China Criticizes US For Making Weapon Plans Steal-able, Alleges Attacks From US 209
Etherwalk writes "Huang Chengqing, China's top internet security official, alleged that cyberattacks on China from people in the U.S. are as serious as those from China on the U.S. 'We have mountains of data, if we wanted to accuse the U.S., but it's not helpful in solving the problem.' Huang, however, does not necessarily attribute them to the U.S. government just because they came from U.S. soil, and he thinks Washington should extend the same courtesy. 'They advocated cases that they never let us know about. Some cases can be addressed if they had talked to us, why not let us know? It is not a constructive train of thought to solve problems.' In response to the recent theft of U.S. military designs, he replied with an observation whose obviousness is worthy of Captain Hammer: 'Even following the general principle of secret-keeping, it should not have been linked to the Internet.'"
A few experts think China's more cooperative attitude has come about precisely because the U.S. government has gone public with hacking allegations.
Oh FFS (Score:4, Insightful)
Fuck off with your victim blaming, China. Pricks.
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No she was in a drug induced coma bent over a park bench where prostitutes work with cum dripping out of her well used vagina. And some homeless guy walked by and just plugged her. Were not sure who that homeless guy was but he had a shirt with the Chinese flag on.
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By the way the coma was self induced.
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Still doesn't justify stealing it.
Re:Oh FFS (Score:5, Insightful)
They didn't steal it; they copied it.
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Then sic the RIAA on them (Score:5, Funny)
According to the RIAA, that's worse.
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Still doesn't justify stealing it.
Entire divisions of intelligence agencies are devoted to stealing secrets from other countries (including "friendly" countries and allies). If the data was readily available, they wouldn't be doing their jobs if they ignored it.
Or are you advocating disbanding all foreign intelligence agencies because no one should be "stealing" any data that's not been made public through official channels?
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Entire divisions of intelligence agencies are devoted to stealing secrets from other countries (including "friendly" countries and allies). If the data was readily available, they wouldn't be doing their jobs if they ignored it.
Very true. However they're not supposed to get caught doing it. That's historically been considered a casus belli.
I don't believe anyone has been "caught" - the thefts may have been traced back to Chinese IP addresses, but everyone here knows that the source IP address of an attack means nothing (despite what RIAA may tell the courts). And even if it was a Chinese citizen that executed the attack(s), in a country of a billion people, it's hard to prove that it was an officially sanctioned theft.
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Re:Oh FFS (Score:5, Insightful)
The world is complex enough that multiple people can be at fault. If the Ferrari gets broken into, you are at fault for being naieve and foolish, and the thief is at fault for being a leech on society.
Who gets the blame? Both of them. Is the thief the bigger part of the problem? Sure he is, and the largest portion of the blame goes to him. But you still are responsible insofar as your foolishness left you wide open to being victimized and creating an opportunity for a crime that any reasonable individual could have predicted.
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I agree, but I think that the blame associated with each individual is also qualitatively different. The owner's blame is related to his good judgment in a practical matter. He didn't think things through or didn't take obvious actions that could have drastically reduced the chances of the loss. But the thief's blame is moral. He took explicit immoral actions that directly harmed another. They both have characteristics in common and fit the word "blame," but there is a real distinction between the cases be
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How naive. We're talking about government espionage. You know, stuff governments do. The reason you don't hear foreign countries talking about the US stealing military tech secrets is because at the moment our stuff is better than anyone elses. But we did hear about Stuxnet. China has been playing catch-up for a while now and they've made tons of progress - by innovating, buying, copying, and probably by stealing. When you're inventing you have no choice. When you're playi
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In this case, the guy with the Ferrari has been stealing money from the druggies.
China's top Internet security official says he has "mountains of data" pointing to extensive U.S. hacking aimed at China
and their source is reliable - they got the evidence directly from the NSA computers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spy_vs._Spy [wikipedia.org]
Re:Oh FFS (Score:4, Insightful)
You have lots of room to complain. If you take away the expectation to complain it give criminals an excuse to commit the crime.
If you saw a Ferrari parked somewhere with a bunch of cash in the front seat, would YOU feel okay stealing it or the car? I would hope not. Stealing is wrong regardless of how easy it is. Why do you give others a pass for something you wouldn't do?
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You can complain all you want.
It's still fucking stupid to park the car there.
Someone is going to steal the car. Right or wrong has nothing to do with it.
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Depends on the neighborhood...
The data was stolen through the internet -- the worst neighborhood imaginable.
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Then why was this on the public internet?
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If you saw a Ferrari parked somewhere with a bunch of cash in the front seat, would YOU feel okay stealing it or the car? I would hope not. Stealing is wrong regardless of how easy it is. Why do you give others a pass for something you wouldn't do?
I would not. That said, if you parked that Ferrari with the windows rolled down and the cash in the front seat, would you expect your insurance company to cover the theft?
The actions of the victim don't justify the crime, but the mere fact that they are victims don't absolve them of responsibility for their actions.
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They obviously have far too much cash, if they leave it lying about like that. Perhaps they will learn not to keep cash in their front seat.
What if the cash was used to buy bread for my starving family? not so easy of a choice now is it.
What if the stolen secrets are to be used to protect against an unjustified attack against their country? Still not so easy of a choice.
People can come up with all sorts of justifications for stealing things - I suppose whether or not they are valid justifications depends on which side of the fence you're on.
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Furthermore, if the rich prick is in a bad part part of town, he's either slumming behind his wife's back, or snorting crack...
Even people, literally ON DRUGS, don't snort crack. You smoke crack and you snort cocaine.
Unless you were referring to the slumee's crack as a new type of sexual fetish... in which case carry-on.
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The copied Ferrari is improved and one day they both meet in an intentional head-on collision. The copied version wins and the original Ferrari's owner is left dead on the side of the road. The owner of the copied Ferrari moves into the original's house, eats all the food, leaves dirty dishes and clothes everywhere, and then leaves when he's tired of the place. There was no one left alive who could stop him.
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What the hell has happened to the Slashdot that I once knew and loved? Someone posts something which is common sense and it gets modded down to -1, Troll? Of course, we SHOULD be able to leave a pile of cash sitting around unguarded, but everyone knows you can't. Just like everyone knows if something is on the Internet, unsecured, someone is going to access it.
So, when someone accesses some private information by changing a URL or some other trivial means, it's OK to blame the victim, as everyone on here
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I have seen a similar trend lately, where comments questioning or blaming our Government are modded troll or flamebait. Dice has been infiltrated so /. is no longer safe? Either that, or shitty people have been getting mod points at which Dice should remove them from the receipt list.
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I have seen a similar trend lately, where comments questioning or blaming our Government are modded troll or flamebait.
Let me guess. "Our government" is the US, right?
I'm surprised it's taken so long. There have been many articles about China or other relatively unpopular governments over the years and it seems to me that almost every one of those stories has in the comments an anti-US bash in it, often coupled with the claim that somehow the US is equivalent in behavior.
So you think this downmodding is a result of some insidious groupthink. I think rather that it's that enough moderators have gotten sick and tired of
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By your reasoning then, there should be no issues when a Russian or Chines person gets censored by their government. There should be no issues with governments pulling phone records to silence dissent, or Twitter records, or anything else that would allow them to silence dissent.
The truth however, is that you most likely do have issue with those things. You probably hold a double standard for your government because of either ignorance, or more likely being delusional. This is where I will plug Plato's A
um? (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:um? (Score:5, Funny)
At least we're not Britain. I mean, seriously, what kind of permissions is 007 for a spy?
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As long as the low-order bit is set, he has execute permission.
What's the problem?
Re:um? (Score:5, Funny)
At least we're not Britain. I mean, seriously, what kind of permissions is 007 for a spy?
Plausible deniability?
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The world is not enough.
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At least we're not Britain. I mean, seriously, what kind of permissions is 007 for a spy?
Plausible deniability?
Plausible!!
>cat .bash_history
chmod 007 F22-plans-really-secret
Re:um? (Score:5, Funny)
Sounds like perfect ones to me - read, write and execute everyone except himself and his group.
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Well, he does have execute permission for *everyone*.
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Or is it everyone has permissions to execute him?
Can't fault China on this one (Score:5, Insightful)
Whilst I'm not saying China doesn't do any state sponsored hacking I've pointed out before that China has the largest online population of any nation and has about 1/6th of the world's population. Statistically if you get non-state sponsored hackers in every nation it makes sense that you're going to see more from China than anywhere else.
It's quite possible that it's nothing to do with the US "going public" and everything to do with the fact that a large number of hack attacks from China against the US is pretty much a statistical certainty regardless of state actors being behind it or not.
I think all governments do state sponsored hacking, I certainly think China does, to what extent is unclear but I do think at least the claims against China are probably overhyped.
Which may not inherently be a bad thing anyway though I guess if it gets Western firms to take security a bit more seriously so maybe there's a silver lining regardless.
Re:Can't fault China on this one (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, but China has a firewall. Surely you're not suggesting that non-state sponsored Chinese hackers have figured out how to get around the national firewall?
Heh... actually, that wouldn't be a bad official response. Puts the Chinese in the position of either accepting responsibility for hacking, or admitting that their state firewall is actually pretty porous.
Re:Can't fault China on this one (Score:5, Insightful)
Heh... actually, that wouldn't be a bad official response. Puts the Chinese in the position of either accepting responsibility for hacking, or admitting that their state firewall is actually pretty porous.
I doubt they care very much that there firewall can be compromised by people skilled enough to hack into government and corporate computers. The main point of the firewall is to assert control over the general population.
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Not to mention that "their" firewall is actually a set of regional firewalls with differing rules. And even the firewall with the strictest rules leak like a sieve.
The purpose of the firewall (and associated software) is twofold: 1) to prevent casual encounters with subversive information and 2) to provide sufficient evidence on persons of interest for a conviction.
The second purpose is actually largely the same as the monitoring situation in the U.S. The government isn't out to get you specifically, but if
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Heh... actually, that wouldn't be a bad official response. Puts the Chinese in the position of either accepting responsibility for hacking, or admitting that their state firewall is actually pretty porous.
Not really. They can do any of the following, including perhaps more than one of these.
1) The Beavis and Butthead defense - "Those were some other kids, sir" meaning non-Chinese people leaving a trail pointing back to China to deflect blame to there.
2) The Bart Simpson defense (denial) - "I didn't do it. Nobody saw me do it. You can't prove anything."
3) "Evil Chinese hackers did do it and yes, they got around our precious firewall. But we won't admit it to our own citizens. That's for external
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It's not that kind of firewall. It isn't design to keep stuff out or in, only to block people inside China from accessing certain foreign sites. There isn't one big server handling it all, they just require ISPs and search engines to implement the blocks for them.
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Surely you're not suggesting that non-state sponsored Chinese hackers have figured out how to get around the national firewall?
Getting around the GFW is a national pastime.
So, yes.
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Ah, yeah, that was sarcasm. Everyone knows the GFW is crap in practice. But that fact that the government persists in using it implies that they might be a bit sensitive about being mocked by foreign governments about it...
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I don't get this. (Score:4, Interesting)
I always thought it was a rule from Espionage 101 that you don't let the other side know when your side has been compromised. You use it as an opportunity to start sending out false information, and to learn their tactics and precisely who is involved. I don't understand why we are telling everyone in the world that the Chinese have stolen our information. It just makes us look inept in all sorts of ways.
Re:I don't get this. (Score:5, Insightful)
To harm China diplomatically and economically. If they get a reputation for underhanded spy games then businesses will be more reluctant to do business there for fear of having their designs shamelessly copied and research stolen, and nations will be less willing to allow free trade if it is known that China seeks to favor domestic industry by impeding the operations of overseas competition.
Re:I don't get this. (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with this position is that they have HAD a bad reputation for stealing IP for over 20 years now. And it hasn't changed anything.
People still do business with them. People still ship designs and formulas to them to produce.
What will reduce IP Theft is higher chinese labor costs which make local manufacturing a better solution than offshoring. And we've probably got another 8 years before chinese wages + fuel transportation costs == local labor costs.
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Hasn't changed anything? Are you insane. One small example is Russia won't sell the Chinese ANY advanced weapons. After the Chinese copied some older model Soviet weapons the Russians refused to sell them ANY advanced weapon systems. This little detail has crippled Chinese weapon advancement for more than a decade, and only recently after realizing they can't create the
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Hasn't changed anything? Are you insane. One small example is Russia won't sell the Chinese ANY advanced weapons. After the Chinese copied some older model Soviet weapons the Russians refused to sell them ANY advanced weapon systems. This little detail has crippled Chinese weapon advancement for more than a decade, and only recently after realizing they can't create the same 50 years of Russian innovation on their own they are only now at the point of a new arms deal with the Russians with guarantees that the designs will not be copied. Even with firm contractual guarantees the Russians are still not sure they want to execute the contract because they don't trust them. I'd wager the contract is about 50/50 that it will ever happen.
Wholesale theft of IP has harmed China in almost as many ways as it has helped them and they have started to realize the damage they've done.
And yet companies keep coming back. Even Toshiba is giving IP to China for their latest design nuclear reactor. Toshiba, a company which obtained much of their steam turbine knowledge from licensing deals from GE in the 1970's and has come to have near-domination of new large steam turbines in the US. Toshiba took GE's steam turbine knowledge and used their weak currency to move in on the market. GE was seriously weakened in the steam turbine market from the IP deals, and has nearly given up trying to s
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I see plenty of specs which specifically require that NO parts come from China.
Specs for what kind of stuff? I'm curious.
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In 8 years, China will be shipping their designs out to Africa.
Not that it matters. China will always have a ton more people than the U.S. They will always have a collective competitive advantage, if only because of economies of scale.
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I always thought it was a rule from Espionage 101 that you don't let the other side know when your side has been compromised. You use it as an opportunity to start sending out false information, and to learn their tactics and precisely who is involved.>/p>
I think this has already happened. They traced the attacks to a specific building in Shanghai operated by the Chinese military [nytimes.com] and learned a great deal about the operations taking place there.
I don't understand why we are telling everyone in the world that the Chinese have stolen our information. It just makes us look inept in all sorts of ways.
Probably because all the useful counter-espionage plays have been done. Now the biggest payoff is from using the information for political leverage.
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It's to gain political currency. Make China out to be the bad guy, try to rally international sympathy for the US. Part of an ongoing narrative.
The US loves bad guys. They justify spending and fear. The USSR fell apart, Iraq has been dealt with, Bin Laden is dead and his organization seems to be ineffectual these days. China is the new bad.
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VPN (Score:2)
China acting responsibly (Score:2)
Any nation-state that does no espionage is irresponsible. They all do it. It's a game, and someone on the US side made a poor move.
I'm American and So Am I... (Score:2)
I wish my country would come up with a decent security policy...of course, this could've all been a trick, and they could have potentially placed these in a convenient location with compromised plans designed to just cost money and explode...but I don
Making them stealable? (Score:2)
Holy crap! Even more reason to ensure my car doors are locked, lest it end up in China. :-) ]
[ and a car analogy to boot
Outsourced R&D (Score:5, Insightful)
WalMart has outsourced the production of plastic flower pots and patio furniture to China for decades - the Chinese are simply reversing the process! By letting U.S. taxpayers fund the billions of dollars per year we pour into military R&D, they save massive amounts of money and man hours, and are guaranteed the best designs that 17 year old Chinese Red-Bull & Cheetos-fuelled hax0rs can steal.
Take a copy-catted F22 Raptor, paint a Chinese air force insignia on it, and * VOILA! * Fifth generation air superiority fighter MINUS the 20 years of research and testing.
What you say? Their copy is only 85% as good as ours because they made shortcuts in the radar, or avionics, or missile systems? That's OK, our congress will keep paring down the final platform order until our air force ends up only getting 200 F22s, while the Chinese will manufacture 1,150 of theirs.
The current US military philosophy is starting to look more and more like WW2 era Germany, with absolute faith placed in a relatively small number of extremely expensive, extremely high quality weapons systems, which ultimately were smothered and overrun by a developing nation (the U.S.) with phenomenal industrial capacity capable of running M4 tanks, jeeps, B17 bombers, and numerous other things off assembly lines faster than the Germans could destroy them.
The comparative ironies to today's military situation are incredible.
Re:Outsourced R&D (Score:5, Interesting)
Arm chair generals. Although the information they stole is valuable they haven't stolen information that's going to have them building Raptors. China has been trying to copy SU-27 jets for about a decade now, they can't get the engines built right and are at the point of having to go back to a Russia that vowed never to sell to them again to beg them for rights to purchase more advanced systems.
Even though they have working Russian built engines to compare against they weren't able to duplicate the engines. Any Engineer can tell you why, even with detailed schematics, if you don't understand the design you don't know where the critical sections of the design are or what processes to use during assembly that prevent catastrophic failure later. Most of these highly advanced weapon systems have decades of incremental experience built into the design. Even small differences in manufacturing can render parts unusable and it's experience that teaches you that, not schematics and working samples. Though the design information and working samples accelerate learning they don't do away with it.
Re:Outsourced R&D (Score:4, Informative)
Can you be more specific? I thought designs and schematics would detail all of these things to make sure someone else knows what to do. It's a bad idea to let critical information get stuck in the heads of your scientists and engineers in case they, you know, die.
Here's one.
My company sells gas turbines for generating electricity. These are based on a standard design which is analyzed to death and then built full-scale to make sure it performs. There is one main package (the gas turbine) and then small little modules which resemble small shipping containers (10x10ft, 15x20ft, etc) with equipment inside. The piping and electricals is run between the packages and the little modules.
Even if you had all the blueprints and design documents, you could easilly fall into the trap of thinking that "modular" implies a similarity to LEGOs and you can lay out the modules wherever you want, changing the placement to suit the site conditions. Maybe you want to move Module X from the left side of the machine to the right side of the machine, or move Module Y by 20 feet in order to try to hide a noisy piece of equipment from a residential area.
On the surface, this sounds quite easy! Just make sure your pipefitters have a little extra pipe, and the electricians have a little extra wiring so they can connect it up. The problem is that the system is completely and tightly integrated-
The piping has been analyzed in the standard design for friction losses and thermal stress. Move the module without considering this, and maybe the system doesn't get quite the pressure it was expecting. Maybe the pipes crack because of thermal expansion.
The Hazardous area classification [wikipedia.org] has been studied in the standard design. Pressurized, airtight, explosion-proof electrical junction boxes are expensive, so they don't get used if they aren't needed. You use a regular one instead. Not a problem at all if you aren't in a hazardous area. Move that module 20 feet, however, and maybe you have put it in a dangerous location.
The entire layout has been planned for maintenance and construction. There is enough room to take everything apart and put it back together again. If you move a module to the wrong spot, maybe you can't remove Part Y from the machine. Or maybe you don't have enough room to put a wrench on equipment Z, so you can't install it in the first place.
The electricals have been designed as an integrated system too, and optimized to use the smallest wire possible while still being reliable and safe. If you make the length longer, however, maybe the resistance loss is high enough that the signal is unreliable.
As the GP said, if you are stealing plans for complicated equipment, you basically have to get to know the design as well as the original designer. If you don't, it is very easy to make a small change for reasons of improvement or localization which completely breaks the design. This can happen even if you have every drawing and document ever made for the thing. Inevitably you will have to change something, especially if you are stealing from the US since we use imperial measurements. It can be as simple as using 26mm thick steel plate instead of 1 inch thick steel plate.
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I prefer this old gem:
"World War 2 was won with American manufacturing, British intelligence, and Soviet blood."
Some statistics:
B17 Flying Fortress: 12,731 units produced - 14 to 16 units per day
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_B-17_Flying_Fortress [wikipedia.org]
B24 Liberators: 18,400+ units produced
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consolidated_B-24_Liberator#cite_ref-Ethell_1995.2C_p._214_6-0 [wikipedia.org]
P51 Mustangs, all variants: 15,486 units (1 per 24 minutes)
Willys Jeep:
Is__el (Score:2)
Israel has been caught, many times, stealing and spying. Yet, I have never seen a US President complain about this. Why?
The next enemy for America is China. Right now the US is in cold war with them. But it's going to get hot soon. Much of what is happening in the Middle East is about controlling the oil and thus, China.
The next battlespace will be Africa.
America is sleep walking, as usual, into a war with China.
Africa (Score:2)
The next battlespace will be Africa
Next? WTF do you call what is going on there now?
US Infosec Incompetence summed up in one sentence! (Score:5, Funny)
'Even following the general principle of secret-keeping, it should not have been linked to the Internet.'"
You think so??? Really? This is a novel concept to our American Information Security Industry, please, tell us more! Surely you don't mean that power plants and water treatment facilities and power grids and other sensitive facilities should not be linked to the internet...HOW THE FUCK ARE THE OPERATORS GOING TO GET TO FACEBOOK IF WE DISCONNECT THEM!?!?!?!?
I have little sympathy for the US government (Score:2)
Listen. I am an American citizen and I do not want our secret whatever weapons plans stolen by ANYONE. We paid good tax money for those space lasers and trained velociraptor dragoons. I'd like to think we could actually go to war without all our wonderful toys being obsolete.
So why is the US government putting our top secret hush hush designs ON THE F"ING INTERNET LIKE DRUNKEN COEDS POSTING THEIR BOOBS ON FACEBOOK!
From here on out... lets just make a rule. If you're just straight up illiterate of computer s
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So why is the US government putting our top secret hush hush designs ON THE F"ING INTERNET
The U.S. Government? Every incident I've read of has been some kind of intrusion at a defense contractor. Meaning, corporate America is dropping the ball on security. But that's because corporations are all about profits and security is just an expense...
Anyway, has there been any published info about an intrusion at an actual U.S. Government facility, not a private company? Honestly, I haven't seen any press about that, maybe I missed it.
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Actually, I've seen quite a few leaks from the Department of energy... just nuclear bomb plans. Nothing to worry about folks. Move alone.
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Sorry, but leaks and hacks aren't the same thing.
If by leaks you mean some employee took info out, well that's espionage and unfortunately not 100% preventable without mind reading.
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I get you, its okay if the government leaks horribly but if a private corp drops the ball its a sign of their inherent evil.
Gotcha.
Sorry if that's rude but I have a low tolerance for double standards.
How about this, sport... How about neither leaks or is hacked or otherwise reveals state secrets? Does that work for you?
The level of incompetence we've seen from multiple parties within our society as regards computer security has been pathetic. Something needs to be done about it.
Here is my fix: Have the gove
Pretty much. (Score:2, Insightful)
My father does a good job of capturing the sheer absurdity, I think.
Me: So, apparently China says that not only are we just as guilty of attacking them, but it's our own damn fault they were able to get at the data. ... I need a moment.
Him: Let me get this straight, China's response to our accusations of cyber-espionage is basically "I know I am, but what are you?"
Real World Scripting (Score:2)
China: "It's your fault, you wore a red dress!"
USA: "Oo... You big bad boy... I love your money!"
These two need couple's counseling.
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Whatever, its not like its going to start WW3... moving on.
If the Chinese use the data appropriately, it can stop WW3 from ever starting by giving them the chance to disable our defenses through software without firing a single shot. They just need to get a Chinese Jeff Goldblum to upload a virus to our mother ship with his Chinese made Macbook.
Another Cold War Almost As Bad (Score:2)
It isn't likely that this would start a full out war, but it has the possibility of starting another cold war between the US and China. Not nearly as many lives are lost, except perhaps people dying in hospitals because the governments are spending more money on defense than on medicare.
Even if all this rhetoric does is give both countries a reason to waste trillions on excessive defense spending, that is already pretty bad.
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Economic collapse. (Score:2)
Whatever, its not like its going to start WW3... moving on.
If relations sour enough that China stops rolling over and buying more US T-bills and starts selling off its holdings, the collapse of the Dollar will drastically exacerbate the US economic collapse. This could easily lead to a WW III situation.
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I don't think China's holdings have that kind of power. If they sell prices would fall, rates would rise. I suspect these events might entice additional demand from other investors causing prices to rise and rates to drop. Also, the U.S. economy is currently growing, not collapsing so there is currently nothing to exacerbate. I would hold off on the bomb shelter for now.
China "owns more about $1.2 trillion in bills, notes and bonds [about.com]" -- so even if investors wanted to snap up China's holdings as they sell, they'd have to sell other holdings so it would still have a large effect on the world economy.
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If relations sour enough that China stops rolling over and buying more US T-bills and starts selling off its holdings
You really think China is going to do us that favor? A declining dollar (China doesn't have enough Treasuries to crash it) would make our exports more competitive and improve our economy, while making their exports less competitive and destroy their economy. Why do you think China bought those Treasuries in the first place?
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What makes you think a declining dollar is GOOD for us (except maybe for the government)?
- It sucks the value out of anything you own that is denominated in dollars. That includes your savings, bonds, and contracted payments (insurance, pensions, wages/salaries).
- It also sucks the value out of your investments that AREN'T denominated in dollars: When you finally liquidate them, the government includes the inflation component of the sale price as increased profit or decreased loss, and tax
Re:Blah blah blah (Score:4, Interesting)
I do hope that means a second space race. If China seriously looked like they were about to set the first man on Mars, or establish a long-term moon base, I think America would have to devote billions of dollars to doing it first just to defend their national ego. Again.
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Perhaps not. If Chinese officials and U.S. Officials all pay lip service to the same corporations, people, dynasties, or whatever...
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But it does put us in the midst of a second cold war
Not even. China can get all butt-hurt if they want, but they'll NEVER put themselves in a position where they can't trade with the US, that would be suicide. China is acting all butt-hurt when we all know they have far more to gain by spying on us than we have to gain by spying on them, economically. We gain by spying on their military strategy, foriegn policy, and disposition of forces.
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they'll NEVER put themselves in a position where they can't trade with the US, that would be suicide
Before 1914 the economic importance of "free trade" was used to explain why WWI would never happen.
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Well, b) might be incidentally true ... but I'm more inclined to believe they really were incompetent enough to let this stuff get broken into and stolen.
Some elaborate conspiracy to appear incompetent while fooling the Chinese hackers is a little harder to believe.
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Some elaborate conspiracy to appear incompetent while fooling the Chinese hackers is a little harder to believe.
If there is anything that government as a rule is good at, it is incompetency.
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Exactly. And why do you a think that the US plans actually work?
If the Chinese stole the entire plans for the F-35, do you think they could actually make it fly? What they could do is whack out the bad parts, make it simpler and cheaper.
And then we can buy it from them.
Win. Win.
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Yes, and they are not that menial that they can be overrun with the army, like Iraq. They are even better than the Russians, as they do not collapse after some decades. Instead they grow and they are big and they are investing in new weapons. All this allows to increase the military funds again. Who cares for health care or any other shit as long as we have BIG guns. Great!
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And by the same virtue the Democratic Party is the Republican Party and the Republican Party is the Democratic Party in America.
Both serve the corporations.
If it's any help- I think it's too late to do anything about it.
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Some of us manage to pay down our house at a reasonable rate, and not owe any more than necessary for the life we want to live. No, I've never had a car payment, but that doesn't mean I have no car, or no license. And yes, I have insurance, to make sure my stuff is replaced if something bad happens. I can't be bother
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What a brilliant idea.
Or you could put them in camps and gas them.
People like you are the reason we are fucked.
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If I was a Chinese government payed hacker I just use some fairly Anonymous or hard to follow accounts to just purchase access to U.S. hosted servers. Or the U.S.s favorite enemies of the day, which don't really have good internet access.
This is pure political bullshit to keep the masses confused. It is unlikely really anything more. Probably equally participated in by both sides.