The US
National Security Agency (NSA) infected 50,000 networks with malware, Dutch
newspaper NRC has reported.
NRC said 20,000
networks had been hit in 2008, with the program recently expanded to include
others in Rome, Berlin, Pristina, Kinshasa, Rangoon.
The NSA
declined to comment.
The
malware could be put in a "sleeper" mode and activated with a click
of a button, the paper said.
"Clearly,
conventional criminal gangs aren't the only people interested in breaking into
computer networks anymore," wrote computer security expert Graham Cluley in a
blogpost.
"All
organisations need to ask themselves the question of whether they could be at
risk."
The
reports come as Twitter introduces technology it says will help protect
people's messages from unwanted scrutiny.
It has employed a system known as "forward secrecy" that
makes it harder for eavesdroppers to access the keys used to encrypt data
passing between Twitter's servers and users' phones, tablets and PCs.
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