Security Infrastructure

ICANN: ‘Most Critical’ Systems Not Affected in Recent Breach

On Dec. 16, Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) said it fell victim to a spear phishing attack that resulted in email credentials of several ICANN staff being compromised.

<p><span><span><strong><span>On Dec. 16, Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) <a href="http://www.securityweek.com/hackers-compromise-icann-computers ">said it fell victim</a> to a spear phishing attack that resulted in email credentials of several ICANN staff being compromised. </span></strong></span></span></p>

On Dec. 16, Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) said it fell victim to a spear phishing attack that resulted in email credentials of several ICANN staff being compromised.

The incident, which occurred in late November and was discovered in early December, allowed attackers to access the Centralized Zone Data System and the ICANN GAC Wiki.

The attacker(s) were able to poke around ICANN systems and obtain administrative access to all files in the CZDS, including copies of the zone files in the system, as well as user information such as name, postal address, email address, fax and telephone numbers, username, and password, according to the original announcement.

Fortunately, ICANN said that those compromised accounts did not have access to the IANA functions systems, which the organization says are a separate system with additional security measures that have not been breached.

IANA functions coordinate domain names with IP addresses to appropriately direct DNS requests to the appropriate server.

ICANN has a contract with U.S. Department of Commerce to maintain the IANA functions on behalf of the entire Internet community.

“During and after the attack, all critical functions hosted by ICANN, including the IANA functions, remained fully operational and unaffected by the attacker’s activities,” ICANN said in an update.

“ICANN employs multiple levels of protection for its most critical services. While the attackers were able to breach the outermost layer of defenses, our on-going investigation indicates our most critical systems were not affected.”

Related: Don’t Let DNS be Your Single Point of Failure

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