The robbery of a Scandinavian internet – bank provokes talks about Russian hackers (Part 2)
The police determined that this programme was the version of Haxdoor. There was good reason to believe, that Corpse was the author of a primordial programme Haxdoor, and also its various versions – A311 Death and Nuclear Grabber. They were offered for sale on one of the Russian sites for the price from several hundreds up to several thousand dollars, depending on the version.
The new version of Haxdoor turned on, when the visitor printed the address of the bank in the line of a browser. Then the espionage programme wrote down, what keys had been pressed to intercept the password. After that money was transferred to the new account and criminals took away cash in the subsidiaries of the bank.
The Swedish police declared that Russian trace in this swindle was not limited to a source of the virus.
Anders Alkvist, the main inspector of the department engaged in the struggle against computer crimes of the Swedish national management of criminal investigations, in telephone interview informed that the stolen passwords had been transferred to the computer server in the USA which had transferred the information to the Russian server.