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NSA infiltrates servers of China telecom giant Huawei, says report

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NSA infiltrates servers of China telecom giant Huawei, says report | Tech/Gadgets | The Malay Mail Online
MARCH 23, 2014

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The US National Security Agency has infiltrated servers in the headquarters of Chinese telecommunications and internet giant Huawei Technologies Co. ― File picWASHINGTON, March 23 ― The US National Security Agency has infiltrated servers in the headquarters of Chinese telecommunications and internet giant Huawei Technologies Co, obtaining sensitive information and monitoring the communications of top executives, the New York Times reported yesterday.


The newspaper said its report on the operation, code-named “Shotgiant,” was based on NSA documents provided by Edward Snowden, the former agency contractor who since last year has leaked data revealing sweeping US surveillance activities. The German magazine Der Spiegel also reported on the documents.

One of the goals of the operation was to find any connections between Huawei and the Chinese People's Liberation Army, according to a 2010 document cited by the Times.

But the newspaper said the operation also sought to exploit Huawei's technology. It reported that the NSA aimed to conduct surveillance through computer and telephone networks Huawei sold to other nations. If ordered by the US president, the NSA also planned to unleash offensive cyber operations, it said.

The newspaper said the NSA secured access to the servers in Huawei's sealed headquarters in the city of Shenzhen and got information about the workings of the giant routers and complex digital switches the company says connect a third of the world's people. The NSA also tracked communications of Huawei's top executives, the Times reported.

Der Spiegel reported that the NSA breached Huawei's computer network and copied a list of more than 1,400 clients and internal training documents for engineers. “We have access to so much data that we don't know what to do with it,” the magazine cited an NSA document as saying.


The magazine said the NSA also is pursuing a digital offensive against the Chinese political leadership. It named the government targets as former Chinese prime minister Hu Jintao and the Chinese trade and foreign ministries.

‘Plans and intentions’

“Many of our targets communicate over Huawei-produced products. We want to make sure that we know how to exploit these products,” the Times quoted an NSA document as saying, to “gain access to networks of interest” around the world.

“If we can determine the company's plans and intentions,” an analyst wrote in the 2010 document, “we hope that this will lead us back to the plans and intentions” of the Chinese government.

The Times also reported that as Huawei invested in new technology and laid undersea cables to connect its US$40 billion-a-year (RM132 bilion) networking operation, the NSA was interested in getting information on into key Chinese customers including “high priority targets ― Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kenya, Cuba.”

The Times quoted William Plummer, a senior Huawei executive in the United States, as saying that the company did not know it was a target of the NSA.

“The irony is that exactly what they are doing to us is what they have always charged that the Chinese are doing through us,” the Times quoted Plummer as saying.

“If such espionage has been truly conducted then it is known that the company is independent and has no unusual ties to any government, and that knowledge should be relayed publicly to put an end to an era of mis- and disinformation,” the Times quoted Plummer as saying.

The Times noted that US officials see Huawei as a security threat and have blocked the company from making business deals in the United States, worried that it would furnish its equipment with “back doors” that could enable China's military or Chinese-backed hackers to swipe corporate and government secrets.

Snowden last year fled to Hong Kong and then to Russia, where he has asylum. The United States wants him returned to face criminal prosecution.

US officials have denied the United States and NSA have spied on foreign companies to help American companies gain a competitive edge. A US intelligence official said the NSA and other agencies do not provide secretly collected intelligence information that could be commercially sensitive or give a competitive advantage to US firms.

US officials acknowledge that in the course of assessing the economic prospects or stability of foreign countries American agencies might collect data on individual companies.

They also said the United States might collect data on foreign companies in preparation for imposing economic sanctions or taking other foreign policy-related actions against a country and its leadership, but not to aid American companies.

The Times and Der Spiegel articles were published just days before Chinese President Xi Jinping visits Europe and will hold talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, herself a target of electronic surveillance by the NSA.

They also were published during US first lady Michelle Obama's visit to China. In Beijing yesterday, she told an audience of college students that open access to information ― especially online ― is a universal right. ― Reuters

- See more at: NSA infiltrates servers of China telecom giant Huawei, says report | Tech/Gadgets | The Malay Mail Online
 
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NSA infiltrates servers of China telecom giant Huawei, says report | Tech/Gadgets | The Malay Mail Online
MARCH 23, 2014

SHARE WITH OTHERS 0 0 Google +0 0
TOOLS
Huawei_2_840_534_100.JPG
The US National Security Agency has infiltrated servers in the headquarters of Chinese telecommunications and internet giant Huawei Technologies Co. ― File picWASHINGTON, March 23 ― The US National Security Agency has infiltrated servers in the headquarters of Chinese telecommunications and internet giant Huawei Technologies Co, obtaining sensitive information and monitoring the communications of top executives, the New York Times reported yesterday.


The newspaper said its report on the operation, code-named “Shotgiant,” was based on NSA documents provided by Edward Snowden, the former agency contractor who since last year has leaked data revealing sweeping US surveillance activities. The German magazine Der Spiegel also reported on the documents.

One of the goals of the operation was to find any connections between Huawei and the Chinese People's Liberation Army, according to a 2010 document cited by the Times.

But the newspaper said the operation also sought to exploit Huawei's technology. It reported that the NSA aimed to conduct surveillance through computer and telephone networks Huawei sold to other nations. If ordered by the US president, the NSA also planned to unleash offensive cyber operations, it said.

The newspaper said the NSA secured access to the servers in Huawei's sealed headquarters in the city of Shenzhen and got information about the workings of the giant routers and complex digital switches the company says connect a third of the world's people. The NSA also tracked communications of Huawei's top executives, the Times reported.

Der Spiegel reported that the NSA breached Huawei's computer network and copied a list of more than 1,400 clients and internal training documents for engineers. “We have access to so much data that we don't know what to do with it,” the magazine cited an NSA document as saying.


The magazine said the NSA also is pursuing a digital offensive against the Chinese political leadership. It named the government targets as former Chinese prime minister Hu Jintao and the Chinese trade and foreign ministries.

‘Plans and intentions’

“Many of our targets communicate over Huawei-produced products. We want to make sure that we know how to exploit these products,” the Times quoted an NSA document as saying, to “gain access to networks of interest” around the world.

“If we can determine the company's plans and intentions,” an analyst wrote in the 2010 document, “we hope that this will lead us back to the plans and intentions” of the Chinese government.

The Times also reported that as Huawei invested in new technology and laid undersea cables to connect its US$40 billion-a-year (RM132 bilion) networking operation, the NSA was interested in getting information on into key Chinese customers including “high priority targets ― Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kenya, Cuba.”

The Times quoted William Plummer, a senior Huawei executive in the United States, as saying that the company did not know it was a target of the NSA.

“The irony is that exactly what they are doing to us is what they have always charged that the Chinese are doing through us,” the Times quoted Plummer as saying.

“If such espionage has been truly conducted then it is known that the company is independent and has no unusual ties to any government, and that knowledge should be relayed publicly to put an end to an era of mis- and disinformation,” the Times quoted Plummer as saying.

The Times noted that US officials see Huawei as a security threat and have blocked the company from making business deals in the United States, worried that it would furnish its equipment with “back doors” that could enable China's military or Chinese-backed hackers to swipe corporate and government secrets.

Snowden last year fled to Hong Kong and then to Russia, where he has asylum. The United States wants him returned to face criminal prosecution.

US officials have denied the United States and NSA have spied on foreign companies to help American companies gain a competitive edge. A US intelligence official said the NSA and other agencies do not provide secretly collected intelligence information that could be commercially sensitive or give a competitive advantage to US firms.

US officials acknowledge that in the course of assessing the economic prospects or stability of foreign countries American agencies might collect data on individual companies.

They also said the United States might collect data on foreign companies in preparation for imposing economic sanctions or taking other foreign policy-related actions against a country and its leadership, but not to aid American companies.

The Times and Der Spiegel articles were published just days before Chinese President Xi Jinping visits Europe and will hold talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, herself a target of electronic surveillance by the NSA.

They also were published during US first lady Michelle Obama's visit to China. In Beijing yesterday, she told an audience of college students that open access to information ― especially online ― is a universal right. ― Reuters

- See more at: NSA infiltrates servers of China telecom giant Huawei, says report | Tech/Gadgets | The Malay Mail Online
Thanks for sharing.:tup:
 
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NSA make Chinese hackers looked immature, US government fooled the Nato and hack all US allies computer and ear dropping on them. China stand accused from the US government as a cyber security threat to the whole world but US government hacked proved to be the most sophisticated hackers in this world.
 
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NSA make Chinese hackers looked immature, US government fooled the Nato and hack all US allies computer and ear dropping on them. China stand accused from the US government as a cyber security threat to the whole world but US government hacked proved to be the most sophisticated hackers in this world.

What proof do you have the Chinese hackers and their military hackers have been established more than a decade before NSA and US ever thought about cyber warfare branch, in short what NSA is doing for the past 3-4 years China has been doing it for the past late 1998...just because NSA might hacked doesn't prove they are better.
 
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What proof do you have the Chinese hackers and their military hackers have been established more than a decade before NSA and US ever thought about cyber warfare branch, in short what NSA is doing for the past 3-4 years China has been doing it for the past late 1998...just because NSA might hacked doesn't prove they are better.



Your totally clueless, US under president Clinton already established a national agency to combat cyber warfare. NSA isn a agency well establish for more than a decade.
 
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Your totally clueless, US under president Clinton already established a national agency to combat cyber warfare. NSA isn a agency well establish for more than a decade.

Nope you are clueless but I do not under estimate NSA...Chinese are better at it.
 
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The difference between us and the American hackers. We hack but we don't boast about it. Our American friends hack, boast, loudmouth, and cry when they get hack. LOL
Do not underestimate the yankees. They didnt become a superpower by boasting without achievements like China's souhern neighbour.
Treat this as a lesson. US is playing the " Feign madness but keep your balance" strategy.
 
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Do not underestimate the yankees. They didnt become a superpower by boasting without achievements like China's souhern neighbour.
Treat this as a lesson. US is playing the " Feign madness but keep your balance" strategy.
No, we should not underestimate them. What I dislike is their attitude. When they get hack, they cry to the world, badmouth us, and accuse us. When we get hack, we simply don't do that. That's what an adult does.
 
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The difference between us and the American hackers. We hack but we don't boast about it. Our American friends hack, boast, loudmouth, and cry when they get hack. LOL

Maybe individual US/Chinese hacker groups are boasting but the NSA and PLA Unit 61398 aren't.
 
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Even if exposed they claim its for national security or even blame the victim to be at fault, but they are feeding U.S. based companies with information on the "enemies" competition to give them a unfair advantage on their so called "free market".

Then they play innocent and accuse the "Chinese state hackers" of their own criminal misconduct with all their state run so called "free" media.
 
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In short what NSA is doing for the past 3-4 years China has been doing it for the past late 1998...

lol :), this is funny. The NSA can and has been and should monitor all kinds of data traffic (probably including this message that I am typing) in my opinion and it should have been happening for many, many years if not decades. How else can you catch bad guys from communicating in the world of email and messaging communications?
Remember, the Internet was initially designed by the DARPA and its initial implementation was for the US military in late 60's - early 70s.
You are going to tell me that since then, and till the internet became a commercial business, these guys were asleep? They don't kiss and tell. They just kiss :). And every nation has a right to secure its citizens and interests. I also think that every nation has people that monitor e-mail and internet communication for that nation's security and interests. I am ALL for such surveillance as it saves human lives and the American interests.
 
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What proof do you have the Chinese hackers and their military hackers have been established more than a decade before NSA and US ever thought about cyber warfare branch, in short what NSA is doing for the past 3-4 years China has been doing it for the past late 1998...just because NSA might hacked doesn't prove they are better.

The NSA doesn't know how to hack. Don't know where you got that idea. This is a Chinese thing. Just like you pointed out that the Chinese have established hacking aeons ago.
 
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