FBI tells telecom firms to boost security following wide-ranging Chinese
hacking campaign
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[December 04, 2024]
By DAVID KLEPPER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal authorities on Tuesday urged telecommunication
companies to boost network security following a sprawling Chinese
hacking campaign that gave officials in Beijing access to private texts
and phone conversations of an unknown number of Americans.
The guidance issued by the FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure
Security Agency is intended to help root out the hackers and prevent
similar cyberespionage in the future. Officials who briefed reporters on
the recommendations said the U.S. still doesn't know the true scope of
China's attack or the extent to which Chinese hackers still have access
to U.S. networks.
In one sign of the global reach of China's hacking efforts, the
government's warning was issued jointly with security agencies in New
Zealand, Australia and Canada, members of the Five Eyes intelligence
alliance, which also includes the U.S. and Britain.
Dubbed Salt Typhoon by analysts, the wide-ranging cyberespionage
campaign emerged earlier this year after hackers sought to penetrate the
networks of multiple telecommunications companies.
The hackers used their access to telecom networks to target the metadata
of a large number of customers, including information on the dates,
times and recipients of calls and texts.
The hackers succeeded in retrieving the actual audio files of calls and
content from texts from a much smaller number of victims. The FBI has
contacted victims in this group, many of whom work in government or
politics, but officials said it is up to telecom companies to notify
customers included in the first, larger group.
Despite months of investigation, the true scale of China’s operation,
including the total number of victims or whether the hackers still have
some access to information, is currently unknown.
The FBI has said some of the information targeted by the hackers relates
to U.S. law enforcement investigations and court orders, suggesting the
hackers may have been trying to access programs subject to the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA. The law grants American spy
agencies sweeping powers to surveil the communications of people
suspected of being agents of a foreign power.
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But on Tuesday, officials said they think the hackers were more broadly
motivated, hoping to burrow deeply into the nation's telecommunications
systems to gain wide access to Americans' information.
The suggestions for telecom companies released Tuesday are largely
technical in nature, urging encryption, centralization and consistent
monitoring to deter cyber intrusions. If implemented, the security
precautions could help disrupt the Salt Typhoon operation and make it
harder for China or any other nation to mount a similar attack in the
future, said Jeff Greene, CISA's executive assistant director for
cybersecurity and one of the officials who briefed reporters Tuesday.
“We don’t have any illusion that once we kick off these actors they’re
not going to come back,” Greene said.
Several recent high-profile hacking incidents have been linked to China
and what officials say is Beijing's effort to steal technical and
government secrets while also gaining access to critical infrastructure
such as the electrical grid.
In September, the FBI announced that it had disrupted a vast Chinese
hacking operation that involved the installation of malicious software
on more than 200,000 consumer devices, including cameras, video
recorders and home and office routers. The devices were then used to
create a massive network of infected computers, or botnet, that could
then be used to carry out other cyber crimes.
In October, officials said hackers linked to China targeted the phones
of then-presidential candidate Donald Trump and his running mate, Sen.
JD Vance, along with people associated with Democratic candidate Vice
President Kamala Harris.
China has rejected accusations from U.S. officials that it engages in
cyberespionage directed against Americans.
On Tuesday, a spokesperson for China's embassy in Washington called the
U.S. allegations “disinformation."
China's government “firmly opposes and combats all kinds of cyber
attacks,” spokesperson Liu Pengyu wrote in a statement emailed to The
Associated Press. “The US needs to stop its own cyberattacks against
other countries and refrain from using cyber security to smear and
slander China.”
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