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he Justice Department filed criminal charges against five hackers in the #Chinese military Monday, accusing them of stealing American trade secrets through cyber-espionage.
The efforts were
directed at six American victim companies: Westinghouse Electric, #US.
subsidiaries of SolarWorld AG, U.S. Steel, Allegheny Technologies and
Alcoa. The United Steel Workers union was also targeted.
Each of the alleged hackers was hit with 31 criminal counts for a conspiracy that stretched back eight years, officials said.
“This is a case alleging economic espionage by members of the Chinese military and represents the first-ever charges against a state actor for this type of hacking,” Attorney General Eric Holder said."Enough is enough," Holder said at a press conference.
Holder Calls Chinese Indictments a 'Wake-Up Call'
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FBI Director James Comey told NBC
News, “For too long, the Chinese government has blatantly sought to use
cyber-espionage to obtain economic advantage for its state-owned
industries.”
The FBI tracked the
computer attacks to Unit 61398 of the Third Department of the People's
Liberation Army, headquartered in a building in Shanghai, officials
said.
Authorities said what
amounted to "21st century burglary" benefited the Chinese competitors of
the U.S. victims, including state-run enterprises, and led to the loss
of American jobs.
As one example, the
hackers stole cost, pricing and strategy information from SolarWorld at
the very time the company was losing market share to Chinese rivals,
officials said.
"These victims are tired of being raided," said Assistant Attorney General John Carlin.
He said that in the
past, when the U.S. has complained about the hacking to China, "they
repsonded by publicly challenging us to provide hard evidence of their
hacking that could cstand up in court.
"Well, today we are," Carlin said.
It's unclear how the
hackers would be brought to justice in the United States. In a separate
case, the feds also have charged the makers of malicious software used
by hackers, Holder announced at the press conference.
In a statement, Alcoa said "no
material information was compromised" during the Chinese intrusion. The
United Steel Workers said, "we find the matter troubling and take it
quite seriously."
"To our knowledge, no
material information was compromised during this incident which occurred
several years ago. Safeguarding our data is a top priority for Alcoa
and we continue to invest resources to protect our systems."
The Obama administration has long considered China the most aggressive nation in obtaining industrial secrets through spying.
"Chinese actors are the
world's most active and persistent perpetrators of economic espionage,"
said the Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive, a U.S.
government agency, in a 2011 report.
A year ago, several
U.S. newspapers, including The New York Times and The Wall Street
Journal, said hackers traced to China attacked their newsroom computer
systems.
A spokesman for China's
foreign ministry called any suggestion that the Chinese were involved
in those intrusions "irresponsible," though U.S. security experts said
China targeted news organizations in the U.S. and overseas to try to
identify the sources of news leaks within the Chinese government.
Those disclosures
prompted a computer security expert and former Justice Department
lawyer, Marc Zwillinger to say, "the only computers these days that are
safe from Chinese government hackers are computers that are turned off,
unplugged, and thrown in the back seat of your car."
Source: NBC News
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