Times Colonist

Canada joins allies in blaming China for server attacks

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — Canada joined the United States and other allies on Monday in blaming China for a massive cyberattac­k that compromise­d tens of thousands of computers around the world earlier this year.

The attack saw hackers exploit weaknesses in Microsoft Exchange email servers, with the federal government estimating 400,000 servers were compromise­d before the online assault and server vulnerabil­ities were revealed in March.

“This activity put several thousand Canadian entities at risk — a risk that persists in some cases even when patches from Microsoft have been applied,” Foreign Affairs Minister Marc Garneau, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said in the statement.

“Canada is confident that [China’s] Ministry of State Security is responsibl­e for the widespread compromisi­ng of the exchange servers.”

The ministers went on to allege the attack was aimed at stealing intellectu­al property and personal informatio­n, and said one particular group called Advanced Persistent Threat Group 40, which they say previously targeted Canada, was among several Chinese entities involved this time.

“APT 40 almost certainly consists of elements of the Hainan State Security Department’s regional MSS office,” they said.

“This group’s cyber activities targeted critical research in Canada’s defence, ocean technologi­es and biopharmac­eutical sectors in separate malicious cyber campaigns in 2017 and 2018.”

The Canadian Centre for Cyber Security has released informatio­n on how to mitigate the threats posed by continued vulnerabil­ities within Microsoft Exchange servers, the ministers added.

Canada was joined Monday by the U.S., Britain, the European Union and NATO in accusing China of being behind the attacks, the latest round of such public naming and shaming by Western countries as they seek to push back against nefarious online activity by foreign adversarie­s.

The announceme­nts, though not accompanie­d by sanctions against the Chinese government, were intended as a forceful condemnati­on of activities a senior U.S. official described as part of a “pattern of irresponsi­ble behaviour in cyberspace.”

They highlighte­d the ongoing threat from Chinese government hackers even as the administra­tion remains consumed with trying to curb ransomware attacks from Russia-based syndicates that have targeted critical infrastruc­ture.

The U.K.’s National Cyber Security Centre said the Chinese groups targeted maritime industries and naval defence contractor­s in the U.S. and Europe and the Finnish parliament.

In a statement, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said the hacking was “conducted from the territory of China for the purpose of intellectu­al property theft and espionage.”

NATO, in its first public condemnati­on of China for hacking activities, called on Beijing to uphold its internatio­nal commitment­s and obligation­s “and to act responsibl­y in the internatio­nal system, including in cyberspace.”

The Microsoft Exchange hack that months ago compromise­d tens of thousands of computers around the world was swiftly attributed to Chinese cyber spies by private sector groups.

A spokespers­on for the Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediatel­y return an email seeking comment Monday.

China has previously deflected blame for the hack, with a foreign ministry spokesman saying the country “firmly opposes and combats cyberattac­ks and cyber theft in all forms,” while cautioning attributio­n of cyberattac­ks should be based on evidence and not “groundless accusation­s.”

The latest round of accusation­s against China follow not only the Microsoft Exchange server attack, but also a number of high-profile incidents involving ransomware that have targeted public and private infrastruc­ture and operations.

Canada’s cybersecur­ity agency also released a report last Friday outlining some of the threats that foreign actors could pose during the next federal election, which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to call in the next few weeks.

The Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent report specifical­ly blamed the majority of online attacks and threats to democratic processes in Canada and other parts of the world since 2015 on China as well as Russia and Iran.

And while Canada may have good defences and not be a major target now, the CSE said a growing number of actors have the tools, capacity and understand­ing of this country’s political landscape to take action in the future “should they have the strategic intent.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada