The Borneo Post (Sabah)

German security office warned firms about Chinese hacking

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BERLIN: Germany’s Office for Informatio­n Security (BSI) has issued warnings to several German firms named by the United States as possible victims of hacking attacks, a newspaper reported, adding that Chinese activity against German firms had increased.

Cyber experts have long warned that Germany – with its high level of technology expertise – is a particular­ly attractive target for cyber attackers of all kinds, including state actors.

“Constructi­on and materials research, engineerin­g firms and some big commercial enterprise­s are the focus for hackers,” the Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung wrote on Wednesday without naming its sources.

The United States is embroiled in a trade conflict with China and a senior US

intelligen­ce official said last week that Chinese cyber activity in the United States had risen in recent months, targeting critical infrastruc­ture.

US prosecutor­s are expected to charge that Chinese hackers were involved in a cyber espionage operation known as ‘Cloudhoppe­r’ targeting technology service providers and their customers, according to people familiar with the matter.

Cloudhoppe­r focuses on hacking large, third-party, data storage companies, and cloud software service companies that store data for US companies and government agencies.

The Sueddeutsc­he said Cloudhoppe­r attacks were still relatively rare in Germany compared to attacks believed to originate in Russia.

While there are not yet weekly victims, the attackers act in a more targeted manner and the damage could therefore be greater, the newspaper said.

In September, Germany’s then domestic spy chief said a growing number of countries can hack into private computer networks and install malicious software to sabotage another country’s infrastruc­ture.

He said China, Russia and other countries continued to try to break into German companies’ computers to steal industrial informatio­n.

In a push to fend off unwanted takeovers by Chinese investors, Germany’s cabinet is expected on Wednesday to lower the threshold to launch security probes of stake purchases by non-European entities to protect critical infrastruc­ture.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows a projection of cyber code on a hooded man is pictured in this illustrati­on picture.
— Reuters photo File photo shows a projection of cyber code on a hooded man is pictured in this illustrati­on picture.

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