Audio By Carbonatix
Microsoft says it had already fixed software flaws linked to an alleged breach of the global banking system before they were exposed last week.
On Friday, a group called the Shadow Brokers published details of several hacking tools, indicating they had been used by the US National Security Agency (NSA) to spy on money transfers.
Reports suggested Microsoft's Windows operating system remained vulnerable.
But the firm revealed it had in fact addressed the problem in March.
"Customers have expressed concerns around the risk [Shadow Brokers'] disclosure potentially creates," it said in a security update.
"Our engineers have investigated the disclosed exploits, and most of the exploits are already patched."
The company has not, however, revealed how it became aware of the flaws.
Microsoft normally acknowledges third parties who tip it off to problems, but has not done so in this case.
The Reuters news agency reported that the company had told it that neither the NSA nor any other part of the US government had informed it of the hacking tools' existence.
That calls into question how Microsoft learned of the issue - tech blog Ars Technica commented it was "highly unlikely" that the patch and leak would both have occurred so close together by coincidence.
'God's eye'
Whisteblower Edward Snowden had previously leaked documents in 2013 that alleged the NSA had carried surveillance of the Brussels-based Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (Swift) for several years, but did not specify how.
Swift allows the world's banks to send payment orders and other messages about large financial transactions in a "secure and reliable" manner.
It is used by about 11,000 financial institutions. The allegation is that third parties - known as Swift Service Bureaus - that provide access to Swift's network were targeted by the NSA, rather than Swift itself.
"If Shadow Brokers' claims are indeed verified, it seems that the NSA sought to totally capture the backbone of [the] international financial system to have a God's eye [view] into a Swift Service Bureau - and potentially the entire Swift network," blogged security researcher Matt Suiche after the latest leak.
"If the US had a specific target in the region's financial system, NSA penetration offers [an alternative to] merely relying upon good faith compliance procedures, standard diplomatic requests, or collaborating with Swift."
Swift has not confirmed it was compromised.
"We have no evidence to suggest that there has ever been any unauthorised access to our network or messaging services," it said in a statement on Friday.
The BBC has not been able to verify the authenticity of the Shadow Brokers' claims, and the NSA has not provided comment.
Latest Stories
-
The Inconvenient Truth: Deliverism not the Barracks must hold Africa together
52 minutes -
Lithuania declares emergency situation over Belarus balloons
2 hours -
Trump criticises ‘decaying’ European countries and ‘weak’ leaders
2 hours -
Afroquality announces ‘Becoming Us’ – a first-of-its-kind PanAfrican micro series redefining how brands tell African stories
3 hours -
Government’s reduction of Lithium Royalty Rate from 10% to 5% raises serious concerns – APL
3 hours -
“Africa cannot afford to be a bystander” – Mahama
3 hours -
Halt ratification of revised lithium agreement between Ghana and Barari
4 hours -
Gov’t will continue to prioritise quality healthcare at all levels – Vice President
4 hours -
Why the NDC’s reduced Lithium Royalty Rate proposal is “Strange and Legally Baseless” – Africa Policy Lens
4 hours -
Your non-involvement enabled us to speedily approve our estimates – Ayariga trolls angry Minority
4 hours -
Christian Council commends government’s Sanitation Week initiative ahead of Christmas
4 hours -
Ghana risks losing about US$630 million if government reduces lithium royalty rate from 10% to 5% – Africa Policy Lens warns
4 hours -
Parliament approves budget allocations despite Minority’s chaotic scenes over Kpandai dispute
4 hours -
GhanaFest Europe debuts in The Hague, showcasing trade and culture
5 hours -
emPLE deepens regional impact with support for Special Project at ART X Lagos 2025
5 hours
