Chinese military-backed hackers likely behind Japan cyberattacks
Japan police are investigating cyberattacks on about 200 Japanese companies and research organisations, including the country’s space agency JAXA.
Investigators suspect that a group of hackers backed by the
Chinese military is behind the cyberattack.
According to the Japan Broadcasting Corporation, police sent
papers to prosecutors on a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) member on Tuesday on
suspicion of forging digital records related to the cyberattacks.
The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department said the Japan
Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA, suffered a cyberattack in 2016. The
police identified a Chinese man who had leased several servers in Japan that
were allegedly used in the attack.
The man, who is no longer in Japan, is said to be a computer
engineer in his 30s. He allegedly rented servers five times under false names.
Investigative sources said the servers' ID and other
credentials were then passed on to a Chinese hacker group known as
"Tick."
Tokyo police suspect that the Chinese People's Liberation
Army instructed Tick to stage cyberattacks in Japan. Sources say that about 200
companies and advanced research institutions, including Mitsubishi Electric and
Keio University, were targeted.
A JAXA spokesperson told NHK that the space agency did
experience unauthorised access, but suffered no data leaks or other damage.
Meanwhile, another Chinese man is also said to have rented
several servers in Japan using fake identities. This was allegedly under the
instruction of a member of unit 61419 -- a bureau in charge of cyberattacks
within China's PLA.
The revelation comes at a time when tensions between China
and Japan have escalated amid increased activity by Beijing in the disputed
East China Sea.
This comes after Beijing implements a new law that allows
the country's quasi-military force to use weapons against foreign ships that
China sees as illegally entering its waters.
Last month, Japan said China's coastguard had expanded its
presence in the contested waters by entering twice a month and as frequently as
twice a week near the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands, known by the Chinese
as Diaoyu.
Last month, Microsoft, the US company, said a sophisticated
group of hackers linked to China has hacked into its popular email service that
allowed them to gain access to computers.
The company had said that four vulnerabilities in its
software allowed hackers to access servers for Microsoft Exchange, "which
enabled access to email accounts, and allowed the installation of additional
malware to facilitate long-term access to victim environments," reported
CNN.
Last year, in a major breach of security, Australia was hit
by a major cyberattack by a "state-based actor".
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