The typical image of Chinese hackers is of operatives working for or with the tacit approval of the government, targeting valuable or sensitive data at foreign companies or government agencies.
While there are plenty of those, many in China—like hackers elsewhere—also target the laptop of their ex-boss or the smartphone of the guy in front of them at the coffee shop.
China’s criminal hacking community numbers at least 400,000 and sucks 100 billion yuan ($15 billion) out of the country’s economy each year, according to Zheng Bu, an angel investor and former executive at cybersecurity company FireEye.
“There is a large criminal ecosystem in China,” says Bryce Boland, FireEye’s chief technology officer for the Asia-Pacific region. And with government restrictions on security technology tightening, individuals and businesses can have a tough time combating the crooks.
Respondents to a 2016 PwC survey of 330 chief executive officers and IT directors of foreign and domestic companies operating inside China and Hong Kong reported a 417 percent year-over-year increase in “detected security incidents,” which can include malware, ransomware, stolen data, and other network breaches.
PwC says these hacks most often target customer databases and proprietary records and typically cost each company in Greater China about $2.6 million annually. Of 496 executives and IT professionals surveyed earlier this year by the American Chamber of Commerce in China, most said data-security threats were more significant in China than in other regions where their businesses operate.
Part of what makes China a lucrative target for hackers is the population’s rapid embrace of mobile payment technology—WeChat Wallet, Alipay, and other transaction software linked to popular social media services. More than half of Chinese consumers expect their phones to become their primary way to pay for things, PwC says. And automatic connections to Wi-Fi are common in China.
“Most people don’t check who is the real administrator of a public Wi-Fi connection,” says Mangesh Fasale, a malware analyst at security firm F-Secure. “Hackers in China often make decoy Wi-Fi access points, and if you connect to them, they can access whatever is on your phone.”
Fully 50 percent of detected institutional hacks in China and Hong Kong were inside jobs, involving former or current employees, according to PwC. In May a Chinese hacker with the Twitter handle @Shenfenzheng, which means “personal identity,” tweeted stolen personal information—including scans of official ID cards and home addresses—apparently belonging to dozens of top Communist Party officials and prominent businesspeople, including Wanda Group CEO Wang Jianlin and his son.
“It’s easy to figure out anybody’s information, whether you’re a government official or a celebrity,” the hacker tweeted. “Getting the common people’s data is like buying cabbage.”
That leak was likely an inside job, too. A police officer confirmed that at least some of the ID cards seem genuine and had come from the Ministry of Public Security’s database, which most police stations across China can access.
“Usernames, ID card information, credit card details—it’s very common for all this data to be stolen,” says Kenneth Wong, PwC’s cybersecurity head for China and Hong Kong. “There have been many incidents where people have gone to websites or trade shows and registered their personal information, and soon after, they will find all their ID information has been leaked online,” he says, often for a price.
China’s hackers have two main goals, says Lester Ross, a partner in the Beijing office of law firm WilmerHale. “First, to extort, to force a company or individual to pay money in order to resolve a problem. And second, to extract proprietary information to benefit somebody else, possibly another company or the government.”
The government’s efforts to control the internet make domestic users more vulnerable, says FireEye’s Boland. Beijing recently stepped up enforcement of a prohibition on the sale or import of hardware and mobile devices containing Trusted Platform Module microchips, used for encrypting passwords and biometric data.
“It’s the international standard, but it’s banned in China,” says Jake Parker, vice president for the U.S.-China Business Council. “As a consequence, companies must use old or untrusted technology systems to secure data. Excluding foreign IT hardware absolutely undermines security goals.”
The government has designated its own standards, but “there’s significant uncertainty over whether local encryption standards match international standards,” he says. “China’s standards are unchecked by outside parties.”
A draft of China’s pending cybersecurity law, which has been reviewed twice by the legislature and could be enacted by the end of the year, would expand the scope of hardware, network equipment, and services that must be accredited by local authorities before being used or sold in the country. The bill would also require more corporate data to be housed exclusively on servers located within China, including sensitive user information.
“China is trying to have more control over cybersecurity technology, which is not something that’s ever done to increase the quality of cybersecurity,” says John Pescatore, a director at IT training company SANS Security. “It’s always done so that a government can maintain its access through the technology.”
If the final legislation includes more stringent directives that companies operating in China use domestic cybersecurity technology, it’ll become even more difficult for companies to protect themselves, says Ross, the WilmerHale partner. “It certainly doesn’t benefit the Chinese customer, either,” he says.
文章
97
浏览
697
获赞
4728
Play as NFL MVP Lamar Jackson in a new Oculus virtual reality game
Sports are on the back burner right now (for obvious pandemic-related reasons), but football fans maTikTok can't get enough of this app that turns your phone into an iPod
Back in those hazy mid-noughties days, long before our phones could do basically everything for us,Video and audio calls on X, formerly Twitter, will be for paying subscribers only
Elon Musk has stated numerous times that he's looking to turn X, the platform formerly known as TwitBest deals of the day Feb. 6: SolaWave light wands, Amazon Kindle, Peacock Premium, and more
We've rounded up the best deals we could find on Feb. 6 —here are some of our top picks:BESTPornhub says Patriots fans watched less porn than Rams fans during Super Bowl
It turns out New Englanders were less likely to engage in hand-to-gland combat during the Super BowlThe iPhone 15 reviews are out. Here are the 3 things people dislike most about it.
The iPhone 15 reviews have crashed the internet, including our own in-depth look into the iPhone 15Microsoft might be saving your conversations with Bing Chat
Uh-oh — Microsoft might be storing information from your Bing chats.This is probably totally fTesla's cheaper Model S and Model X are here, but at cost of lower range
Tesla's Model S and Model X cars are now available at a lower price, but it comes at the expense ofSo it snowed in Seattle, and the dogs are loving it
So it snowed in Seattle. Like, a lot. And wouldn't you know it, the city's canine residents can't geiPhone 15 Pro can record spatial Vision Pro videos
We thought a USB-C port would be the coolest thing about iPhone 15 Pro. We might have been wrong.DurApple iPhone 15 USB
We thought it would be coming, but now it's finally confirmed: The iPhone 15 is getting a USB-C portMassive Books3 collection for training AI was taken down over copyright issues
AI as we know it basically exists to eat up the internet and spit it back out at you. The problem wiEU is investigating Apple Pay and App Store for breaking competition rules
The European Commission has launched two formal investigations into Apple's business practices overGoogle Keep is about to become a lot more useful
Google Keep, the company's note-taking app, is a nice, free way to write down quick notes that syncGoogle and Universal Music might license artists' voices for AI
Google and Universal Music Group (UMG) are reportedly working on a partnership to license artists' v