Energy Sector v China

The aftershocks of Google v China continue to rumble as more companies are linked to the advanced persistent threat. Mark Clayton from the Christian Science Monitor wrote a story titled US oil industry hit by cyberattacks: Was China involved? I found these excerpts interesting.

At least three US oil companies were the target of a series of previously undisclosed cyberattacks that may have originated in China and that experts say highlight a new level of sophistication in the growing global war of Internet espionage.

The oil and gas industry breaches, the mere existence of which has been a closely guarded secret of oil companies and federal authorities, were focused on one of the crown jewels of the industry: valuable “bid data” detailing the quantity, value, and location of oil discoveries worldwide...

The companies – Marathon Oil, ExxonMobil, and ConocoPhillips – didn’t realize the full extent of the attacks, which occurred in 2008, until the FBI alerted them that year and in early 2009. Federal officials told the companies proprietary information had been flowing out, including to computers overseas...

“What these guys [corporate officials] don’t realize, because nobody tells them, is that a major foreign intelligence agency has taken control of major portions of their network,” says the source familiar with the attacks. “You can’t get rid of this attacker very easily. It doesn’t work like a normal virus. We’ve never seen anything this clever, this tenacious...”

Many experts say the theft of this kind of information – about, for instance, the temperature and valve settings of chemical plant processes or the source code of a software company – can give competitors an advantage, and over time could degrade America’s global economic competitiveness...

Even more basic, many corporate executives aren’t aware of how sophisticated the new espionage software has become and cling to outdated forms of electronic defense...

[B]ased on the kind of information that was being stolen, federal officials said a key target appeared to be bid data potentially valuable to “state-owned energy companies...”

China would certainly be interested in this kind of data, experts say. With the country’s economy consuming huge amounts of energy, China’s state-owned oil companies have been among the most aggressive in going after available leases around the world, particularly in Nigeria and Angola, where many US companies are also competing for tracts...

“What I’m saying to you is that it’s not just the oil and gas industry that’s vulnerable to this kind of attack: It’s any industry that the Chinese decide they want to take a look at,” says an FBI source. “It’s like they’re just going down the street picking out what they want to have.”


Expect more denials from party spokesmen in China.

Comments

Anonymous said…
So what about GE? A rhetorical question....
Anonymous said…
something has to be done
Anonymous said…
That's all great, but surely we would expect to see more evidence, rather than vague verbal claims. Not that i am not open to the possibility, but simple statements do not make things true.
The companies – Marathon Oil, ExxonMobil, and ConocoPhillips – didn’t realize the full extent of the attacks, which occurred in 2008, until the FBI alerted them that year and in early 2009. Federal officials told the companies proprietary information had been flowing out, including to computers overseas.

Federal involvement is not "vague."
jbmoore said…
You left out the phase, "more denials from corporate spokesmen in America" as well. Obviously, those companies' IT Security guys were clueless since the government told them they were owned and losing secrets. The problem starts in the executive suite since the suits have to see IT Security as a form of insurance, not as just something they have to do to appease regulators.
fantasy said…
Yeah? What's the big deal of GE?

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