Author Topic: Ripsnort was right about China  (Read 248 times)

Krush

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Ripsnort was right about China
« on: April 27, 2001, 05:30:00 PM »
The war has already started !
--------------------------------

The Chinese hackers are responding to attacks on Chinese sites by American
hackers, including a group that calls itself PoizonBOx, military officials
said. Intelligence sources said they expect the attacks to start May 1.
For weeks, hacker chat rooms have been full of talk by Chinese and American
hackers about continuing their attacks. The Pentagon is worried it may be
caught in the middle.

The possible Chinese computer attack would be timed to mark a low point of
U.S.-China relations, 1999's accidental U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy
in Belgrade. And it would come weeks after the flap over a U.S. surveillance
plane was forced to land on an island in the South China Sea.

Since the standoff over the plane and the Chinese detainment of the 24 U.S.
crew members, American and Chinese hackers have threatened each other in
Internet chat rooms. American hackers have been urging each other to attack
Chinese Web sites, and the American group PoizonBOx has reportedly defaced
more than 100 Chinese sites.

On Alpha Alert

The Pentagon is preparing for denial-of-service attacks against unclassified
".mil" sites, the domain reserved for the U.S. military. Plus, military
officials said they expect attacks could target the ".gov" sites of the U.S.
government.

In a denial-of-service attack, hackers try to overwhelm a system's Web
servers by sending floods of requests.

To prepare, the U.S. Pacific Command has raised its information-systems
threat condition - known as INFOCON - to Alpha from normal, requiring close
monitoring of its Web sites, according to a Defense Department source.

Military officials expect to raise the threat level to Bravo or Charlie by
the middle of next week, the source said. Bravo calls for starting to limit
access to military sites, and Charlie requires pulling systems offline.
Delta, the highest threat level, calls for a system shutdown.

The Pentagon would take action against a denial-of-service attack by
blocking access to the targeted sites or pulling certain systems offline.
Officials are also monitoring unfamiliar e-mail attachments, which might
contain computer viruses.

The Pacific Command, based in Hawaii, declined to comment specifically on
the matter, but a spokeswoman told ABCNEWS: "We are dedicating additional
assets to monitor and track suspicious activity related to our computer and
communications systems."

Concern of Government Involvement

Pentagon officials said they believed Chinese hackers chose the first week
in May because of two important dates: a Chinese holiday on May 4 during
which many people would be home and on their personal computers; and May 7,
the anniversary of the embassy bombing.

Military sources told ABCNEWS that, although they expect the hack attacks
will be done by civilians, there is some concern that the Chinese government
could be backing the efforts.

During the standoff over the spy plane in early April, the Pacific Command
was targeted by Chinese hackers. A huge denial-of-service attack from China
shut down the Pacific Command's unclassified computer network for 12 hours,
according to a high-ranking Pentagon official.


Offline miko2d

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Ripsnort was right about China
« Reply #1 on: April 27, 2001, 05:40:00 PM »
 We should catch and publicly hand a hundred of those american hackers under the pretext that their actions may provoke a nuclear war.
 Then chinese will try to do better and may catch and hang a thousand of them.

 This way we get some benefit out of that crisis.

 miko

Offline Fatty

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Ripsnort was right about China
« Reply #2 on: April 27, 2001, 07:32:00 PM »
Heh, best idea I've heard yet at a diplomatic solution benifiting all sides.

Offline StSanta

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Ripsnort was right about China
« Reply #3 on: April 28, 2001, 02:47:00 AM »
Heh, only forgetting that at least some of these American hackers are good computer science students that are going to be needed in the industry. Didn't know hacking was a crime for which the US would send people off to the offending country  .

Unfortunately, many .gov and .mil sites are incompetently run, and this in the country with the sharpest minds when it comes to IT technology. The info on protection is out there, but not used.

Sort of like sex and protection  .

And of course the media call script kiddies for "hackers". It's ridiculous.

------------------
Von Santa
Staffelkapitän 9./JG 54 "Grünherz"
"If you return from a mission with a victory, but without your Rottenflieger, you have lost your battle."
- D. Hrabak, JG 54 "Grünherz"

MrSiD

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Ripsnort was right about China
« Reply #4 on: April 28, 2001, 06:07:00 AM »
There are too many DoS kids around packeting ANYTHING that crosses their way.

They build flood networks consisting of hundreds or even thousands of clients.

I've been attacked by some of them and I can tell you, there's nothing you can do to protect yourself.

Those people (I dont care who the diddly they are or what they study) are global scale organized criminals and they should be put away as soon as possible!

They cause a huge amount of havoc in the networking systems every day, and nothing effective is being done to stop them.