The FBI says more cyber attacks come from China than everywhere else combined

Currently investigating over 2,000 attacks on US targets – new file every 12 
hours

Simon Sharwood, APAC Editor Thu 3 Feb 2022
https://www.theregister.com/2022/02/03/fbi_china_threat_to_usa/


Th US Federal Bureau of Investigation director Christopher Wray has named China 
as the source of more cyber-attacks on the USA than all other nations combined.

In a Monday speech titled Countering Threats Posed by the Chinese Government 
Inside the US, Wray said the FBI is probing over 2,000 investigations of 
incidents assessed as attempts by China's government "to steal our information 
and technology."

"The Chinese government steals staggering volumes of information and causes 
deep, job-destroying damage across a wide range of industries – so much so 
that, as you heard, we're constantly opening new cases to counter their 
intelligence operations, about every 12 hours or so."

Wray rated China's online offensive as "bigger than those of every other major 
nation combined," adding it has "a lot of funding and sophisticated tools, and 
often joining forces with cyber criminals – in effect, cyber mercenaries."

"They're not just hacking on a huge scale but causing indiscriminate damage to 
get to what they want.

Like in the recent Microsoft Exchange hack, which compromised the networks of 
more than 10,000 American companies in a single campaign alone," he added.

Wray said China sometimes directs attacks by government-owned companies but 
doesn't have to rely on such entities because businesses are required to 
maintain a Communist Party Committee comprised of Party members who are placed 
in senior management positions.

"Within China, they force US companies to partner with Chinese government-owned 
ones to do business in China, and then abuse and exploit those partnerships," 
Wray added.

"In 2015, the Chinese government publicly promised to stop handing hacked US 
technology to Chinese companies, but their cyber theft program kept going 
strong."

The director also said China has ignored the mutual 2015 no-hack pact between 
the Middle Kingdom and the USA.

"And in the years since, they've hit ever more companies and workers. We've 
seen small companies developing important medicines ransacked. We've seen big 
managed service providers remotely managing IT services for thousands of other 
businesses hacked, so the Chinese government could hijack their trusted 
connections with their customers and hack those companies, too."

Wray insisted that China's actions hurt the US economy – as in the case of a 
wind turbine maker that has shrunk from 900 to 300 staff after Chinese 
attackers stole some of its source code.

On the other hand, the director did say the USA and its allies have had some 
wins, though his sole example was action against Huawei. That company's 
difficulties serve as a demonstration to China that its aggression hurts its 
own businesses too.

"There is so much good we could do with a responsible Chinese government: crack 
down on cyber criminals, stop money launderers, reduce opioid overdose deaths. 
But at the FBI, we're focused on the reality of the Chinese government today."

Wray said the Bureau thinks a "long fight" against China is now in prospect, 
"and everyone involved in that fight can be certain that you will have no more 
committed partner than the FBI."

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