The Malta Business Weekly

German spy agency warns of Chinese LinkedIn espionage

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China is using fake LinkedIn profiles to gather informatio­n on German officials and politician­s, the German intelligen­ce agency (BfV) has said.

The agency alleges that Chinese intelligen­ce used the networking site to target at least 10,000 Germans, possibly to recruit them as informants.

It released a number of fake profiles allegedly used for this purpose.

BfV head Hans-Georg Maassen said the accounts show China’s efforts to subvert top-level German politics.

“This is a broad-based attempt to infiltrate in particular parliament­s, ministries and government agencies,” he said.

China has denied similar allegation­s of cyber espionage in the past and has not yet responded to the German allegation.

The BfV published eight of what they say are the most active profiles used to contact German LinkedIn users. They are designed to look enticing to other users and promote young Chinese profes- sionals, who do not exist.

Some of the accounts include “Allen Liu”, said to be a human resources manager at an economic consultanc­y and “Lily Wu”, who reportedly works at a think tank in eastern China.

The BfV says both accounts are fake.

The agency is increasing­ly worried that Chinese intelligen­ce is using the method to recruit highrankin­g politician­s as informants.

They asked users who believed they had been targeted by suspect accounts to contact them.

Last year, the BfV said they had detected “increasing­ly aggressive cyber-espionage” including “intensifyi­ng” attempts to influence September’s parliament­ary elections.

They said the hacker group known as “Fancy Bear” or APT28 was especially active and it is believed to be controlled by the Russian state.

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