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Is Someone in China Reading Your E-mails?

By Maura Moynihan, AlterNet. Posted January 12, 2009.


China has a vast intelligence-gathering operation of Chinese citizens recruited to spy on and hack into U.S. computers.
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On Dec. 16, 2008, Time magazine announced the annual People of the Year list. Barack Obama topped the list, and one runner-up was China's Zhang Yimou, the epic filmmaker and Olympic impresario, for creating "arguably the grandest spectacle of the new millennium," the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, which "showcased the rise of China as a world power."

The bland celebration of China’s version of Leni Riefenstahl dodged the uncomfortable truth that the Olympics enabled the Chinese Communist Party to expand its intelligence operations within the corporations and governments that flew to Beijing for a sports party.

China is now flexing its post-Olympic power with an aggressive new cyberespionage campaign, targeting government, military and civilians with equal force. If you use Windows, the Chinese Communist Party to knows how to hack into your laptop. If you have friends and associates in China, they're reading your e-mails.

The Pentagon, the State Department and the U.S. Congress have been monitoring China’s cyberintelligence campaigns for years. The Congressional Record has a long list of hearings on the matter. In 2008 press statements, the Pentagon report that Chinese cyberespionage has “increased dramatically” before and after the Olympic Games.

During preparations for the Olympics, China installed massive new surveillance and security systems with the generous assist of U.S. corporations Honeywell, General Electric, United Technologies and IBM. Throughout the Olympic gold rush, the Bush administration routinely sidestepped the 1990 law stipulating that high-tech must not benefit the Chinese military. After all, the People's Republic of China was a paying customer and owns a majority share of U.S. Treasury Bills.

The craven posturing of the International Olympic Committee and its corporate sponsors allowed Beijing party bosses to break every pledge to improve human rights, duly sworn when they lobbied for the contract. And what has the result been of this blind quest for corporate profit? On Nov. 20, 2008, the bipartisan U.S. China Economic and Security Review Commission sent its annual report to Congress. It states:

"China is targeting U.S. government and commercial computers for espionage (and) is stealing vast amounts of sensitive information from U.S. computer networks."

The Web site of the independent research consortium infowar-monitor.net provides updates on China's Web-infiltration methods. One alarming new report describes tracking devices carefully affixed into computers manufactured in China that route information to the Chinese Communist Party's Public Security Bureau. Cyberintelligence is linked into a vast intelligence-gathering operation of Chinese citizens recruited to spy for the Motherland known as "a thousand grains of sand." This network involves tourists, businessmen and some of the more than 100,000 Chinese students who study overseas each year. Every one is questioned by intelligence officers before and after their foreign tour and offered lucrative rewards for valued intelligence.

China's military academies are also diligently training thousands of young workers in computer hacking. Larry M. Wortzel, the author of a 2007 U.S. Army War College report on China's cybercampaigns said: "The thing that should give us pause is that in many Chinese military manuals, they identify the U.S. as the country they are most likely to go to war with. They are moving very rapidly to master this new form of warfare." Two Chinese army hackers produced a "virtual guidebook for electronic warfare and jamming" after studying dozens of U.S. and NATO manuals on military tactics.


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See more stories tagged with: technology, china, cyber spying

Maura Moynihan is the founding director of Friends of Moynihan Station. She lives in New York City.

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View:
What you read might learn you
Posted by: orionsan on Jan 12, 2009 4:30 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and when your done, turn off the little yellow light switch.

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Mao is passe
Posted by: laoma on Jan 12, 2009 4:39 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let the China bashing begin. While the substance of this article is correct, who cares! This is what governments do and the Chinese are doing it quite well. This is more than a distraction for what our government has always done ("turn about is fair play"; "pay back is a bitch") or tries to do in other countries, and increasingly doing to its own citizens domestically. Let's hear it for the NSA, DIA, CIA, Blackwater and the invisible hosts of other local spooks.

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this is new news??? unplug it!!!
Posted by: ellie on Jan 12, 2009 4:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
has been going on for a long time now... all the firewalls in the universe can't stop hacking, so what to do???

to keep the big bad scary people out of your latest, hottest, email to aunt tillie about your dog's fleas etc...

people should realize there are things known as routers that can send your sent email to the moon and back before it gets to the person you addressed it to, sooooo...

unplug the damn thing when you're done doing what you are doing... for laptops, don't leave the wifi card active all the time, shut it down and disable it, connect it when you need it but otherwise keep the connection closed... every time your connection is on, anyone can get through the mandated access back door into your computer... the feds required this access during software build... remember, all vendors to the feds have dod requirements attached to them and every popular software company holds fed contracts for big $$...

additionally, make sure you shut down the remote access in your software... how often do you use it???
servers are another issue...

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Is someone in China reading you email?
Posted by: jeaninemolloff on Jan 12, 2009 8:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all the so called brain power in the Pentagon; you would THINK that the same Pentagon braintrust would stop using MICROSOFT WINDOWS. Switch to an operating system which can be altered suddenly when a hacker is suspected. Why do we constantly give in to the likes of Bill Gates, when most IT professionals have clearly stated that Windows has more than one fatal flaw? WHERE IS THE LEADERSHIP?

Jeanine

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Can't be too surprised. Besides, that's the price we pay for
Posted by: Wayne Etheridge on Jan 12, 2009 10:52 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
borrowing from that nation and abusing "free" labor into giving us "cheap" shit.

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God save America, cause we are too dumb to do it ourselfs.
Posted by: GregH on Jan 12, 2009 11:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
By David E. Hoffman
updated 9:13 p.m. PT, Thurs., Feb. 26, 2004
In January 1982, President Ronald Reagan approved a CIA plan to sabotage the economy of the Soviet Union through covert transfers of technology that contained hidden malfunctions, including software that later triggered a huge explosion in a Siberian natural gas pipeline, according to a new memoir by a Reagan White House official.
I worked for DoD installations in network security. For a several years, Defense Contractors were starting to use computer personnel from former East Bloc countries and the Peoples Republic of China. The cost saving, not passed on to the tax payers, helped to fatten the contractors already bloated checks.

Common sense told me that the very bright Chinese computer techs were not "run of the mill" Chinese people. I thought that the competition to get into collage, graduate school and permission to work overseas must be fierce and that only "connected" people would make it. Many of them even looked military. This was in stark contrast to the '80s when DoD employees were required to self report if we even spoke to a East Bloc citizen or Red Chinese.

My warnings were of course ignored. Defense Contractors are too well connected to our own politicians and military personnel, while perhaps personally brave are the biggest moral and career cowards I have ever known. I say this as the brother of a career Army Medal of Honor Recipient and as a former combat paratrooper myself.

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It would be hard for them to interpret our emails anyway...
Posted by: Habaro on Jan 12, 2009 12:16 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...unless of course they have some kind of advanced program that can transpose L's and R's.

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» Funny. Posted by: suprmark
» RE: Funny. Posted by: Habaro
This article is racist anti-China bullshit.
Posted by: lindat on Jan 12, 2009 7:04 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
China reading your email? More likely, Barack Obama, since he voted to uphold FISA and give the spying U.S. telecoms immunity.

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Ms Moniyhan don't you know...
Posted by: Michael Turton on Jan 13, 2009 8:54 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...you can't post stuff that says bad things about China on a progressive website! This kind of thing is supposed to posted on a right-wing website, where it can be safely dismissed. You've clearly forgotten to follow the program:

(1) criticize US hegemony in Asia but ignore any desire on China's part for regional hegemony
(2) ignore China's territorial claims on the nations around it
(3) praise China's military build up as a force for stability
(4) send out warm fuzzies about the rise of China which must and shall be peaceful
(5) neglect to mention anything like democracy and Taiwan in case they reflect positively on US hegemony or evoke a complex moral response in the reader
(6) create equivalences -- Chinese spying on the US is just as bad as US spying on China
(7) label anyone who thinks different a racist who hates Chinese

In the old days progressives formed the Abraham Lincoln Brigades and fought the Chinas of the world. Things sure are different now among progressives.

Michael Turton
The View from Taiwan blog
http://michaelturton.blogspot.com

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Shut Up
Posted by: Zeugitai on Jan 17, 2009 11:45 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The USA owns the world and outer-space as far as surveillance and intelligence go. Just as militarily, the USA outspends other nations by a factor of ten to maintain and expand its unparalleled and unequaled global intelligence networks. If any other country is trying to read e-mails, god bless them, because compared to the global Big Brother that is the USA, they are playing tiddleywinks.

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another idiotic journalist
Posted by: chevo on Jan 21, 2009 2:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this story is big on bigotted accusations and small on facts and evidence.

take this ridiculous statement:

"Do a brief Web search, and you will find a long list of U.S.-educated, high-level, Chinese-born agents serving time in U.S. prisons for spying and stealing military secrets for their homeland."

There has only been one person of Chinese ancestry to have ever be convicted or pled guilty to espionage in the history of the US. One individual does not, by any definition, make up a "long list". Now how many white men have been convicted of espionage both against and for the US? Google that.

Most of the major allegations of espionage involving Chinese people have been shown either unfounded due to lack of evidence or have been proven to be hoaxes conjured up by the racist media and by fear mongering and attention whoring politicians or incompetent FBI agents. Tsien Hsue-shen, Wen Ho lee, James Yee, and the Cox Report/hoax are the most infamous examples where the media and politicians have gone out of their way to persecute/frame Chinese Americans all without a shred of evidence. Only brainwashed small people believed these initial allegations which never seem to offer any substantive evidence to support them and which all subsequently fizzled out due to lack of evidence or were proven beyond doubt to be hoaxes. Their propagation is powered by emotional waves of public prejudice and ignorance.

It's really sad that pea-brained twits still believe these ridiculous allegations that are remarkebly similar to the anti-semetic aspersions cast at Jews by many European countries prior to WWII.

One has to wonder if there is so much Chinese espionage by using "vast networks" of "Chinese born agents" to steal US tech then why hasn't there been anyone caught or even prosecuted (without the charges being eventually dropped by the prosecutor) for the crime of spying within the last quarter of a century?

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Hey NON-Americans: you KNOW the gringos are SPYING ON YOU, too.
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Jan 25, 2009 1:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
yeah, the CHINESE are the problem...
okay. sure. You're okay with spying... if somebody says its 'in your best interests'? really?
let's remember: spying is about THE RICHEST & MOST POWERFUL compelling behaviour upon the REST OF US.

- China is spying on everybody else's industries.
- America is spying on everybody else's industries.
IN BOTH CASES, their private corporations & governments are collaborating to *fuck with you & me*.

in both cases, almost *every* electronic transmission is routed at some point through either American or Chinese technology. You didn't think the NSA is about taking care of YOU... did you?

If you're not a Chinese or American powerful industrialist... don't think for a MOMENT THAT EITHER GROUP HAS *YOUR* BEST INTERESTS AT HEART.

neither Obama or Hu JinTao was elected for anybody but the buggers they represent: the rest of us can get stuffed.

- AT&T thanks the Blue Dog Democrats with a lavish party - Glenn Greenwald
- The AT&T Convention in Denver - Glenn Greenwald

The Republican Convention wasn't the ONLY US convention that featured **citizen abuses by local cops & security** which was ignored by the Press.

For more words on the subject, try The Jeff Farias Show podcast featuring an exciting & riveting interview with Franklin López, "founder of subMediaTV & producer Ground Noise & Static with accounts from the protests outside the Dem & Rep conventions in the Summer of ‘08."

or try the podcast from Fri.23.Jan.09 show:

"Russell Tice offers revelations on the scope of NSA illegalities

Max Obuszewski from Baltimore Nonviolence Center, with a look at our surveillance society, his research & experience as a one of the World's surveilled pacifist activists."

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