From 7-11s to train stations, cyber attacks plague Taiwan over Pelosi 
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		 [August 04, 2022]  
		By Sarah Wu and Eduardo Baptista 
		 
		TAIPEI/BEIJING (Reuters) - As U.S. House of 
		Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi made a brief visit to Taiwan this 
		week that enraged Beijing, the welcome she received from government 
		officials and the public was in sharp contrast with a different sort of 
		message that began popping up elsewhere on the island.  
		 
		On Wednesday, in some branches of 7-11 convenience stores in Taiwan, the 
		television screens behind cashiers suddenly switched to display the 
		words: "Warmonger Pelosi, get out of Taiwan!" 
		 
		The largest 24-hour convenience store chain on the island was the victim 
		of what Taiwanese authorities are calling an unprecedented amount of 
		cyber attacks on government websites belonging to the presidential 
		office, foreign and defence ministries as well as infrastructure such as 
		screens at railway stations, in protest against Pelosi's visit.  
		  
		
		
		  
		
		 
		Taipei has not directly blamed the attacks on the Chinese government, 
		but has said that the attacks on government websites -- which paralysed 
		the sites' operations -- originated from addresses in China and Russia. 
		It also said the firms whose displays were changed had used Chinese 
		software that could have contained backdoors or Trojan horse malware.
		 
		 
		Taiwan's digital minister Audrey Tang said the volume of cyber attacks 
		on Taiwan government units on Tuesday, before and during Pelosi's 
		arrival, surpassed 15,000 gigabits, 23 times higher than the previous 
		daily record. 
		 
		Lo Ping-cheng, Taiwan Cabinet spokesman, said on Wednesday that the 
		government had stepped up security at key infrastructure including power 
		plants and airports and increased the cyber security alertness level 
		across government offices. On Thursday, he said no related damage had 
		been detected so far. 
		 
		"Government departments have been very careful. In these past few days, 
		in terms of public security, we have set up a three-tier government 
		security and communication mechanism, it is already tough and defensive 
		enough so these adaptations have been beneficial," he told a briefing.  
		
		THEATRE, RATHER THAN THREAT  
		 
		Pelosi's visit triggered furious responses from the Chinese public and 
		Beijing, who said the trip to the self-ruled island it regards as its 
		territory infringed its sovereignty. On Thursday, China fired missiles 
		around Taiwan as part of a series of unprecedented military drills. 
		 
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			U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks at a 
			meeting with Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen (not pictured) at the 
			presidential office in Taipei, Taiwan August 3, 2022. Taiwan 
			Presidential Office/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			
			
			  
            A cybersecurity research organisation said the attacks against 
			Taiwanese government websites before Pelosi's visit were likely 
			launched by Chinese activist hackers rather than the Chinese 
			government. 
			 
			Hacker group APT 27, which has been accused by Western authorities 
			of being a Chinese state-sponsored group, claimed responsibility for 
			the cyber attacks on Taiwan on Wednesday, saying on YouTube that 
			they were done to protest how Pelosi had defied China's warnings 
			with her visit. It also claimed it had shut down 60,000 
			internet-connected devices in Taiwan.  
			 
			Asked about the cyber attacks in Taiwan on Thursday at a regular 
			Chinese foreign ministry briefing, a spokesperson declined to 
			comment. The Cyberspace Administration of China, which regulates the 
			country's internet, did not immediately respond to a request for 
			comment.  
			 
			Experts said that the cyber attacks, combined with China's live 
			firing exercises, provide Taiwan's leaders with a preview of what an 
			invasion from China would look like. 
			 
			In recent years, several reports from think tanks in Taiwan and the 
			United States have emphasised the high likelihood that, in the event 
			of a military assault of Taiwan, China would first launch a 
			debilitating cybersecurity attack on Taiwan’s key infrastructure, 
			such as its power grid.  
			 
			Still, Eryk Waligora, a cyber threat intelligence specialist at 
			Accenture, said the latest ones appeared to be "more theatre than 
			threat" so far. He said past attacks, like a campaign between 
			November last year to February that forced several financial 
			institutions in Taiwan to suspend online transactions, were more 
			sophisticated technically, and damaging.  
			  
            
			  
			 
			“There have certainly been far worse cyber-attacks,” he said. 
			 
			(Reporting by Sarah Wu and Eduardo Baptista; Additional reporting by 
			Yimou Lee and Martin Pollard, Writing by Brenda Goh; Editnig by Kim 
			Coghill) 
            
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