If you're two of the world's most popular and profitable companies — or, say, the United States government — a major intelligence attack by a foreign power is news worth denying, vehemently. On Thursday, Bloomberg Businessweekpublished a highly-sourced cover story detailing a stunning attack by the Chinese government capable of infiltrating companies including Apple and Amazon, as well as US intelligence agencies, the mormon church, and the porn industry. SEE ALSO: Android devices are stunningly vulnerable if you're a careless power-userAccording to the report, Chinese spies placed microchips the size of a sharpened pencil tip in the Chinese-manufactured servers of one of the most prolific server-providers in the world, Supermicro. The disguised microchips allowed the government to "alter the operating system’s core so it could accept modifications," and "contact computers controlled by the attackers in search of further instructions and code." Essentially, the microchips provided Chinese spies a secret passageway into the networks of almost 30 companies. Bloomberg Businessweeksays it received confirmation of the attack from 17 people including government intelligence officials, and employees of Amazon and Apple. But Supermicro, Amazon, and Apple are roundly denying the report. Bloomberg has published the full statements of the three companies in which all companies claim no knowledge of or involvement in any government investigation.
Amazon and Supermicro provide similar statements. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security issued a statement on Saturday:
Then, on Sunday, Apple's Vice President for Information Security George Stathakopoulos clarified why the company is so certain in its refutation of the report in a letter provided to Reuters. "Apple’s proprietary security tools are continuously scanning for precisely this kind of outbound traffic, as it indicates the existence of malware or other malicious activity. Nothing was ever found," Stathakopoulos wrote. If Bloomberg's report is accurate, the attack would be devastating for the United States and the companies involved; it means that China has built a window into the very guts of United States government and business. So for the sake of national and consumer security, let's hope that Bloomberg is somehow mistaken. But with corroboration from 17 independent sources stacked up against the interests of the world's two most valuable companies, the odds are not looking good. UPDATE: Oct. 4, 2018, 12:33 p.m. EDT: Amazon released a public blog post emphatically refuting the Bloomberg story. Here is a small portion of the company's official statement:
UPDATE: Oct. 4, 2018, 4:30 p.m. EDT: Super Micro Computer also released a statement refuting the Bloomberg story. Here is a small excerpt:
UPDATED Oct 7, 2018, 5:17 p.m. ETwith the DHS statement and update from Apple. Featured Video For You Facebook's data breach and what it means for you — Technically Speaking |
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