Sunday, June 12, 2016

INTERNATIONAL CHINESE HACKERS ATTACKING THE UNSUSPECTED SERVER OF ANYONE EVEN A RURAL PC IN THE BACK ROOM TO JUMP START THIER ENTRY INTO AMERICAN COMPANIES AND DEFENSE WEB PORTAL AS THIS SMALL WISCONSIN WELDING COMPANY WAS INFECETD AS THE POINT OF PUSH AND PULL FOR TRACING ACTIVITY AFTER ONCE FOUND FROM THE SILICON VALLEY ANTI HACK COMPANY

Drive past the dairy farms, cornfields and horse pastures here and you will eventually arrive at Cate Machine & Welding, a small-town business run by Gene and Lori Cate and their sons. For 46 years, the Cates have welded many things — fertilizer tanks, jet-fighter parts, cheese molds, even a farmer’s broken glasses.
And like many small businesses, they have a dusty old computer humming away in the back office. On this one, however, an unusual spy-versus-spy battle is playing out: The machine has been taken over by Chinese hackers.
The hackers use it to plan and stage attacks. But unbeknown to them, a Silicon Valley start-up is tracking them here, in real time, watching their every move and, in some cases, blocking their efforts.
“When they first told us, we said, ‘No way,’” Mr. Cate said one afternoon recently over pizza and cheese curds, recalling when he first learned the computer server his family used to manage its welding business had been secretly repurposed. “We were totally freaked out,” Ms. Cate said. “We had no idea we could be used as an infiltration unit for Chinese attacks.”
On a recent Thursday, the hackers’ targets appeared to be a Silicon Valley food delivery start-up, a major Manhattan law firm, one of the world’s biggest airlines, a prominent Southern university and a smattering of targets across Thailand and Malaysia. The New York Times viewed the action on the Cates’ computer on the condition that it not name the targets.
The activity had the hallmarks of Chinese hackers known as the C0d0s0 group, a collection of hackers for hire that the security industry has been tracking for years. Over the years, the group has breached banks, law firms and tech companies, and once hijacked the Forbes website to try to infect visitors’ computers with malware.


http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/12/technology/the-chinese-hackers-in-the-back-office.html

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