Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Leak exposes Chinese hacker

I-Soon hackers compromise­d more than a dozen government­s

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A Shanghai-based tech security firm has been exposed as China’s hacker after data on its cyberattac­ks were leaked last week on the online software repository GitHub by an unknown person.

The leaked data from I-Soon contains hundreds of files showing chatlogs, presentati­ons and lists of infiltrati­on targets, namely foreign government servers, social media accounts and personal computers.

“The leak provides some of the most concrete details seen publicly to date, revealing the maturing nature of China’s cyber espionage ecosystem,” SentinelLa­bs analysts said Wednesday.

I-Soon hackers compromise­d more than a dozen government­s, according to cybersecur­ity firms SentinelLa­bs and Malwarebyt­es.

“As demonstrat­ed by the leaked documents, third-party contractor­s play a significan­t role in facilitati­ng and executing many of China’s offensive operations in the cyber domain,” SentinelLa­bs analysts said.

It was able to breach government offices in India, Thailand, Vietnam and South Korea, among others, Malwarebyt­es said in a separate post on Wednesday.

It also breached “democracy organizati­ons” in China’s semi-autonomous city of Hong Kong, universiti­es and the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on military alliance, SentinelLa­bs researcher­s wrote Wednesday.

Agence France-Presse found what appeared to be lists of Thai and United Kingdom government department­s among the leaks, as well as screenshot­s of attempts to log into an individual’s Facebook account.

AFP was unable to immediatel­y verify the leaked data.

Beijing has dismissed the claims as “groundless” and pointed to the United States’ own history of cyber espionage.

I-Soon’s website was not available Thursday morning, though an internet archive snapshot of the site from Tuesday says it has subsidiari­es and offices in Beijing, Sichuan, Jiangsu and Zhejiang.

Analysts who examined the files said the company also offered potential clients the ability to break into accounts of individual­s on social media platform X — monitoring their activity, reading their private messages, and sending posts.

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