Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The Chinese Menace

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/computersecurity/2008-06-10-olympicspy_N.htm

As revealed by USA Today, the Chinese are after more than just Gold Medals at this summer's Olympics. They also seek highly confidential and highly secret information. This is just another reason why we shouldn't let rogue regimes hold the Olympics in the first place. It will be a gold mine for information. Why should the Chinese send intelligence agents to foreign countries when they can just attract important businessmen and leaders to polluted China. This threat needs to be taken seriously by people. This blog, calls again for President Bush and other Western leaders to boycott the Olympics and withdraw their athletes. Here is the full text:

National security agencies are warning businesses and federal officials that laptops and e-mail devices taken to the Beijing Olympics are likely to be penetrated by Chinese agents aiming to steal secrets or plant bugs to infiltrate U.S. computer networks.
Chinese government and industry use electronic espionage to "easily access official and personal computers," says one recent report by the Overseas Security Advisory Council, a federally chartered panel comprising security experts from corporations and the State, Commerce and Treasury departments.
Equipment left unsupervised for just minutes in a hotel or even during a security screening can be hacked, mined and bugged, adds Larry Wortzel, who chairs the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, a federal panel that monitors China-related security issues for Congress. China's government also controls Internet service providers and wireless networks, he says, so computers and PDAs can be monitored and planted with bugs remotely, too.
"There is a high likelihood — virtually 100% — that if an individual is of security, political, or business interest to Chinese … security services or high technology industries, their electronics can and will be tampered with or penetrated," Wortzel says.
China's embassy did not respond to requests for comment but usually dismisses espionage charges.

No comments: