SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rarebird who wrote (67614)4/13/2001 3:07:16 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116972
 
Rarebird:

Investment guru Phil Fisher had an interesting column in FORBES recently. He argued Greenie and Bush know a recession is inevitable and want to get it overwith as quickly as possible. In this they are following in the footsteps of Ronald Reagan.

In the markets I did very well on QQQ in January and sold out near the top, but bought back too early on the way down. The NDX went lower than almost anybody expected this spring - an almost vertical drop of 50% in 2 months. But I have now recouped and will be looking to get out next week. I see another 5-10% upside in QQQ before this move peters out.

And I continue to accumulate gold funds on weakness.



To: Rarebird who wrote (67614)4/13/2001 10:34:55 PM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116972
 
Chinese Suspected of Hacking U.S. Sites

_____Related Links_____

Special Report: Spy Plane Standoff

Photo Gallery: The Crew Returns Home

What's Your Opinion of the Chinese Hackers Story?



E-Mail This Article

Printer-Friendly Version




By Ariana Eunjung Cha,
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, April 13, 2001; 10:57 AM

The diplomatic standoff over the collision of a U.S. surveillance plane and a Chinese jet fighter may be over. But hard feelings still linger in cyberspace.
On message boards and in e-mails, angry Chinese commentators plot revenge for the death of pilot Wang Wei. They encourage Chinese loyalists to take to their keyboards and strike at U.S. Web sites.

"Hack the USA!!!" commanded one posting. "For our pilote [sic] Wang!!! For our China!!!"

Since the accident occurred on April 1, no fewer than nine U.S. government and business sites have been attacked. Most of the attacks were simple vandalism, with an official Web page being replaced by one with a political message.

Two Navy sites that are not militarily critical were targeted; only one was defaced. A Navy spokeswoman said she can't say for sure that the perpetrators were in China but said the attacks did "appear" to be coming from there.

Computer users who tried yesterday to pull up a forum for artists and writers in Marin County, Calif., at www.iplexmarin.com, found instead a giant red Chinese flag, threatening messages and audio of the Chinese national anthem.

"This is becoming a cyber-mob," said Michael Assante, a security consultant with Vigilinx Inc. and a former U.S. government intelligence officer. "Really, China is quite threatening in that they have a lot of nationalism as well as a lot of technology."

Assante and other computer experts said administrators of U.S. Web sites should take the recent Chinese attacks as a warning that their electronic defenses are inadequate. Just last week, a House committee issued a report saying that hackers—of many nationalities—had gained control of at least 155 government computer systems last year.

The recent rash of apparent collision-inspired hacking is not without precedent. Chinese vigilantes have been bullying their way through the virtual world since around 1998, defacing Web sites and releasing viruses into computer systems, experts say.

They are different from other foreign hackers, security experts say, in that they are not motivated by money like hackers from struggling regions such as the former Soviet republics or the Philippines. For the Chinese, it's almost always about politics, the experts say.

After the Taiwanese president said last year that his country and China should speak on a "state-to-state" basis, Chinese compatriots launched more than 100,000 attacks on Taiwan government sites. And when some Japanese at a public rally refused to acknowledge that they had committed any atrocities during the 1937 Nanking massacre, Chinese hackers began putting gory pictures of victims on Japanese government Web sites.

The surveillance plane dispute has so riled many Chinese that they have been voicing their anger in a way that might not have been possible even in a democracy in the pre-Internet era.

Using portals such as Sina.com and Sohu.com or more obscure sites such as illusa.abc.yesite.com, the organizers list simple-to-use hacking tools, suggest targets—and encourage the general populace to join in.

At a time when high technology can make war impersonal—with pilotless planes and laser guided bombs—the Internet has become a way for people to fight, even when the enemy is far away, experts say. "They’re picking up their keyboards instead of guns and stick and rocks," said Joel De La Garza of Silicon Valley’s Securify.com.

Many of the recent hackings were signed by the Hackers Union of China, also known as the Honkers Union of China or the "red guest" alliance. Max Vision, a security consultant who has been monitoring the group, describes it as a "very loosely organized" band. On its Web site, cnhonker.com, the group calls itself a "network security organization."

Members of the group did not respond to e-mail inquiries, and the FBI declined to comment on any recent hacking from China.

A small company called Intelligent Direct Inc. in Wellsboro, Pa., has been fending off the hackers for a week. The company’s president, Dan Olasin, said that each time it managed to get its sales page of its www.zipcodemaps.com online, it was replaced with the Chinese flag and messages such as "China have atom bomb too", as well as "fairly profane comments about someone’s mother."

He said he didn’t know why his company had been targeted, but he thinks—or hopes—the attacks have subsided.

Olasin said the incident has given him time to reflect on how the Internet, once hailed as way to erase borders, was becoming a powerful tool for acting out nation-state animosities.

He said he wishes he could tell the hackers: "I understand your frustration. It's a touchy situation for all of us. I'm not sure why you’re taking this out on me but maybe if I sent you a picture of myself and my staff, you might say what you want to say without all the damage."


worldnetdaily.com