Firewall breached: NSA has created a map, showing how Chinese hackers have successfully breached American cyber-security more than 600 times to steal secrets from businesses and government and military agencies in the past five years
New York Times: U.S. Decides to Retaliate Against China’s Hacking
The Obama administration has determined that it must retaliate against China for the theft of the personal information of more than 20 million Americans from the databases of the Office of Personnel Management, but it is still struggling to decide what it can do without prompting an escalating cyberconflict.
The decision came after the administration concluded that the hacking attack was so vast in scope and ambition that the usual practices for dealing with traditional espionage cases did not apply.
But in a series of classified meetings, officials have struggled to choose among options that range from largely symbolic responses — for example, diplomatic protests or the ouster of known Chinese agents in the United States — to more significant actions that some officials fear could lead to an escalation of the hacking conflict between the two countries.
Update #1: US Decides To Retaliate Against China For Cyberattack: Report -- IBTimes
US Deliberates Retaliatory Action for Mass Data Breach Linked to China -- Sputnik
Update #2: Exclusive: Secret NSA Map Shows China Cyber Attacks on U.S. Targets -- NBC
Update #3: Shocking map shows how Chinese hackers have breached American cyber-security more than 600 times to steal secrets in the past five years -- Daily Mail
WNU Editor: Too little .... and waaayyy too late.
Obama retaliate?
ReplyDeleteAgainst political opponent at home but not against a foreign one.
Unless they be small like Israel.
Poor North Dakota. Even the Red Chinese
ReplyDeletewon't take them seriously.
ofs
I have not heard from you for awhile OFS. Good to know that you are OK.
ReplyDeleteWNU Editor,
ReplyDeleteThank you.
I'm doing fine. I've just decided to
not comment about much anymore. I ran
into an old acquaintance not too long
ago who started quoting things I've
said in the past. Now, none of it was
stuff I regret or retract or find
particularly damning, but I'm not used
to being remembered. I also heard a
prescient lecture from 1973 and found it
challenged me. In it, the speaker
said, that databases store everything
forever and they never forgive and
they never forget. None of this is new
news, but it hit me hard.
ofs