China blames hacking attack for recent Internet problems
Developers from wpkg.org had said they were unsure why traffic from inside China was being redirected to their site.
A hacking attack using malware from overseas servers was
to blame for Internet problems in China earlier this week that
prevented users accessing a number of popular foreign websites, an
official state-run newspaper said on Friday.
Social
media users first reported on Sunday that they were being sent to
software website wpkg.org and travel website ptraveler.com when trying
to access news websites like cnn.com, news portal yahoo.co.jp, and games
website runescape.com, among others.
The incident
was the latest in a series of challenges businesses and individuals have
faced going online in the world's second-largest economy.
The
English-language China Daily, citing the National Computer Network
Emergency Response Technical Team Coordination Centre, an agency that
monitors China's Internet safety, said the redirection happened because
some servers in China were “contaminated” by malware from overseas
servers.
“Experts said it will be difficult to trace
the source of the attack because it is technically possible to carry it
out by remotely controlling the servers,” the newspaper said.
“No group or individual has claimed responsibility for the attack,” it said.
A senior staff member at the centre told the newspaper that it was not currently possible to estimate the damage caused.
“It
was a rather strange case because the hackers were directly targeting
the telecom carriers’ servers. It has rarely happened before,” the
unidentified official said.
Developers from wpkg.org had said they were unsure why traffic from inside China was being redirected to their site.
Access
to the internet -- both speed and stability -- have long been a major
issue especially among foreign businesses and individuals. This is
especially the case when attempting to access overseas online services,
which are regularly plagued by disruptions and blockages.
Internet
services operated by Facebook Inc, Google Inc and Twitter Inc, to name a
few, are unusable in China. The country operates the world's most
sophisticated censorship mechanism in order to quell sources of
information the Communist Party sees as potentially destabilising or
undermining its rule.
China blames hacking attack for recent Internet problems
Reviewed by Unknown
on
4/30/2015
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