BEIJING (Reuters) - U.S. government analysts believe a Chinese man
with government links wrote the key part of a spyware program used in
hacker attacks on Google last year, the Financial Times
reported
on Monday.
The man, a security consultant in his 30s, posted sections of the
program to a hacking forum where he described it as something he was
“working on,” the paper said, quoting an unidentified researcher
working for the U.S. government
.
The spyware creator works as a freelancer and did not launch the
attack, but Chinese officials had “special access” to his programing,
the report said.
“If he wants to do the research he’s good at, he has to toe the line
now and again,” the paper quoted the unnamed U.S. government researcher
saying.
“He would rather not have uniformed guys looking over his shoulder,
but there is no way anyone of his skill level can get away from that
kind of thing. The state has privileged access to these researchers’
work.”
The report did not say how analysts knew about the man’s government
ties.
The allegations over the spyware are the latest episode in a dispute
that has pitted Google and the United States against China, with its
wall of Internet controls and legions of hackers.
In January, the giant internet search engine company, Google,
threatened to pull back from China and shut its Google.cn
Chinese-language portal over complaints of censorship and sophisticated
hacking from within China.
Washington has backed those criticisms and urged Beijing to
investigate hacking complaints thoroughly and transparently. Beijing has
said it opposes hacking.
The Financial Times report also quoted unnamed sources backing a New
York Times report that analysts had traced the online attacks to two
Chinese educational institutions, the prestigious Shanghai Jiaotong
University and the Lanxiang vocational school.
The two establishments have denied the reports. And the allegation
that the latter, a high-school level institute that also trains
hairdressers, chefs and car mechanics, could take on one of the world’s
most powerful Internet firms, have been widely mocked in Chinese
cyberspace.
“How can these future cooks be such powerful hackers?” a web
user from Zhejiang province said on the portal www.163.com
.
The use of the school’s IP address could simply mean that hackers had
taken over its computers to hide their tracks.
But Lanxiang’s website also claims to have the “biggest” computer
laboratory in the world, a boast it says is confirmed by Guinness World
Records.
There was less online comment about the well-respected Jiaotong
University, which attracts top graduates and has a School of Information
Security Engineering.
(Reporting by Emma Graham-Harrison; Editing by Alex Richardson)
Read More http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/02/us-pinpoints-coder-behind-google-attack/#ixzz0gJSBYMgO
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