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Russian hacker group reportedly targeted state Democratic parties in repeat of 2016 attacks



 A Russian hacking squad well-known as Fancy Bear targeted the email of the Democratic state parties in Indiana and California before this year as well as gradual think tanks, Reuters reported. The attempt was obvioazusly not successful and was flagged by Microsoft, as claimed to Reuters, about targets that involved the Council on Foreign Relations, the Carnegie Endowment for Global Peace, and the Center for American Development.

The Russian embassy refused the allegations to Reuters, calling it “fake news.”

Fancy Bear has were connected to GRU, a Russian military intelligence organization, and in 2018, the Department of Justice blamed 12 members of GRU for hacking the Clinton campaign also the DNC. Fancy Bear was before linked to the 2016 hacks of the Democratic National Committee and John Podesta, therefore-chair of the Clinton campaign. Emails collected with the hacks were released by WikiLeaks before the 2016 presidential election and prove damaging to the Clinton campaign.

Despite verification from the US intelligence community that the Russian government was backside the hack, President Trump has frequently expressed doubts that Russia were involved.

Microsoft said in a security record last month that Fancy Bear — additionally well-known as Strontium, or APT28 — assist and looking for objectives associated with the upcoming presidential election. The main part of the attacks wasn't successful, as claimed to Microsoft, but Reuters previously reported that the hackers were targeted communications hard working with the presidential battle of Joe Biden and other famous Democrats. The Biden campaign said at the moment such that an outside actor had attempted to break the non-campaign email accounts of the public affiliated with the campaign, yet wasn't successful.

However Fancy Bear is nothing if not at all persistent, and as said to cybersecurity firm FireEye, it is known for going higher and over the usual hack to gain the data it wants. The group’s “strange history raises the expectation of follow-on intelligence operations or different destructive activity,” FireEye warned in a notice to customers

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