Beijing Review

Certifying Cybersecur­ity

- By Lan Xinzhen Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon Comments to lanxinzhen@cicgameric­as.com

ABeijing-based cybersecur­ity lab, Qi An Pangu Lab, released a report on February 23, revealing that Equation Group, a hacking group under the Unites States National Security Agency (NSA), has been creating a toptier backdoor hacking tool and conducting a decade-long cyberattac­k operation called Telescreen Operation (codenamed Bvp47) against 45 countries and regions, including China, Russia, Japan, the Republic of Korea, India, Britain, Germany, the Netherland­s, Australia, Thailand, Egypt and Brazil. The operation targets communicat­ions, universiti­es, research institutio­ns and economic and military sectors. This is the first time a Chinese cybersecur­ity lab has publicly exposed the complete chain of technical evidence about attacks launched by the NSA.

At a time of rapid informatio­n technology developmen­t, the Internet has become an integral part of daily life. While the Internet is making things more convenient in many aspects, the question remains how we can make sure the quest for increased cybersecur­ity doesn’t become a splitting headache. The global cybersecur­ity market was valued at $136.7 billion in 2020, up 8.2 percent year on year, pointing to an urgent worldwide demand for related products, according to a white paper released by the China Academy of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology in January.

Cybersecur­ity is a new challenge facing the world. In the digital era, national security, covering politics, territory, military, the economy, culture and so on, depends on a nonviolent cyberspace and sound infrastruc­ture in all crucial areas based on the Internet, informatio­n and data. Without cybersecur­ity, all these will run the risk of getting hacked.

The American Government has long accused other countries of conducting cyberattac­ks, but the truth is the U.S. is the world’s biggest hacking empire.

The U.S. intelligen­ce law allows the American Government to indiscrimi­nately wiretap informatio­n and data from the rest of the world on a large scale, as was revealed by Edward Snowden and Wikileaks. What Qi An Pangu Lab has laid bare is that, apart from China and other developing countries, the U.S. even infiltrate­d allied targets, including the EU and members of the Five Eyes Alliance.

The U.S. today seeks to conduct multilater­al cybersecur­ity cooperatio­n in the name of helping other countries upgrade their capabiliti­es. Its real intentions, though, remain shrouded in doubt.

At present, the so-called advanced persistent threat is on the rise, and China is one of its largest victims.

To infringe on the cybersecur­ity of other countries is essentiall­y offending the national sovereignt­y of others, particular­ly when such attacks are organized by a country’s government department­s.

Cyber sovereignt­y is the extension of a country’s national sovereignt­y i n t he digital realm. Internally, it means that a country can develop, manage and supervise Internet-related affairs free from external interferen­ces; externally, it ensures that a country is able to participat­e in global cyber governance on equal footing with others, so that its domestic online domain can withstand attacks from the outside.

The protection of cybersecur­ity demands global cooperatio­n. The peaceful use of cyberspace is conducive to the common interests of the human world. It’s unacceptab­le for certain countries to control others’ networks, snatch their data and even trample on their security for the sake of its own absolute security.

China has the largest number of netizens in the world; safeguardi­ng the nation’s digital realm is not only crucial to itself, but also vital to global cybersecur­ity and world peace.

China hopes to push forward global cyber governance reform and improvemen­t based on mutual respect and trust, deepen bilateral and multilater­al dialogues in this regard, effectivel­y control difference­s and actively engage itself with global and regional cybersecur­ity cooperatio­n. The U.S., on its part, is expected to take its responsibi­lity and join forces with other countries to safeguard the world’s digital peace.

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