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CYBER WARS
Syria, China worst for online spying: RSF
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) March 12, 2013


China says willing to work with US against hacking
Beijing (AFP) March 13, 2013 - China has expressed a willingness to cooperate with the United States and others to combat hacking, after a top US official warned the international community was losing patience with Beijing.

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying, while reiterating China's position that it is a victim of attacks in cyberspace, said Beijing was in favour of global cooperation on the issue.

"What is necessary in cyberspace is not war, but rather regulation and cooperation," she told a regular briefing Tuesday.

"China wants to develop constructive dialogue and cooperation and joint safeguarding of the peace, safety and cooperation of cyberspace together with the international community including the United States," she said.

China has repeatedly made such offers in the past.

Such cooperation needs to be "based on the principle of mutual respect and trust", said Hua, calling the issue a "global problem".

She spoke after National Security Advisor Tom Donilon said in New York on Monday that Beijing must take steps to investigate and stop cybercrime.

Last month a report from US security firm Mandiant said a unit of China's People's Liberation Army had stolen hundreds of terabytes of data from at least 141 organisations, mostly based in the United States.

"This is not solely a national security concern or a concern of the US government," Donilon said, adding that US businesses were increasingly worried about theft of their secrets "through cyber-intrusions emanating from China".

A US congressional report last year named China as "the most threatening actor in cyberspace".

Beijing has flatly rejected such accusations. Following the Mandiant report. China's defence ministry countered that US-based hackers carried out regular attacks last year on two Chinese military websites.

Ministry spokesman Geng Yansheng also said that the Chinese military has no cyber warfare units.

Guo Longlong, a researcher in American Studies at the Shanghai Institute for International Studies, believes the claims that China is not doing enough to combat hacking are unfair.

"We don't have advanced technologies to protect ourselves from cyber theft," he told Wednesday's Global Times newspaper. "So we are actually more vulnerable."

Syria, China, Iran, Bahrain and Vietnam are flagrantly spying online, media watchdog RSF said Tuesday, urging controls on the export of Internet surveillance tools to regimes clamping down on dissent.

A new report entitled "Enemies of the Internet" also singled out five companies -- Gamma, Trovicor, Hacking Team, Amesys and Blue Coat -- that it branded "digital era mercenaries," who were helping oppressive governments.

Syria's estimated five million Internet users are subject to rampant state spying, Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF, Journalists without Borders) said in the report, which coincides with the World Day Against Cyber-Censorship.

Noting that 22 journalists and 18 Internet users had been jailed, it said the network was controlled by two entities including the Syrian Computer Society (SCG) founded by President Bashar al-Assad.

The SCG, it said, controlled Syria's 3G infrastructure, while the Syrian Telecommunications Establishment (STE) controlled the majority of the fixed connections.

"When the government orders the blocking of a word, of an URL, or of a site, STE transmits the order to service providers," it said, publishing a leaked 1999 bid invitation from STE to install a national Internet system in Syria.

The requirements include recording of online and offline activities, copying of all e-mail exchanges from within Syria, and the ability to detect, intercept and block any encrypted data.

Damascus beefed up its monitoring in 2011 "adding new technologies to its cyber-arsenal" including proxy Blue Coat servers, RSF said.

Iran meanwhile is in the process of creating a home-grown Internet system, citing a series of cyber attacks on its nuclear installations, RSF said.

"Applications and services such as email, search engines and social networks are proposed to be developed under government control," to allow for "large-scale surveillance and the systematic elimination of dissent."

Twenty Internet users were jailed and one had been killed in the past year, it said, warning against the use of Iranian virtual private networks as it "will be like throwing yourself into the lion's jaws."

But in terms of sheer numbers, the "Chinese Communist Party runs one of the world's biggest digital empires, if not the biggest," RSF said, adding that individuals and companies have to rent their broadband access from the Chinese state or a government-controlled company.

"The tools put in place to filter and monitor the Internet are collectively known as the Great Firewall of China. Begun in 2003, it allows for access to foreign sites to be filtered," it said, and to block feeds and content deemed undesirable.

"The Chinese cyber-dissident Hu Jia and his wife Zeng Jinyang have had policemen stationed at the foot of their apartment building for months," it said.

"China jails more people involved in news and information than any other country. Today 30 journalists and 69 netizens are in prison."

Bahrain, which with an Internet penetration of 77 percent is one of the most connected states in the Middle East, has seen a dramatic increase in surveillance and news blackouts in the past three years, RSF said.

Vietnam's network is shoddy in quality but under tight state control. Thirty-one Internet users are in prison and Internet cafes are tightly monitored with users obliged to show identity documents before using them.

RSF called for a ban on the sale of surveillance hardware and software to countries that flout basic fundamental rights and crack down on any opposition.

"The private sector cannot be expected to police itself. Legislators must intervene," it said.

"The European Union and the United States have already banned the export of surveillance technology to Iran and Syria. This praiseworthy initiative should not be an isolated one."

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CYBER WARS
US urges China to probe, halt cyber spying
New York (AFP) March 11, 2013
Beijing must take steps to investigate and halt cybercrime, a top US official said Monday, warning the international community cannot tolerate the widespread hacking coming from China. "This is not solely a national security concern or a concern of the US government," National Security Advisor Tom Donilon told The Asia Society. "Increasingly, US businesses are speaking out about their se ... read more


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