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China Security IT

Blog Reveals a Chinese Military Hacker's Life Is One of Boredom and Bitterness 185

Nerval's Lobster writes "People's Liberation Army hackers: they're just like us. As noted by IT security firm Mandiant, and detailed in a new article by The Los Angeles Times, a blogger calling themselves 'Rocy Bird' had posted several hundred blog entries over a three-year period about life as a Chinese military hacker. It wasn't the most exciting existence. He worked a normal workday—8 A.M. until 5:30 P.M., unless some project required late hours—and lived in a dorm. He dined often on instant noodles and enjoyed the television series 'Prison Break.' He spent lots of time online, even when off the clock. And like millions of people all over the world, he disliked many aspects of his job. 'What I can't understand is why all the work units are located in the most remote areas of the city,' the hacker, who the Times identified as having the family name Wang, wrote in a portion of a blog posting reprinted by the paper. 'I really don't get what those old guys are thinking in the beginning. They should at least take us young people into consideration. How can passionate young people like us handle a prison-like environment like this?'"
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Blog Reveals a Chinese Military Hacker's Life Is One of Boredom and Bitterness

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  • by cbiltcliffe ( 186293 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2013 @10:32PM (#43166985) Homepage Journal

    Something tells me that's the kind of stuff that gets you disappeared in China.
      Probably not worth the risk. Hell, it's hardly even worth the risk in North America...

  • military life (Score:5, Insightful)

    by memnock ( 466995 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2013 @10:37PM (#43167005)

    Based on the comment in the summary: what did this person think the military was like? Perhaps the people that recruited him sold him a bill of goods: 'Protect the Fatherland! China faces threats on multiple fronts! It'll be better than World of Warcraft and The Matrix combined! Your skill set and our resources will be cracking secrets everywhere in Europe and the U.S.A. and you'll be a hero and celebrated! You'll be part of the select group protecting us from the evil outside our borders that doesn't recognize our sovereignty."

  • by girlintraining ( 1395911 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2013 @10:42PM (#43167047)

    Hell, it's hardly even worth the risk in North America...

    In North America, everything is illegal, off limits, or for authorized personnel only, and with rather stiff consequences if you're caught. We have a higher incarceration rate than China. So I say, if you're really going to have the democratic spirit...

    Ignore all that shit, and do it anyway.

  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2013 @11:40PM (#43167445) Journal
    I am probably well known for pointing out the issues of the Chinese gov. However, I think that the average Chinese, like any other person on this planet, loves his nation, hates his gov, and simply wants to live and enjoy life. This blog supports this case, though it could easily be written by the propaganda unit.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 14, 2013 @12:14AM (#43167619)

    This.

    It is blindingly obvious that a PR campaign has been going on around "cyber war" and "cyber terrorism" and aimed at China.

    It is also blindingly obvious that the public at large will eat this horseshit right up and vote for whoever promises the most "cyber security".

    It worries me how this might go...

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 14, 2013 @12:47AM (#43167799)

    I was very sure I picked a hint of "pythonesque" humor in the voice over so I googled and yup, it's a hoax [huffingtonpost.com]

  • by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Thursday March 14, 2013 @12:54AM (#43167813) Journal
    prison-like environment, remote areas of the city.
    Sounds like the growing pains of the 1950-60's GCHQ and NSA stations around the "Commonwealth" land for signal bases swap.
    The conditions in the UK bases where cash strapped - any money raised was going to exotic expensive new equipment and keeping the USA very happy.
    The Russians where fast to pick up on the gifted young men and woman in distant lands with very low wages, mounting lifestyle costs and young families.
    Add in a cold command structure left over from past wars and many where open to waiting Russian offers.
    What has China (and other spook agencies) learned?
    Young people with dreams might walk out - dont hire skilled people with any strange imaginations.
    Keep tourists, business types, diplomates in other parts of the country/city. If the foreigners venture out they are easy to note.
    Hire gifted locals, from trusted families with deep village backgrounds. If you walk out the pain will be massive - up and down the family tree,
    If China wants more from its staff they should follow the GCHQ reforms of the 1970-90's (excluding the union issues) - wage and basic working condition improvements.
    Drop the military feel - even something as simple as the endless tight "dress" uniforms can make a huge difference to the quality of everyday life to a young officer.
    Cash the staff up and offer massive extra rewards for extra long term study (NSA is great at that ;) ).
    If China lets the "anguished person" thing fester they will suffer.
    The UK and USA where able to profile and wage up their staff to fix that issue. Long term China will have to make some huge cash investments in domestic tech.
    The internet in the USA always was and will be a NSA play thing - totally open to 'cyber command' and will soon go on the offence.
    "not elite uber-hackers" seems to show China is just learning like the UK did in the 1950-70's with US tech.
    What can China do? Face down the NSA on the "internet" - that did not work well for the Russians.
    Go for soft US personal with issues and buy them to sell out the USA? The NSA keeps its staff and exstaff close.
    Or just keep chipping away with a broad front of masses of staff hoping a few get into some US box thats open to scripts?
    The only problem for the USA is its own staff pushing for cloud and networking - somehow "all" the data been shared will give them insights.
    Many spy agencies have lost generations of work due to massive data loss in one go due to a person and in the future a script/hack.
    Russia will aim for the person or site, China is going for everything and will see what drops out :)
    All the NSA can do is keep its gems off the network - but the demands of contracts with political/mil friends with cloud tools for sale will be fun to watch.
  • by xQx ( 5744 ) on Thursday March 14, 2013 @01:01AM (#43167841)
    So, how much longer until China realizes that all they need to do to fully replicate western society is to give their citizens a right to vote every 4 years between 'thing 1' and 'thing 2'.

    It's no real surprise how similar it is to live in an economic society under communist rule as it is to live in an economic society under democratic rule when modern democracy has done everything it can to resist any push to reform into a method of governance that gives people actual choice, rather than the illusion of choice.

    Bradley Manning's case is a great example of the difference between pissing off a communist party, and pissing off a military that reports to a democratic government.

    In China, you get torture then execution.

    In America, you get torture (or is that "subjected to enhanced interrogation techniques"), prison, a theatrical presentation for the benefit of the public called "fair trial", prison, then death.

    You say tomato, I say tomato.
  • by OhANameWhatName ( 2688401 ) on Thursday March 14, 2013 @01:47AM (#43168039)

    It just makes me feel bad for some individual somewhere, that his life is just as mundane as anyone else's, and that he's seemingly unmotivated to perform his duty at top effort. Not exactly the kind of message you want to send if you're hell-bent on promoting a cyber war or whatever

    The lies will come in all sorts of shapes and sizes. This particular lie is promoting the idea that Chinese citizenry are down trodden, unhappy and poorly fed. The best and brightest are locked in jails and forced to work long hours without socialisation. There's always some truth in the lies, that's what makes them so compelling. That this particular lie feeds on the truth (that some Chinese workers live in poor or even terrible conditions) to construct something conceivably possible is simply the artistry in the campaign. eg. You believe it.

    Always question things. This particular report comes with no evidence, no source, nothing to believe whatsoever. At best, it could be summarized as a story, fiction. It's delivered by a private security company, broadcast by a multi-national corporation and submitted to the largest tech news site on the web. To find the truth, follow the money .. it's pretty clear where the money is in this story.

    Personally, I never drank Kool-Aid.

  • by OhANameWhatName ( 2688401 ) on Thursday March 14, 2013 @01:57AM (#43168089)

    But that the Chinese military has lots of employed hackers is already something everyone knows

    Call me ignorant. The Chinese government claims it isn't hacking, and I've yet to see evidence to the contrary. Hyperbole, allegations, lies .. these all come in droves. Proof? Not a drop

    I'd be shocked if the Chinese government didn't have defensive hacking capabilities. They probably even have offensive hacking capabilities. I'm positively certain that the Australian government has cyber security professionals on the payroll (because I've seen banner ads recruiting people for the jobs) and we all know that the US government has hackers on the payroll because they trumpet 'Cyber Security' left right and centre.

    What you say 'everyone knows' about China has only been strenuously denied by the Chinese government.

  • by hackingbear ( 988354 ) on Thursday March 14, 2013 @02:09AM (#43168147)

    Exactly! This whole sage has suddenly been blown up recently. They have the full control of their routers and gateway and can fake network addressing information anyway they want, if it is a serious spy operation. Besides, anyone who really know China should know that government departments or employees in china are almost ways just work for their own projects for their own profits, rather than that of the country's.

    This whole saga reminds me of the WMD in Iraq claim before the Iraq war. It was so convinced at the time that Iraq was building/storing massive WMD that aimed at US... until we spent trillions of dollar and thousands of lives to find out the whole thing is a flop. So many defense contractors who were friendly to the ruling parties got big rainfall, and nobody really got punished for such terrible intelligence.

    This time, though, we will never find out the truth, because we can't possibly invade China to find out. We will just keep spending $$$. Thanks a lot!

  • The Russians knew (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SmallFurryCreature ( 593017 ) on Thursday March 14, 2013 @03:54AM (#43168591) Journal

    During Glasnost, Russian reporters on the American election noted not just how similar the US elections were to USSR ones (pick one of two) but how much BETTER the Americans had gotten at totally muzzling the press through unseen torture methods because at no point could the Russians see any sign of the American media asking akward or difficult questions. What terrible gulags must exist to put the fright into the press to such a degree!?!

    Well... the answer is of course, the gulag of exile. Ask akward or non-pre-approved questions and you don't get access anymore to special events and then have to explain to your advertisers why your network/newspaper was the one not present at a press conference. It is a marvelous system. You can ask any question you want as a member of the free press at a press conference... you just won't be there to ask them.

    The KGB had to actually get out of their chair to supress the media, get their hands bloody. The white house press officer just sends one less invite. It is not just the US doing this, ask the wrong questions and they can't keep you out of the official big gatherings, you just don't get access anymore to all the "optional" stuff. It is so simple but it is where democracy dies. It is not just the ones in power that do it, Palin only does things by invite and with pre-approved lists of questions. Wilders both bans AND is himself banned (right wing dutch politician).

    Mind you, the catholics show the other method doesn't really work either. In theory any kardinal can be elected pope... so how come they got the rotten luck every single elected pope turns out to be a war criminal, child molesting bigot? I mean... what are the odds... unless every single catholic is a nasty piece of work... nah... that couldn't be the case could it? Or could it be that if the milk is spoiled, that which rises to the top is not the cream? That any person who makes it into a position of being elected ruler has had to swim in the cesspool for so long, they can't help but got tainted?

    That it don't matter how many are up for election, they are all part of the system because the system is what nurtured them?

    Geert Wilders is a right wing dutch politician who often bitches about "The Hague" which is our capitol hill. Tiny detail, he is one of the longest serving politicians. It is the clincher for many right wingers, if someone tells you business will solve everything and government is filled with useless people who can't do anything right... and they been in government for decades and have no business experience... do you believe them?

    If you are a Republican, you should listen to richest people on this planet since they by your believe system are the most right. So... what do Bill Gates and Warren Buffet have to say about politics? Mmm?

    We are the cesspool and our leaders are what floated to the top.

  • Re:Won't work (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TapeCutter ( 624760 ) on Thursday March 14, 2013 @03:59AM (#43168603) Journal

    They used Fema to move people who'd lost everything all over the country so they couldn't become a dangerous voting block

    That's the lamest conspiracy theory I've heard all week. Fema and the rest of the clowns involved in that circus were simply incompetent to the point of criminal neglect.

  • by Intrepid imaginaut ( 1970940 ) on Thursday March 14, 2013 @08:51AM (#43169921)

    I mean... what are the odds... unless every single catholic is a nasty piece of work... nah... that couldn't be the case could it? Or could it be that if the milk is spoiled, that which rises to the top is not the cream? That any person who makes it into a position of being elected ruler has had to swim in the cesspool for so long, they can't help but got tainted?

    Really, you're painting a billion odd people with the same brush? As with politicians there's a big difference between the leadership and the average individual. And unlike voters Catholics have exactly zero say in church policy or elections. I'm not defending the religion, just pointing out the reality.

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