The Norwalk Hour

Leak paints portrait of Chinese hacking industry

- By Dake Kang and Zen Soo

BEIJING — China’s hackersfor-hire take government officials out for lavish banquets, binge drinking and late-night karaoke with young women in a bid to win favor and business, as revealed in a highly unusual leak last month of internal documents from a private contractor linked to Chinese police.

China’s hacking industry is vast in size and scope but also suffers from shady business practices, disgruntle­ment over pay and work quality, and poor security protocols, the documents show.

Private hacking contractor­s are companies that steal data from other countries to sell to the Chinese authoritie­s. Over the past two decades, Chinese state security’s demand for overseas intelligen­ce has soared, giving rise to a vast network of these private hackers-for-hire companies that have infiltrate­d hundreds of systems outside China.

Though the existence of these hacking contractor­s is an open secret in China, little was known about how they operate. But the leaked documents from a firm called I-Soon have pulled back the curtain, revealing a seedy, sprawling industry where corners are cut and rules are murky and poorly enforced in the quest to make money.

Leaked chat records show ISoon executives colluding with competitor­s to rig bidding for government contracts. They pay thousands of dollars in “introducti­on fees” to contacts who bring them lucrative projects. ISoon has not commented on the documents.

Mei Danowski, a cybersecur­ity analyst who wrote about ISoon on her blog, Natto Thoughts, said the documents show that China’s hackers for hire work much like any other industry in China.

“It is profit driven,” Danowski said. “It is subject to China’s business culture — who you know, who you dine and wine with, and who you are friends with.”

Though I-Soon boasted about its hacking prowess in slick marketing PowerPoint presentati­ons, the real business took place at hotpot parties, late night drinking sessions and poaching wars with competitor­s, leaked records show. A picture emerges of a company enmeshed in a seedy, sprawling industry that relies heavily on connection­s to get things done.

I-Soon’s founder and CEO, Wu Haibo, is one of China’s so-called “red hackers” — patriots who offer their services to the Chinese Communist Party. With the spread of the internet, China’s

hacking-for-hire industry boomed, emphasizin­g espionage and intellectu­al property theft.

Today, hackers such as those at I-Soon outnumber FBI cybersecur­ity staff by “at least 50 to one,” FBI director Christophe­r Wray said January at a conference in Munich.

China boasts world-class hackers, many employed by the Chinese military and other state institutio­ns. But documents reveal that I-Soon and other hackers-for-hire often engage in sketchy business practices. ISoon leadership discussed buying gifts and which officials liked red wine. They swapped tips on who was a lightweigh­t, and who could handle their liquor.

I-Soon executives paid “introducti­on fees” for lucrative projects, chat records show, including tens of thousands of RMB (thousands of dollars) to a man who landed them a 285,000 RMB ($40,000) contract with police in Hebei province. To sweeten the deal, I-Soon’s chief operating officer, Chen Cheng, suggested arranging the man a drinking and karaoke session with women.

“He likes to touch girls,” Chen wrote.

The source of the I-Soon documents is unclear, and executives and Chinese police are investigat­ing. And though Beijing has repeatedly denied involvemen­t in offensive hacking, the leak illustrate­s I-Soon and other hacking companies’ deep ties with the Chinese state.

For example, chat records show China’s Ministry of Public Security gave companies access to proofs of concept of so-called “zero days”, the industry term for a previously unknown software security hole. Zero days are prized because they can be exploited until detected. I-Soon company executives debated how to obtain them. They are regularly discovered and surface at an annual Chinese state-sponsored hacking competitio­n.

Many of I-Soon’s clients were police in cities across China, a leaked contract list showed. ISoon scouted for databases they thought would sell well with officers, such as Vietnamese traffic data to the southeast province of Yunnan, or data on exiled Tibetans to the Tibetan regional government. At times, I-Soon hacked on demand.

I-Soon proclaimed their patriotism to win new business. Top executives discussed participat­ing in China’s poverty alleviatio­n scheme — one of Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s signature initiative­s — to make connection­s. In interviews with state media, I-Soon’s CEO Wu quoted Mencius, a Chinese philosophe­r, casting himself as a scholar concerned with China’s national interest.

Despite Wu’s professed patriotism, the leaked records depict a competitiv­e man motivated to get rich. “If you don’t make money,” he wrote in a private message, “being famous is useless.”

But I-Soon has been hit by the country’s recent economic downturn, leading to thin profits, low pay and an exodus of talent, the leaked documents show.

Low salaries and pay disparitie­s caused employees to complain, chat records show. Leaked employee lists show most I-Soon staff held a degree from a vocational training school, not an undergradu­ate degree, suggesting lower levels of education and training. Sales staff reported that clients were dissatisfi­ed with the quality of I-Soon data, making it difficult to collect payments.

The company’s troubles reflect broader issues in China’s private hacking industry. The country’s cratering economy, Beijing’s tightening controls and the growing role of the state has led to an exodus of top hacking talent, four cybersecur­ity analysts and Chinese industry insiders told The Associated Press.

“China is no longer the country we used to know. A lot of highly skilled people have been leaving,” said one industry insider, declining to be named to speak on a sensitive topic. Under Xi, the person added, the growing role of the state in China’s technology industry has emphasized ideology over competence, impeded pay and made access to officials pivotal.

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