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Kaspersky, which dominates the global market for antiviral software, has been hacked and its antivirus spread around the world. The company said that despite the seriousness of this incident, no sensitive customer data had been exposed or stolen. Leaked keys were found on Pastebin and servers hosting them have been removed, but these particular keygen resulted in malicious operation in "around 730 thousand computers." The attack has caused disruption to Kaspersky's operations worldwide and therefore a large number of people were unable to work productively so they decided not to go into work at all and many machines were left completely inaccessible. However, according to Kaspersky it does not believe that this cyber-attack has anything to do with North Korea. By the end of July 2014, Kaspersky Lab managed to block access to the compromised server. Cyber criminals have managed to gain access to sensitive data belonging to several thousand people, including four million US Department of Defense employees, by exploiting a vulnerability in the US Postal Service's e-mail system. The FBI is investigating what it described as "the largest known data breach in the history of the U.S. Postal Service." Microsoft was able to issue patches for 97% of its products after hackers exploited a 0-day vulnerability in Windows XP and Windows Server 2003. The exploit was used, more or less successfully, in targeted attacks against the United States Department of Labor, MedStar Health hospitals, and major energy companies in Ukraine. According to researchers at iSIGHT Partners, this malware had been developed by the same group of hackers that attacked South Korean banks last year. A Microsoft spokesperson was quoted saying that while there is some evidence that North Korea has been conducting some form of cyber-espionage around the world, "there is no evidence that they are involved in this attack." This attack appeared to be aimed at disabling large parts of North Korea's infrastructure. Even so, most North Koreans will continue to live without Internet access or with severely restricted Internet access via a government-controlled network. The government of China has been using a range of technologies to monitor and censor online activity in the country. The most advanced of these is the Golden Shield Project, or "Great Firewall." This system combines a number of techniques, from simply blocking a given website, to redirecting a user to another site, to deep packet inspection and active content manipulation. On January 1, 2013, Google withdrew its search engine from the Chinese market citing an increasing trend of cyber attacks on its services. The US National Security Agency (NSA) is believed to have penetrated Chinese government computers. A story in the "South China Morning Post" reported that all 6 of China's telco operators are required to install backdoors into their systems for unrestricted access by the NSA. According to NSA documents leaked by Edward Snowden, the agency was able to conduct surveillance on Google's internal systems due to a "working relationship" with some of their employees. According to the New York Times, the FBI had been looking into claims that China had hacked into computers at United States Steel Corporation in September 2010, and later at USW's office of law firm Mayer Brown Rowe & Maw. cfa1e77820
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