Via InformationWeek -
Chinese cyberattacks on civilian, government, and military networks are rising, a congressional advisory committee warned in a report released Thursday, and the United States needs to bolster its defenses and engage with allies and Chinese authorities to clarify the consequences of aggression in cyberspace.
"China is targeting U.S. government and commercial computers for espionage," says the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission's (USCC) 2008 Annual Report to Congress. "Alan Paller from the SANS Institute, an Internet security company, believes that in 2007 the 10 most prominent U.S. defense contractors, including Raytheon, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman, were victims of cyberespionage through penetrations of their unclassified networks."
Citing examples of Chinese espionage, the report looks back to 2005 at an incident in which hackers from China stole files related to NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter that detailed the space vehicle's propulsion system, solar panels, and fuel tanks. It also cites an incident that same year in which the aviation mission planning system for Army helicopters and related software were stolen from the Army Aviation and Missile Command at Redstone Arsenal in Alabama.
More recent examples abound. On Nov. 18, Quan-Sheng Shu, a Chinese-born scientist who worked in Virginia, pleaded guilty to selling U.S. military rocket technology to China.
Earlier this month, The Financial Times, citing an unnamed senior U.S. official, reported, "Chinese hackers have penetrated the White House computer network on multiple occasions, and obtained e-mails between government officials."
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