The Great Cannon system was used to intercept web and advertising traffic intended for Baidu, China’s biggest search engine company, researchers said.
Intel processors are displayed at a store in Seoul June 21, 2012.
Pedestrians walk past anti-terror propaganda posters pasted along the streets of Urumqi. China’s new draft counterterrorism law is provoking widespread condemnation.
The regulations would require IT equipment to undergo security testing, use Chinese intellectual property and force developers to share source codes and other sensitive data with Beijing.
By Christian Oliver in Brussels and Tom Mitchell in Beijing
Beijing has launched major cyber strikes against American IT giants eyeing its market.
The latest hacker invasions of Google, Apple, Microsoft and Yahoo are being masterminded by Lu Wei, with the Politburo's approval.
“Axiom’s activities are supported by China to steal trade secrets and to target dissidents, pro-democracy organizations and governments.” -- Peter LaMontagne
By Ellen Nakashima
Countering Chinese cyber espionage must be a top priority
By Mackenzie Eaglen & Charles Morrison
Earlier this month, the latest cyber-attack against J.P. Morgan garnered national headlines.
Global security firms cooperate against Chinese hackers
Ten cyber-security companies have cooperated to pool intelligence and combat Chinese state APT actors.
By Tim Ring
“The Axiom threat group is a well-resourced and sophisticated Chinese cyber espionage group that has been operating unfettered for at least four years, and most likely more.” -- Novetta Solutions report
By Ellen Nakashima
Chinese communists
have increasingly targeted activists and dissidents, as well as their
relatives, on non-political charges such as disturbing public order or
business-related misdeeds, instead of free speech and political dissent
charges that would draw international condemnation.
AP
Commerce probing whether Huawei sale of U.S. gear violated sanctions
By Bill Gertz
A Chinese telecommunications company linked to the People’s Liberation Army provided U.S.-origin equipment to Cuba in apparent violation of U.S. economic sanctions on the communist-ruled island.
U.S. officials familiar with intelligence reports said the equipment included U.S.-made modems, routers, and switches for telecommunications networks.