KR South Korean telecom company attacks torrent users with malware - Over 600,000 customers report missing files, strange folders, and disabled PCs

From Tom's Hardware. Article / archive.

By Jowi Morales
published 9 hours ago

ISP sends malware to hundreds of thousands of customers to stop them from using a file-sharing service.

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Korean news organization JTBC recently discovered through an in-depth investigation that KT Corporation, one of the largest telecom providers in South Korea, deliberately infected over 600,000 users with malware over their use of torrent services.

The issue began in May 2020 when Webhard, a Korean cloud service provider, was inundated with user complaints of unexplained errors. The company discovered that its Grid Program, which relies on BitTorrent peer-to-peer file sharing, had been compromised. An anonymous representative of Webhard said, “There is a suspicion of a hacking attack on our grid service. It’s very malicious, interfering with it.”

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Upon further investigation, the company noted that all affected users had KT as their internet service provider. The representative added, “Only KT users have problems. What the malware does on the user’s PC is to create strange folders or make file invisible. It completely disables the Webhard program itself. In some cases, the PC itself was also disabled because of it, so we reported it.”

Police officials acted on the information and discovered it came from KT’s own data center south of Seoul. The authorities say that KT may have violated South Korean laws, including the Protection of Communications Secrets Act and the Information and Communications Network Act. They’ve since identified and charged 13 individuals, including KT employees and subcontractors directly connected to the malware attack last November, but the investigations continue today.

According to the news report, KT said it directly planted the malware on its customers that use Webhard’s Grid Service, as it was a malicious program and that “it had no choice but to control it.” However, the main problem here wasn’t Webhard’s use of the BitTorrent protocol but the installation of malware on customer computers without consent.

Webhard and KT have fought in the past over the latter’s use of its Grid Service. The former says that it’s saving tens of billions of Korean Won by allowing its users to use peer-to-peer services to store and transfer data instead of storing it on its servers. On the other hand, the massive number of Grid Service users is straining KT’s network, and the two companies went to court to resolve the issue.

The judiciary actually ruled in favor of KT. It said that Webhard didn’t pay KT network usage fees for its peer-to-peer system and didn’t explain to its users how the Grid Service works in detail. Therefore, it wasn’t unreasonable for KT to block Webhard’s network traffic.

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But instead of blocking IP addresses, KT nuked Grid Service users with malware. Unfortunately, most of them were individuals, not businesses or corporations, and they had no idea what was going on.

KT’s move to send and install malware on hundreds of thousands of Grid Service users seems like a financial move, as it likely just wanted to stop them from continually using Webhard’s BitTorrent file-sharing service. But whatever KT’s intentions were, this move led to missing files and damage to customer PCs. Its users were more than just inconvenienced; they likely had to deal with computer problems that stemmed from the company’s actions.
 
So that would explain why KT's League of Legends team has been shitting the bed lately. They're diverting money out of their players and coaching staff, to disappear people's files. But even if money wasn't being diverted that way, their LoL team would find ways to shit the bed anyways.
 
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When I read the headline I assumed it was about trying to stifle digital pirates, which I could understand even though it would still be illegal. The fact that this was done against a perfectly legal service is insane.

Just want to point out that while BitTorrent is associated with piracy in the public's mind it is actually just a method of data transfer with many legitimate uses. The reason it's popular with digital pirates is because it's so practical for that purpose. There's nothing illegal about the method itself. Saying BitTorrent should be illegal is like saying boats should be illegal because the cartels use them to transport drugs, or vans should be illegal because they're used to transport illegals across the border. Legitimately useful things shouldn't be banned because some people use them for illegal purposes.

That said I have to wonder how much data was being transferred if it was causing issues for KT.
 
For when you thought that it couldn't get worse than having AT&T.

And once again, I'm reiterating the necessity of a South Korea General thread, that country is reaching a happenings singularity
I'll be thinking of doing one since I too think that the country is the embodiment that not even supposedly first world countries are safe from retardation.
 
Looks like this confirms that the South Koreans are behind the fake torrents plaguing the net. Would have thought to be the Norks, but those guys deal with drugs as they like their isolated Nork internet.

South Korea is a blade runner/neuromancer society.
To be fair, their most well known franchise (aside from the vapid K-pop and K-Drama) is about a technomagical dystopia and the hilariously shit-tier conditions everyone who isn't at the top has to deal with. Everything Project Moon is producing is practically a cry for help.

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For when you thought that it couldn't get worse than having AT&T.

And once again, I'm reiterating the necessity of a South Korea General thread, that country is reaching a happenings singularity
At least this time they are not in the news for a mass casualty event of their own doing.
 
Yeah, it sucks, but I just have to lol at how brilliantly galaxy brain autistic this is.

"Our users are downloading way too much pr0n on BitTorrent, and it's fucking with our profits because we can't afford the bandwidth! How about we send out a program to perma-fuck their computers so they won't hog our bandwidth?"

Of course, this results in a mega loss of subscribers since they can't log on at all because their ISP destroyed their computers. And then tehnooz gets a whiff of it. In the end the company is getting disemboweled by the entire fucking country and can't figure out why.
 
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