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Cyber |
‘Chinese hacking typhoons' threaten U.S. infrastructure - Prelude to Taiwan or Something More Global? |
2024-09-21 |
[Axios] The Chinese government is running another broad campaign to hack as many American organizations as possible — heightening the threat across critical infrastructure. Why it matters: The new hacking campaign suggests China could hold more expansive power to turn off key U.S. infrastructure than previously thought. Driving the news: FBI director Christopher Wray said at the Aspen Cyber Summit on Wednesday that the bureau and its partners hijacked thousands of devices last week that a Chinese hacking group had infected with malware.
Zoom in: As of June, Flax Typhoon's botnet included more than 260,000 malware-infected devices across North America, South America, Europe, Africa, Southeast Asia and Australia, according to a U.S. government advisory.
Threat level: A senior administration official told reporters that while Flax Typhoon is focused solely on espionage, its more destructive counterpart, Volt Typhoon, shared some of the infrastructure for its attacks. The big picture: The threat of China lurking inside U.S. and other global networks is now existential for American companies and government agencies, Tom Fanning, former executive chairman at electric power operator Southern Company, told Axios.
Flashback: Earlier this year the country's top cybersecurity officials warned Congress about Volt Typhoon and shared that they had taken down that hacking group's own network of infected devices.
Yes, but: Botnet takedowns aren't a foolproof fix for taking down hackers, especially nation-state actors.
Between the lines: Operations like the one targeting Flax Typhoon still make it "riskier, costlier and harder" for nation-states to spy and hack U.S. critical infrastructure, Anne Neuberger, deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging tech, told reporters. What we're watching: Wray warned that the Flax Typhoon operation is just "one round in a much longer fight." Stopping future threats will require the private sector and government to strengthen collaboration to get "as much of a real-time view of what's happening as possible," Fanning added. |
Posted by:NoMoreBS |