This Is The Russian Hacker Detained For Maybe Helping Hack The 2016 Campaign

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SAN FRANCISCO — For years Pyotr Levashov, aka Peter Severa, was known to authorities as one of the world’s most prolific spam kingpins.

Levashov, who lived in St. Petersburg, travelled freely under a lifestyle so lavish that one fellow Russian hacker told BuzzFeed News he “would have embarrassed an oligarch.” Last week, he was arrested in Barcelona while vacationing with his family under an international warrant at the request of the US.

Normally, the arrest of a spammer wouldn’t illicit international headlines, no matter how prolific. But over the weekend Levashov’s wife told the Russian state-owned broadcaster Russia Today that her husband’s arrest was due to his involvement in a “computer virus” which was “linked to Trump’s win.” Immediately, online forums were abuzz that one of the Fancy Bears — a group of Russian, government-linked hackers — had been caught.

Yet the arrest of Levashov, a well-known figure in cybercriminal circles, has less to do with the US government hunting down elusive members of the Russian government’s elite squad of hackers, and more to do with authorities finally cracking down on the murky underworld of Russian cybercriminals who have aided Russia’s ever-growing cyberwar in pursuit of their geopolitical goals. For years, cybersecurity researchers and US authorities have tracked the murky ties between cybercriminals and the Russian state, including how malware first developed for criminal enterprises has made its way into state-sponsored cyberattacks on Russia’s neighbors. Over the last six months, US authorities have appeared to be stepping up their efforts to arrest the cybercriminals who work with the Russian state.

“We’ve reached a boiling point with Russia. They are the closest competitor to the US when it comes to cyberespionage and cyberattacks,” said Milan Patel, managing director at the K2 cybersecurity firm, and former Chief Technology Officer of the FBI’s cyber division. “With Russia now, a lot is coming the forefront and being made public about how they run their cyber activities.”

Last month, the US announced charges against two Russian intelligence officers and two hackers over a massive Yahoo breach. US authorities said the group hacked into Yahoo, compromising more than 500 million email accounts, in order to target the emails of just a handful of Russian journalists, opposition politicians, and government officials, for cyberespionnage.

The Justice Department refused to comment on Levashov’s arrest to BuzzFeed News or on the case against him. For years Levashov has been listed as among the top 10 perpetrators of spam in the world by Spamhaus, a group that tracks spammers. Cybersecurity researcher Brian Krebs has also documented how Levashov appeared to be a moderator for online communities which profited from spam, and how he served as a linchpin between virus writers with spam networks.

In 2012, Russian cybersecurity researchers Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan, reported that Russian hacker forums believed that Peter Severa (believed to be Levashov’s online alias) had been recruited by the Russia’s national security service, the FSB. The researchers wrote that Peter Severa had been attempting to recruit hackers on online forums.

The alias of Peter Severa was also named by a 2012 court filing by Microsoft, which outlined how the extensive spam network had been used to spread a host of computer viruses. One of those, the Kelihos virus, was used to spread spam during the 2012 Russian elections that pushed fake news stories about the candidate running against Russian President Vladimir Putin. Those emails included unsubstantiated allegations that Putin’s opponent, Mikhail D. Prokhorov, had come out as gay.

It is unclear how, or if, Levashov is tied to the hacks on the DNC, as his wife told Russia Today. One Russian hacker, reached by BuzzFeed News Monday, said he was doubtful Levashov had any direct connection the hacks, but that is was possible malware developed by him had been repurposed in some form.

“They commin for everyon[e] man,” wrote the hacker, via a secure messaging app. His communication with BuzzFeed News was done so on condition of anonymity. “People need keep their head down.”

In previous conversations the hacker, who says he has no ties to the Russian state, has said that Russian cybercriminals are alarmed by the recent arrests among their group and believe the US is on a vendetta. He said that while Russian cybercriminals still enjoy freedom of movement and protection within Russia — as long as their actions don’t target the Russian State — they have become increasingly paranoid about travel and communication outside Russia.

Quelle: <a href="This Is The Russian Hacker Detained For Maybe Helping Hack The 2016 Campaign“>BuzzFeed

Infuse some AI into your Azure apps at hands-on Seattle workshop

If you’re an Azure developer interested to incorporate the very latest AI and machine learning techniques into your apps and enterprise solutions, here’s a free in-person workshop you’ll want to register for.

Microsoft is running an all-day AI Immersion Workshop on Tuesday, May 9th, at the W Hotel in Seattle. We’ll provide an overview of Microsoft’s extensive AI investments and offerings at this event, followed by deep technical tutorials, specifically designed for hands-on developers such as yourself. The tutorials being featured at this event include:

Applied Machine Learning for Developers.
Big AI – Applying Artificial Intelligence at Scale.
Weaving Cognitive and Azure Services to Provide Next-Generation Intelligence.
Deep Learning and the Microsoft Cognitive Toolkit.
Building Intelligent SaaS Applications.

Seasoned Microsoft engineers and data scientists are running the tutorials, and they will there to guide and help you along the way, as you complete your apps through the day.

Spots are filling up rapidly, so be sure to register now and reserve your spot:

For more details, including session abstracts and instructor names, be sure to check out our event agenda page here. See you in Seattle next month!

Quelle: Azure

Availability of migration of ExpressRoute for Classic to Resource Manager IaaS Migration

Azure Resource Manager provides a lot of benefits with support for tagging, RBAC, and infrastructure orchestration using templates. As part of Azure Resource Manager, Virtual Machines gain these new capabilities plus additional compute specific capabilities such as:

Ability to resize to any VM size without having to delete and recreate the VM
Ability to migrate to managed disks which provide a simplified management experience while also providing higher availability by leveraging multiple storage controllers for availability sets with multiple instances
Support for 3 fault domains and 20 update domains

Learn more about Resource Manager and understand the differences between Classic and Resource Manager deployment models.

To allow our customers to benefit from these additional capabilities, we introduced a service that enables customers to bring their classic VMs over into the Resource Manager world without downtime!

Today, we are pleased to announce that customers using ExpressRoute can also migrate their Virtual Networks, including all the VMs in the VNET, to Azure Resource Manager without downtime. Learn more by reading the instructions on how to Migrate ExpressRoute circuits and associated virtual networks from the classic to the Resource Manager deployment model.

There are some edge cases for ExpressRoute migration you should be aware of. Please review the unsupported features and configurations to make sure your environment is supported.

As part of this release, we’re also announcing a revamped documentation set for migration. Based on customer recommendations and migrations, we’ve added additional planning docs and answers for the most frequently asked questions. Existing documents have also been restructured to be easier to understand as part of this effort.

Overview of platform-supported migration of IaaS resources from classic to Azure Resource Manager
Technical deep dive on platform-supported migration from classic to Azure Resource Manager
Planning for migration of IaaS resources from classic to Azure Resource Manager
Use PowerShell to migrate IaaS resources from classic to Azure Resource Manager
Use CLI to migrate IaaS resources from classic to Azure Resource Manager
VPN Gateway classic to Resource Manager migration
Migrate ExpressRoute circuits and associated virtual networks from the classic to the Resource Manager deployment model
Community tools for assisting with migration of IaaS resources from classic to Azure Resource Manager
Review most common migration errors
Review the most frequently asked questions about migrating IaaS resources from classic to Azure Resource Manager

For a great video overview of the migration process please check out Corey Sanders in the below Microsoft Mechanics episode, Azure Classic to Azure Resource Manager Migration.

Quelle: Azure

Get started tile now live on Azure Stack

We recently announced the release of Azure Stack Technical Preview 3 refresh with Azure PaaS Services. Coming as a part of this release is the Get Started tile that you have grown to love in public Azure.

As of this release the tile will only contain content related to Azure Stack administration. We are currently working on bringing you separate experiences for the tenant and admin portals. You will be able to see those changes in future releases.

On the admin portal, the Get Started tile will give you an insight into experiences that are "Azure Stack" specific and do not necessarily apply to public Azure. These tutorial videos, created by Program Managers working hard on delivering these experiences to you, will introduce you to new concepts and ideas in Azure Stack and will quickly bring you up to speed on various components of Azure Stack administration.

In these tutorials, you will learn how to make VM images available to your tenants, offer tenant services, add content to your Marketplace, monitor your infrastructure, and how to work with the Azure Stack portal.

The content is hosted online with the videos being hosted on Channel 9, hence you will require an active internet connection to access it.

We are really excited to bring these experiences to you and are looking forward to getting your feedback. Please let us know if you have suggestions on improving the content or if you&;d like to see tutorials on new topics!
Quelle: Azure