It was reported last 27 December that Chinese hackers called Salt Typhoon have infiltrated a ninth telecommunications firm. It was also alleged by the U.S. cybersecurity officials that these hackers gained access to information about millions of people.
The FBI is investigating the Salt Typhoon attacks, which are spurring new defensive measures, deputy U.S. national security adviser Anne Neuberger told reporters recently.
"As we look at China's compromise of now nine telecom companies, the first step is creating a defensible infrastructure," she said.
The hackers primarily are targeting individuals and organizations involved in political or governmental activities and a significant number of hacking victims are located in the Washington D.C.-Virginia area.
The hackers can geolocate millions of people in the United States, listen to their phone conversations and record them whenever they like, Politico reported.
Among recent victims are President-elect Donald Trump, Vice President-elect JD Vance and several Biden administration officials.
Neuberger did not name the nine telecommunications firms that have been hacked, but said telecommunications firms and others must do more to improve cybersecurity and protect individual customers.
"We wouldn't leave our homes, our offices unlocked," she said. "Yet, the private companies owning and operating our critical infrastructure often do not have the basic cybersecurity practices in place that would make our infrastructure riskier, costlier and harder for countries and criminals to attack."
She said companies need better management of configuration, better vulnerability management of networks and better work across the telecom sector to share information when incidents occur.
"However, we know that voluntary cybersecurity practices are inadequate to protect against China, Russia and Iran hacking our critical infrastructure," Neuberger said.
Australian and British officials already have enacted telecom regulations "because they recognize that the nation's secrets, the nation's economy relies on their telecommunications sector."
No comments:
Post a Comment