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China-Japan-Koreas
South Korean Military on alert over Chinese Hackers
2008-01-03
SOUTH Korea's military has been put on alert against overseas hackers who have gained access to some soldiers' personal computers, the defence ministry said. It did not identify the country where the hackers are based but Chosun Ilbo newspaper said it was China.

The Defence Security Command, which handles counter-intelligence, this week warned all military units to be on the alert against hacking, a ministry spokesman said. "The alert was issued after the counter-intelligence command found 'third-nation' hackers had successfully broken into some soldiers' computers via emails to steal private data," the spokesman said. "No military information has been leaked."

The South's military runs its own intranet, usually disconnected to the internet, and also has separate servers for processing confidential data, he said. But the command instructed troops to keep no official data on personal computers and also to update anti-virus programs.

The spokesman said hackers used emails entitled in Korean "Current state of the North Korean army's capabilities" to arouse the curiosity of soldiers. The hacking virus starts working when the emails are opened.

Chosun Ilbo said military investigators had traced the hackers to China but failed to identify whether they are ordinary citizens or military personnel. It noted that China launched a military unit called NET Force to carry out online warfare against enemy computer networks in 2000, with one million civilian "red hackers" operating in the country.
Posted by:Oztralian

#4  The hackers are specially trained members of the PLA. It's no use pretending otherwise. There probably isn't much use pretending our guys aren't hacking right back at them.

Fun and games.

The upside is that dealing with it forces us to learn how to make our systems more secure. You might say it makes us tougher...if it doesn't kill us.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2008-01-03 12:04  

#3  A little reciprocal ruthlessness would go a long way. Hold China responsible and just pull the plug.

Exactly! A few filters here, a few ACL's there, on some key border routers and Viola, no traffic into or out of China.
Posted by: Chert B. Hayes6204   2008-01-03 10:44  

#2  A little reciprocal ruthlessness would go a long way. Hold China responsible and just pull the plug.
Posted by: Grunter   2008-01-03 10:32  

#1  Sigh. This sort of thing really is the death of the internet. The idea that everyone should be equal, and communication should be possible everywhere, is being ruthlessly exploited by the worst possible people. It's amazing what America did with the internet, and it's going to come crashing down sooner than everyone thinks.
Posted by: gromky   2008-01-03 04:34  

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