Cyber Sentinel: Beijing Watch

Beijing's Telecom Takedown: China's Hackers Caught Red-Handed in 2025 Cyber Scandal


Listen Later

This is your Cyber Sentinel: Beijing Watch podcast.

Hey cyber enthusiasts, Ting here! Another week in the digital trenches, and Beijing's hackers have been working overtime. Let me break down what's been happening in the shadows of our networks.

The biggest story this week: Salt Typhoon, a Chinese state-backed hacking group, has been caught with their digital hands in America's telecom cookie jar. Data center giant Digital Realty and Comcast are among their latest victims. What's particularly concerning is that corporate investigators discovered Chinese hackers had already penetrated an unnamed American telecommunications company back in summer 2023—that's a full year before US officials publicly acknowledged these intrusions.

That malware sat there for seven months, just listening and watching. As my colleague Marc Rogers put it, "We've known for a long time that this infrastructure has been vulnerable... but this shows us that going as far back as 2023, the Chinese were compromising our telecom companies."

The scale is staggering—over 70 organizations across multiple sectors were targeted between July 2024 and March 2025, including cybersecurity firm SentinelOne. The attacks are sophisticated enough that they're causing smartphone crashes, which began late last year and continued into 2025. These weren't just glitches; they were breadcrumbs leading to a massive surveillance operation.

According to Representative Raja Krishnamoorthi from Illinois, "They were able to listen in on phone calls in real time and able to read text messages." Even Donald Trump and JD Vance's campaign phones were targeted during the 2024 election.

The Justice Department isn't sitting idle—back in March they charged 12 Chinese contract hackers and law enforcement officers involved in global cyber campaigns.

Of course, Beijing denies everything. Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian recently claimed, "The U.S. has long been using all kinds of despicable methods to steal other countries' secrets." Classic deflection tactics.

For organizations potentially in the crosshairs, now's the time to:
- Audit all telecom equipment and connections
- Implement zero-trust architecture across your infrastructure
- Monitor for unusual patterns in network traffic, especially outbound connections
- Update your incident response plans specifically for telecom intrusions

The strategic implications are profound—these aren't just attacks on companies; they're part of a coordinated campaign to establish persistent access to critical American infrastructure ahead of any potential conflict.

Stay vigilant, patch those systems, and remember: in cyberspace, what you don't see can definitely hurt you. This is Ting, signing off until next week's Beijing Watch!

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Cyber Sentinel: Beijing WatchBy Quiet. Please