Hi Joel, You make a good point. You should drop a note to the writer of the story to find out how sure the DoD is about the identity of the persons who broke into their system. The writer's email address is [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Richard > I hate crap like this... that people > > 1) Assume it was the military > > 2) It was done by the Chinese at all > > > > China just had a few million people get online. You can bet that the vast > portion are running pirated windows software, are not getting updates, and > are therefore prime targets for hijacking and setting up of remote proxy. > I > see Chinese proxy's for sale in IRC all the time, and it's the Russians > and > Brazilians that are selling them... not their fellow Chinamen... > > > Then people use this to justify further fears of China. Give me a break. > China is FAR more dependent on us than we are of them. If our economy > falters, they'll tank. They have enough citizens of theirs in this country > at any given time such that if the REAL Chinese military DID want to > actually hack into the Pentagon, they sure as HELL would be able to cover > their tracks back to Beijing. > > > > The Military has been using China to justify defense budgets since the > fall > of the Soviet Union. My home network gets scanned 100's of times per day, > so > what. Does this mean the Chinese military has it in for me too? > > > > I just had to add my 2 cents. > > > > Regards, > > > > Joel Helgeson > > > > > > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On > Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, September 03, 2007 5:26 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: [funsec] What kind of Pentagon computers were hacked by the > Chinese > military? > > > > http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a89c1c88-5a38-11dc-9bcd-0000779fd2ac.html > > Beware: enemy attacks in cyberspace > > By Demetri Sevastopulo in Washington > > Published: September 3 2007 19:00 | Last updated: September 3 2007 19:00 > > Lieutenant General Robert Elder, senior Air Force officer for cyberspace > issues, recently joked that North Korea "must only have one laptop" to > make > the more serious point that every potential adversary - except Pyongyang - > routinely scans US computer networks. > > North Korea may be impotent in cyberspace, but its neighbour is not. The > Chinese military sent a shiver down the Pentagon's spine in June by > successfully hacking into an unclassified network used by the top policy > advisers to Robert Gates, the defence secretary. > > While the People's Liberation Army has been probing Pentagon networks > hund-reds of times a day for the past few years, the US is more alarmed at > the growing frequency and sophistication of the attacks. > > The Pentagon spent several months deflecting the recent onslaught before > the > PLA penetrated its system, which was shut down for more than a week for > diagnosis. > > . > > > > _______________________________________________ Fun and Misc security discussion for OT posts. https://linuxbox.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/funsec Note: funsec is a public and open mailing list.
