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China United States Security

US Officials Race To Understand Severity of China's Salt Typhoon Hacks (msn.com) 20

U.S. officials are racing to understand the full scope of a China-linked hack of major U.S. broadband providers, as concerns mount from members of Congress that the breach could amount to a devastating counterintelligence failure. From a report: Federal authorities and cybersecurity investigators are probing the breaches of Verizon Communications, AT&T and Lumen Technologies. A stealthy hacking group known as Salt Typhoon tied to Chinese intelligence is believed to be responsible. The compromises may have allowed hackers to access information from systems the federal government uses for court-authorized network wiretapping requests, The Wall Street Journal reported last week.

Among the concerns are that the hackers may have essentially been able to spy on the U.S. government's efforts to surveil Chinese threats, including the FBI's investigations. The House Select Committee on China sent letters Thursday asking the three companies to describe when they became aware of the breaches and what measures they are taking to protect their wiretap systems from attack. Spokespeople for AT&T, Lumen and Verizon declined to comment on the attack. A spokesman at the Chinese Embassy in Washington has denied that Beijing is responsible for the alleged breaches.

Combined with other Chinese cyber threats, news of the Salt Typhoon assault makes clear that "we face a cyber-adversary the likes of which we have never confronted before," Rep. John Moolenaar, the Republican chairman of the House Select Committee Committee on China, and Raja Krishnamoorthi, the panel's top Democrat, said in the letters. "The implications of any breach of this nature would be difficult to overstate," they said. Hackers still had access to some parts of U.S. broadband networks within the last week, and more companies were being notified that their networks had been breached, people familiar with the matter said. Investigators remain in the dark about precisely what the hackers were seeking to do, according to people familiar with the response.

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US Officials Race To Understand Severity of China's Salt Typhoon Hacks

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  • by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Friday October 11, 2024 @09:48AM (#64856827)

    These attacks were basically the Chinese tapping into the FBI/NSA (illegal) wiretapping boxes that ISPs, Universities and data centers are obliged to install (I've seen a few of them).

    As Alanis Morissette would say: isn't it ironic.

    • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Friday October 11, 2024 @09:56AM (#64856841)

      Who needs a backdoor to undermine U.S. intelligence efforts when it's handed over [imgur.com] like a present.

      • by alexgieg ( 948359 ) <alexgieg@gmail.com> on Friday October 11, 2024 @12:17PM (#64857115) Homepage

        On the bright side, from now on everyone will be able to refer to this incident whenever a government wants to introduce a backdoor in secure messaging. Something like this:

        "Oh, so you want a repeat of the Salt Typhoon incident! Why are you trying to undermine the country's safety? Are you a Chinese spy? How much are they paying you!?"

        Wash, rinse, and repeat, until it gets across.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. Not only you can spy on your people, the rest of the world can do so too!

      What a complete fail at IT risk management. Must be moron-fanatics in charge.

    • Why are we calling routers back doors? The devices installed are primarily routers and possibly a small analytic blade for raw traffic. But mostly their job is to forward a subset of all traffic to a second destination. By getting access to these systems, the Chinese would know what the U.S. government has order be watched.
  • by 0xG ( 712423 ) on Friday October 11, 2024 @10:50AM (#64856955)

    Don't we assume that *any* unencrypted communications on the internet can be intercepted anyways? Or saved for later?
    It's the internet...

  • If the NSA hacks China, is the NSA at fault or is it China's fault for failing to keep them out? China has laws that make this a criminal act, and the US government has no qualms breaking those laws.

    We hack China. China hacks us. This is the norm.

    Our job is to keep them out. If we are too stupid to keep them out, we get what we deserve.

    • The difference here is that our government agencies required companies to put in back doors so our government could spy on us... the bad guys just opened those back doors.
  • Every last one (Score:5, Insightful)

    by blackomegax ( 807080 ) on Friday October 11, 2024 @11:54AM (#64857067) Journal
    ALL backdoors for domestic use are pathways in for foreign use or malicious hackers. Every single one is a ticking timebomb.

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