Intel's latest financial filing with the Securities and Exchange
Commission reveals that the company was targeted in a sophisticated
hacking attack in January, a risk not previously cited in the
company's quarterly filings.
"One recent and sophisticated incident occurred in January 2010
around the same time as the recently publicized security incident
reported by Google," the company states in its Form 10-K Annual
Report. "We seek to detect and investigate these security incidents
and to prevent their recurrence, but in some cases we might be
unaware of an incident or its magnitude and effects."
Such attacks, the company says, "are sometimes successful."
The chip-making giant says that it regularly faces attempts to
penetrate its systems, which may represent industrial espionage or
efforts to harm the company.
Intel did not respond to requests for comment about the impact
of the successful attacks.
It's not clear how alarmed organizations should be by such
attacks, given that Intel's acknowledgment comes as a matter of
regulatory compliance. Financial filings typically cite worst-case
scenarios to protect companies from liability.
Google in January said that it had detected "a highly sophisticated
and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating
from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property" and
declared it would alter its cooperation with Chinese censors as a
consequence.
Google's statement, in conjunction with news that some 33 other
companies had been targeted in what security researchers dubbed
"Operation Aurora," prompted significant concern from the U.S State
Department.
The subsequent finding that over 74,000 personal, corporate and
government computers at over 2,500 organizations around the world
had been compromised by Trojan malware and turned into bots led
Amit Yoran, former DHS cybersecurity director and the current CEO
of security vendor NetWitness, to state, "These large-scale
compromises of enterprise networks have reached epidemic
levels."
Yet, this ostensible epidemic doesn't alarm everyone. In
response to Google's revelation, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer told
Reuters, "We're attacked every day from all parts of the world and
I think everybody else is too. We didn't see anything out of the
ordinary."