Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Daimler. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Daimler. Afficher tous les articles

samedi 18 août 2018

Rogue University

Tsinghua University linked to Chinese cyber espionage
Targeting of Daimler, state of Alaska and Tibetan groups traced to college computer 
By Yuan Yang in Beijing

Cyberwar: An IP address at China's Tsinghua University is the origin of numerous recent cyber-attacks on targets around the world.

China’s top engineering university, Tsinghua University, was the origin of multiple recent cyber-espionage campaigns targeting groups such as the Tibetan community in India and the Alaskan state government, new research has found.
 Attacks originating from Tsinghua University's infrastructure also targeted the German carmaker Daimler a day after it issued a profit warning blaming the US-China trade war, according to cyber security company Recorded Future.
 Chinese cyber espionage against the US is increasing, US security firms say, giving credence to Washington’s fears that Beijing is stealing technology from US companies — fears that have in part pushed both countries into a global trade war.
 Although cyber security firms had previously seen a lull in attacks following a 2015 bilateral agreement to end government-sponsored hacking for commercial purposes, attacks are now back at or above the pre-accord level, experts say.
 Recorded Future found that from March this year, a series of attacks emanated from an IP address — an identification number given to every computer connecting to the internet — that belongs to Tsinghua University.
Tsinghua is among the world’s best computer science universities, and owns companies and projects tied to Beijing’s industrial policies, which pursue technological upgrading.
 Tsinghua was not immediately available for comment due to the university holiday season.
 The IP address in question had engaged in “aggressive scanning” of networks including the government of the US state of Alaska and the Kenyan Ports Authority.
 It also attempted to attack a server used by the Tibetan community in India, which had previously been the target of Chinese surveillance as a result of Beijing’s attempts to undermine supporters of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader reviled by the Communist party leadership as “a wolf in monk’s clothing”.
 Recorded Future said that the activity was “conducted by Chinese state-sponsored actors in support of China’s economic development goals”.
 Scanning the ports on a network is usually the first step in an attempt to penetrate the network by seeing what openings there are. 
However Recorded Future did not find evidence the attacker had successfully obtained sensitive information.
 “It makes sense that spy activities are more common now, given the tense economic situation,” said one Chinese security professional, who wished to remain anonymous.
However, he questioned why the attackers did not cover their tracks at all.
 Public “Whois” records show the IP address in question was first registered in 1993 as part of a block of IP addresses belonging to the domain tsinghua.edu.cn, with a street address belonging to Tsinghua University.

lundi 5 mars 2018

Lost Illusions

Europe Once Saw Xi Jinping as a Hedge Against Trump. Not Anymore.
By STEVEN ERLANGER

The announcement that Xi Jinping could possibly become China’s ruler for life has punctured his promise to be “a reliable stakeholder” in the global order. 

BRUSSELS — A year ago, the self-styled global elite gathered at Davos, shaken by the election of Donald J. Trump, who made no secret of his contempt for the multilateral alliances and trade that underpin the European Union.
Then up stepped Xi Jinping, promising that if America would no longer champion the global system, China would.
European officials and business leaders were thrilled.
But a year later, European leaders are confronted with the reality that Xi is also a threat to the global system, rather than a great defender. 
The abolition of the two-term limit for the presidency, which could make Xi China’s ruler for life and which is expected to be ratified this week by China’s legislature, has punctured the hope that China would become “a responsible stakeholder” in the global order. 
Few still believe China is moving toward the Western values of democracy and rule of law.
Instead, European leaders now accuse China of trying to divide the European Union as it woos Central Europe and the Balkan states with large investments. 
They are also wary of how China has become more aggressive militarily, in espionage and in its investment strategy abroad — with targets including its largest trading partner in Europe, Germany.
For decades the European Union has benefited from the global system created by the United States after World War II, as has China. 
Even as Russia under Vladimir V. Putin has remained a revanchist power, trying to destabilize the bloc and win back territories lost in the Cold War, China’s economic success has depended on stability and order — which benefited Europe, too.
But the prospect of Xi as ruler in perpetuity has scrambled the equation. 
Many European leaders distrust Mr. Trump, who says he sees them less as allies than as competitors. 
But if moving closer to China once seemed like a smart hedge, at least while Mr. Trump was in office, now Xi also presents a problem — and he may not be going away.

China invested heavily in the port of Piraeus, in Greece, transforming it into the busiest harbor in the Mediterranean. 

“We’re at an inflection point,” said Orville Schell, director of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at the Asia Society. 
“The Western world now understands that we have to take China’s push out into the world much more seriously than we have in the past.”
Mr. Trump’s declaration that he will impose swinging tariffs on imported steel will hurt Europe more than China, another example of how Europe is getting caught between Washington and Beijing.
European political leaders were already growing wary of Chinese intentions, especially given the vacuum of foreign policy leadership from the Trump administration and the persistent meddling from Russia. 
Last month, Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel of Germany warned that China was pursuing its own model of world order and attempting “to put a Chinese stamp on the world and impose a Chinese system, a real global system but not like ours, based on human rights and individual liberties.”
Mr. Gabriel was especially concerned about China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative, a huge infrastructure project promoted by Xi to expand Chinese power by developing new trade routes, including in Europe. 
To expedite this, Beijing has created the “16 plus 1” group, which brings China together with 16 European nations, 11 of them members of the European Union and the rest from the western Balkans.
“If we don’t succeed in developing a single strategy toward China,” said Mr. Gabriel in an earlier speech, “then China will succeed in dividing Europe.”
At the time, some regarded his remarks as alarmist. 
Less so now. 
Despite Germany’s huge exports to China and investment there — China is Germany’s largest trading partner, with two-way trade last year of $230 billion — even the German ambassador in Beijing, Michael Clauss, has openly criticized China’s policies and domestic repression, a marked change from years of German silence.

A Chinese car company’s recent purchase of nearly 10 percent of Daimler, the iconic German car manufacturer that owns the Mercedes-Benz brand, has alarmed German officials. 

Chinese companies have also made waves by buying a major German machine-tool and robotics company, Kuka, and then trying to buy a key semiconductor company, Aixtron. 
The latter bid was blocked by American objections on security grounds. 
The sudden purchase last week of nearly 10 percent of Daimler, the iconic German car manufacturer, by a much smaller Chinese car company, Geely, has also raised hackles, and questions about where the money, some $9 billion, really comes from.
“It’s a highly public discussion about Chinese influence in Germany,” said Angela Stanzel, an Asia expert at the European Council on Foreign Relations. 
“There have been 10 times as many articles about Daimler than about Xi prolonging his rule.”
Berlin and Brussels have been shaken amid concerns that the real intent of Beijing’s “One Belt, One Road” program is as much political as economic.
The main worry was China’s divide-and-rule policy,” Ms. Stanzel said. 
“The new worry is that because China is trying to make this format work, it will invest less effort and money into its relationship with Brussels.”
Both Germany and France have been pushing the European Commission, the bloc’s executive branch, to draw up stricter investment screening regulations to better protect European companies and European security. 
Europe will have to find a new China strategy, Ms. Stanzel added, one free of any illusions, “because now we’re sure we’ll have Xi for the rest of his life.”
Minxin Pei, a China scholar at Claremont McKenna College, said China’s actions in Europe, much like in the South China Sea, “have a probing quality, to test where the weaknesses are and where the pushback is.”

Trade is only part of the overall security and geopolitical picture, he said, noting that Xi may be pushing too hard, too fast and that “this grandiose vision and ruthless actions are a bit premature.”
Politically, the European Union has been troubled by convulsions in recent years as far-right parties have challenged the political establishment, while leaders in Poland and Hungary are challenging democratic norms
No European leader confused China with being an emerging democracy, yet analysts say many Western officials hoped and assumed the Chinese system would gradually become more like the democratic West.
“I don’t know who is still fooling themselves about convergence and liberalization — Xi put an end to that long ago,” François Godement, a China scholar at Sciences Po in Paris. 
“Official China has been increasingly frank about a systematic competition with democracies.”
By now, European leaders are accustomed to dealing with Putin and Russia. 
Xi is very different, says Susan Shirk, an expert on Chinese politics who served in the Clinton administration.
“While Putin wants to be a spoiler, Xi wants to be respected as a global leader,” said Ms. Shirk, who is now director of the 21st Century China Center at the University of California, San Diego. 
“He hasn’t tried to subvert the structures that exist. But he has recently started to build his own.”
With China returning to a more Leninist system, “we still don’t know what that will mean for global governance,” she said, “especially with Trump abdicating and trashing it.” 
For Europe, the prospect of China as a strategic competitor, as well as a political competitor, is a major challenge. 
“Europe is so disaggregated and so lacking in fortitude that its countries don’t think like big leaders,” said Mr. Schell. 
“America always has, but with Trump we’ve gone missing, and nature abhors a vacuum.”
“Xi’s open-ended tenure is rooted in Leninism, autocracy and control, which will make it a tremendous challenge for liberal democracies rooted in a different value system, especially in a world reeling with no leadership.”