China used stolen data to expose CIA operatives | Universities warn foreign interference measures must be 'carefully calibrated' | Far-right chat groups discovered in German police department
China used stolen data to expose CIA operatives | Universities warn foreign interference measures must be 'carefully calibrated' | Far-right chat groups discovered in German police department
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Follow us on Twitter. The Daily Cyber Digest focuses on the topics we work on, including cyber, critical technologies & strategic issues like foreign interference. U.S. officials believed Chinese intelligence operatives had likely combed through and synthesized information from these massive, stolen caches to identify the undercover U.S. intelligence officials. It was very likely a “suave and professional utilization” of these datasets, said the same former intelligence official. This “was not random or generic,” this source said. “It’s a big-data problem.” The battle over data—who controls it, who secures it, who can steal it, and how it can be used for economic and security objectives—is defining the global conflict between Washington and Beijing.
China used stolen data to expose CIA operatives | Universities warn foreign interference measures must be 'carefully calibrated' | Far-right chat groups discovered in German police department
China used stolen data to expose CIA…
China used stolen data to expose CIA operatives | Universities warn foreign interference measures must be 'carefully calibrated' | Far-right chat groups discovered in German police department
Follow us on Twitter. The Daily Cyber Digest focuses on the topics we work on, including cyber, critical technologies & strategic issues like foreign interference. U.S. officials believed Chinese intelligence operatives had likely combed through and synthesized information from these massive, stolen caches to identify the undercover U.S. intelligence officials. It was very likely a “suave and professional utilization” of these datasets, said the same former intelligence official. This “was not random or generic,” this source said. “It’s a big-data problem.” The battle over data—who controls it, who secures it, who can steal it, and how it can be used for economic and security objectives—is defining the global conflict between Washington and Beijing.