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US disrupts Anonymous Sudan DDoS operation, indicts 2 Sudanese brothers. The United States Department of Justice unsealed an indictment today against two Sudanese brothers suspected of being the operators of Anonymous Sudan, a notorious and dangerous hacktivist group known for conducting over 35,000 DDoS attacks in a year. Since launching in 2023, Anonymous Sudan has been behind numerous high-profile DDoS attacks, causing widespread outages and the inability for users worldwide to access targeted services. Many of their attacks have been motivated by pro-Russian and pro-Palestinian causes from messages posted to their Telegram channels. These attacks impacted well-known companies and services, including tech giants like Cloudflare, Microsoft, and OpenAI, with the threat actors capable of overloading services and making them inaccessible. Other attacks targeted government agencies worldwide and healthcare, including Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles, where the attack disrupted systems and caused emergency services and patients to be diverted to other hospitals. Anonymous Sudan indicted Today, the Department of Justice unsealed an indictment against two Sudanese nationals named Ahmed Salah Yousif Omer, 22, and Alaa Salah Yusuuf Omer, 27, for operating and controlling Anonymous Sudan. While the group claimed to be targeting countries and organizations interfering with Sudanese politics, some researchers believed that to be a false flag and linked the group to Russia instead. U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada told reporters in a press call that Anonymous Sudan was considered the most dangerous cyber group in terms of DDoS attacks and that the brothers were motivated by a Sudanese nationalist ideology. Estrada said the brothers have been in custody since March when Anonymous Sudan was disrupted and infrastructure seized, but would not share what country arrested the two. However, he did state that while they are not in US custody, they have been interviewed by the FBI. "A federal grand jury indictment unsealed today charges two Sudanese nationals with operating and controlling Anonymous Sudan, an online cybercriminal group responsible for tens of thousands of Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks against critical infrastructure, corporate networks, and government agencies in the United States and around the world," announced the DOJ. "In March 2024, pursuant to court-authorized seizure warrants, the U.S. Attorney's Office and FBI seized and disabled Anonymous Sudan's powerful DDoS tool, which the group allegedly used to perform DDoS attacks, and sold as a service to other criminal actors." Unlike other groups that conduct DDoS attacks, Anonymous Sudan did not compromise devices to use as part of their attacks. Instead, they utilized tools called the Skynet Botnet or DCAT that used open proxies to overwhelm targeted servers. "I have interviewed employees at Amazon who examined data associated with Skynet Botnet attacks against Amazon customers," FBI Special Agent Elliott Peterson explained in the criminal complaint. "They determined that the attacks were being transmitted not from compromised victim devices, as would ordinarily be the case with a botnet, but from devices that were configured to automatically forward certain categories of Internet traffic." "Also called "Open Proxy Resolvers," these "auto-forwarding" devices comprise the public part of the Skynet Botnet, and they were often the only information a Skynet Botnet attack victim would see in their network data." Peterson, who has been investigating Anonymous Sudan since 2023, has also been involved in other disruptions of DDoS operations as part of Operation PowerOff. The two suspects now face charges of conspiracy to damage protected computers, and Ahmed Omer is also charged with three counts of damaging protected computers. Ahmed Omer also faces a statutory maximum sentence of life in federal prison for reckless endangerment of life for their attack on Cedars-Sinai Hospital, which Estrada said may be the first time this statute was charged in the US for a cyberattack.

Daily Brief Summary

DDOS // U.S. Indicts Operators of Anonymous Sudan for Global DDoS Attacks

The U.S. Department of Justice indicted two Sudanese brothers, operators of the cyber group Anonymous Sudan, responsible for over 35,000 DDoS attacks worldwide.

Targets included major corporations like Microsoft, Cloudflare, and government and healthcare facilities, notably disrupting Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles.

Accusations suggest that their attacks, while claimed to protect Sudanese political interests, might have connections to Russian operations.

The U.S. authorities successfully disrupted Anonymous Sudan's operations in March 2024, seizing its primary DDoS tools without compromising private devices.

Anonymous Sudan utilized unique tools like the Skynet Botnet or DCAT, relying on open proxies rather than compromised victim devices to conduct attacks.

Both brothers were arrested in March, and though not in U.S. custody, they have been interrogated by the FBI.

Charges include conspiracy to damage protected computers, with additional charges against Ahmed Omer for endangering lives during the DDoS attack on Cedars-Sinai Hospital.