"Citing sources in the defense contracting and intelligence consulting community, the iDefense report unambiguously declares that the Chinese government was, in fact, behind the effort."
OK, good. It's not yet been proved in court, but at least it allows us, in further discussion, to comfortably assume that it was in fact China.
Some time soon I'd like to see: an end to end trace of the attack, identifying computers, their physical locations and ownership/control; a broad and coherent description of the of the crime itself, including how they first got in and how they operated while in; and a description of what was taken or changed. I'd like the analysis to be unusually forthcoming and direct.
This is not to force the Chinese govt to fess up. They know they did it, they know we know, and they'll deny it forever, even if we find a picture of the chief general of the PLA crouching over the disemboweled corpse with blood dripping from his teeth and a deer-in-headlights expression.
This is for US citizens and the rest of the world to see unambiguously what the Chinese have done and how much effort they put into it, and the cost. As such I'd like to see it first in a popular magazine, maybe a special edition. After that I'd like to see the same information dragged back and forth in Congressional hearings.
It's one thing to vaguely assume in some sort of hip, jaded way that "of course the Chinese are spying on us." It's quite another thing to see the (I assume) enormous extent and effect of what they're actually doing.
"The servers used in both attacks ... are currently pointing to IP addresses owned by Linode, a US-based company that offers Virtual Private Server hosting. ... "Considering this proximity, it is possible that the two attacks are one and the same, and that the organizations targeted in the Silicon Valley attacks have been compromised since July."
If the report's findings are correct, it suggests that the government of China has been engaged for months in a massive campaign of industrial espionage against US companies."
OK, good. It's not yet been proved in court, but at least it allows us, in further discussion, to comfortably assume that it was in fact China.
Some time soon I'd like to see: an end to end trace of the attack, identifying computers, their physical locations and ownership/control; a broad and coherent description of the of the crime itself, including how they first got in and how they operated while in; and a description of what was taken or changed. I'd like the analysis to be unusually forthcoming and direct.
This is not to force the Chinese govt to fess up. They know they did it, they know we know, and they'll deny it forever, even if we find a picture of the chief general of the PLA crouching over the disemboweled corpse with blood dripping from his teeth and a deer-in-headlights expression.
This is for US citizens and the rest of the world to see unambiguously what the Chinese have done and how much effort they put into it, and the cost. As such I'd like to see it first in a popular magazine, maybe a special edition. After that I'd like to see the same information dragged back and forth in Congressional hearings.
It's one thing to vaguely assume in some sort of hip, jaded way that "of course the Chinese are spying on us." It's quite another thing to see the (I assume) enormous extent and effect of what they're actually doing.
"The servers used in both attacks ... are currently pointing to IP addresses owned by Linode, a US-based company that offers Virtual Private Server hosting. ... "Considering this proximity, it is possible that the two attacks are one and the same, and that the organizations targeted in the Silicon Valley attacks have been compromised since July."
If the report's findings are correct, it suggests that the government of China has been engaged for months in a massive campaign of industrial espionage against US companies."
SON of a ...