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How a Chinese Hacker Tried To Blackmail Me

An anonymous reader writes "Slate provides the first-person account of a CEO who received an e-mail with several business documents attached threatening to distribute them to competitors and business partners unless the CEO paid $150,000. 'Experts I consulted told me that the hacking probably came from government monitors who wanted extra cash,' writes the CEO, who successfully ended the extortion with an e-mail from the law firm from the bank of his financial partner, refusing payment and adding that the authorities had been notified. According to the article, IT providers routinely receive phone calls from their service providers if they detect any downtime on the monitors of network traffic installed by the Chinese government, similar to the alerts provided to telecom providers about VoIP fraud on their IP-PBX switches. 'Hundreds of millions of Chinese operate on the Internet without any real sense of privacy, fully aware that a massive eavesdropping apparatus tracks their every communication and move...' writes the CEO. 'With China's world and ours intersecting online, I expect we'll eventually wonder how we could have been so naive to have assumed that privacy was normal- or that breaches of it were news.'"

4 of 146 comments (clear)

  1. WTF?? by rudy_wayne · · Score: 4, Funny

    This alleged extortion plot happened in 2007

    1. Re:WTF?? by Arancaytar · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, but someone at Slashdot messed up and clicked the approve button too soon. The story was scheduled to run in 2017.

  2. Re:Why not use encryption? by karbonforms · · Score: 3, Funny

    You appear to still not know, despite your googling. That would be 1919. You know, like, AFTER, world war one? I'm no historian, but no google required! lol

  3. Re: Words mean things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Wait a minute, I thought crackers were white people, not black...