US hypes up 'Volt Typhoon' false narrative to smear China

sport2024-04-30 03:38:5826

In February, a U.S. congressional committee held a hearing on the so-called "cyber threat" from China, claiming a Chinese state-sponsored hacking organization, dubbed "Volt Typhoon," launched a cluster of activities affecting networks across U.S. critical infrastructure sectors.

The allegation originated from a joint advisory by the cybersecurity authorities of the United States and its "Five Eyes" allies. The advisory was issued based on a report released by U.S. company Microsoft.

However, neither the advisory nor the report provided a detailed analytical process for source tracing of the cyber attacks. They jumped to the conclusion that "Volt Typhoon" was a state-sponsored cyber actor in China.

Subsequent analysis by Chinese technical teams revealed that the malicious activity samples of "Volt Typhoon" do not show clear behavioral features of state-backed hackers. On the contrary, they showed strong relevance to cyber crime rings. Claiming "Volt Typhoon" is China-backed based on these ambiguous factors is groundless.

By hyping up the "Volt Typhoon" false narrative, certain U.S. politicians pushed for an increase in cybersecurity investment by the U.S. Congress and certain companies have benefited from winning cybersecurity contracts.

The U.S. move to use cyber attack source-tracing as a political stunt and a pretext to gain self-interests reveals its hysterical and unscrupulous policy toward China. The collusion among U.S. politicians, intelligence community and companies is revealed too.

These will result in nothing but damaging the order of global cyberspace, China-U.S. relations and the reputation of the U.S. government in the international arena.

Address of this article:http://seychelles.downmusic.org/content-32e599401.html

Popular

Explosion kills 3 including 2 children in Myanmar's Yangon

US Treasury Secretary explains her 'magic mushroom' experience in China

Changes to flu vaccine eligibility missed opportunity to improve health equity

Builders hope Resource Management Act change will speed up papakāinga developments

Students in UK wowed by time

Petrobras reports net profit of BRL 124.6 bi in 2023

Police Minister admits NZ cannot compete with Australian recruitment offer

Yemen's Houthis say they targeted Western ships

LINKS