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CYBER WARS
British aide accuses China, Russia over cyber attacks
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Oct 31, 2011

New cyber attack on Japan parliament
Tokyo (AFP) Nov 2, 2011 - Japan's parliament has come under cyber attack again, apparently from the same emails linked to a China-based server that have already hit several lawmakers' computers, an official said Wednesday.

Malicious emails were found on computers used in the upper chamber of the Japanese parliament, a government spokesman said.

"The upper house office has confirmed that seven suspicious emails, the same ones that were sent to the lower house, were found" in computers in the upper house, Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Isao Saito said.

A report last week said that computers in the lower chamber had been hit by a virus, with passwords and other information possibly compromised.

But Saito said the email server of the upper house had not succumbed to any virus and security had been tightened on all machines used by lawmakers there.

Local media reported last month that politicians' computers and a lower house server had contracted a "Trojan horse" virus containing a program that allowed a China-based server to steal passwords and other information.

It was not clear who was behind the attack, the reports said, adding it was possible the China-based server could have been controlled from a third country.

In June, Internet giant Google said a cyber-spying campaign originating in China had targeted the Gmail accounts of senior US officials, military personnel, journalists and Chinese political activists.

China angrily denies that it is orchestrating any online attacks on foreign government agencies and companies.

Japan is already probing a series of recent attacks on computer systems at defence contractor Mitsubishi Heavy, which reportedly could have resulted in the theft of information on military aircraft and nuclear power plants.

Computers at several of Japan's overseas diplomatic missions have also been targeted by hackers, Japanese media said last week.


A British government advisor accused China and Russia on Monday of being behind cyber attacks on other states, ahead of a major London conference designed to agree some global rules on cyberspace.

Pauline Neville-Jones, Prime Minister David Cameron's special representative to business on cyber security, told BBC radio there was a real threat posed by people trying to obtain Britain's national security secrets.

When the interviewer noted that China and Russia are often blamed for involvement in such attacks, Neville-Jones replied: "They certainly are. Some governments are more interested in this kind of activity.

"But there are a lot of private individuals who do this kind of 'hoovering' of other people's systems and then try and sell the stuff that they've managed to obtain to buyers.... There are a lot of actors in this."

Pressed again on whether China and Russia were the biggest players, the former security minister said: "They are certainly some of them."

But Neville-Jones insisted she did not want to "point the finger", particularly ahead of the two-day London conference attended by representatives of China and Russia, as well as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

She said: "What we want to try and do is to create a climate in which people feel that obeying the rules and actually behaving above board serves the national interest and that it is damaging in the end to try to play both sides.

"Because if you are a company that comes from a country like China, you can suffer if in the end people believe it is potentially threatening to employ your products."

In an article in The Times on Monday, Iain Lobban, director of the British intelligence agency GCHQ, warned of a "disturbing" rise in cyber attacks on government and industry systems.

The Government Communications Headquarters chief said the attacks included "one significant (but unsuccessful) attempt" to acquire sensitive information from the computer systems used by the Foreign Office earlier this year.

"The volume of e-crime and attacks on government and industry systems continue to be disturbing," he wrote.

This included attempts to steal British ideas and designs, he said, which "represents an attack on the UK's continued economic wellbeing".

Criminals were also using cyberspace to extort money and steal identities, Lobban said, to the extent that "we are witnessing the development of a global criminal market place".

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Cyber spy campaign targets chemical industry: Symantec
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 31, 2011 - US Internet security firm Symantec on Monday exposed a cyber spying campaign targeting trade secrets at top chemical firms and linked the industrial espionage to a man in China.

At least 48 companies, including some that make advanced materials for military vehicles, were targeted in a campaign Symantec dubbed "Nitro" given the type of information at risk.

"Attacks on the chemical industry are merely their latest attack wave," Symantec security response team members Eric Chien and Gavin O'Gorman said in a report released on Monday.

The attacks targeted NGOs supporting human rights from late April to early May before switching to the motor industry, according to the report.

Major chemical firms, mainly in the United States, Britain, and Bangladesh, came under fire by cyber spies from late July to mid September, Symantec said.

Nitro was aimed at stealing intellectual property for competitive advantage, according to Chien and O'Gorman.

Attackers researched firms, sending selected workers booby-trapped emails that, once opened, secretly infected computers with malicious "Poison Ivy" software designed to steal information.

While various ruses were used to trick workers into opening email attachments to unleash spy software in machines, a typical pretext was to fake a meeting invitation from an established business partner.

Another tactic used by cyber spies was to send employees email purporting to be a security software update that needed to be installed in computers, according to Symantec.

Poison Ivy code was written by a Chinese speaker and Nitro attacks were traced to a server located in the United States but owned by a "20-something male" in the Hebei region of China, the report said.

Symantec referred to the man internally as "Covert Grove" based on a literal translation of his name from Chinese to English.

China has repeatedly denied state involvement in cyber espionage against Western governments and companies, including well-publicized attacks on Internet giant Google that sparked a row between Washington and Beijing.



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Annapolis Junction, MD (SPX) Oct 31, 2011
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