WASHINGTON: The New York Times said on
Tuesday its Moscow bureau was targeted by a cyber attack this month but
that there was no evidence the hackers, believed to be Russian, were
successful.
"We are constantly monitoring our systems
with the latest available intelligence and tools," Times spokeswoman
Eileen Murphy told the newspaper.
"We have seen no
evidence that any of our internal systems, including our systems in the
Moscow bureau, have been breached or compromised."
Earlier
on Tuesday, CNN, citing unnamed US officials, reported that the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and other US security agencies were
investigating cyber breaches targeting reporters at the Times and other
US news organisations that were thought to have been carried out by
hackers working for Russian intelligence.
"Investigators
so far believe that Russian intelligence is likely behind the attacks
and that Russian hackers are targeting news organisations as part of a
broader series of hacks that also have focused on Democratic Party
organisations, the officials said," CNN reported.
The FBI
declined a Reuters' request for comment. Representatives for the US
Secret Service, which has a role in protecting the country from cyber
crime, did not reply to a request for comment.
A
government official briefed on the inquiry told the Times the FBI was
looking into the attempted cyber attack but was not carrying out similar
investigations at other news organisations.
The Times had not hired outside firms to investigate the attempted intrusion, contrary to the CNN report, Murphy said.
News
of the cyber attack comes amid a wave of similar attacks targeting
major US political parties that have surfaced in recent weeks ahead of
the Nov. 8 presidential election.
The Democratic National
Committee, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton's campaign
and the party's congressional fundraising committee have all been
affected.
Hackers have also targeted the computer systems
of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and Republican Party
organisations, sources have told Reuters.
A breach at the
Times would not be the first time foreign hackers infiltrated a news
organisation. Media are frequently targeted in order to glean insights
into US policies or to spy on journalists.
In 2013, a
group of hackers known as the Syrian Electronic Army attacked the Times
and other media outlets. Chinese attackers also infiltrated the Times
that year.
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