08/10/11

Hong Kong Exchange Hacked | Payback For -Operation Shady RAT

Hong Kong is a special administrative region of China. When someone goes for the Money Shot like this, it looks like a nation state to me. Maybe a message for ”Operation Shady RAT.”. Call this a shot across the bow China. Good Cyber Shot U.S.

Seems like the McAfee is getting in the U.S. viewfinder.In a letter to Dmitri Alperovitch, vice president of threat research for McAfee and author of the report, Bono Mack requested a briefing with his research team and asked how the government and private sector could more effectively mitigate data breaches. Representative Mary Bono Mack, chairman of the House Commerce subcommittee with jurisdiction over cybersecurity, said she was alarmed by the report on a slew of cyber attacks that McAfee has dubbed “Operation Shady RAT.”

Operation Shady RAT is an eye sour for the U.S government and China now is telling us that we should decrease our military and reduce social programs. China is telling us how to be more financially prudent. Well I think someone in high places just kicked China in the cyber financial teeth….

 

mEoW – gatoMalo

Read More>>> http://chinacyberwarfare.wordpress.com/2011/08/10/hong-kong-exchange-hit-by-hackers-good-cyber-shot-u-s/

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08/2/11

Is China going after Facebook?

China’s move to invest in Facebook is to make money but it will lead to more cyber freedom for its people. Facebook has been banned in China since 2009. China can deliver 450 million Chinese to Facebook today. Do you want a piece of that stock action?  The cyber economy is one side the information about its user’s is why China wants’ Social Networks like Facebook in their financial pocket since Google has pulled away.uscyberlabs - el gatoMalo

China’s leaders have been bit and byte by capitalism and cyberspace is the next frontier not only in warfare but also in economics. They want to monitor their people also. Imagine the Chinese government having Facebook statistics. It could hamper civil liberties very quickly. Today China has posed fines and forfeits of business that do not put monitoring software on there Internet Café and business. The Iran’s Green Revolution in 2010 and the Arab Spring this year has showed the Chinese leaders that with a simple cell phone and Cyberspace, the people can topple a Nation without firing a shoot. Social Networks are a tool for organizing rebellion, but it can be monitored by China’s inside agent.

With Facebook on the side of the Chinese leaders, the Chinese will market cyberspace to their own people, and in the Asia Pacific area become the cyberspace leaders in business and personal information and the keepers of the (financial) firewall to Asia. When Facebook finally goes public, the company is expected to be valued at over $100 billion. That’s a daunting sum, even to the portfolio managers of China’s war chest. The flip side is China will generate a middle class and this will defeat communism. China’s dependence on cyberspace to make money will make it as vulnerable to cyber attacks as any other cyber Nation.

el gatoMaloThe Jennie is out of the bottle, the Chinese people have tasted freedom and this is the beginning of a free Cyber China very soon. The business connection alone that China can make in Facebook will deliver billion back to the Chinese people. The Chinese people will never go back to the old way. Cyberspace needs to be kept free not only for the Chinese people but for the people of the world.

My 2© cents -MeOw mEoW -gatomalo

Read More ..> http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/asia-pacific/china/110725/china-facebook-google-economy

 

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06/23/11

Chinese Hacker-CYber Timeline: June 23, 2011

Created by: veteran4life:- GatoMalo@uscyberlabs.com

This timeline covers almost all of 2010 – to get a full up to date time-line email me : GatoMalo@uscyberlabs.com. This time-line opened my eye’s and helped connect the dots like 2003 Microsoft opens up source code to China (Titan Rain-starts part of Moonlight Maze operations-) to get MS-Office sold. The Chinese do not like any code that they did not create, all code has back-doors and the west will use it to destroy China, or so goes the Chinese paranoia.

ENJOY THE TIMELINE:

Chinese Hacker-Cyber Timeline 1994 -2010

Year

Major Incident
1994 -1996 Formation, Expansion and Exploration -
1997
  • The Green Army (China’s first hacker group) is formed
  • China Eagle Union’s preliminary web design registered as Chinawill and title “Voice of the Dragon”.
1998
  • Anti-Chinese riots in Indonesia ignites retaliation from Chinese hackers and provide the catalyst for the creation of the “Red Hacker Alliance
  • Moonlight Maze – The name Moonlight Maze refers to an incident in which U.S. officials accidentally discovered a pattern of probing of computer systems at The PentagonNASA,United States Department of Energy, private universities, and research labs that had begun in March 1998 and had been going on for nearly two years. Sources report that the invaders were systematically marauding through tens of thousands of files — including maps of military installations, troop configurations and military hardware designs. The United States Department of Defense traced the trail back to a mainframe computer in the former Soviet Union but the sponsor of the attacks is unknown and Russia denies any involvement. Moonlight Maze is still being actively investigated by U.S. intelligence (as of 2003).[1]
1999
  • Cyber conflict between People’s Republic of China’s and Taiwan over “Two State Theory”
  • Commercialism is introduced into the Green Army
  • August- Taiwanese and Chinese Hacker War- ERUPTS
2000
  • Denial of Nanjing Massacre leads to attack on Japanese web Sites
  • Taiwanese elections spark conflict with mainland hackers
  • November – Chinese Hacktivist threaten DDOS on Taiwan National Day
  • Hacker activity marking the anniversary of the firstSino-US Hacker war squashed by the Chinese government. Chinese hacktivist appear to goUnder Ground.
  • Beginning of “reckless desire” within the alliance the Green Army falls apart from financial disputes
  • Honker Union of China founded by Lion
  • China Eagle Union founded by Won Tao
  • Javaphile founded by CoolSwallow and Blhuang

2001
  • The Red Hacker Alliance attacks Japan over incident
  • The Japanese Web Site hit over Prime ministers visit to controversial monument.
  • April- First “Sino-US Hacker War” erupts after US EP-3 and PLA F-2 Collided and US crew Detained
2002 Attack on Taiwanese company Lite-On by Javaphile

2003
  • Titan Rain – was the U.S. government‘s designation given to a series of coordinated attacks on American computer systems since 2003. The attacks were labeled as Chinese in origin, although their precise nature (i.e., state-sponsored espionagecorporate espionage, or randomhacker attacks) and their real identities (i.e., masked by proxy, zombie computer, spyware/virus infected) remain unknown. The activity known as ‘Titan Rain’ is believed to be associated with an Advanced Persistent Threat.
  • August- Reports of Chinese hackers against Taiwanese government and commercial sites.
  • The Chinese government grants licenses to open Internet cafe chains to just 10 firms, including three affiliated to the Ministry of Culture, one linked to the politically powerful Central Committee of China Youth League and six state-owned telecoms operators.
  • Microsoft opens up source code to China to get MS-Office -
2004
  • Chinese hackers hit Japan government web site over dispute over Diaoyu Island.
  • July Chinese hacker attacks against Taiwan continues
  • November- Media reports of attacks against several US military installations.
2005
  • Honker Union of China reforms
  • December- In early December 2005 the director of the SANS Institute, a security institute in the U.S., said that the attacks were “most likely the result of Chinese military hackers attempting to gather information on U.S. systems.”[1]
  • March- Several attacks from sites in allegedly in China against multiple sites in Japan.
  • August- Media reporting of Chinese Espionage condemned “Titan Rain
  • September- According to media staff in Taiwan National Security Council is targeted via social engineering e-mails.
  • China purchases over 200 routers from an American company, Cisco Systems that allow the government more sophisticated technological censoring capabilities. In October, the governmentblocks access to Wikipedia.
2006
  • British MPs targeted. (Guardian, Smash and Grab, the High Tech Way)
  • June- Chinese hackers strike at Taiwan MoD.
  • July- Media Report US State Department is recovering from a damaging cyber attack
  • August- Official State hostile cyber force have downloaded up to 20tb (Terra Byte = 1024 Gigabytes = 1 Terabyte -20 terabytes of data)
  • August- Claims of Congressional Computers being hacked are made
  • November- US Naval War College computers infrastructure reportedly attacked.
  • January-  a group of former senior Communist party officials in China criticize the internet censorship, warning that it could “sow the seeds of disaster” for China’s political transition.
  • February-  Google agrees to block websites, which the Chinese Government deems illegal in exchange for a license to operate on Chinese soil. The search engine responds to international criticism by protesting that it has to obey local laws.
  • May-  Chinese Internet users encountered difficulties when connecting to Hotmail, Microsoft’s popular email service. Microsoft says the break in service is caused by technical problems, but there is widespread speculation that the incident is linked to state censorship. In the last week of May, Google and many of its services also became unreachable.
  • July-  researchers at Cambridge University claim to have broken through the Great Firewall of China - the government imposed blocks on large portions of the web.
  • November-  the Chinese language version of Wikipedia is briefly unblocked before being shut down again the same month.

2007
  • WASHINGTON —  The Chinese government hacked a noncritical Defense Department computer system in June, a Pentagon source told FOX News on Tuesday.
  • Pentagon investigators could not definitively link the cyber attack to the Chinese military, the source said, but the technology was sophisticated enough that it indicated to Pentagon officials — as well as those in charge of computer security — that it came from within the Chinese government.
  • 2007 German Chancellery compromised and China accused of being the perpetrator. (Der Spiegel, Merkel’s China Visit Marred by Hacking Allegations)
  • 2007 US Pentagon email servers compromised for an extended period. Cost to recover $100 million. Paul, Ryan. “Pentagon e-mail taken down by hackers.” Ars Technica. 22 June 2007 )
  • 2007 Oak Ridge National Laboratory targeted by Chinese hackers (Stiennon, Haephratic Technique Used to Crack US Research Lab)
  • June- OSD (Office of the Secretary of Defense) Computers attacked via malicious e-mail.
  • August- Reports emerge of cyber attacks of Germany.
  • September- Reports emerge of cyber attacks of UK.
  • September- Reports emerge of cyber attacks of NZL (New Zealand).
  • October-US Nuclear Labs targeted by malicious e-mail.
  • December- MI5 Issues warring on Chinese Cyber Attacks
  • January- Hu Jintao, the Chinese president, pledges to “purify” the Internet. He makes no specific mention of censorship, saying China needs to “strengthen administration and development of our country’s Internet culture.”
  • March- access to the LiveJournal, Xanga, Blogger and Blogspot blogging services from within China become blocked. Blogger and Blogspot become accessible again later the same month.
  • June-  American military warn that China is gearing up to launch a cyber war on the US -plans to hack US networks for trade and defense secrets.
2008
  • March- Reports emerge on cyber attacks on Australia.
  • May- Reports emerge on cyber attacks on India.
  • May- Reports emerge on cyber attacks on Belgium
  • May- US commerce Secretary laptop investigation for data infiltration.
  • June- US elections campaign hacking reported.
  • November- Hacking of White House Computers alleged.
  • November- Massive intrusion on NASA systems released.
  • December- French Embassy Web site attacked in protest over meeting with Dali Lama
  • April-  MI5 writes to more than 300 senior executives at banks, accountants and legal firms warning them that the Chinese army is using Internet spyware to steal confidential information.
  • June- Hu Jintao, the Chinese president, makes his first tentative steps online by answering questions on a web forum.
  • August- China faces widespread criticism for Internet censorship in the run-up to the Beijing Olympics. The government surprises critics by lifting some of the restrictions, making the websites of human rights organizations such as Amnesty International accessible for the first time.
2009
  • March- GhostNet – China’s large-scale cyber-spying -China’s global cyber-espionage network GhostNet penetrates 103 countries. A vast Chinese cyber-espionage network, codenamed GhostNet, has penetrated 103 countries and infects at least a dozen new computers every week, according to researchers.
  • 2009 Three largest resource companies in Australia, including Rio Tinto compromised.(Rio Tinto hacked at time of Hu arrest)
  • 2009 Google Aurora attacks target user data and source code. (McAfee blog)
  • April- Compromise of systems across 103 countries by Chinese cyber spies while Chinese govvernment denies invollment in GhostNet.
  • April- Daily attacks reported against German government.
  • April- The Chinese government denies reports of hacking the Australian Prime Ministers e-mail
  • April- Reports emerge of Chinese hackers targeting South Korea official with social engineered e-mail.
  • March-, Bill Gates weighs into the Internet censorship row, declaring that “Chinese efforts to censor the Internet have been very limited” and that the Great Firewall of China is “easy to go around”. His comments are met with scorn by commentators on the web.
  • March-, the government blocks the video-sharing website YouTube after footage appearing to show police beating Tibetan monks is posted on the site.
  • June-, China imposes an information black-outin the lead up to the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, blocking access to networking sites such as Twitter as well as BBC television reports.
  • June-, China faces a storm of criticism over plans to force all computer users to install Green Dam Internet monitoring software. The plan is dropped in August.
  • June-Lord West, the British security minister,warns that Britain faces the threat of a “cyber cold war” with China amid fears that hackers could gain the technology to shut down the computer systems that control Britain’s power stations, water companies, air traffic, government and financial markets.
  • August-, the US Government begins covertly testing technology to allow people in China and Iran to bypass Internet censorship firewalls set up by their own governments.
  • December-, the government offers rewards of up to 10,000 Yuan (£888) to users who report websites featuring pornography. The number of pornographic searches rockets.

2010

via cyber.amoreswebdesign.com_AmoresWebDesign -Cyber BlogAmoresWebDesign -Cyber Blog » Cyber Security & Warfare Blog.

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06/18/11

Chinese software vulnerable to hackers: How long till LulzSec and Anonymous notice? – International Business Times

With news out that parts of China’s networks are currently vulnerable to cyber attacks from hacker’s, analysts have begun to speculate how long will it be until the hacker groups Anonymous and LulzSec take advantage.

 

Google -vs- China

The bug in China‘s software

A report from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security today revealed that parts of the software systems used by China to run its weapons, utilities and chemical plants systems suffer from an inherent bug in their coding.

The bug reportedly creates a crack in the systems cyber security that could potentially be exploited by hackers.

After the weakness was discovered DHS reportedly contacted China warning it over the bug in its software.

China are not the only country that could be affected. The software was designed by Beijing-based Sunway Force Control Technology Co. Sunway’s products, while most widely used in China, are also used by certain Western companies — meaning that they are just as vulnerable.

According to experts, the hole in security is so severe that a successful attack could potentially cause lasting damage on critical parts of China’s infrastructure.

Sunway has since clarified that it has already developed software patches to plug the security holes.

Unfortunately, the company also admitted that it will take the software’s users weeks, maybe months to install the new security fixes — a rather large window of opportunity for any opportunistic hacker.

LulzSec and Anonymous

The hacker collectives LulzSec and Anonymous have both gained notoriety this year for perpetrating high-profile hacks and cyber attacks against numerous companies and government agencies.

Despite both having been born from the older hacking collective 4Chan both operate under very different principles.

Anonymous

The older group Anonymous, has always marketed itself as “hacktivist”. The group in general targets organisations or companies it feels have done wrong.

Most recently Anonymous has targeted the Turkish government, protesting its continued censorship of the internet.

In a statement released earlier this year the group openly stated its motivation writing:

“We are anonymous. Over the last few years, we have witnessed the censorship taken by the Turkish government, such as blocking YouTube, Rapidshare, Fileserve and thousands of other websites.

“Most recently, the government banned access to Google services. These acts of censorship are inexcusable.

“The internet is a platform for freedom, a place where anyone and everyone can come together, discuss topics, and share information, without fear of government interference”.

With China’s propensity to block websites and ongoing feud with Google, it certainly wouldn’t be beyond the realm of possibility for Anonymous to target China for similar reasons — indeed swap Chinese for Turkish and the statement could be seen to ring equally true.

LulzSec

Despite originating from the same source as Anonymous, the hacker collective LulzSec operate under very different principles — if any.

As the name would suggest — Lulz being a reference to lolz which means lots of laughs — LulzSec’s primary motivation for its attacks seems to be simple entertainment.

While the group did originally claim that its attacks on Sony were a punishment for the company’s extended PlayStation Network outage, it has since committed numerous hacks offering no reason past “just for Lulz”.

Most recently the group has released the email, social networking and password information of 62,000 apparently innocent internet users, simply because fans on its Twitter page asked them to.

Similarly, earlier this week LulzSec hacked the games company Bethesda Sofwork’s website just to win an argument on Twitter.

The group has already shown willingness to target high-profile government departments and agencies. Only this week it reported successful attacks on the U.S. Senate and CIA’s websites.

With this in mind, it seems highly unlikely that the group would pass up the opportunity to target one of the most humourless regimes in the world in its moment of weakness.

via Chinese software vulnerable to hackers: How long till LulzSec and Anonymous notice? – International Business Times.

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06/6/11

Defense minister denies China behind cyber attacks

SINGAPORE – China’s defense minister on Sunday denied that Beijing was behind cyber attacks on foreign targets and said the country was also a victim of Internet hackers.

“It is hard to attribute the real source of attacks and we need to work together to make sure that this security problem won’t be a problem,” Defense Minister Liang Guanglie told a security forum in Singapore.

“Actually in China we also suffered quite a wide range (of) and frequent cyber attacks,” he said through a translator.

“The Chinese government attaches importance also on cyber security and stands firmly against all kinds of cyber crimes,” he said.

“It is important for everyone to obey or follow laws and regulations in terms of cyber security,” said Liang, who joined calls for global coordination to deal with cyber security.

The United States and Britain called Saturday for international cooperation against threats to cyber security following a fresh spate of attacks on government and corporate targets.

A few days before, Internet giant Google said a cyber spying campaign originating in China had targeted Gmail accounts of senior US officials, military personnel, journalists and Chinese political activists.

China said Thursday it was “unacceptable” to blame it for operation.

US aerospace giant Boeing said Friday on the sidelines of the Singapore conference that it was under “continuous” cyber attack but there had been no breach of its databases.

via Defense minister denies China behind cyber attacks | Inquirer News.

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05/13/11

China-U.S. Defense Hotline Shows Gulf Between Nations – Bloomberg

A U.S.-China defense hotline set up three years ago may illustrate the hurdles to improving military relations between the two global powers. It’s been used only four times.

Navy Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will try to advance military cooperation between the two countries when he hosts the chief of staff of the People’s Liberation Army, Chen Bingde, May 15-22. Chen will tour U.S. military installations, attend meetings at the Pentagon and hear a joint concert by the U.S. Army and People’s Liberation Army bands.

via China-U.S. Defense Hotline Shows Gulf Between Nations – Bloomberg.

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05/13/11

FEATURE-As China rises, grand strategy talk back in style | Reuters

The young are the new masters of the world they use technology more fluent since it’s been their since birth. In China we have to look at our future and our past at once. When you take a peasant class person throw them into smart-phone technology, web access, instant communication this is a game changer in the human evolution matrix.

Social media is a two edge blade for cyber security. In one way goverments today have Facebook pages gathering up information on not just you but what makes you tick. It’s a basic naccistic plasure to go back and see if anyone posted a comment on your last trolling mission. We do it and we love it. But it’s this little fluff of information that got Osaba bin Laden caught. It’s the “digital fluff” that leaves a bread crumb trail everywhere in cyber space.

veteran4life

The number learning basic Chinese was rising, he said, but students were keen to show they had knowledge of a broad range of topics from economics to cyber warfare and the effect of social media on politics.

Much of the new struggle for power between states will take place largely out of sight, experts say, with confrontation in cyberspace or over economic issues such as currency strength largely replacing military conflicts or colonial struggles.

via FEATURE-As China rises, grand strategy talk back in style | Reuters.

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05/12/11

Canada Becomes Second-Largest Source of Phishing, Malware, Botnet Activity – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

Cyber-criminals appear to be on the move, switching from Chinese and Eastern European IP addresses in favor of Canadian ones, according to securityresearchers.

An increasing number of malicious traffic and botnets is originating from servers based in Canada, Patrik Runald, a senior manager of security research at Websense, wrote May 9 on the Websense Insights blog. This may be because many Web security services and security products scrutinize traffic originating from China and Eastern Europe more carefully for malicious activity, the researchers said.

In contrast, Canada has a better “cyber-reputation,” and traffic from those servers may be regarded with less suspicion.

via Canada Becomes Second-Largest Source of Phishing, Malware, Botnet Activity – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

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05/9/11

Online Calls for Protests Put China on the Defensive | PCWorld Business Center

Recent online calls for mass protests have sent the Chinese government on the defensive, and while experts say the online activity probably won’t lead to outright revolution, it could force China’s leadership to be more responsive to social problems ailing the country.

Starting last month, an anonymous activist group began calling on the Chinese people to stage a “Jasmine Revolution”, a reference to the anti-government protests that have erupted in the Middle East.

China had already blocked the site from which the calls to protest came. But the government has taken the extra step of preventing any mention of related terms. Searches for the word “Jasmine” have been blocked on microblog services, while users of social networking sites have been barred from posting any information related to the protest calls.

The Chinese government remains averse to protests or movements of any kind that might threaten the leadership. The Falun Gong spiritual movement, for example, was banned in China when it grew too big, and the government has maintained a watch on Tiananmen Square in Beijing ever since the protests there in 1989, when the Chinese government called in the military to squash a student-led democracy movement.

China’s attempts to prevent unrest also extend to the mass communication abilities of the Internet, with any talk of government overthrow online immediately silenced. Chinese authorities even shut down the Internet in the western region of Xinjiang when ethnic rioting erupted there in 2009.

Although the recent protest calls have yet to spark demonstrations in China, the online activity has been powerful enough to force the Chinese government to take action, said David Bandurski, a researcher at the University of Hong Kong’s China Media Project. “It’s clearly shown the capacity of the Internet,” Bandurski said. “It has the capacity to really pressure the leadership.”

Since the protest calls were made, China has deployed large police forces across cities in China, harassed foreign journalists and arrested human rights activists.

The moves show that the Chinese government is clearly “cautious” about the Internet, Bandurski said.

The activists originally posted their protest calls on the Chinese political blog boxun.com. After it went offline, they set up a blog at blogspot.com where they wrote: “We learned that Chinese government employs hundreds of thousands of people to make overflow attacks on Boxun, VOA, Twitter and other websites, in order to block information about this movement.”

Bandurski described the government’s actions as “a kind of full-on assault,” adding that: “The Chinese leadership is responding to this in a kind of draconian way with very clever systems of technical controls to stop the threat of people gathering.”

The activists behind the protest calls are urging the Chinese people to bring forth democracy in the country and have called for new rallies this Sunday, March 6.

Activists contacted for this story declined to answer questions. “At this point, none of us can reveal the personal identities nor the locations or number of people working on this,” one of the organizers said.

The recent online protest calls, however, are not as serious as previous attempts at reform, said Nicholas Bequelin, a senior researcher at New York-based Human Rights Watch. The online activity “seems to me to have been an opportunistic move by people mostly based outside of China,” he said.

“What makes the Chinese authorities nervous is not the call itself, but the realization with the Middle East revolts that the Internet can actually play a major role in triggering protests,” he said.

China has the world’s largest Internet population with 457 million Internet users. The country is notorious for taking down or blocking politically sensitive content on the web. U.S. sites like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube are all inaccessible, although users can pay for online services that allow them to get past Chinese Internet censors.

The Chinese government also exercises strict control over news. In the case of the anti-government protests in Egypt, it restricted information related to the event, with coverage limited to photos and short articles.

While the Chinese government does not tolerate open calls for revolution, “Chinese cyberspace is full of views critical of officials and government policies,” said Wenran Jiang, a professor at the University of Alberta. “The government, while controlling the Internet, also gets feedback from the masses and responds to those complaints in order to defuse crises.”

This happened on Sunday when China’s Premier Wen Jiabao answered questions from Internet users during a two-hour webcast. Wen said that the government would tackle the challenges of inflation, rising housing prices and corruption.

Wen has spoken in similar webcasts before. But the timing of the appearance suggests that the government wanted to address the current tensions, experts said.

“These are as close as you get to town hall meetings in the U.S.,” said Jiang. “In that sense, the growth of the Internet in China is a positive story, and it has played a role in putting the government on alert and forced it to be more responsive.”

The recent protest calls for a Jasmine revolution, however, just add to the mounting pressures facing the Chinese government, experts say.

“I would not be surprised that those calls and similar Internet-based messages could lead to tangible policy changes, even meaningful reforms in China,” said Fei-Ling Wang, a professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

But some are questioning how long China can maintain strict control over the Internet without allowing for free speech. Last month, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said China and other countries with prevalent Internet censorship would face long-term costs like social unrest. Mention of the speech was immediately blocked on microblogs searches in China.

China is making a “gamble” by believing it can continue with its Internet censorship policies, said Phelim Kine, an Asia researcher also with Human Rights Watch.

“So far it’s working for the Chinese government,” he said. “It’s a cat-and-mouse game of people trying to push the envelope through the Internet and into the public sphere.”

via Online Calls for Protests Put China on the Defensive | PCWorld Business Center.

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05/9/11

Change.org victim of DDoS attack from China

Change.org, an online petitioning platform, has come under an ongoing distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack originating from China after the site hosted a call urging Chinese authorities to release artist Ai Weiwei from custody.

The attacks, which started late Sunday, have nearly brought down the site, according to Change.org founder Ben Rattray.

DDoS attacks work by using hundreds or thousands of hacked computers to send traffic to a website, overwhelming it with data so it becomes inaccessible to normal users.

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Change.org said the current attack originates from an expanding group of computers primarily based in China, and has yet to stop. This is the first time the site has been hit with a DDoS attack.

Change.org has been hosting a online petition calling for the release of Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who is currently under arrest. The petition has attracted almost 100,000 people from 175 countries, making it one of Change.org’s most successful international campaigns, Rattray said.

“It’s pretty clear the attack is in response to the campaign,” he added. “It’s extraordinary that somebody in China with a high-level of technical sophistication can impact the ability for people around the world to organize.”

The online call coincided with demonstrations across the world this past Sunday, which also called for the artist’s release. Ai, who is also known for his activism, has been detained as part of a Chinese government crackdown on political dissidents in the country.

Authorities in the country have arrested other human rights activists and clamped down on the information flow, following previous online postings that began in February calling for a “Jasmine revolution” against the Chinese government.

Change.org is currently blocked in China. Internet censors in the country regularly block sites that are deemed to politically sensitive.

Despite the block, the computers involved in the DDoS attack are managing to find a way around the country’s national Internet firewall, said Rattray.

In the past, other sites have been the victims of cyber attacks coming from China. This March, blog publishing platform WordPress.com also reported being hit with a DDoS attack originating from China.

Chinese hackers have also allegedly launched cyber attacks to steal data from foreign energy accompanies, according to security vendor McAfee. In 2009, Google was also the victim of an attack originating from China that was aimed at accessing the Gmail accounts of human rights activists

The Chinese government has previously responded to these reports by denying it is involved in any cyberattacks, adding that China has also been a victim of hacking attempts.

The true source of DDoS attacks is often unclear. Although Change.org has traced the current attack to servers in China, it is also possible the computers are under the control of hackers based in another country.

Change.org reports that both the FBI and U.S. State Department are looking into the DDoS attack.

“We won’t stop or take down anything because of this DDoS attack,” Rattray said. “We believe in the fundamental right of the people to organize around issues they care about it.”

via Change.org victim of DDoS attack from China.

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