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CYBER WARS
Spy agencies in 'technology arms race', says British chief
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) March 30, 2015


China suspected as software site GitHub hit by attack
Washington (AFP) March 30, 2015 - The software collaboration website GitHub said Monday it was fighting off a cyber attack since late last week, and security analysts said the effort appeared to originate in China.

A US website described as "the world's largest code host," GitHub said it first noticed the so-called distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack Thursday, with intermittent disruptions over the past few days.

On Monday, GitHub said the attack "has evolved" and that it was working to mitigate the flood of requests which appear to be aimed at shutting its down.

GitHub said it believes "the intent of this attack is to convince us to remove a specific class of content."

Some security specialists went further, saying it appears to be an attempt to block the use of anti-censorship tools in China.

The security firm Insight Labs noted that massive amounts of traffic from the large Chinese search engine Baidu were "hijacked" in the attack on GitHub.

"Even people outside China are being weaponized to target things the Chinese government does not like, for example, freedom of speech," the security firm said.

Online security specialist Alan Woodward of the University of Surrey said on Twitter that the attack "seems to be coming from China aimed at pages censored -- is this same as http://greatfire.org attack."

Woodward was referring to the Chinese activist group GreatFire, which operates websites that circumvent the country's censorship, and whose online service came under attack this month.

GreatFire allows residents of China to circumvent the so-called "Great Firewall" that censors much content from the West, by providing "mirror" websites of those which are blocked by censors.

Researchers said the GitHub attack appeared to be aimed at knocking out censored sites including the Chinese edition of the New York Times and GreatFire.

Security researcher Richard Bejtlich blamed the Chinese government for the attacks.

"Even if somehow this is not a state-executed or state-ordered attack, according to the spectrum of state responsibility, the Chinese government is clearly responsible in one form or another," Bejtlich said in a blog post.

- Great Firewall changing -

GreatFire said meanwhile a statement that it believes the attacks are related and come from the Chinese government.

"We can now confidently conclude that the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) is responsible for both of these attacks," the statement said.

GreatFire said the attacks involve hijacking of Internet traffic from around the world in an effort to bring down blocked websites.

"The Great Firewall has switched from being a passive, inbound filter to being an active and aggressive outbound one," the statement said.

"This is a frightening development and the implications of this action extend beyond control of information on the Internet."

Spy agencies are caught in a "technology arms race" with terrorists and criminals, the new head of Britain's MI6 said on Monday in his first public comments since becoming chief.

Alex Younger defended the use of data by the Secret Intelligence Service, known as MI6, after the release of documents by former CIA contractor Edward Snowden sparked criticism of sweeping mass surveillance by intelligence agencies.

"Using data appropriately and proportionately offers us a priceless opportunity to be even more deliberate and targeted in what we do, and so to be better at protecting our agents and this country," Younger said.

"The bad news is the same technology in opposition hands, an opposition often unconstrained by consideration of ethics and law, allows them to see what we are doing and to put our people and agents at risk," he said.

"So we find ourselves in a technology arms race."

He described the threats faced by MI6 as the "dark side of globalisation" including "terrorists, malicious actors in cyberspace and criminals".

The comments were Younger's first since the career spy became chief of Britain's foreign intelligence service last year, taking the helm of an agency not officially acknowledged by the British government until 1994.

The organisation has emerged from the shadows in recent years to defend itself and restore a reputation tarnished by discredited intelligence used to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and accusations of complicity in torture during the so-called "War on Terror".

Younger said that public trust relied on oversight by parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee, which has been criticised as being ineffectual in reining in the agencies.

"What really distinguishes us from our opponents is that we live by the values of this country and are regulated by its laws, even as we work in secret. This is our vital advantage," Younger said.

"Our staff are asked to make complex decisions in a difficult ethical and legal space. They do so with remarkable assurance. If we make mistakes, we face up to them and learn from them.

"The guiding principle is clear -- we cannot protect the values this country represents if we undermine them in the process. And we cannot hope to hold the public's trust unless they know this principle is effectively overseen."


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CYBER WARS
Beijing behind Internet security violation: group
Beijing (AFP) March 25, 2015
China's cyberspace administration is "complicit" in attacks on major Internet companies including Google, an anti-censorship group said Wednesday, calling on firms worldwide to strengthen their defences. Beijing dismissed the accusation and called for all sides to "abandon accusing each other without proof". GreatFire.org, which operates websites seeking to circumvent China's vast censor ... read more


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