Home Technology Cybersecurity Microsoft confirms hacker group Lapsus$ breached its systems The hacking group has been expanding the geographic range of its targets by Bloomberg March 24, 2022 Microsoft Corporation said that the hacker group Lapsus$ gained “limited access” to its systems, following a claim by the group that it obtained source code for the Bing search engine and Cortana voice assistant. The software giant had been tracking the activities of Lapsus$ – which it labels a “large-scale social engineering and extortion campaign” — for several weeks and provided some details on the methods of its attacks in a blog post late Tuesday. Lapsus$ had previously breached the cybersecurity defenses of Nvidia Corporation and Samsung Electronics, and this week also claimed to have gained access to the system privileges of Okta, the San Francisco-based company that manages user authentication services for thousands of corporate clients. “Our investigation has found a single account had been compromised, granting limited access,” Microsoft said. “Our cybersecurity response teams quickly engaged to remediate the compromised account and prevent further activity. Microsoft does not rely on the secrecy of code as a security measure and viewing source code does not lead to elevation of risk.” The hacking group, which has been given the designation DEV-0537 by Microsoft’s cybersecurity researchers, has been expanding the geographic range of its targets and going after government organisations as well as the tech, telecom and healthcare sectors, according to the blog post. They are also known for hijacking cryptocurrency accounts, Microsoft said. Lapsus$ has made claims on social media that it’s infiltrated several large tech companies besides Microsoft. Its Telegram channel was first to announce the Microsoft and Okta breaches this week and also included mention of breaching employee accounts of LG Electronics Inc. “Unlike most activity groups that stay under the radar, DEV-0537 doesn’t seem to cover its tracks,” said Microsoft, based in Redmond, Washington. “They go as far as announcing their attacks on social media or advertising their intent to buy credentials from employees of target organisations.” Tags Bing Code Cortana Lapsus$ microsoft 0 Comments You might also like OpenAI in talks to raise new funding at $100bn valuation Microsoft, OpenAI tie-up comes under antitrust scrutiny COP28: Microsoft’s Naim Yazbeck on leveraging data, tech to drive sustainability UPDATE: Sam Altman to join Microsoft after OpenAI exit