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		U.S. charges seven in wide-ranging Chinese hacking effort
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		 [September 17, 2020] 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. 
		Justice Department said on Wednesday it has charged five Chinese 
		residents and two Malaysian businessmen in a wide-ranging hacking effort 
		that encompassed targets from videogames to pro-democracy activists. 
 Federal prosecutors said the Chinese nationals had been charged with 
		hacking more than 100 companies in the United States and abroad, 
		including software development companies, computer manufacturers, 
		telecommunications providers, social media companies, gaming firms, 
		nonprofits, universities, think-tanks as well as foreign governments and 
		politicians and civil society figures in Hong Kong.
 
 U.S. officials stopped short of alleging the hackers were working on 
		behalf of Beijing, but in a statement Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey 
		Rosen expressed exasperation with Chinese authorities, saying they were 
		- at the very least - turning a blind eye to cyber-espionage.
 
 "We know the Chinese authorities to be at least as able as the law 
		enforcement authorities here and in likeminded states to enforce laws 
		against computer intrusions," Rosen said. "But they choose not to."
 
 He further alleged that one of the Chinese defendants had boasted to a 
		colleague that he was "very close" to China's Ministry of State Security 
		and would be protected "unless something very big happens."
 
		
		 
		
 "No responsible government knowingly shelters cyber criminals that 
		target victims worldwide in acts of rank theft," Rosen said.
 
 The Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediately return an email 
		seeking comment. Beijing has repeatedly denied responsibility for 
		hacking in the face of a mounting pile of indictments from U.S. 
		authorities.
 
 Along with the alleged hackers, U.S. prosecutors also indicted two 
		Malaysian businessmen, Wong Ong Hua, 46, and Ling Yang Ching, 32, who 
		were charged with conspiring with two of the digital spies to profit 
		from computer intrusions targeting videogame companies in the United 
		States, France, Japan, Singapore and South Korea.
 
 The Justice Department said the pair operated through a Malaysian firm 
		called SEA Gamer Mall, an online gaming store.
 
 SEA Gamer said in a statement it was aware of the allegations against 
		their employees but denied that the company was involved in wrongdoing.
 
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			A Wanted poster is displayed as Deputy Attorney General Jeffery A 
			Rosen speaks during a Justice Department's news conference to 
			announce charges in China-related intrusion campaigns, in Washington 
			D.C., U.S., September 16, 2020. Tasos Katopodis/Pool via REUTERS 
            
 
            "Without compromising the integrity of any ongoing legal process, 
			suffice to say that the company has never engaged in any illegal 
			activity," it said, adding that it was cooperating with authorities.
 U.S. Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Demers 
			said on Wednesday that the Malaysian defendants were in custody but 
			were likely to fight extradition.
 
 The Justice Department said it has obtained search warrants this 
			month resulting in the seizure of hundreds of accounts, servers, 
			domain names and "dead drop" Web pages used by the alleged hackers 
			to help siphon data from their victims.
 
 The Department said Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O> had developed measures 
			to block the hackers and that the company's actions "were a 
			significant part" of the overall U.S. effort to neutralize them. 
			Microsoft acknowledged this in a statement that applauded government 
			officials for "taking action to protect our customers."
 
 (Reporting by David Shepardson, Susan Heavey, Raphael Satter and 
			Mark Hosenball in Washington; Additional reporting by Rozanna Latiff 
			in Kuala Lumpur; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Matthew Lewis and 
			Richard Chang)
 
 
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