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China-Japan-Koreas
Google China cyberattack part of vast espionage campaign, experts say
2010-01-14
Computer attacks on Google that the search giant said originated in China were part of a concerted political and corporate espionage effort that exploited security flaws in e-mail attachments to sneak into the networks of major financial, defense and technology companies and research institutions in the United States, security experts said.

At least 34 companies -- including Yahoo, Symantec, Adobe, Northrop Grumman and Dow Chemical -- were attacked, according to congressional and industry sources. Google, which disclosed on Tuesday that hackers had penetrated the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights advocates in the United States, Europe and China, threatened to shutter its operations in the country as a result.
At least 34 companies -- including Yahoo, Symantec, Adobe, Northrop Grumman and Dow Chemical -- were attacked, according to congressional and industry sources. Google, which disclosed on Tuesday that hackers had penetrated the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights advocates in the United States, Europe and China, threatened to shutter its operations in the country as a result.

Human rights groups as well as Washington-based think tanks that have helped shape the debate in Congress about China were also hit.

And Rantburg. I'd thought we were an exquisite semi-secret, like a wonderful restaurant or shop one only tells a select few close friends about. I didn't realize we were playing in the big leagues.
Security experts say the attacks showed a new level of sophistication, exploiting multiple flaws in different software programs and underscoring what senior administration officials have said over the past year is an increasingly serious cyber threat to the nation's critical industries.

"Usually it's a group using one type of malicious code per target," said Eli Jellenc, head of international cyber-intelligence for VeriSign's iDefense Labs, a Silicon Valley company helping some firms investigate the attacks. "In this case, they're using multiple types against multiple targets -- but all in the same attack campaign. That's a marked leap in coordination."
Think of it as evolution in action. Rantburg was modified to be much stronger against such attacks in the future, and I'm sure the other attackees were as well. China may come to regret having revealed their hand so early in their war.
While it's difficult to say with certainty where a cyberattack originated because the Internet allows hackers to seemingly crisscross country borders and time zones in seconds, the issue is quickly turning into a source of diplomatic tension.

The standoff between Google and China touches on the most sensitive subjects in U.S.-China relations: human rights and censorship, trade, intellectual property disputes, and access to high-tech military technology.

"The recent cyber-intrusion that Google attributes to China is troubling, and the federal government is looking into it," White House spokesman Nick Shapiro said. He added that President Obama made Internet freedom "a central human rights issue" on his trip to China last fall.

Since it began operations in China five years ago, Google had agreed in theory to filter sensitive searches but clashed with the Chinese government on what material was covered, and the company regularly found its service blocked when it defied its hosts.

China's state media reported that the government is looking into Google's claims. In China, news about Tuesday's public rebuke by Google was heavily censored except for a stinging opinion piece in the official People's Daily that called the Silicon Valley tech giant a "spoiled child" and predicted that it would not follow through on its ultimatum.

The recent attacks seem to have targeted companies in strategic industries in which China is lagging, industry experts said. The attacks on defense companies were aimed at gaining information on weapons systems, experts said, while those on tech firms sought valuable source code that powers software applications -- the firms' bread and butter.
Posted by:Fred

#2  Ars technia description of attach
Posted by: 3dc   2010-01-14 16:40  

#1  This is the country to which our government has foolishly seen fit to grant most favored nation trading status. Our biggest retailers import billions of dollars worth of plastic crap from these bastards and people at their stores actually buy it, often because the stores offer no alternatives. We've lost our ability to manufacture all kinds of things because we can't compete with the cheap, slave labor and lack of environmental controls in China. They compete with us in the global oil market, driving up the price of that commodity. Their mercury laden coal smoke makes it all the way across the Pacific Ocean into our country getting into the food chain on the way. Wonder why they tell you not to eat too much fish? They proliferate weapons of mass destruction to other hostile dictatorships like Pakistan and they block our efforts to impose sanctions on Iran. They threaten our democratic friends in Asia. There's lots of money to be made doing business with them - if you don't mind dealing with the devil. The danger is that your Chinese overlords may one day stomp all over your human rights just like they have their own people.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2010-01-14 13:28  

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