Kuwait Times

China using chips on US computers to steal secrets

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WASHINGTON: Tiny chips inserted in US computer equipment manufactur­ed in China were used as part of a vast effort by Beijing to steal US technology secrets, a published report said. The Bloomberg News report said the chips, the size of a grain of rice, were used on equipment made for Amazon, which first alerted US authoritie­s, and Apple, and possibly for other companies and government agencies. Bloomberg said a three-year secret investigat­ion, which remains open, enabled spies to create a “stealth doorway” into computer equipment, a hardware-based entry that would be more effective and harder to detect than a software hack.

Citing unnamed US officials, Bloomberg said a unit of the People’s Liberation Army were involved the operation that placed the chips on equipment manufactur­ed in China for US-based Super Micro Computer Inc. Supermicro, according to Bloomberg, also manufactur­ed equipment for Department of Defense data centers, the CIA’s drone operations, and onboard networks of Navy warships. The report said Amazon discovered the problem when it acquired software firm Elemental and began a security review of equipment made for Elemental by California-based Supermicro.

According to Bloomberg, the spy chips were designed for motherboar­ds-the nerve centers for computer equipmentu­sed in data centers operated by Apple, Amazon Web Services and others. Apple said in a statement it “has never found malicious chips, ‘hardware manipulati­ons’ or vulnerabil­ities purposely planted in any server.” A statement by Amazon to AFP said that “at no time, past or present, have we ever found any issues relating to modified hardware or malicious chips in Supermicro motherboar­ds in any Elemental or Amazon systems.” Supermicro could not immediatel­y be reached for comment, but Bloomberg said the firm denied any knowledge of the espionage or investigat­ion. — AFP

 ??  ?? WASHINGTON: A man types on a computer keyboard in this photo illustrati­on taken in Washington, DC. An elite group of North Korean hackers has been identified as the source of a wave of cyberattac­ks on global banks that has netted “hundreds of millions” of dollars, security researcher­s said. — AFP
WASHINGTON: A man types on a computer keyboard in this photo illustrati­on taken in Washington, DC. An elite group of North Korean hackers has been identified as the source of a wave of cyberattac­ks on global banks that has netted “hundreds of millions” of dollars, security researcher­s said. — AFP

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