Hacker claims major Chinese citizens' data theft | Same Business

Hacker claims major Chinese citizens' data theft

A HACKER is currently attempting to sell the personal information of hundreds of millions of Chinese individuals online.

The hacker published a sample of 750,000 items online, including names, mobile numbers, national ID numbers, residences, birthdays, and police complaints submitted by individuals.

The authenticity of some of the citizen data in the sample has been confirmed by the AFP and cybersecurity specialists, but it is difficult to estimate the size of the complete database.

Source

The 23-terabyte database, which the hacker claims has the records of a billion Chinese individuals, was advertised on a forum late last month but wasn't discovered until this week by cybersecurity specialists. It is being offered for 10 bitcoin, or almost $200,000.

"It appears to have come from several sources. Some look to be census data, while others are facial recognition technologies, according to Robert Potter, co-founder of cybersecurity company Internet 2.0.
"The complete amount of records has not been verified, and I have my doubts about the figure of one billion citizens," he continued.

Out of the more than a dozen persons AFP contacted, at least four confirmed that their names and residences were exactly as they were included in the database.

"In light of this, it makes sense why so many people have added my WeChat during the past several days. Should I contact the police about this?" a woman with the last name Hao said.

Another woman with the last name Liu added, "I'm particularly perplexed as to why my personal information was exposed.

Source

Users who commented on the initial article conjectured that the information may have been stolen from an Alibaba Cloud server where it was allegedly kept by the Shanghai police.

The files were stolen from Alibaba Cloud, according to Potter, a cybersecurity analyst. Alibaba Cloud did not respond to a request for comment from AFP.

If true, the breach would rank among the biggest in recorded history and would be a serious infringement of the recently enacted Chinese data protection legislation.

Heads will roll over this one, wrote Trivium China IT partner Kendra Schaefer in a tweet.

An inquiry fax sent to China's cybersecurity administration received no response.


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