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Exclusive: US disabled Chinese hacking network targeting critical infrastructure

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Exclusive: US disabled Chinese hacking network targeting critical infrastructure

Jan 29 (Reuters) – The U.S. government in recent months launched an operation to fight a pervasive Chinese hacking operation that compromised thousands of internet-connected devices, two Western security officials and a person familiar with the matter said.

The Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation sought and received legal authorization to remotely disable aspects of the Chinese hacking campaign, the sources told Reuters.

The Biden administration has increasingly focused on hacking, not only for fear nation states may try to disrupt the U.S. election in November, but because ransomware wreaked havoc on Corporate America in 2023.
The hacking group at the center of recent activity, Volt Typhoon, has especially alarmed intelligence officials who say it is part of a larger effort to compromise Western critical infrastructure, including naval ports, internet service providers and utilities.

While the Volt Typhoon campaign initially came to light in May 2023, the hackers expanded the scope of their operations late last year and changed some of their techniques, according to three people familiar with the matter.

The widespread nature of the hacks led to a series of meetings between the White House and private technology industry, including several telecommunications and cloud computing companies, where the U.S. government asked for assistance in tracking the activity.

Such breaches could enable China, national security experts said, to remotely disrupt important facilities in the Indo-Pacific region that in some form support or service U.S. military operations. Sources said U.S. officials are concerned the hackers were working to hurt U.S. readiness in case of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.

China, which claims democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has increased its military activities near the island in recent years in response to what Beijing calls “collusion” between Taiwan and the United States.

Item 1 of 2 Computer code is seen on a screen above a Chinese flag in this July 12, 2017 illustration photo. REUTERS/Thomas White/Illustration/File Photo

The Justice Department and FBI declined to comment. The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

China’s foreign ministry called the accusations “groundless” and “extremely irresponsible”, and said it was the U.S. that was “the initiator and master of cyber attacks”.

“Since last year, China’s network security agencies have issued reports one after another, revealing that the U.S. government has carried out cyber attacks on China’s key infrastructure for a long time. Such irresponsible policies and practices put the global critical infrastructure at great risk,” ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told a regular news conference on Thursday.

When Western nations first warned about Volt Typhoon in May, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said the hacking allegations were a “collective disinformation campaign” from the Five Eyes countries, a reference to the intelligence sharing grouping of countries comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Volt Typhoon has functioned by taking control of vulnerable digital devices around the world – such as routers, modems, and even internet-connected security cameras – to hide later, downstream attacks into more sensitive targets, security researchers told Reuters.

This constellation of remotely controlled systems, known as a botnet, is of primary concern to security officials because it limits the visibility of cyber defenders that monitor for foreign footprints in their computer networks.

“How it works is the Chinese are taking control of a camera or modem that is positioned geographically right next to a port or ISP (internet service provider) and then using that destination to route their intrusions into the real target,” said a former official familiar with the matter. “To the IT team at the downstream target it just looks like a normal, native user that’s sitting nearby.”

The use of botnets by both government and criminal hackers to launder their cyber operations is not new. The approach is often used when an attacker wants to quickly target numerous victims simultaneously or seeks to hide their origins.

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Reporting by Christopher Bing in Washington, Karen Freifeld in New York and James Pearson in London; Additional reporting by Antoni Slodkowski and Liz Lee in Beijing; Editing by Chris Sanders, Lisa Shumaker and Barbara Lewis

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