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Taiwan Under Cyber Attack from China

An anonymous reader writes: "O'Reilly Developer News is reporting this morning that Taipei is under cyber attack by a Chinese 'army of hackers'. The Taipei government is saying that the attacks are trojan-horses against windows machines that are being staged to break in to government databases."

19 of 646 comments (clear)

  1. Text by r84x · · Score: 4, Informative

    Cabinet says computers under attack
    INFORMATION WARFARE: A Cabinet spokesman said Beijing is waging a campaign designed to access databases in Taiwan through the use of Trojan-horse computer programs
    By Ko Shu-ling
    STAFF REPORTER
    Thursday, Sep 04, 2003,Page 1

    China has launched a systematic information warfare campaign against Taiwan, spreading Trojan-horse programs into private companies' computers as a means to break into government databases, the Cabinet said yesterday.

    "National intelligence has indicated that an army of hackers based in China's Hubei and Fujian provinces has successfully spread 23 different Trojan horse programs to the networks 10 private high-tech companies here to use them as a springboard to break into at least 30 different government agencies and 50 private companies," Cabinet Spokesman Lin Chia-lung () said yesterday.

    The government agencies invaded by the Trojan-horse programs include the National Police Administration, the Ministry of National Defense, the Central Election Commission and the Central Bank of China.

    To minimize the damage, Premier Yu Shyi-kun yesterday instructed all central government agencies to scrutinize their computer systems and report to the authorities within two days. Those failing or refusing to comply with the order may face punishment.

    Yu made the remark yesterday morning during the weekly closed-door Cabinet meeting, in which Minister without Portfolio Tsai Ching-yen () briefed Yu on the matter.

    "Trojan-horse attacks are one of the most serious threats to computer security," Tsai said. "A computer user may have not only been attacked but may also be attacking others unknowingly."

    Because of the vast popularity and many weaknesses of the Windows operating system, most of the damage is done to Windows users, Tsai said.

    Although the National Information Task Force has warned government agencies to be on alert, Tsai said, some agencies have failed to take the warning seriously.

    "They either delayed reporting to authorities or tried to solve the problem themselves. It not only stalled our response efforts but also made the situation worse," Tsai said.

    Since it appears no government information has been stolen, Tsai said, the deployment of the program is likely aimed at paralyzing the nation's computer systems.

    "Of course there are other possibilities such as stealing sensitive government information in vast sums or preparing computers for future information warfare," he said.

    To help government agencies invaded by the program clean up the mess, Tsai said the National Information Security Committee plans to complete the programming of the anti-Trojan-horse software today.

    "We'll also post the solution manual on the Internet for the convenience of other countries facing the same problem," Tsai said, adding that Taiwan is the first country to have detected the program.

    Lee Hsiang-chen (), captain of the National Police Administration's Criminal Investigation Bureau, said the situation has been monitored 24 hours a day over the past two months.

    "We're glad that it has been detected before any damage was done," Lee said.

    "If there's any lesson from this experience, it is not to use software developed in China or hire Chinese computer programmers, because you're running the risk of having the software you use implanted with the Trojan-horse program," he said.

    --
    Karma: Can there be a void?

    .. -. - . .-. .-. --- -...

  2. Re:Trojan, or propaganda? by psyclo · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well, just because you see it only as text in the source doesn't mean the value isn't being calculated by a server side include script, which is what most companies do. A server maintains the "max hits" count and a script can query that value and populate the HTML in-stream. I do that all the time in my stuff. In the resulting source HTML, the count appears as straight text.

    --
    =======================
    Psyclo, the dark night.
    Mike, the computer geek.
  3. Bigger picture by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here is the cause. Taiwan recently conducted military exercises simulating a Chinese invasion despite Chinese protests. I would imagine that this is China's response.

    Or it could be preparation for an all out invasion by China. Now that would be a fun war to watch.

  4. The traffic went up... by pr0ntab · · Score: 3, Informative

    and the CMS made the formally dynamic page static to save the server.

    --
    Fuck Beta. Fuck Dice
  5. Re:Trojan, or propaganda? by ucsckevin · · Score: 5, Informative

    As a former resident of taiwan (2 years), I can say this:
    Taiwan is just as free/democratic as the US. Taiwan has a free press, a former minority party in charge, large voter populace, and more informed voters. There's marches and protests against the government all the time. As for pirated software...uh, um...

  6. Re:Trojan, or propaganda? by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 4, Informative

    there's the whole pirated anime problem.
    The pirated anime "problem" was summed at as Taiwan isn't a member of the Berne convention. Now, although the Berne convention dates back to the 19th century, even the PRC wasn't a signatory until 1992. And Taiwan-- well there's this large hulking monster of a country that seems to believe that if Taiwan accedes to any International Intellectual Property conventions, that somehow violates that bully's sovereignty. So, even if Taiwan wants to impose rather draconian IP laws, it's all tangled up in the cross-straits issue. Taiwan does have bilateral agreements with some countries, but oh my, is that a low rumble of protest I'm hearing from the reds?
    That must be the secret plan of PRC-- block Taiwan from acceding to treaties "protecting" IP, smear Taiwan as a country of Pirates, and since high seas piracy is a breach of international law, it has some kind of Casus Belli.

    Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to bathe. I've spent far too much time reading about TRIPS, GATT, and the Berne convention, and feel rather ...
    dirty.

  7. Re:Trojan, or propaganda? by isaac · · Score: 2, Informative
    However, we should not be complacent about China. I am certainly not one for warmongering but given the U.S. financial involvement in Taiwan (odds are the computer you are typing on was made there), if China ever does do anything more than little experimental probes then we will inexorably be drawn in to a conflict.

    Why? American capital is heavily invested on both sides of the strait - and new investment is primarily being made on the mainland. What makes you think we'd go to war with China when there's money to be made regardless of who's in power in Taiwan. (Democracy be damned. Of course, Taiwan's democracy is not a decade old...)

    I'm inclined to believe that economics will dictate that the US will not intervene if China forces "reunification." If anything, I think China would seek our permission before invading Taiwan.

    -Isaac

    --
    I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
  8. Re:Understanding Taiwan: Security Threat to USA by wayward_son · · Score: 2, Informative

    Taiwan is officially the Republic of China.

    Officially they are the minority side in the Chinese Civil War, which has been going on since 1945.

    Both China and Taiwan agree that Taiwan is a part of China, as is Tibet.

    The debate officially is not over what China is doing with the rest of the world, but over who rules China.

  9. Chinese invasion by moZer · · Score: 2, Informative

    Andrej Gromyko (former Soviet Union Sect. of State) wrote in his autobiography about Mao Tse Tung's plan to destroy the capitalist forces sometime in the 60's or 70's. It went something like this: first, China would invade Taiwan. This would make US/Nato respond by taking back Taiwan, and move onto the Chinese mainland, where the Chinese forces would fall back to the Gobi desert. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union would be passive, and even a little pro-American. Then, when least expected, the Soviet Union would launch a nuclear attack on the Nato forces in the Gobi desert, destroying them. Mao estimated about 200 million dead chinese, which was an acceptable price to pay...

    --
    Hello, my name is Robert Lerner, and I pronounce Lernux as "99% cpu"
  10. Re:They have windows source code? by jea6 · · Score: 2, Informative
    --

    sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.
  11. Re:Trojan, or propaganda? by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Amnesty International report for Taiwan. And for China Software piracy, is, by comparison, piddling. (And in any case, the PRC is hardly a paragon of virtue.)

  12. War games by wytcld · · Score: 4, Informative

    1st, Taiwan staged its largest-ever war games a few days back. It's trying to take an even-more-solid defensive posture because it knows that the US is too bogged down in Iraq to come fully to its defense if China invades soon.

    2nd, when I worked in Taiwan in the late 80s, there was a single pipe into the country which the government heavily monitored. The pipe's much fatter now. Anyone know how heavy the monitoring is these days?

    3rd, the mainland would be totally stupid not to try to break into Taiwanese databases. Any professional intelligence agency anywhere in the world has people assigned to breaking into friends' and neighbors' databases.

    4th, the government on Taiwan is the only legitimate government of China. We may be making a terrible mistake not to back it, and not to demand the dissolution of the illegitimate government on the mainland. But hey, the mainland will sell us cheap goods made with slave and prison labor - good enough for us....

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    1. Re:War games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "the US is too bogged down in Iraq to come fully to its defense if China invades soon."

      Not quite. We have 5 aircraft carriers; KH, Constellation, CV, AL and JCS along with 13 subs and and 11 Ticonderoga-class AEGIS cruisers and 3 Arleigh-Burke class AEGIS in the area. There would not be a major ground battle for Taiwan beacuse the US would have 100% air and sea superiority in the Taiwan Strait.

  13. Re:Mr. Peanut by drooling-dog · · Score: 2, Informative
    When he left office, inflation was 14%; mortgage rates were 22%. Compare that to the previous ten years (now): 2%-3% inflation and 5%-8% (max) mortgage rates.

    Not to defend Carter - he was intelligent and meant well, but wasn't much of a leader - but much of that was the economic fallout of the Vietnam war, which most Americans supported as long as they didn't have to pay for it. Our leaders knew that America loves a free war and thus chose to finance it through deficits rather than by raising taxes. Hence Daniel Berrigan's famous quote that if LBJ had asked for our cars instead of our sons, we would never have gotten involved in it.

    Of course now we know better than this, and no responsible American President would put the ecomony at risk by waging war without securing the means to pay for it, and we the people would gladly sacrifice what we could in support of a Just Cause. Oh, wait...

  14. Re:Understanding Taiwan: Security Threat to USA by ucsckevin · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, I would say there are a lot of turncoats in Taiwan, but most of them belong to the former ruling party, the KMT. These people were ethnic chinese who moved over after they lost the civil war. They have little affinity for President Chen, or Taiwan. These people support the one china policy. But most people in Taiwan, do not. Most support independence now or later. A vast majority (95%) do not want anything to do with communist china. In 1994, Taiwan renounced all claims to the Mainland. In 1994, Taiwan renounced all claims to the Mainland. But you keep on acting as if most Taiwanese (daiwanlang) are keen on China dominating the world. They're not. THey support the US against China.
    As for spies, we spy against allies and vice versa. And yes, the Chinese do target disgruntled Taiwanese, just like they and the soviets targeted disgruntled americans. I think taiwan is the only country to have a movement to make it the 51st state. have you even been to taiwan, bro? At anyrate, you really need to modify some of the erroneous information in your little geocities article, eg the ethnic makeup of taiwan.

  15. China R&D as of 1999 into Asymetric Warfare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://cryptome.org/cuw01.htm

  16. Water Sports? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I'm engaged to a very beautiful girl from a town on the Yellow River.

    I bet you remind her of the yellow river every night.

  17. Re:Carter was an officer by thesolo · · Score: 4, Informative
    GWB had some military service in the Texas Air National Guard.

    "Some" being the key word there. GW Bush deserted the Texas Air National Guard for approximately a full year between 1972-1973. This was originally reported in the May 23rd issue of the Boston Globe.
    "1-year gap in Bush's Guard duty. No record of airman at drills from 1972-73"

    More information on that here and here.
  18. Don't believe everything you read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    The Taipei Times is a pro-independence, separationist news organization. Their articles on Mainland China should be taken with a grain of salt.