CHINA> Focus
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China at the mercy of global hackers
By Cui Xiaohuo, Wang Linyan and Peng Kuang (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-17 07:46 No wonder World Wide Web creator Tim Berners-Lee said recently that most people "no longer understand the Web". "Security permeates everything, so there are possible attacks on everything," the 54-year-old US inventor told London-based New Scientist magazine on June 5. Computer warfare still has the capacity to go beyond people's imagination, according to scientists and military specialists, who claim a full cyber war would determine a real combat situation and could halt the exchange of fire before it started. "The key word for computer warfare is suppression, not hacking," explained Professor Fang Binxing, a leading cyberspace scientist with a 21-year career in computer technology. "This is when a military, using civilian and commercial networks, infiltrates the firewall of its enemy's system and disables things like the water, electricity and gas supplies, making it virtually impossible for a country to command the situation or fight back."
Strategists have pointed out that China, with a discord in cyber security defense and a lack of public awareness surrounding network safety, is vulnerable to a cyber attack. B2B Research Center, a Hangzhou-based firm that studies commercial activities online, also warned the country's "cyber sovereignty" had been put in jeopardy by the domination of foreign investment in the local Internet industry.
Li at the National Defense University said the Chinese military, which uses an autonomous cabled network, has done no work with civilian and commercial resources to establish a suitable cyber defense. "The military's separate network has so far been safe from any infiltrations, but such safety can make a military complacent to future tactics," said Fang, president of Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications and the first person in China to build online infrastructure designed to combat Internet infiltrations. He was also director of the national computer network emergency response team between 2002 and 2006. Fellow expert Fang Xingdong, a Beijing-based IT industry observer, added: "Some Chinese military officials still hold dear to the belief that there is no danger of war in cyberspace." The central government has set up anti-hacking offices at security and industry ministries, mainly to tackle online financial crimes and industrial espionage, but there is so far no liaison office watching over cyber-security surveillance. Sources said the People's Liberation Army (PLA) has set a steady budget for its information-based operations, but it is unknown how much is spent on joint projects with commercial companies. "A cyber security taskforce should be established to collaborate with civilian resources," said Professor Yu. "This is the next crucial step for the nation's cyberspace strategy." Fang Binxing, meanwhile, warned that the lack of urgency in updating its digital defense structure or cooperating with industry leaders over advanced technology had left some divisions of the PLA open to attack, particularly the air force, which relies heavily on electronic communication. "It is a dangerous paradox," he said. "China's resources heavily rely on the Internet, but it is still desperately in need of an effective defensive system." He said almost every country claims its computer systems have been abused by foreign hackers, but the US, boasting the most sophisticated cyber network in the world, often claims it is the prime victim. "The US talks about hackers making assaults on the Pentagon and Congress, but they are also crystal clear that a full cyber war, if waged, is beyond any hacker's might," said Fang. The nation's Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn said on Monday that threats to US-based computer networks represent "an unprecedented national security challenge".
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