Thursday, February 27, 2014

Chinese cyber attacks and how Edward Snowden became their not so secret weapon.

Courtesy of the New York Post:  

China’s military hackers are back, more brazen than ever. You can thank Edward Snowden. 

A year ago, the Internet security firm Mandiant went public with what cyber-war watchers had known for some time: Unit 61398, a secret branch of the Chinese military, had been behind more than 1,000 cyber attacks on Western targets since 2006. Employing thousands of trained cyber warriors housed in a 12-story building in Shanghai — and backed by an enormous militia of part-time hackers — Unit 61398 had been waging a constant war on foreign banks, infrastructure, defense firms and government agencies, including one spectacular 2007 raid on the Pentagon that shut down 1,500 different Defense Department networks. 

The resulting international sensation forced a reluctant President Obama to confront the Chinese premier on the issue. Beijing issued its usual furious denial — but the attacks stopped and Unit 61398 fell from the headlines. 

But now we know they didn’t stop for long — and the West and the Obama administration are looking as ill-prepared and impotent as ever in dealing with the threat. China’s usual attacks on banks, weapons manufacturers and other juicy targets are now back to almost daily. 

The first big attack came as early as late May, when Chinese hackers raided networks at top US defense firms, swiping information on more than two dozen weapons systems.  

In October, they hit the Federal Electoral Commission, suggesting the People’s Liberation Army is looking at ways to interfere in the US electoral process.

In December, they launched a series of attacks on the foreign ministries of five countries ahead of the G-20 summit, using an infected e-mail attachment that was supposed to provide updates on the Syria crisis. (Not as clever as Unit 61398’s similar 2011 attack, which used an e-mail promising nude photos of then French President Nicholas Sarkozy’s wife, Carla Bruni.)  

The latest outrage came Feb. 11, when evidence revealed Chinese cyber warriors had cracked open the Veterans of Foreign Wars computer system — itself not an obvious security threat, but part of what experts believe was a much broader attack on US military personnel records and files, both past and current. 

Most striking is how bold the attacks have grown. The Chinese are apparently so confident we can’t (or won’t) stop them that they’ve gotten sloppy. Examining hacker codes left behind on US military and commercial networks, Internet-security engineers have been finding bits of code identical to Chinese commercial software sold for export by companies with contracts with the People’s Liberation Army.

What has emboldened the Chinese military hackers?

Well that would be Edward Snowden.  

The Snowden defection back in June was a double gift for China’s hackers (as well as for Russian ones — the State Department even issued a warning that any cellphone or laptop brought to the Sochi Olympics would almost certainly be hacked there, and its passwords stolen). 

The data Snowden brought with him to Hong Kong included a wealth of information about how our intelligence agencies fight and trace hackers, as well as on the NSA’s own hacking efforts in China.

Not only has the information that Snowden carried into China given them the blueprint for how our  data gathering system work, but the fact that we have data gathering systems has allowed China, who hacks into American businesses to sell the information to Chinese businesses, to play the moral equivalency game.

If the US does it, how can they point the finger at us?

Here is more from a Newsweek article from November: 

"Snowden couldn't have played better into China's strategy for protecting its cyber activities if he had been doing it on purpose,'' one American intelligence official says. 

Snowden's revelations quickly veered away from what he called the NSA's "domestic surveillance state" to overseas espionage by the United States. After fleeing to Hong Kong, he provided local reporters with NSA documents and told them the United States was hacking major Chinese telecommunications companies, a Beijing university and the corporate owner of the region's most extensive fiber-optic submarine cable network. That information, government officials and industry experts say, is now used by the Chinese to deflect criticisms of their hacking, both in meetings with the administration and at cyber security conferences.

The activities of the two sides, however, are vastly different in scope and intent. The United States engages in widespread electronic espionage, but that classified information cannot legally be handed over to private industry. China is using its surveillance to steal trade secrets, harm international competitors and undermine American businesses.

In Snowden's zeal to be the next Daniel Ellsberg he has instead become perhaps the worst American traitor since Aldrich Ames.

If Snowden had released his information to journalists here in the country, and kept the stolen data within American borders, he could rightfully be called a hero.

But taking such sensitive material out of the country, and reporting on our data gathering process to nations with an adversarial relationship with America, Snowden has not only placed our state secrets in jeopardy, he has also irrevocably damaged out ability to deal with cyber attacks, or hold those who do them accountable.

23 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:36 PM

    Isn't it handy that the US Government now has someone to blame for its long-term, ongoing, systemic inability to keep up with Chinese hackers?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous12:49 PM

    Snowden pre-planned to purposefully lie and commit theft and then run out of the United States with all the info. I can't believe those who have rushed to say he deserves a Nobel Peace prize and comparing him to Rosa Parks, JFK and MLK, including his own father!

    He's yet another opportunistic geek punk seeking his 15 minutes and unlike balloon boy this is a very bad and harmful punk to our country.

    This story is not done playing out yet. At the very least I hope Sarah can see Snowden from her porch forever.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous12:49 PM

    This happened because Edward Snowdon was more about Edward Snowdon than about the issue of Government spying.

    He's a hero born of the reality tv generation.

    Look at me! Look at me!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous1:00 PM

    Yahoo webcam users’ ‘intimate’ images intercepted by GCHQ spy programme, Snowden files reveal

    http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/yahoo-webcam-users-intimate-images-intercepted-by-gchq-spy-programme-snowden-files-reveal-9158140.html

    Technology is moves so fast. People just need to pay attention instead of hailing Snowden as revealing new "revelations" many of which are NOT new at all. Most internet users are clueless, especially Facebook users giving out ALL their personal information.

    We already know that even baby monitors can be hacked for example. We've known for at least 2 years before anyone ever heard of Snowden that Smart Tv's are capable of watching you back, are hackable & vulnerable to viruses because they are connected to the internet.

    People just haven't been paying attention & think this punk is some hero all the while completely ignoring cookies, data-mining and all the surveillance by corporations, retailers, websites that spend 24/7 following your every key stroke.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous2:02 PM

      Great example are the people who keep their Facebooks public and as an HR person who pulls resumes to look for potential hires I can usually weed out the undesirables by their public face books and the "too much information" that they post there. Someone called to follow up last week about why they weren't hired for a certain position and I said, "Hello, have you even read your own Facebook"?

      Delete
    2. Anonymous2:51 PM

      Not to mention that James Bamford wrote in 'The Shadow Factory' in 2008 that the NSA is capturing data from all emails and phone calls all over the world, everyone is being spied on.

      Perhaps the NSA was counting on America not being a nation of readers.

      Delete
  5. Anonymous1:01 PM

    The NY Post is a right wing Murdoch rag. Of course it's going to use Snowden to rag on the Obama administration. Just as it would have used him to come to the defense of the Bush administration and praised everything the Bush administration did to cover its NSA civil-liberty-violating ass.

    But since it's Obama to whom the NSA answers now, and Obama can't be made to look bad by Dems any more than Bush could be made bad by Repugs, Snowden must be villainized, even though what the NSA is doing to us, with Obama's OK, is infinitely worse. We've already seen that if Obama has to choose between protecting our constitutional liberties, and protecting NSA's violation of them, he will pick the NSA every time.

    Tell me, would you have trashed Snowden if he did this under Bush's watch? No need -- I know that you wouldn't have.

    The double standard is very obvious, and very troubling.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous2:03 PM

      Just as you choose anonymous, as I have in my comment, you truly are never, ever anonymous.

      Delete
  6. Anonymous1:13 PM

    What makes anyone think he might not have done it all on purpose. After all, he is all about himself and could give a shit about anyone else. Personally, I think he had a lot of help from both the Russians and the Chinese well before he tried this crap.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous1:30 PM

    ""If Snowden had released his information to journalists here in the country, and kept the stolen data within American borders, he could rightfully be called a hero.""

    Just stop with the fan-boy stuff. I usually agree with you,but this is not the first time you have imagined this traitorous piece of garbage as some white knight who made a little misstep.

    He scammed to get the job. He stole secrets,he betrayed his fellow employees and his employer. He committed treason.

    He is vile trash.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous2:05 PM

      Snowden is merely a symptom of a bigger issue. There is NO privacy, not on your computer, not on your phone or tablet. They cyber world was created, ironically, not to protect security but to infringe upon it.

      Delete
  8. O/T but Gryphen I thought you might enjoy this....Calvin and Hobbes are BACK...well sort of....LOL!!

    http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2014/02/27/calvin-hobbes-stripped-bill-watterson/5859235/?AID=10709313&PID=6154686&SID=17mf8mp4lx00s

    ReplyDelete
  9. Anonymous2:23 PM

    Sorry folks. Snowden is a traitor. There are a lot of ways to fight back if you think the gov is wrong. He has damaged this country enormously. He is an outright, two faced liar.

    10cats.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous2:25 PM

    OT, I hate to keep going off topic but Alaskans as far south as Homer can possible expect a strong aurora tonight beginning as soon as 7pm. It is currently happening in Europe and is expected to continue into our Alaskan evening time. Given that it is warm this might be a chance for Alaskans to step outside and keep an eye on the sky!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous5:54 AM

      Well.how was it?

      Delete
  11. Anita Winecooler6:08 PM

    In the infamous words of Foghorn Leghorn-

    "I say, I say, There's something wrong with that boy!"

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous4:21 AM

    It's not a government of the people, by the people if there is no oversight of the secrecy and hidden agendas in our government. Sure, E. Snowdon is a self-aggrandizing traitor to America, but what does that make all of the shadow people actually making decisions in the name of us?
    I just can't help thinking about all the "good" Germans that didn't lift a finger to stop their country from committing the atrocities that they did in ww2.
    So who cares Ed's motives - at least he got the word out to the masses. Maybe if in 1933-35 if the inner circle of the brownshirts were exposed to the public's view....

    ReplyDelete
  13. Anonymous4:22 AM

    Somewhere,somehow,someone got the erroneous notion that Capitalism could tame the beast........be careful what you wish for........modernity has only sharpened the beast's appetite.....

    ReplyDelete
  14. Anonymous4:24 AM

    BTW.......http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-alan-grayson/the-keystone-xl-pipeline-_b_4870103.html

    ReplyDelete
  15. Anonymous5:43 AM

    Bring him back to the USA, put him on trial, will be found guilty and hang him for treason! He deserves nothing better!

    ReplyDelete

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