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Showing posts with label Messaging App Security. Show all posts

French Government Messaging Platform Tchap Breached After Hijacked User Account Attack

 

A surprise alert came from Paris when officials revealed a security flaw in Tchap, the nation’s encrypted chat system. Through a hijacked login, intruders slipped inside without immediate detection. Only later did analysts at the country's cyber defense unit spot unusual activity. Their probe began quietly, tracing paths taken and files touched during the unauthorized visit. Questions now linger about what data could have been seen or copied in the gap before discovery. 

Starting in 2018, France's DINUM introduced Tchap alongside the country’s cybersecurity body, ANSSI. Built using the Matrix framework, this tool serves only state workers and official institutions through secure chats and teamwork functions. Since launch, usage expanded - now counting above 300,000 people logging in each month, with half a million installs just on Android. Growth picked up speed when Prime Minister François Bayrou advised staff to switch work conversations to Tchap rather than rely on non-European apps. 

Later that week, signs of intrusion appeared on the interface - ANSSI spotted irregular behavior tied to one logged-in profile. That channel got shut down fast, stopping extra breaches. From there, scrutiny turned to stored records, checking what exchanges or documents might have leaked. Though control slipped briefly, response narrowed the risk without delay. Even though no breach occurred, France's digital agency reached out to CNIL due to possible exposure of personal details via the app. 

While public discussions remain accessible to verified participants, those conversations lack encryption safeguards. Because privacy risks exist, officials emphasize handling delicate data strictly within protected one-on-one exchanges. Only secured channels offer the level of protection needed for such content. Over the weekend, someone took credit for the incident, saying they got in by manipulating people rather than exploiting code. 

Though officials haven’t shared specifics about how it happened, the claim points to deception as the entry method. Access reportedly began with an account tied to Tchap’s school-focused systems. From there, information visible within that account was gathered without permission. Among the claims made was access to fixed LDAP login details, left visible inside a PowerShell file circulated by someone working for the state. 

It followed that large volumes of data - over 13 gigabytes - were reportedly copied, spanning both documents and multimedia content. From those materials emerged close to 650,000 individual messages. Account-related records tied to over seventy-three thousand users were pulled apart, revealing emails, affiliations, scheduled call URLs, plus background system logs. 

A separate assertion pointed to how easily such scripts could expose sensitive internal structures. Still examining the reports, investigators work to measure how far the effects reach. When hackers trick users or steal logins, even coded messaging apps can fail - this case shows it once again.

Signal Phishing Campaign Attributed to Russian Intelligence FBI Says


 

As part of a pair of advisory reports issued Friday, federal authorities outlined a pattern of foreign cyber activity that is increasingly exploiting the trust users place in everyday communication tools as a means of infiltration. 

According to the FBI, as well as the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Russian and Iranian intelligence-linked actors are utilizing widely-used messaging platforms for the purpose of infiltrating sensitive networks, particularly Signal. 

It is not merely opportunistic, but is also carefully planned, with a focus on individuals who are in a position to influence government, defense, media, and public affairs. These operations typically imitate routine system notifications and support alerts to trick victims into providing access credentials under the guise of urgent account actions resulting in the unauthorized accessing of thousands of accounts. 

As a result, social engineering tactics are being increasingly employed, which rely less on technical exploits and more on eroding trust among users in otherwise secure environments online. On the basis of these findings, the FBI has issued a public service announcement explicitly identifying Russian intelligence services as the source of ongoing phishing activity, which is an unusual step, as it departs from earlier advisories that generally refer to state-sponsored threats in a broader sense. These operations are designed in a manner to circumvent the security assurances offered by end-to-end encrypted commercial messaging applications, rather than by compromising cryptographic integrity, but by systematically hijacking user accounts. 

Attackers are able to acquire persistent access without defeating the underlying encryption protocols by exploiting authentication workflows and manipulating users into divulging verification codes or account credentials. 

Although the tradecraft can be used across a wide range of messaging platforms, investigators note that Signal is a prominent target due to the combination of perceived security and high-value users. When a threat actor enters an account, they will have access to private communications, contact networks, impersonation of trusted identities, and the propagation of further phishing campaigns. 

Based on the FBI's estimate that thousands of accounts have already been impacted, the scope of the activity underscores a deliberate focus on individuals with access to sensitive or influential information. Each successful compromise increases both the intelligence value and downstream operational risk. 

During his presentation to the FBI, Director Kash Patel explained that the operation targeted individuals of high intelligence value. This campaign has already been confirmed to have affected thousands of accounts worldwide, including current and former government officials, military personnel, political actors, and media members. 

It is important to emphasize that the intrusion set does not exploit flaws in the encryption architecture of commercial messaging platforms but instead uses sophisticated phishing techniques to compromise user authentication.

The method typically involves the delivery of convincingly crafted alerts warning of suspicious login activity or unauthorized access attempts to recipients, which prompt them to act immediately by following embedded links, scanning QR codes, or disclosing credentials for one-time verification. Once a threat actor has gained access to the victim's email account, they are in a position to harvest the contents of the message as well as the contact information. 

Once the victims' identity has been assumed, the threat actor can engage in further communication with the victim through secondary phishing attempts. Despite the fact that U.S. agencies have not formally attributed the activity to a particular operational unit, parallel threat intelligence reports from industry sources linked similar tactics to multiple Russian-aligned clusters, including UNC5792, UNC4221, and Star Blizzard. 

It is not confined to a single region of the world; European cybersecurity agencies, including France's Cyber Crisis Coordination Centre, as well as German and Dutch cybersecurity agencies, have reported a corresponding increase in attacks against government, media, and corporate leadership messaging accounts. There are a number of incidents that share a common operational objective: exploiting trust channels for the collection of intelligence and for the further compromise of compromised systems. 

Adversaries can exploit established trust relationships by masquerading as legitimate support entities—particularly "Signal Support" by manipulating established trust relationships, making secure messaging ecosystems a conduit for intrusion rather than a barrier against it when they masquerade as legitimate support entities. 

In order for the campaign to be consistent, it primarily utilizes user manipulation rather than technical exploitation, and Signal is its primary target, although similar tactics are also employed across other messaging platforms, including WhatsApp. Often, threat actors impersonate official support channels to distribute highly targeted phishing messages that compel recipients to take immediate actions either by clicking embedded links, scanning QR codes, or disclosing verification credentials and PINs. 

By complying with these prompts, attackers may either register their own devices as trusted endpoints through legitimate "linked device" functionality or carry out an account takeover as a whole. In a joint advisory from U.S. authorities, it is explained that such actions effectively permit unauthorized access without triggering conventional security safeguards, and that malware distribution may be included as a secondary means to compromise systems. 

The present study emphasizes the enduring effectiveness of phishing as a vector that may bypass even robust protections such as end-to-end encryption by focusing directly on user behavior. Once access has been established, adversaries may be able to retrieve message histories, map contact networks, and exploit established trust relationships in order to expand their reach through secondary phishing attacks. 

It has been reported that international intelligence agencies, including counterparts in France and the Netherlands, have issued parallel warnings regarding coordinated efforts to target officials, civil servants, and military personnel, reflecting the broader strategic intent to intercept sensitive communications. 

In addition, the agencies have stressed that the activity does not originate from inherent vulnerabilities within the platforms themselves, but rather from systematic abuse of legitimate authentication workflows and features. It is therefore necessary that users remain vigilant and avoid disclosing one-time codes, scrutinize unsolicited messages-even those that appear to originate from known contacts-and only use official channels when dealing with account issues.

Furthermore, officials caution against the use of commercial messaging applications for exchanging classified or sensitive information in high-risk environments, underscoring the tensions between operational security and convenience in modern communication systems. The persistence and adaptability of the campaign illustrates the importance of reinforcing both user-side defenses and platform-level controls for mitigation. 

As a result, organizations are advised to enforce rigorous identity verification practices, enforcing multifactor authentication hygiene, and restricting high-value personnel's exposure through publicly accessible communications channels. Continuous awareness training is equally important for preparing users to recognize subtle indicators of social engineering, especially in environments that simulate urgency and authority on a regular basis. 

A rapid report and coordinated response coordination remain essential to containing the possibility of lateral spread once an account has been compromised at an operational level. Accordingly, the broader implication is clear: as adversaries refine techniques that exploit trust and not technology, resilience will increasingly depend not solely on encryption's strength, but on the diligence and preparedness of those who use it.