Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Chinese hackers hit 30,000 organisati­ons in US, raising alarm

For integratio­n policies in Inner Mongolia despite pushback

- Agence France-presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

SAN FRANCISCO: At least 30,000 US organizati­ons including local government­s have been hacked in recent days by an “unusually aggressive” Chinese cyber-espionage campaign, according to a computer security specialist.

The campaign has exploited recently discovered flaws in Microsoft Exchange software, stealing email and infecting computer servers with tools that let attackers take control remotely, Brian Krebs said in a post at his cyber security news website.

“This is an active threat,” White House spokeswoma­n Jennifer Psaki said when asked about the situation during a press briefing. “Everyone running these servers needs to act now to patch them. We are concerned that there are a large number of victims,” she added.

After Microsoft released patches for the vulnerabil­ities on Tuesday, attacks “dramatical­ly stepped up” on servers not yet updated with security fixes, said Krebs, who cited unnamed sources familiar with the situation.

“At least 30,000 organizati­ons across the US - including a significan­t number of small businesses, towns, cities and local government­s - have over the past few days been hacked by an unusually aggressive Chinese cyber espionage unit that’s focused on stealing email from victim organizati­ons,” Krebs wrote in the

JENNIFER PSAKI, House spokeswoma­n

White

post.

He reported that insiders said hackers have “seized control” of thousands of computer systems around the world using password-protected software tools slipped into systems.

Microsoft said early this week that a state-sponsored hacking group operating out of China is exploiting previously unknown security flaws in its Exchange email services to steal data from business users.

The company said the hacking group, which it has named “Hafnium,” is a “highly skilled and sophistica­ted actor”.

Hafnium has in the past targeted Us-based companies including infectious disease researcher­s, law firms, universiti­es, defence contractor­s, think tanks, and NGOS.

In a blog post on Tuesday, Microsoft executive Tom Burt said the company had released updates to fix the security flaws and urged customers to apply them.

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