The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

German intelligen­ce warns: Chinese spies on social media

More than 10,000 German officials have been targets.

- By Kirsten Grieshaber

BERLIN — The head of Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce agency warned Sunday that China allegedly is using social networks to try to cultivate lawmakers and other officials as sources.

Hans-Georg Maassen said his agency, known by its German acronym BfV, believes more than 10,000 Germans have been targeted by Chinese intelligen­ce agents posing as consultant­s, headhunter­s or researcher­s, primarily on the social networking site LinkedIn.

“This is a broad-based attempt to infiltrate in particular parliament­s, ministries and government agencies,” Maassen said.

In addition, Chinese hackers increasing­ly are launching attacks on European companies through trusted suppliers, he alleged.

The BfV establishe­d a task force early this year which examined the use of fake profiles on social networks over nine months. The agency provided journalist­s with what it said were eight of the most prolific fake profiles on LinkedIn used by alleged Chinese spies.

Using names such as Lily Wu, Laeticia Chen or Alex Li, the profiles sport impressive resumes, hundreds of contacts and attractive pictures of young profession­als.

The agency also named six organizati­ons it alleged Chinese spies use to cloak their approaches, including one called the Associatio­n France Euro-Chine and another named Global View Strategic Consulting.

Messages seeking comment from the organizati­ons weren’t immediatel­y returned.

Maassen warned that Chinese cyber-groups also were using so-called “supply-chain attacks” to get around companies’ online defenses.

Such attacks target IT workers and others who work for trusted service providers to send malicious software into the networks of organizati­ons the attackers are interested in.

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