Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Laeticia Chen. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Laeticia Chen. Afficher tous les articles

lundi 11 décembre 2017

Linked In Spying

CHINA IS SPYING ON THE WEST USING LINKEDIN
BY ANTHONY CUTHBERTSON

Chinese spies nest.

China has denied using LinkedIn to infiltrate political and business circles in Germany, following claims from German intelligence services that 10,000 of its citizens were targeted by Chinese spies.
The German intelligence agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), made the allegations Sunday, suggesting that China was using fake profiles to connect with high-profile politicians and business leaders. 
The claims follow similar allegations of cyber espionage being undertaken by Russian spy agencies.
“Chinese intelligence services are active on networks like LinkedIn and have been trying for a while to extract information and find intelligence sources in this way,” said a spokesperson for Germany’s BfV intelligence agency.
The infections are difficult to detect, since network connections between service providers and their customers aren’t suspicious. This gives the attacker an even better disguise than before.
The method of infiltration that Chinese operatives used, according to the BfV, was to pose as academics, business consultants and policy experts on the business networking site. 
The BfV published the names of eight of the profiles it claimed were set up for the purpose of surveillance and infiltration, adding that it suspected there were many more.
One example of a suspicious account was that of Laeticia Chen, whose profile stated she was a manager at the “China Center of International Politics and Economy.” 
There was no evidence that Chen is a real person and her profile picture was borrowed from an online fashion catalogue, the intelligence agency said, according to German broadcaster Deutsche Welle.
The BfV feared that these accounts were used to contact relevant German nationals for the purpose of gathering information and to recruit informants.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry responded to the allegations on Monday, December 11, saying that such claims were damaging to relations between the two countries.
Earlier this year, Russian intelligence services came under scrutiny for their manipulation of LinkedIn as a surveillance tool, as well as their widely reported use of bots across other social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter.
The attraction of LinkedIn as a spying platform is that its users are predominantly white-collar workers in positions that could be exploited at high levels of business and government.
“The Russian special services are for sure exploiting LinkedIn to gather personal information on certain targets and possibly recruit and blackmail them,” a Kremlin expert told Newsweek in August. “They operate under fabricated identities and credentials, while Russian propaganda and trolling campaigns are widely applied on the platform.”

Linked In Spying

Chinese agencies are using fake LinkedIn profiles to ensnare politicians
By Tobias Buck in Berlin

Chinese spies are populating LinkedIn: The Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz released some of the fake LinkedIn profiles used by Chinese intelligence, including academics and consultants claiming to belong to established and reputable-sounding institutions, think-tanks and universities.

Chinese intelligence agencies are using LinkedIn to establish contact with German politicians and officials, according to a study by Germany’s internal security service.
The Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz (BfV) on Sunday released some of the fake LinkedIn profiles used by Chinese intelligence, including academics and consultants claiming to belong to established and reputable-sounding institutions, think-tanks and universities.
Some of the most widely used profiles show pictures of attractive young women and men who claim to be headhunters or project managers or assistants. 
The names and profiles released by the BfV include those of Lily Wu and Alex Li from the Center for Sino-Europe Development Studies, Laeticia Chen from the China Center of International Politics and Economy and Eva Han from the China University of Political Science and Law.
 A special project group set up by the BfV earlier this year found that some 10,000 German citizens had been contacted in this manner, though the agency said it believed the true number was significantly higher. 
 “Chinese intelligence services are using new strategies of attack in the digital space. Social networks, especially LinkedIn, are being used in an ambitious manner to gather information and for recruitment,” said Hans-Georg Maassen, the BfV president.
“We are dealing with a broad attempt to infiltrate parliaments, ministries and administrations.”
The information released by the German authorities follows a nine-month survey of social networks that began in January.
 “Establishing contact through social media has for some time been on the agenda of foreign intelligence services . . . Information about habits, hobbies and even political interests can be generated with only a few clicks,” the BfV said.
“Chinese intelligence agencies in particular are active on networks like LinkedIn.” 
 According to German media reports, the Chinese intelligence services used fake profiles to contact members of the German and European parliaments, as well as senior military officials and representatives of foundations, lobby groups and consultancies.
 Once contact was made, the Chinese spies would try to launch a professional exchange of views and information, followed by invitations to conferences and other events in China.

dimanche 10 décembre 2017

Chinese Spies Are Populating LinkedIn

German intelligence unmasks covert Chinese LinkedIn profiles
Reuters
Chinese spies nest

BERLIN -- Germany’s intelligence service has published the details of social network profiles which are fronts faked by Chinese intelligence to gather personal information about German officials and politicians.
The BfV domestic intelligence service took the unusual step of naming individual profiles it says are fake and fake organizations to warn public officials about the risk of leaking valuable personal information via social media.
“Chinese intelligence services are active on LinkedIn and have been trying for a while to extract information and find intelligence sources in this way,” including seeking data on users’ habits, hobbies and political interests.
Nine months of research had found that more than 10,000 German citizens had been contacted on the LinkedIn professional networking site by fake profiles disguised as headhunters, consultants, think-tankers or scholars, the BfV said.
“There could be a large number of target individuals and fake profiles that have not yet been identified,” they added.
Among the faked profiles whose details were published were that of “Rachel Li”, identified as a “headhunter” at “RiseHR”, and an “Alex Li”, a “Project Manager at Center for Sino-Europe Development Studies”.
Many of the profile pictures show stylish and visually appealing young men and women. 
The picture of “Laeticia Chen”, a manager at the “China Center of International Politics and Economy” was nicked from an online fashion catalogue, an official said.
A Reuters review of the profiles showed that some were connected to senior diplomats and politicians from several European countries. 
There was no way to establish whether contacts had taken place beyond the initial social media “add”.
The warning reflects growing concern in European and western intelligence circles at Chinese covert activities in their countries and follows warnings from the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency over attempts by the economic giant’s security services to recruit U.S. citizens as agents.
The BfV invited concerned users to contact them if they encountered social media profiles that seemed suspect.