[iwar] China Cyberwar on USA

From: Ravi V Prasad (r_v_p@yahoo.com)
Date: 2002-11-13 03:33:43


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From: Ravi V Prasad <r_v_p@yahoo.com>
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Date: Wed, 13 Nov 2002 03:33:43 -0800 (PST)
Subject: [iwar] China Cyberwar on USA
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From StrategyWorld.com, StrategyPage.com

http://www.strategypage.com

November 7, 2002

The United States is trying to come up with ideas on
how to deal with China's formidable army of "hacker
irregulars." In the past few years, whenever there is
dispute between the U.S. and China, especially one
that makes a big splash in the media, young Chinese
computer enthusiasts make attacks on American web
sites. This first happened after the Chinese embassy
in Yugoslavia was accidentally bombed in 1999. Another
flurry of attacks occurred after the May, 2001
collision of a Chinese fighter with an American naval
patrol aircraft. The Chinese government maintains that
it has no control over these patriotic young Chinese
hackers. But when May 2002 rolled around, accompanied
by months of chat room and email discussion of a first
anniversary attack on U.S. web sites, nothing
happened. Why? It seems the Chinese government issued
a statement a few days before the anniversary
suggesting that any hack attacks on U.S. sites would
not be a good idea. 

So far, none of the Chinese attacks, as far as anyone
can tell, were much more than a nuisance. But year by
year, the attackers have shown more skill. Now it is
pretty certain that the Chinese are formally
organizing some of these "patriotic hackers." By
maintaining the myth that these young Internet users
are operating independently, the government can
unleash these kids on any nation without being tagged
as a warmonger. This deception won't stand much
scrutiny. American hackers have been able to back
track some of the Chinese attacks to Chinese
government computers. If the Chinese were on the ball
and well organized, they would not have allowed
hackers to use government computers. Or at the very
least, they would have made sure the hackers knew how
to cover their tracks. 

The Chinese have boasted that their official
cyberwarrior units have "weapons grade computer
viruses." It would be a trivial matter to slip their
"volunteers" some of these military grade weapons and
let the kids unleash them. A military grade virus is,
in theory, one that does not spread wildly, infecting
every PC it encounters, but instead hits a more
specific target. Whether or not that kind of
technology works, the Chinese have already shown that
the "hacker volunteers" gambit already does. 


http://www.strategypage.com

From StrategyWorld.com, StrategyPage.com


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