a victim to another.
As part of the assaults, compromised hosts are being used as Monero (XMR) mining hosts, as XMR-proxy and SOCKS-proxy hosts, and as tunnel hosts (for SSH tunneling), EGI's team explains.
[...] The attacks targeted multiple victims in Germany, including the Julich Supercomputing Centre (JSC)-maintained JURECA, JUDAC, and JUWELS, the HPC systems at Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ), the Taurus supercomputer at the Technical University in Dresden, and five HPC clusters coordinated by bwHPC, among others.
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