

China Outs US Hackers for Attack, a New Frontier in Spy Games (bloomberg.com) 10
China's outing of alleged US National Security Agency hackers marks a major escalation in the ongoing tit-for-tat between Chinese and American intelligence agencies, according to analysts. From a report: Chinese authorities Tuesday said three NSA employees hacked the Asian Winter Games held this year in Harbin, accusing them of targeting systems that held vast amounts of personal information on people involved in the event. The hacks "severely endangered the security of China's critical information infrastructure, national defense, finance, society, production, as well as citizens' personal information," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian told reporters.
While the US has repeatedly published names of alleged Chinese hackers and filed criminal charges against them, China has historically refrained from making similar accusations against American spies. Rafe Pilling, director of threat intelligence at the cyber firm Sophos' Secureworks unit, said the development may signal a broader policy change from Chinese security agencies, with allegations of US cyberattacks becoming more specific and timely. "This is an escalation in China's experimentation with 'name and shame' policies for the alleged perpetrators of cyberattacks, mirroring US pursuit of a similar policy for a number of years now," said Pilling.
While the US has repeatedly published names of alleged Chinese hackers and filed criminal charges against them, China has historically refrained from making similar accusations against American spies. Rafe Pilling, director of threat intelligence at the cyber firm Sophos' Secureworks unit, said the development may signal a broader policy change from Chinese security agencies, with allegations of US cyberattacks becoming more specific and timely. "This is an escalation in China's experimentation with 'name and shame' policies for the alleged perpetrators of cyberattacks, mirroring US pursuit of a similar policy for a number of years now," said Pilling.
Is it an escalation? Or a mistake? (Score:5, Interesting)
They've never "name and shamed" US spies in the past because to do so, they'd have to admit the attacks were successful. This damages their self image of superiority over the west, which can be very dangerous to the leadership of the country.
Are they stepping up the conflict? Or did they blink (like they did when they started shopping for - not very successfully - allies in the trade war)?
Re: Is it an escalation? Or a mistake? (Score:2, Insightful)
This is called diplomacy.
China is entirely prepared to out the US dirty laundry.
They (the US) might want to consider what's in the laundry basket.
Re: (Score:2)
Personally I'm all for it. It's sad that it would take a foreign government to give our citizens the kind of transparency that we deserve for our own government, but I'll take what I can get. I do
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
China is entirely prepared to out the US dirty laundry.
They (the US) might want to consider what's in the laundry basket.
Bunches of dirty, orange-colored face towels?
Re: (Score:2)
They've never "name and shamed" US spies in the past because [...] This damages their self image
LOL, please, it damages nothing - propaganda about concealed operations against "the people" have always been a part of the "official" public image of the USA in the part of the world that developed behind the Iron Curtain. There is even a special name for it and you can easily see how it came about by looking at what languages in Wikipedia have it - https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Besides, how does exposing an operation like the alleged one in TFS would be "damaging"? How is a successful 'acking of a low-
False flag (Score:3)
Make a lot of noise over here so that over there you can get all sorts of intelligence.
This is a war US can't win (Score:2)