China Allegedly Admits Role in Cyberattacks on US Infrastructure Over Taiwan Support
- During a secret meeting, Chinese officials reportedly claimed their involvement in hacking U.S. infrastructure, citing America's support for Taiwan as the reason behind these attacks.
- The National Counterintelligence and Security Center stated that China's intelligence services are recruiting U.S. Federal employees by posing as private organizations.
- President Trump revoked the security clearance of former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Chris Krebs, alleging First Amendment violations.
- NSA Cybersecurity Division Director Dave Luber and Cyber Command Executive Director Morgan Adamski canceled appearances at the RSA security conference due to agency restrictions on nonessential travel.
53 Articles
53 Articles
The story behind the story is AI generated news
I clicked a Google link to a news story that had the Chinese admitting that they have been doing cyber attacks against U.S. infrastructure with the reason being our continued support of Taiwan. It was on Investing.com. At the end was a disclaimer that...
China officials privately acknowledged role in U.S. infrastructure hacks
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ESET discovers Chinese company's cyber espionage operation
The United States Department of Justice (DOJ) filed an indictment against employees of the Chinese company I-SOON for their involvement in various global cyberespionage operations. Cyber espionage was aimed at European institutions. Cyberespionage...
Sources: China claimed responsibility for cyberattacks against the US
A Chinese delegation reportedly claimed responsibility for widespread cyberattacks against the United States at a secret meeting in December, the Wall Street Journal reports. Since then, tensions between the superpowers have become increasingly heated.
China Admits to Cyberattacks: U.S. Infrastructure Was the Target
In a private meeting last December, Chinese officials made a vague but chilling admission—Beijing is behind a long-running series of cyberattacks targeting U.S. infrastructure. The acknowledgment marks a sharp escalation in digital hostilities between the two global powers. Key Facts: In December, Chinese cyber officials indirectly admitted to years of attacks on U.S. critical infrastructure. The Volt Typhoon campaign targeted U.S. ports, water…
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