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A cache of leaked Chinese hacking documents just confirmed experts' warnings about how compromised the US could be

alaskanseminole

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Oct 20, 2002
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A cache of over 570 Chinese hacking documents was posted to GitHub last week. Cybersecurity experts say the files, which reportedly belong to state-backed hackers, look authentic.


A trove of leaked Chinese hacking documents might have given the world a glimpse of how widespread and effective China's hacking operations could be.

Over 570 files and documents were posted to the developer platform GitHub last week, per The Washington Post. The documents, which track hacking activity across multiple countries, belong to iSoon, a private security contractor with ties to China's Ministry of Public Security, according to the Post's report on Wednesday.

"We have every reason to believe this is the authentic data of a contractor supporting global and domestic cyber espionage operations out of China," cybersecurity expert John Hultquitist told the Post.

On Wednesday, the Associated Press reported that Chinese police are investigating the leak, citing two unnamed iSoon employees it spoke to. The employees told AP that the documents belonged to the group.

The leaked files mentioned at least 20 hacking targets, including countries like the UK, India, South Korea, Thailand, and Malaysia, per the Post. Besides foreign governments, the files said data had also been extracted from foreign telecommunications firms.

The hackers had exploited vulnerabilities present in software made by companies like Microsoft and Google, per the Post.

The leaked files have inadvertently confirmed multiple warnings from security officials and experts on China's hacking operations.

FBI chief Christopher Wray told "60 Minutes" in October that China, per his assessment, is running "the biggest hacking program in the world."

China, Wray said, had "stolen more of our personal and corporate data than every nation, big or small, combined."

And when it comes to tackling the threat posed by Chinese hackers, Wray said the FBI finds themselves outnumbered.

"If each one of the FBI's cyber agents and intelligence analysts focused exclusively on the China threat, China's hackers would still outnumber FBI cyber personnel by at least 50 to 1," Wray told lawmakers last month.

Representatives for China's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BI.

 
Thats Good Zach Galligan GIF by filmeditor
 
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The bright side is China is getting desperate to remain on top.

Their population is aging, cheaper labor is now available, and they have serious issues with their economy.
Which also makes them extremely dangerous the next couple years. They might want to shoot their bolt before their problems really take root.
 
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Do they have the ability to do anything with fingerprints yet? I was assured that mine getting stolen wouldn’t be an issue because they couldn’t do anything with them at the time
 
Anyone with half a brain knew this was going on. What commands attention is the scope of the operations, if Wray isn't hyperbolizing.

Needless to say, all major nations - and some small ones, too - are deep into this hacking.

Can one party be counted on to be more aggressive against this sort of thing? Would the other party block funding or laws to deal with it?

Is this publicity an effort to make cybersecurity a top issue in the upcoming election? Will it work? Who does it benefit?
 
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Is it time to pretend that this is a new phenomenon and that Americans right to and love of treasure coupled with our belief that paying the least possible amount for everything didn't open the door?
 
The bright side is China is getting desperate to remain on top.

Their population is aging, cheaper labor is now available, and they have serious issues with their economy.
Aging and their brilliant one child (essentially one boy) policy is cratering their population. I can't believe they didn't see the flaw in that.
 
Aren’t those considered an attack on NATO, article 5 type stuff. I’m pretty sure cyber attacking infrastructure is considered an act of warfare per their definition.
Don’t worry Biden will lead the charge and really stick it to them.
 
Aging and their brilliant one child (essentially one boy) policy is cratering their population. I can't believe they didn't see the flaw in that.
Source: National Bureau of Statistics, China. China's total natural population dropped by more than 2 million in 2023, according to the latest Chinese statistics. The country recorded 9.0 million births and 11.1 million deaths.

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I can see hacking attempts on our internet facing systems at work and can view by source country as a heat map. Russia, China, and North Korea are almost always bright red spots on the heat map and the only other country that even registers as a blip on the map is the US and the blips are specific states.

We block Russia/China/North Korea by their IP ranges/geolocation but they can still make the attempts before getting denied, which is what we see.

This has been going on for 10+ years.
 
Major states engage in hacking/cyber espionage/data collection/etc. Duh.

If China is out-hacking us, shouldn't we be more mad at ourselves for lagging behind? If, that is, we actually are lagging behind.

We act like China is so awful. But isn't this just real world politics? Surely we should try to block them - and they us. But please stop with the phony morality and scare-mongering.

Bottom line on TikTok: We want them to sell to a US company so we can buy the data they collect, rather than the data going to our adversaries.

China should probably just offer to sell us the information they gather on US citizens and companies. Like everybody else does.

It's a farce, really. We have laws limiting direct government surveillance on our own people, but we have much fewer restrictions on what private enterprise does. Which is why the US government buys data on us from our own companies. It's an easy work-around of our laws, and it enriches the private companies that spy on us.

It's a win-win . . . unless, of course you don't like being spied upon, or think our tax dollars could be better spent.
 
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It's probably just a misunderstanding. Nothing to do with other countries thinking we have a feckless leader....

You guys see that balloon?
You just use words you see on this board without understanding their meaning, don't you. I'd get back to cold calling those leads.
 
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