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news US Charges 12 Chinese Hackers For Hacking National Security Infrastructure

A thread covering the latest news on trends, groundbreaking technologies, and digital innovations reshaping the tech landscape.
The United States Department of Justice unveiled charges against twelve Chinese nationals on March 5, 2025, accusing them of orchestrating a sophisticated global cyber espionage campaign targeting critical American infrastructure, government agencies, and dissidents.

The indictments mark a significant escalation in Washington’s efforts to counter what officials describe as China’s increasingly aggressive cyber operations against U.S. national security interests.

Federal prosecutors detailed how ten alleged hackers-for-hire, along with two Chinese government officials, operated within a complex web of state-sponsored cyber activities.

The accused individuals, including employees of a private hacking company known as i-Soon, allegedly conducted advanced persistent threat (APT) operations under directives from China’s Ministry of Public Security.

The hackers functioned as what one senior FBI official described as “cyber mercenaries,” exploiting vulnerable systems and extracting sensitive data that was subsequently sold to Chinese government security services.

“Today, we are exposing the Chinese government agents directing and fostering indiscriminate and reckless attacks against computers and networks worldwide,” stated Sue J. Bai, head of the DOJ’s National Security Division.

Sophisticated Attack Vectors and Targets

The hackers reportedly employed multiple attack vectors, including backdoor exploitations, access control breaches, and authentication bypass techniques to penetrate secure networks.

Among the high-profile targets were the U.S. Treasury Department, which acknowledged a significant breach last year, and the Defense Intelligence and Commerce departments.

Beyond U.S. government entities, the campaign extended to foreign ministries in Taiwan, South Korea, India, and Indonesia, the New York State Assembly, and various religious and media organizations critical of China.

According to Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), Zhou Shuai and Yin Kecheng are among those charged; they are accused of stealing information from extremely sensitive U.S. vital infrastructure as early as 2013 in order to support China’s defense industry.

Two people frequently work together to target infrastructure and steal and sell important information from the defense industrial base.

They are recognized members of Silk Typhoon, the hacker collective that gained access to Treasury’s networks in late 2024 by breaching a government contractor.

According to the indictment, the DOJ disclosed that Zhou had been collecting data on border crossings, telecommunications, and individuals employed in the media, civil service, and religion studies for the previous five years under a stringent set of guidelines provided by the MSS.

Further, the indictments shed light on what U.S. officials characterize as a booming “hacking-for-hire ecosystem” in China, where private companies like i-Soon operate with tacit government approval.

This arrangement provides Chinese state security forces with plausible deniability while maintaining operational effectiveness.

Wu Haibo, the founder of i-Soon and a former member of China’s first hacktivist group,Green Army, allegedly oversaw and directed many of these hacking operations.

US Warns of Ongoing Chinese Espionage

According to Justice Department representatives, all twelve individuals indicted remain at large in China. The Chinese Embassy in Washington promptly condemned the indictments and associated sanctions, urging the U.S. to refrain from using cybersecurity issues as a pretext to “defame” China.

Despite these denials, U.S. authorities maintain that the evidence points to a deliberate, state-sponsored intelligence-gathering campaign designed to advance Chinese interests at the expense of American national security.

U.S. officials view these indictments as merely “one phase in a much more extensive battle” against China’s cyber threats.

They warn that Chinese state-backed hackers continue to target broad segments of American organizations and critical infrastructure using increasingly sophisticated methods.

The case highlights the changing landscape of international cyberwarfare, in which nation-states use private organizations to carry out espionage while seemingly avoiding direct government intervention.

Source: https://cybersecuritynews.com/us-charges-12-chinese-hackers/
 
This is a big blow to the United States of America’s cyber security, but we thank God that the US department of justice has delivered the right judgment against the 12 Chinese nationals that hacked the national security infrastructure. Apparently, it is a giant move in the right direction.

However, this incident reveals to us the porosity in cyber activities. There are tens of millions of hacking being perpetrated on the web every now and then.
 
This is a big blow to the United States of America’s cyber security, but we thank God that the US department of justice has delivered the right judgment against the 12 Chinese nationals that hacked the national security infrastructure. Apparently, it is a giant move in the right direction.

However, this incident reveals to us the porosity in cyber activities. There are tens of millions of hacking being perpetrated on the web every now and then.
Well, I do know that if China gains AI supremacy, it will probably ask the US to be a puppet (after some planned false flag, probably).

And China is strongly on the way to AI supremacy, so this is scary.
 
I would find this outrageous, but that's just what big powers do. I mean, look how the US interfered in Latin America for much of it's history.
How is this outrageous? They created backdoors and penetrated secured networks.
 
You're saying the US didn't do similar things in Latin America etc. but, of course, any type of spying should be met with outrage.
Who’s worse though? There are various chinese companies that roam freely and try to hit websites all the time trying to find backdoors, the United states doesn’t really do this. China and Russia do it all the time.

Which is why, a lot of their ip and ranges are blocked server side via a firewall. Especially with Cloudflare and Ngnix. If you have any examples of the United States doing it, I’d love to hear about it.


The FBI assesses that Integrity Technology Group, in addition to developing and controlling the botnet, is responsible for computer intrusion activities attributed to China-based hackers known by the private sector as “Flax Typhoon.” Microsoft Threat Intelligence described Flax Typhoon as nation-state actors based out of China, active since 2021, who have targeted government agencies and education, critical manufacturing, and information technology organizations in Taiwan, and elsewhere. The FBI’s investigation has corroborated Microsoft’s conclusions, finding that Flax Typhoon has successfully attacked multiple U.S. and foreign corporations, universities, government agencies, telecommunications providers, and media organizations.


A study released Tuesday by Netacea found that 72% of organizations surveyed suffered bot attacks that originated in China, and 66% from Russia.

The study also found that the average business loses 4.3% of online revenues every year to bots, or $85.6 million, a number that has more than doubled in the past two years.

Netacea commissioned independent researchers Coleman Parkes for the third straight year to survey 440 businesses with average online revenue of $1.9 billion across the travel, entertainment, ecommerce, financial services, and telecom sectors in the United States and UK.

The survey also found that it takes four months on average to detect bot attacks, with 97% admitting it takes over a month to respond. And 40% of businesses report attacks on their APIs, while attacks on mobile apps have overtaken website attacks for the first time.




“Using bots, they quietly target the APIs, websites, and applications powering these automations to corrupt business logic at massive scale,” wrote Andy Still, co-founder of Netacea, in the study's forward. "By doing so, they bleed revenues and abuse sensitive data wholesale, damaging reputation, degrading website performance and driving up technical costs.”
 
Who’s worse though? There are various chinese companies that roam freely and try to hit websites all the time trying to find backdoors, the United states doesn’t really do this. China and Russia do it all the time.
I don't know what the US is doing in Latin America now, but it's always been known they interfere in elections, usually with the goal of stopping Communists.
 
Like they did in Ukraine, creating a dictator. :-P
So, you need all the "good Ukranians" to bow down, just like the "good Canadians". What's the odds of that?

Russia's long history is of pushing people around. They even controlled half of Europe once and they would have taken all of it.

And what does America care of dictators, they even supported Stalin, seeing as he was fighting German aggression.
 
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