Chinese Computer Hack Attacks Slow Ahead of Obama Summit: Reports

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 21 September 2015 12:35 IST
Chinese Computer Hack Attacks Slow Ahead of Obama Summit: Reports
Major intrusions by Chinese hackers of U.S. companies' computer systems appear to have slowed in recent months, private-sector experts say, ahead of a meeting between China's president and President Barack Obama with cyber-security on the agenda.

Three senior executives at private-sector firms in the field told Reuters they had noticed a downtick in hacking activity.

"The pace of new breaches feels like it's tempering," said Kevin Mandia, founder of Mandiant, a prominent company that investigates sophisticated corporate breaches.

A point of friction in U.S.-Chinese relations, cyber-security will be a major focus of talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping this week in Washington, D.C., Obama said earlier this week.

In the same remarks, Obama called for a global framework to prevent the Internet from being "weaponized" as a tool of national aggression, while also holding out the prospect of a forceful U.S. response to China over recent hacking attacks.

Advertisement

Mandia has probed major corporate breaches, including those at Sony Pictures Entertainment, Target and healthcare insurers. Experts have connected some of these to a breach of classified background investigations at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, which was traced to China.

Government-supported hackers in China may have backed off recently as Chinese and U.S. officials began negotiating in earnest over cyber-security ahead of the Obama-Xi summit.

Advertisement

"In my gut, I feel like the Chinese and the U.S. over the next couple of years are going to figure this out," said Mandia, now an executive at Mandiant's parent, FireEye Inc.

The FBI declined to comment on Friday.

The Obama administration has been weighing bringing economic sanctions against Chinese companies that have benefited from intellectual property theft. But no sanctions have been brought and U.S. companies disagree on the wisdom of such retaliation.

Advertisement

U.S. Assistant Attorney General John Carlin, who leads the Justice Department's National Security Division, has scheduled a press availability on cyber-security for Wednesday in Pittsburgh.

That is the same day that President Xi is scheduled to attend an Internet industry forum in Seattle hosted by Microsoft Corp. Xi will depart the next day for Washington, D.C.

On Saturday, a Justice Department spokesman said Carlin will make routine remarks and answer questions. The spokesman said he expected U.S cyber espionage charges brought in May 2014 against five Chinese army officers would come up. The indictment alleged the officers conspired from 2006 to 2014 to hack into U.S. entities' computers and steal information.

In July, the FBI said economic espionage cases it had handled in the preceding 12 months were up 53 percent from a year earlier, with China the biggest offender. Statistically, that period could have included a falloff toward the end.

While Mandia said his perception of a slowdown was unscientific and based on "how often my phone has been ringing," others voiced similar views.

Stuart McClure, chief executive of Cylance Inc., a smaller cyber-security firm, said he too had noticed a drop-off in presumed Chinese attacks going back about six months.

"He has more volume" and so has a broader perspective, McClure said of Mandia. "But we have not seen the samples of attacks like we had been."

Mandia and McClure spoke Thursday on the sidelines of the Billington CyberSecurity Summit in Washington, D.C.

Tom Kellermann, chief cyber-security officer at large security vendor Trend Micro Inc., said in an interview in New York he also had seen fewer new Chinese hacks recently, though he said one campaign that compromised U.S. defense contractors years ago might be adding new government targets.

"There's been a consolidation in activity coming out of China," Kellermann said. "It's down a notch."

A spokeswoman for security investigations firm CrowdStrike said in an email that it had not seen a significant change.

The Billington conference featured White House cyber-security policy coordinator Michael Daniel. After speaking on a panel, Daniel suggested to reporters that Chinese officials have been listening hard to U.S. complaints on economic spying.

© Thomson Reuters 2015

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Oppo K13x 5G With 6,000mAh Battery Launched in India: See Price
  2. Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Pro Review: Your Work Companion
  3. Asus V470VA All-in-One PC Review: A Stylish AiO PC For Everyday Work
  4. iPhone 17 Said to Be Available in New Colour Options
  5. Redmi A4 5G Gets a New RAM and Storage Variant in India
  6. Nothing Phone 3 Full Specifications Surface Ahead of Its July 1 Debut
  7. Oakley Meta Glasses With Meta AI Assistant Announced: See Features
  1. BSNL 5G FWA Plans in India to Start at Rs. 999 a Month With 100Mbps Speed; Pilot to Begin in September
  2. Redmi A4 5G Now Available in New 6GB RAM and 128GB Storage Variant in India: Price, Availability
  3. Bitcoin Nears $101,000 While Altcoin Prices Decline Amid Rising Geopolitical Tensions
  4. Apple's 20th Anniversary iPhone to Debut in 2027 With Under-Display Camera, Face ID: Report
  5. Oppo K13x 5G With 50-Megapixel Rear Camera, 6,000mAh Battery Launched in India: Price, Specifications
  6. Perplexity Bot on X Gets AI-Powered Video Generation Capability, Available to All Users
  7. Samsung Galaxy Buds Core Launch in India Teased: Expected Features
  8. Xiaomi Mix Flip 2, Redmi K80 Ultra Launch Date Confirmed; Xiaomi Pad 7S Pro, Redmi K Pad to Debut Alongside
  9. iPhone 17 Tipped to Be Available in New Colour Options
  10. Nothing Phone 3 Tipped to Get 50-Megapixel Triple Cameras; Specifications Leak Ahead of Launch
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.