Security

Cyber-crime

Germany names China as source of attack on government geospatial agency

Meanwhile, US apparently considers further AI hardware sanctions


Germany's government has named China-controlled actors as the perpetrators of a 2021 cyber attack on the Federal Office of Cartography and Geodesy (BKG) – the official mapping agency.

The nation's Ministry of the Interior and Home Affairs on Wednesday published an assertion that China infiltrated the Office’s systems to conduct espionage, after first compromising devices belonging to private individuals and businesses to conduct the raid.

Federal minister of the interior Nancy Faeser did not mince words, issuing a declaration to the effect that "This serious cyber attack on a federal authority shows how great the danger is from Chinese cyber attacks."

The minister attributed the incident to "state-controlled Chinese actors," condemned it in the strongest possible terms, declared it a threat to sovereignty, and called on China to "refrain from and stop such cyber attacks."

China's ambassador was called in for a stern chat, so that Germany could express its displeasure – which may have been a futile gesture. The Home Affairs ministry's post includes a warning that Germany's security authorities expect China will intensify its cyber offensive in pursuit of info that informs the Middle Kingdom's industrial development.

"Cyber operations are likely to continue to be implemented in a highly professional manner and with enormous expenditure of resources," the document predicts.

The ministry's announcement doesn't detail any damage resulting from the incident. It does disclose that a part of the BKG's network was compromised – but that malware was not found elsewhere in the agency's systems.

Networks were rebuilt, and German authorities were satisfied the attacker was not able to maintain a presence.

News of Germany's attribution came on the same day as reports suggesting the US is pondering further sanctions on tech exports to China – this time covering high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and the kit to make it.

HBM is needed in GPUs and servers capable of running AI workloads at decent speed, and the United States is concerned that China will use such hardware to advance its military capabilities.

The ban under consideration would require major HBM-makers like Samsung and SK hynix to refrain from doing business with China. The Biden administration has made strengthening ties to South Korea – home to both silicon slingers – a priority, in part to help with its plan to keep advanced tech out of China. South Korea has pushed back a little, as tech exports make a vast contribution to its economy.

Another major HBM-maker, Micron, is US-based – and has been banned by China over apparent security concerns. ®

Send us news
10 Comments

Novel attack on Windows spotted in phishing campaign run from and targeting China

Resources hosted at Tencent Cloud involved in Cobalt Strike campaign

Volt Typhoon suspected of exploiting Versa SD-WAN bug since June

The same Beijing-backed cyber spy crew the feds say burrowed into US critical infrastructure

Chinese broadband satellites may be Beijing's flying spying censors, think tank warns

Ground stations are the perfect place for the Great Firewall to block things China finds unpleasant

China outspending US, Taiwan, and South Korea combined on chipmaking kit

$25B semiconductor shopping spree leaves rivals in the dust

China is beating the world at scientific research, think tank finds

Could monopolise 24 key techs if current trends continue

China's chip tech still lags the West – by up to five generations

Think tank warns US and friends they can't assume Beijing won't catch up

EU tries to pin down China on definition of 'important data'

Rules on cross border data transfers have European businesses scratching their heads

China AI devs use cloud services to game US chip sanctions

Orgs are accessing restricted tech, raising concerns about more potential loopholes

When it comes to cloud, it's China against the world

Amazon, Microsoft, and Google dominate the west, but the Middle Kingdom plays by its own rules

One of China's best GPU prospects admits it's failing, lays off workers

Needs new investors to get beyond current modest products

Chinese boffins advocate nuking nearby asteroids – it’s the only way to be sure

Plus: Alibaba exits regulatory purgatory; India slows CBDC rollout; China creates eight new datacenter hubs

Nvidia's growth slows to a mere 122 percent but it’s still topping expectations

Still growing in China, ramping Hopper prods and predicting Blackwell billions soon