Los Angeles Times

Cyber attacks

Journalist­s at New York Times and Wall Street Journal are among the victims.

- By Michael Muskal and Jessica Guynn michael.muskal@ latimes.com jessica.guynn@latimes.com

Hackers are targeting Western news agencies in China.

More than 30 journalist­s and executives at Western news organizati­ons in China, including the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, have had their computers hacked, according to the news organizati­ons and a security firm that monitors such attacks.

Over the last four months, the hackers managed to infiltrate the Times’ computers, the newspaper reported Thursday. It said hackers had penetrated its computers and obtained passwords for reporters and other employees.

The hackers have been blocked and security tightened to prevent another attack, which followed an investigat­ion by the paper into finances of relatives of Wen Jiabao, China’s premier

Mandiant Corp., a security firm brought into the case by the Times, said it found that hackers using techniques associated with the Chinese military stole emails, contacts and files from 30 journalist­s and executives and maintained a short list of journalist­s whose accounts have been repeatedly attacked.

That finding, first reported in the New York Times, was part of a December report that was expected to be made public soon, a Mandiant spokeswoma­n said Thursday.

The Wall Street Journal said that it too had been targeted by Chinese hackers.

Paula Keve, spokeswoma­n for the Journal’s parent company, Dow Jones & Co., said: “Evidence shows that infiltrati­on efforts target the monitoring of the Journal’s coverage of China, and are not an attempt to gain commercial advantage or to misappropr­iate customer informatio­n.”

Bloomberg News was targeted as well — after it published an article June 29 about the wealth of relatives of Xi Jinping, the current general secretary of the Communist Party and the person expected to become president in March. No computer breach took place.

“Our security was not compromise­d,” Ty Trippet, a spokesman for Bloomberg, said Thursday.

“Newspapers and journalist­s are high-value targets,” said James Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal studies. “They have really good sources, and they don’t publish everything.”

But they are just one target in many. Cyber-security experts say the United States has become increasing­ly vulnerable to foreign hackers who could target the nation’s power grid, gas pipelines and other crucial infrastruc­ture.

Those same hackers routinely and aggressive­ly break into a wide range of corporate America’s computers, including those of oil and financial companies.

Yet corporatio­ns have blocked legislatio­n on Capitol Hill that would require higher standards to protect against breaches, saying it would be too costly and burdensome.

The full extent of how deeply hackers have penetrated into corporate America is not known. Companies are usually reluctant to talk publicly about attacks or to share informatio­n with the government.

“We know that every Fortune 500 company has had a problem, and probably every Fortune 1,000 company has had a problem too,” Lewis said.

High-profile attacks like the ones that targeted Internet search giant Google Inc. three years ago may make it seem as if computer networks in the U.S. are under rising attack, but Lewis said networks are just under “sustained” attack.

“It’s as bad as it can be. What’s happening is that people are noticing it. That’s a big change,” Lewis said. “Four years ago nobody could spell cyber-security. Now everyone’s waking up to the fact that the networks we depend on are totally insecure.”

Cybersecur­ity experts said they are optimistic that the U.S. government is developing a cyber arsenal capable of repelling attacks.

Alan Paller, director of research at the SANS Institute, said the Defense Department has a growing ability to defend against sophistica­ted attacks — to protect crucial infrastruc­ture and the Defense Department itself. It also has developed a “cyber offense,” the ability to “project power” and to carry out sophistica­ted attacks itself, Paller said.

The hackers routed their attacks through computers at U.S. universiti­es, according to the New York Times. Hackers installed malicious software that allowed them to enter the newspaper’s computers. The software, known as malware, was “identified by computer security experts as a specific strain associated with computer attacks originatin­g in China,” the newspaper said.

Chinese officials denied they were responsibl­e.

“Chinese laws prohibit any action including hacking that damages Internet security,” China’s Ministry of National Defense told the New York Times. It added: “To accuse the Chinese military of launching cyber attacks without solid proof is unprofessi­onal and baseless.”

Eileen M. Murphy, the Times’ vice president for corporate communicat­ions, said Thursday the newspaper stood by the story.

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