After the attacks last month on various companies, including Google, Northop Grumman, Adobe, and even a Los Angeles law firm representing a company suing China for allegedly stealing its software code, Google is fighting back. Google has implied that the Chinese government is responsible for the attacks and stopped cooperating with Chinese government censors. Now rumors are swirling that Google might stop doing business in China.
Good for Google. Welcome to the free market, 同志 (and I mean that literally, not in the colloquial way it has come to be used)! Click here to read about the far-ranging support for Google’s actions.
Now the U.S. government is attempting to gather evidence on the perpetrators of the attacks, with mixed results. The NYT reports:
[After gaining access to a computer in Taiwan that it suspected of being the source of the attacks,] Google company engineers actually saw evidence of the aftermath of the attacks, not only at Google, but also at at least 33 other companies, including Adobe Systems, Northrop Grumman and Juniper Networks…
[T]hey alerted American intelligence and law enforcement officials and worked with them to assemble powerful evidence that the masterminds of the attacks were not in Taiwan, but on the Chinese mainland.
But while much of the evidence, including the sophistication of the attacks, strongly suggested an operation run by Chinese government agencies, or at least approved by them, company engineers could not definitively prove their case. Today that uncertainty, along with concerns about confronting the Chinese without strong evidence, has frozen the Obama administration’s response to the intrusion…
Update: U.S. to issue formal protest to China concerning the cyberattacks against Google.
Click here to read more on the growing Chinese cybermilitia and why “the FBI ranks China as one of the greatest potential espionage threats over the next decade.”