The Sunday Guardian

China is using fake LinkedIn: US

- REUTERS

The United States’ top spy catcher said Chinese espionage agencies are using fake LinkedIn accounts to try to recruit Americans with access to government and commer- cial secrets, and the company should shut them down.

William Evanina, the US counter-intelligen­ce chief, told Reuters in an interview that intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t officials have told LinkedIn, owned by Microsoft Corp., about China’s “super aggressive” efforts on the site.

He said the Chinese campaign includes contacting thousands of LinkedIn members at a time, but he declined to say how many fake accounts US intelligen­ce had discovered, how many Americans may have been contacted and how much success China has had in the recruitmen­t drive.

German and British authoritie­s have previously warned their citizens that Beijing is using LinkedIn to try to recruit them as spies. But this is the first time a US official has publicly discussed the challenge in the United States and indicated it is a bigger problem than previously known.

Evanina said LinkedIn should look at copying the response of Twitter, Google and Facebook, which have all purged fake accounts allegedly linked to Iranian and Russian intelligen­ce agencies.

“I recently saw that Twitter is cancelling, I don’t know, millions of fake accounts, and our request would be maybe LinkedIn could go ahead and be part of that,” said Evanina, who heads the US National Counter-Intelligen­ce and Security Center. It is highly unusual for a senior US intelligen­ce official to single out an American-owned company by name and publicly recommend it take action. LinkedIn says it has 575 million users in more than 200 counties and territorie­s, including more than 150 million US members. Evanina did not, however, say whether he was frustrated by LinkedIn’s response or whether he believes it has done enough. LinkedIn’s head of trust and safety, Paul Rockwell, confirmed the company had been talking to US law enforcemen­t agencies about Chinese espionage efforts. Earlier this month, LinkedIn said it had taken down “less than 40” fake accounts whose users were attempting to contact LinkedIn members associated with unidentifi­ed political organizati­ons.

Rockwell did not say whether those were Chinese accounts.

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