Open Innovation Community of Frog by Wyplay also to participate at the CES 2015


Wyplay Frog is a leading pay-TV operator software solution. Wyplay recently announced that the open source community has been a collection of more than 75 licensed companies. Jacques Bourgninaud, CEO...

GCHQ and NSA are linked to Regin Malware that has been infecting Belgacom since 2008


According to the technical analysis conducted by The Intercept and security industry sources, the US and British intelligence agencies have collaborated in order to create a convoluted malware whose...

GCHQ Spies Used Fake LinkedIn and Salshdot WebPages to Target Telecom Engineers


Malware on the site implanted by specialized GCHQ spies was used to infiltrate the activities of Belgacom’s engineers. It had long been common knowledge thanks to Edward Snowden’s whistle blowing...

Snowden leak suggests UK was spying on Belgian telecom

Snowden leaks suggest UK was spying on Belgian telecom, not NSA

When Belgian prosecutors suggested that Belgacom was the target of foreign espionage, many blamed the NSA -- it has a history of snooping on other countries, after all. Those accusations may have been off the mark, however. Der Spiegel has revealed documents leaked by Edward Snowden which hint that the UK's Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) was responsible. The intelligence agency reportedly tricked key Belgacom staff into visiting a malware-loaded website that hijacked their PCs. GCHQ could then spy on smartphones, map the network and investigate secure VPN connections. Neither Belgacom nor Belgium has responded to this latest Snowden leak, but we wouldn't be surprised if the apparent evidence speeds up their investigation.

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Via: Ars Technica

Source: Der Spiegel (translated)

British Agency Is Behind Belgacom Hacking


The Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) has been caught red-handed thanks to new information revealed by Edward Snowden. The proof in the form of documents shows that Belgium’s suspicions...

Belgium looks into claims of foreign spying against its biggest telecom

Belgium looks into claims of foreign spying against its biggest telecom

Europeans are already jittery about possible foreign surveillance of their communications; today, those worries have reached a fever pitch. Belgian government investigators now suspect that a recently discovered virus in the internal systems of Belgacom, the country's telecom giant, was planted as part of state-backed cyber espionage. The malware's sophistication, scale and strategic focus suggest an attacker with "significant financial and logistic means," according to prosecutors. Neither side has officially named a culprit. Local newspaper De Standaard isn't quite so reticent, however -- it alleges that the NSA has been spying on Belgacom's voice traffic for at least two years, and that the discovery was prompted by Edward Snowden's leaks. Whether or not the NSA is involved, the damage may be limited. Belgacom scrubbed its systems clean this weekend, and it doesn't believe that the attack compromised customer data.

[Thanks, Joachim / image credit: Diluvienne, Flickr]

Dan Cooper contributed to this report.

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Via: Reuters

Source: De Standaard (translated), Belgacom