The BBC reports that Chinese officials orchestrated the hacking at Google earlier this year, according to WikiLeaks cables.
The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission\'s annual Report is just out. The Commission is charged with evaluating the national security implications of the bilateral trade and economic relationship between the United States and the China.
A new report found that for 15 minutes in April a Chinese state controlled telecommunications company was able to hijack 15 percent of the world\'s internet traffic.
China hijacked fifteen percent of Internet traffic across the globe. Nobody noticed, except for some cybersecurity experts. They may have also had access to data from U.S. military, civilian organizations and those of other U.S. allies.
Seymour Hersh writes in the New Yorker about the EP-3E debacle that has fueled a debate on whether the military or civilians should take the lead in cybersecurity.
The Pentagon is opening talks with China to restart stalled military relations, Wall Street Journal reports.
Mergers Reflect a Greater Trend in IT-Infosec Synergy
The Pentagon is worried that China might have the upper hand soon in South East Asia
The United States and South Korea have started the first in a series of large-scale naval exercises off Japan and the Korean Peninsula despite objections from China. What could possibly go wrong?
In a staggering statement yesterday the head of Canada\'s intelligence agency said says it suspects that cabinet ministers in two Canadian provinces are under the control of foreign nations. The Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) also said China and countries in the Middle East may be the culprits. Director Richard Fadden said on Canadian TV politicians in British Columbia may be under the influence of foreign governments and are not aware they are being used.
Chinese leaders may be willing to realign some of their weapons and ease tensions with Taiwan. Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Dianne Feinstein, who visited China and Taiwan earlier made the comments during a Senate hearing. The move may have been coated with hopes that the U.S. suspend or abandon future weapons sales to Taiwan. China broke of military to military talks with the U.S. after the Obama administration announced plans to sell Taiwan up to $6.4 billion in arms.
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke made scathing comments before a high-level U.S.-China dialogue in Beijing next week.