Chinese Websites Used As Launchpads For Cracking 256
An anonymous reader writes "A Washington Post article reports that Chinese networks are being used to breach hundreds of unclassified U.S. government systems. The article goes on to say that some analysts believe the activity to be tied to the Chinese government, although there is also some dissent." From the article: "Whether the attacks constitute a coordinated Chinese government campaign to penetrate U.S. networks and spy on government databanks has divided U.S. analysts. Some in the Pentagon are said to be convinced of official Chinese involvement; others see the electronic probing as the work of other hackers simply using Chinese networks to disguise the origins of the attacks."
Idealism (Score:4, Insightful)
This seems like the work of terrorists to me. They gather unclassified intel from multiple sources and then they can prove/disprove rumours (leaks?) of a secret nature. This puts a strain on the agencies to ensure that solid intel can not be assembled from less potent information, and yet many citizens complain about the slow pace in which free information flows out of the government. Look at what they are up against, today. (I know I'm going to get hammered on that statement) I think we're seeing that delicate balance between freedom of information and security will be tipping in the near future as a direct result of these attacks. It's never been very balanced anyway. I might be a touch left-wing, an idealist -- but to me there needs also to be a careful approach to protecting the homeland, whether it's in Canada, the US or abroad. I have a sneaky feeling that someone we know had something to do with this, and it's likely not the Chinese government -- I think it was the FSM [boingboing.net], or possibly a smaller cell -- the Army of the 12 Monkeys!
Re:Idealism (Score:2, Insightful)
This puts a strain on the agencies to ensure that solid intel can not be assembled from less potent information
It doesn't even need to be solid, if you're a blackmailer or social engineer - just enough to be damning/interesting/scary or enough to let you "talk the talk" when posing as a government official working on some project or other.
Re:Idealism (Score:2)
Because we all know the Chinese Government is a tolerant and benevolent, progressive-thinking lot who simply want to be left alone. Buy U.S. Government votes, maybe, but NEVER spy on them!
Re:Idealism (Score:3, Interesting)
Unless they wanted to make us think that the signals are not originating in china by making us think they are and then us believing that they wouldn't be and that it is someone else diverting through China
Re:Idealism (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Idealism (Score:5, Funny)
"Now, a clever man would put the poison into his own goblet, because he would know that only a great fool would reach for what he was given. I am not a great fool, so I can clearly not choose the wine in front of you. But you must have known I was not a great fool, you would have counted on it, so I can clearly not choose the wine in front of me!"
"You only think I guessed wrong - that's what's so funny! I switched glasses when your back was turned! Ha-ha, you fool! You fell victim to one of the classic blunders, the most famous of which is "Never get involved in a land war in Asia", but only slightly less famous is this: "Never go in against a Sicilian, when *death* is on the line!". Hahahahahah!"
[Vizzini falls over dead]
Vizzini, Princess Bride
Re:Idealism (Score:2)
Basically the same start
"By the way , I actually poisoned your steak"
Re:Idealism (Score:3, Interesting)
There is a difference between the citizens of a country knowing every detail of the government's actions and a country that is actively against many of those actions knowing. The problem is that most of the people I hear from seem to think that if everyone just would calm down, smoke some weed together and such that we would all be friends. No more adversaries... Right.
The US government has always been operating
Re:Idealism (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, it may very well be that (real) democracy isn't stable in the long run - certainly the US government has moved more and more toward the totalitarian mode over the last couple centuries - but the people who're upset over that aren't confused or misled about a need for secrecy. They're concerned with the fact that a government that nominally represents thier them is actively seeking to hide information and activities from them (again, not a poke at the Bush administration - this has been happing, and gradually increasing, for the entire history of the US).
Historical fact bears this out, too - there's been more than one case of government agencies refusing FOIA requests, or censoring them, not because they contained information critical to national security, but because they were embarressing, or contradicted "official" reports.
In terms of security at all, the *best* kind is the kind that works even when everyone knows what you're doing. Thats not always possible, of course, but your example of vacation time is a great one for exactly that reason. Suppose that some city had some large fraction of it's officers on vacation on the same week of every year. Thats hurtful to security whether it's published or not. Publishing it, in fact, is probably the best way to correct such a short sighted flaw in operating procedures. "Open and transparent" means that the public (remember, the people who're supposedly the important ones) can confirm that people who claim to be acting in thier interest are actually doing so.
And the what matters as well, especially when we're a supposedly moral nation. For example, many people are uncomfortable with the idea of torturing prisoners, or assassinating foreign politicians. Now, those actions may be neccesary to protect the US. Or they may not. But, supposedly, it's the *people* of the US who should determine what the line they will not cross is. Thats why we have laws and such about treatment of prisoners, and regulating our international operations. And history has shown that we need public oversight if our government is to be trusted to abide by those laws. Here I will poke specifically at the Bush administration, because, whether you support torturing prisoners for information or not, the Bush adminstration official policy is to do it via legal loopholing and word games, not via straightforward public policy.
Of course, this is all predicated on the idea that a democratic society is stable or even a good idea. Theres a lot of people who would disagree, even Americans (from the sound of it, even yourself). Humans are social animals and being led is very comforting to many people.
Re:Idealism (Score:2)
"These attacks" are the perfect excuse
Re:Idealism (Score:2)
I don't know... sometimes there are kids in kindergarten that just walk right up to a kid they don't even know and smack them in the head. Those same irrational kids generally grow up and live their lives in a slight fog of irrationality that no amount of "making sure they don't hate us" will alter. I suggest that certai
Looks like governments at work to me (Score:2)
http://fly.hiwaay.net/~pspoole/echelon.html [hiwaay.net]
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Um, simply not true. [erols.com] And that site is not pulling punches.
And, when considering the body count of the PRC, keep in mind also the body count of the Koumintang.
Re:Real Bigness (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
So what exactly went on between the end of the Eisenhower and the beginning of the Nixon administrations? Were there any other presidents, or was the office just vacant for eight years?
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
The stalemate in Korea is a defeat for the US. It's been the same stalemate since Eisenhower negotiated it, so he owns it, having run the war to that defeat, and institutionalized it. But that doesn't mean that the uninterrupted series of presidents since, whose job was to do something about it, but didn't, don't
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
But now it's worse: the rat has actually gone nuclear. While Bush did nothing but ratchet up the rhetoric, instead of something constructive. Much like Bush Sr did nothing while Iraq threatened to invade Kuwait, until it was too late. Like so much of Bush's malign incompetence of the past 5 years, it's too late to really fix. If I were the president, I'd have a lot better
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Yeah, we were so much better off when Clinton was giving away security secrets.
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
50% Troll
50% Interesting
Well, at least this post was actually disputed in replies, though mostly ones not worth reading. But of course it did draw its share of TrollMods, silently attacking it without accountability. That "Troll" mod selection should require the moderator to pass a quick quiz on the definition of "Troll". Hint: it doesn't mean "I don't like it, but I'm too lame to say why".
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Russian Communism was largely defeated by terrorist actions on behalf of NATO, chiefly the USA. You can't bitch about others terrorism when you are the largest practicioner of it on the planet.
I suggest you get a history book about something called "The Cold War". It's cold for a reason; there was no outright war, just war between your proxies e.g. the Afgan civil war. The CIA openly did thi
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Em, all of it? The mujahideen? The anti-socialist death squads trained at "The School of the Americas". Multiple attacks on Cuba. You sound like a motivated person, a google for that phrase should find you some articles you'd find interesting. The declasified training manuals are terrifying. What's your major? "Oh, just kidnapping and torture for political gain"...
The USA has a dark history WRT to terrorism. Also, read up on the IRA, who have
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
Lawyers, in fact, are an improvement over their predecessors: thugs and assassins. There's more to wealth than just creating it: there's protecting it, an
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2)
It's sad that you think Creationists should be objects of ridicule based on their religious beliefs. That is no better than racism.
Re:Real Bigness (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Real Bigness (Score:3, Insightful)
You can point out dark parts of any race or large religions history pretty much. Should we hold the rape of nanking against the Japanese today?
Of course people who insist on believing in an imaginary spirit that created the universe 7000 years ago, inserting dinosaur bones in the ground to fool us, and who insist children should be taught their myth is
Re:Real Bigness (Score:2, Flamebait)
Oh, it's espionage is it... (Score:3, Funny)
At least we know it's not the Russians! (Score:5, Interesting)
My favorite was about how the KGB operatives in DC in the late 50s stayed in good graces wtih their Moscow overloads with a minumum of effort:
They were supposed to keep tabs on the ongoings of the US political system by establishing inside contacts, and reporting back. So, they just summarized the political news from each day's New York Times, and kept their jobs for years.
The Americans pulled an good one on them: To spy at the Russian consolate in New York, the CIA recruited Xerox to install a minature camera in the consolate's copy equipment. When he came to do "regular maitenance" each month, he'd also replace the full tapes with new ones.
Sorry for no linkies, my source for these is an 80 year old CPP [asisonline.org].
Re:At least we know it's not the Russians! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Oh, it's espionage is it... (Score:2)
Microsoft / China "shared source" initiative? (Score:5, Funny)
It's Cisco... (Score:2)
Doesn't that mean that I can't get back at the bastards?
Seems like someone isn't playing fair...
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft / China "shared source" initiative? (Score:2)
One might wonder if upon accessment of Microsoft's Shared Source, the PRC government decided to "roll their own" Dragon Linux for internal use. We already know what the PRC government thinks of WiFi security, since they decided to create their own security stack.
Any
Was meant to be humorous (Score:2)
Web sites (Score:2)
Other than the fact that the attacks are coming from machines attached to a Chinese network and the reports that the PLA has been concentrating a little more on network warfare, what evidence are they basing their claims on that the attacks are coming from the Chinese government?
Re:Web sites (Score:2)
Pick an IE vulnerability and create a trojan that uses this to dial home and send a copy of the user's documents (or even just give a remote user a shell on the machine).
Re:Web sites (Score:2, Insightful)
Must...resist....urge.... (Score:3, Funny)
Film at 0x0b (Score:2)
Hmm, let me see, shall I attack the US govt. by using machines from a virtual black hole or not ?
why don't they... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:why don't they... (Score:2)
Re:why don't they... (Score:2, Informative)
How much is spoofed? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How much is spoofed? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How much is spoofed? (Score:3, Interesting)
1, Sit at a computer in the US.
2, Hack into a computer in China, Eastern Europe or wherever. Hope that the owner / admin won't notice a thing.
3, Hack into the system of an US government agency, company or wherever you need.
4, Hope that no-one notices. If they do never mind, you have a 99.9% chance that they'll assume the att
Re:How much is spoofed? (Score:2)
Horrible statistics (Score:2)
The number of attempted intrusions from all sources identified by the Pentagon last year totaled about 79,000, defense officials said, up from about 54,000 in 2003. Of those, hackers succeeded in gaining access to a Defense Department computer in about 1,300 cases. The vast majority of these instances involved what VanPutte called "low risk" computers.
I don't care if it's Low Risk; a 1.6% success rate is unaccepta
Re:Horrible statistics (Score:3, Funny)
Some are said to be? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Some in the Pentagon are said to be convinced of official Chinese involvement..."
So, other people have said that some people in the Pentagon are convinced. We don't even know who is doing the "saying."
Sounds like weak speculation to me.
Re:Some are said to be? (Score:2)
"This is an ongoing, organized attempt to siphon off information from our unclassified systems."
Great propaganda though.
Re:Some are said to be? (Score:2)
If you've done nothing wrong... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:If you've done nothing wrong... (Score:5, Informative)
I was being sarcastic, and showing one obvious instance where, even if you
Re:If you've done nothing wrong... (Score:2)
That was not immediately apparent.
My bad.
Re:If you've done nothing wrong... (Score:3, Funny)
Please refrain from calling people complete assficks and giving them alternative ways of speaking.
It makes you sound like a complete assfuck.
If you wish to correct the way someone communicates to a third party, STFU.
Re:If you've done nothing wrong... (Score:3, Funny)
Real story (Score:5, Insightful)
Next story : old korean grand-mothers hacking Pentagon's SMTP servers.
Re:Real story (Score:2)
Hence the reason why the general population hates China, Russia, France, N. Korea and Iran. So long as they aren't hating the clear local government corruption, it's all good, right? We need them to protect us from
websites? (Score:5, Insightful)
General Ripper on line 1, sir. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:General Ripper on line 1, sir. (Score:2)
Maybe a little of both. (Score:3, Insightful)
The Currency of Fear. (Score:4, Insightful)
From here. [newamerica.net]
Re:The Currency of Fear. (Score:2)
Is it really? The BIOS basically provides services only in real mode. For the rest, everything is implemented in the OS anyway. Sure, there's hardware initialization, but if the BIOS can do that, the OS can too. In fact, this is just what LinuxBIOS [google.com] does.
Chinese Government (Score:2, Insightful)
Nature of "Attacks" (Score:4, Insightful)
Nowhere does TFA describe the attacks themselves. I guess we are to assume they are malicious Attacks to gain control of DOD computers. I try to never assume anything based on vague DOD statements. So I'm going with hits on the serveer Logs. Seems like a cute way to get approval for Classifying these UNClassified Systems. This administration has been overly secretive in a whole slew of areas, add one more to the list.
I give it a week, then quietly changes will be made and this info will dissappear off the web, innaccessible to all but the DOD.
Wouldn't it be interesting to know how many "Attacks" the chinese government receives from the US.
The number of attempted intrusions from all sources identified by the Pentagon last year totaled about 79,000, defense officials said, up from about 54,000 in 2003. Of those, hackers succeeded in gaining access to a Defense Department computer in about 1,300 cases. The vast majority of these instances involved what VanPutte called "low risk" computers.
Gained access, Shit man, Raise Terror Threat Level to chartruse.
This is an ongoing, organized attempt to siphon off information from our unclassified systems."
No kidding, People are using computers to gather publicly available information. Oh.. My.. God.. Raise to level Periwinkle.....Get Dick to an undisclosed location. Get Condi on the horn.
Either you are with us or your with the Chinese Websites.
Re:Nature of "Attacks" (Score:2)
TFA doesn't say this is "publicly available information," just that these networks are are unclassified. Just because this stuff isn't Top Secret doesn't mean we should ship off all the Pentagon's backup tapes to China with a red bow on top.
On the other hand, the vagueness of the article makes me wonder if these are just spammers looking for compromisable computers they can use to send spam.
Of course they're spying (Score:2, Insightful)
I expect they're being more sophisticated. How about sniffing everything that goes over the internet. I bet they're doing that.
I remember describing something as having more antennas than a Russian fishing trawler. Those trawlers were of course not fishing for fish.
When we learn? (Score:4, Funny)
Of course, the chinese are doing it; so what? (Score:2)
Damn - More Outsourcing (Score:4, Funny)
Unlikely (Score:2)
It is the present day Top Gun (Score:2, Funny)
I wonder if the American computer experts d
Re:It is the present day Top Gun (Score:2)
The Great FIrewall of What??? (Score:2)
Translation: Of course the Chinese government is behind all this.
Firewall (Score:2)
I set up a passworded share to see what would happen, and damn if there weren't systems trying to bruteforce the password on it.
Had to ban Chinese subnets (Score:3, Informative)
I don't doubt that the ChiCom is behind this (Score:2)
The ChiCom party either knows about this and condones it or is actively sponsoring it.
Therefore it is in our best interests to cut China from the net. But this plays right into the hands of the ChiCom party.
After all, a disconnected China is pretty much free of pesky dissent sites.
Well I smell another war comming... (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:unclassified could be espionage as well (Score:2, Insightful)
Rule number one of the internet.
If you don't want the world to see your sensitive documents, don't put them on the webserver.
Hmmmm... (Score:2)
Re:IT IS TRUE!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Well, there now, sounds to me like they may be harboring terrorists and weapons of mass destruction.
We must persevere. Stay true to our convictions, and continue to sacrifice. For the good of the world, in our war on terrorism.
Re:We're talking about the chinese govt. (Score:2)
Re:Uh... (Score:2)
C//
Re:Typical (Score:2)
It was only a few years ago that a US spyplane made an emergency landing in China. How would you feel if there were Chinese spyplanes 6km off the coast of Florida 24/7? The hyprocracy in this topic is so thick you could cut it with a knife.
Re:USA and the "paranoid mode=ON" (Score:2)
YEAH, cos like EVERY terrorist on the planet is a part of the SAME GLOBAL NETWORK!! OMG, GWB save me!!
So, what's the IRA and McVey's excuse? Terrorism comes from all backgrounds. The anti-US terrorism is 100% the product of your foreign policies. Whether those policies were just is another debate, however there is a clear cause and effect. They don't hate freedom, they just hate you. Until the UK got i
Re:Chinese crackers (Score:2)
Yeah, the US should start spying too, that would be a really novel idea. Maybe you should write to your congressmen and suggest it.
Or you could try paying attention [cnn.com] for a week or two.
Why do you think the NSA tryed to stop the spread of encryption around the world? PGP? Are we all asleep here? Computers were largely invented to further warfare, cracking enemies networks would be top of the TODO list.