The world's largest defense contractor said Saturday it fought off a "tenacious" cyber attack last week.
Lockheed Martin Corp, the Pentagon's No. 1 supplier, said in a statement it detected a "significant" assault on its computer networks on May 21. It was found "almost immediately" and no employee, program or customer data was lost, the company said in a statement.
The Department of Homeland Security said it knew about the "cyber incident," and was investigating alongside the Department of Defense.
The agencies are "determining the extent of the incident, performing analysis of available data in order to provide recommendations to mitigate further risk," said Chris Ortman, a spokesman for the agency.
Lockheed uses a mobile security system produced by EMC Corp.’s RSA unit. RSA bolstered security for clients, including Lockheed, after a network breach in March resulted in the theft of RSA data, a person familiar with the process said.
Weapons makers are the latest companies to be breached through sophisticated attacks that have pierced the defenses of huge corporations including Sony and Google.
Rick Moy, president of NSS Labs, an information security company, said the original attack on RSA was likely targeted at its customers, including military, financial, governmental and other organizations with critical intellectual property.
He said the initial RSA attack was followed by malware and phishing campaigns seeking specific data that would link tokens to end-users, which meant the current attacks may have been carried out by the same hackers.
"Given the military targets, and that millions of compromised keys are in circulation, this is not over," he said.
Lockheed Martin Corp, the Pentagon's No. 1 supplier, said in a statement it detected a "significant" assault on its computer networks on May 21. It was found "almost immediately" and no employee, program or customer data was lost, the company said in a statement.
The Department of Homeland Security said it knew about the "cyber incident," and was investigating alongside the Department of Defense.
The agencies are "determining the extent of the incident, performing analysis of available data in order to provide recommendations to mitigate further risk," said Chris Ortman, a spokesman for the agency.
Lockheed uses a mobile security system produced by EMC Corp.’s RSA unit. RSA bolstered security for clients, including Lockheed, after a network breach in March resulted in the theft of RSA data, a person familiar with the process said.
Weapons makers are the latest companies to be breached through sophisticated attacks that have pierced the defenses of huge corporations including Sony and Google.
Rick Moy, president of NSS Labs, an information security company, said the original attack on RSA was likely targeted at its customers, including military, financial, governmental and other organizations with critical intellectual property.
He said the initial RSA attack was followed by malware and phishing campaigns seeking specific data that would link tokens to end-users, which meant the current attacks may have been carried out by the same hackers.
"Given the military targets, and that millions of compromised keys are in circulation, this is not over," he said.
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