360首次披露台湾五大黑客组织,周鸿祎:属于三线水平

Core Insights - The report reveals five hacker organizations attributed to Taiwan, highlighting the increasing cyber threats from these groups [1] - The founder of 360 Group emphasizes the challenges of tracing cyber attacks and the company's extensive experience in dealing with APT organizations [1][2] - The report indicates that Taiwan's APT organizations have relatively weak counter-tracing capabilities, often making unprofessional operational mistakes [2] Group 1: Cybersecurity Landscape - The report identifies five major hacker organizations: APT-C-01 (Poison Ivy), APT-C-62 (Pansy), APT-C-64 (Anonymous 64), APT-C-65 (Golden Leaf), and APT-C-67 (Ursula) [1] - The "Ursula" group has recently emerged, targeting IoT systems, particularly video surveillance systems in mainland China and Hong Kong [1] - 360 Group has nearly 20 years of experience in combating foreign APT organizations, with a significant focus on those from Taiwan [1] Group 2: Operational Insights - 360 Group's experts can often detect attacks in their initial stages due to a comprehensive APT knowledge base [2] - The report highlights the historical operational errors made by Taiwan's APT organizations, such as storing personal documents on attack resource servers [2] - The founder of 360 Group states that the cybersecurity landscape has entered the AI era, and the company aims to leverage its unique capabilities in both cybersecurity and AI [2]