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Lawmaker says China engages in cyber spying

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The chairman of the House of Representatives intelligence committee on Tuesday accused China of widespread cyber economic espionage and said many U.S. firms were afraid to come forward for fear their computers would be the targets of even more attacks.

“China’s economic espionage has reached an intolerable level and I believe that the United States and our allies in Europe and Asia have an obligation to confront Beijing and demand that they put a stop to this piracy,” Republican Representative Mike Rogers said at a committee hearing on cybersecurity.

“Beijing is waging a massive trade war on us all, and we should band together to pressure them to stop,” he said.

Internet giant Google partially pulled out of China last year after concerns of censorship and a hacking episode that it said originated from China.

Rogers said companies like Google that reported cyber attacks were “just the tip of the iceberg.”

“There are more companies that have been hit that won’t talk about it in the press, for fear of provoking further Chinese attacks,” he said.

Behind closed doors, however, companies describe attacks that originate in China, he said.

While U.S. officials and firms point the finger at China for many cyber attacks, China says it is one of the world’s biggest victims of hacking.

“Attributing this espionage isn’t easy, but talk to any private sector cyber analyst, and they will tell you there is little doubt that this is a massive campaign being conducted by the Chinese government,” Rogers said.

(Reporting by Tabassum Zakaria and Susan Cornwell; Editing by Xavier Briand)


Browsers Tackle The ‘BEAST’ Web Security Problem

Browser makers are devising ways to protect people from a security protocol weakness that could let an attacker eavesdrop on or hijack protected Internet sessions. Potential solutions include a Mozilla option to disable Java in Firefox.

The problem–considered theoretical until a demonstration by researchers Juliano Rizzo and Thai Duong at a security conference in Argentina last week–is a vulnerability in SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) and TLS (Transport Layer Security) 1.0, encryption protocols used to secure Web sites that are accessed using HTTPS (Secure Hypertext Transfer Protocol).

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Lawyers seek docs on NYPD unit that eyed Muslims

Civil liberties groups are asking a judge to force the New York Police Department to turn over documents about its efforts to spy on and infiltrate the Muslim community.

The documents filed in federal court in Manhattan are based largely on reporting from The Associated Press that showed police monitoring all aspects of daily life in Muslim neighborhoods. Documents showed that plainclothes officers were being dispatched to eavesdrop inside businesses. Hundreds of mosques were investigated. Dozens were infiltrated. And police maintained a list of 28 countries that, along with “American Black Muslim,” were labeled “ancestries of interest.”

Lawyers said that could violate a longstanding court order prohibiting the NYPD from maintaining information on people not involved with criminal activity. The NYPD didn’t immediately respond to a message for comment.


Nicolas Sarkozy ally accused of spying in latest scandal to hit re-election bid

The threat to Nicolas Sarkozy’s re-election bid from corruption scandals intensified on Wednesday after a leading state prosecutor close to the president was summoned before judges over an alleged dirty tricks campaign to spy on journalists.

Seven months before the presidential election, Sarkozy, who once promised to be Mr Squeaky Clean of French politics, has seen his close circle come under pressure in a series of corruption investigations whose plots thicken by the day. Investigators are untangling a web of scandals involving alleged illegal party-funding with banknotes variously stuffed into bags, briefcases and brown envelopes, as well as phone interceptions.

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Are UK lecturers spying on Indian students?

London: New Home Office rules asking academic staff at British universities to keep a tab on students from India and other non-EU countries have sparked off concern that lecturers have been turned into “spies and spooks”.

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