Claims About China's April Internet Hijack Are Overblown 78
sturgeon writes "Yesterday, we discussed what most of the world's major media outlets were reporting on China's April 2010 hijack of '15% of Internet traffic,' including sensitive US government and defense sites. The alarm came following a US Government report (see page 244) on China / US economic and security relations released on Tuesday. Unfortunately, few bothered with fact checking or actually reading the report. The actual study never makes any estimate of Internet traffic diverted during the hijack — it only cites a blog post to suggest large volumes of traffic were involved. And curiously, the cited blog at the heart of the report never mentions traffic at all — only routes. You have to go to an interview with a third-party security researcher in a minor trade magazine to first come up with the 15% number (and this article never explains where the number came from). In a review of real data and actual facts, Arbor Nework's Craig Labovitz has a blog post looking at the traffic volumes involved in the incident (only a couple of Gigabits per second, or a 'statistically insignificant' percentage of Internet traffic)."
Re:heh (Score:5, Funny)
I certainly didn't. When I saw TFA was from "foxnews.com" I thought "This is going to be entirely reasonable and free of any fear-mongering."
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Only more Evidence (Score:5, Insightful)
[J]
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But seriously, this is what old media claims time and time again, but the quality of their reporting is just as abysmal. A few original well researched pieces aside (I treasure those) every news item is either some unchecked internet hearsay or a rehash or an ANP newsitem (which is by the way used just as well on the internet).
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have you never read fark?
believe it or not, as much as their headlines are funny sometimes and generally sarcastic, they and reddit and a number of sites tend to debunk bad fact checking quite often.
Re:Only more Evidence (Score:4, Interesting)
What I'm very curious about is the claim that "the Chinese government holds a copy of an encryption master key" that a few of these "old media" made:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/8142267/China-hijacks-15-per-cent-of-worlds-internet-traffic.html [telegraph.co.uk]
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/18/world/asia/18intel.html [nytimes.com]
Re:Only more Evidence (Score:4, Insightful)
There are certain keywords to look for to know if the journalist knows what he/she is talking about (regardless of subject). Note: "there was speculation that
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This panic over misinformation could be useful when discussing encryption and the clipper chip proposals of the mid 90s and the newer escrow law proposals.
If the government were to mandate a back door, there would effectively be a master key that could be leaked, requiring a complete digital "changing of the locks" every time the key were suspected of being compromised.
Probability is high... (Score:2)
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Please. The old guard outlets are guilty of the same exact thing. Look at any "mainstream" print media's coverage of Four Loko for proof.
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Yet, this is what you demand in political journalists. If they don't praise Obama, or fail to ignore it when he talks about the 54 states, you rant and pull out the pitchforks and torches.
What do you expect to end up with when you shut down all opposing views. Politics is the news leader, and when you screw that up enough, why should you expect the rest of the media to act any differently? You don't want facts, you want a happy meal with apple pie.
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There is a less political example of this type of situation involving Steve Wozniak being mis-quoted by a Dutch tabloid newspaper.
I disagree that Politics is the news leader, but it is the drama that is created to make it a news leader that the mindless are drawn to. My comment was about research and merit that lacks in modern, mainstream journalism. Politicians making extremes back
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The problem is with the traditional media like newspapers... you pay money but a long time ago, they realized that it's less expensive to produce lower quality info, so you pay and still get low quality info; they earn their costs from the advertising, and the reduction in costs due to lower quality info (few quality controls) is pure profit.
"High quality info" is such a niche market nowadays, that you would have to pay a lot just for the privilege of something that apparently very few people demand and
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What would make you think it's any worse now? Yellow journalism [spanamwar.com] has a long glorious history. It has propped up the drug war for 80 years. By shaping a complacent, submissive public's opinion, it serves the government agenda quite well. Sorry, nothing new to see here. It's the same as it ever was.
It's not the 15% that mattered (Score:4, Insightful)
THe 15% number was just an eye grabber. The point is if a foreign government can redirect even a few messages that it chooses it is not good. Simply doing traffic analysis on the state department will alert people to crises. (they already do that with pizza deliveries to the whitehouse). I'd like to hear more abouthow it's done. is it some sort of DNS poisoning or publishing misleading ford-bellman shortest path info or rARP spoofing?
Re:It's not the 15% that mattered (Score:5, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_hijacking
the 15% number came from the number of prefixes hijacked, not the actual amount of data (as TFA says here)
Re:It's not the 15% that mattered (Score:4, Insightful)
The point is if a foreign government can redirect even a few messages that it chooses it is not good.
So if it wasn't a foreign government it would be ok? Remember, all governments are foreign to some of us.
Inconceivable!!! (Score:1, Troll)
What?!!! A Slashdot summary was wrong? A sensationalist headline was wrong? No one did any fact checking?!!!! Inconceivable!
This is why Slashdot (News for Nerds) is "news" like Fox News is "news" - it's not. There's no journalistic ethics applied. It's entertainment and maybe occasionally informational.
Re:Inconceivable!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
This is why Slashdot (News for Nerds) is "news" like Fox News is "news" - it's not.
Maybe. But you'll never see a correction to an overblown sensationalist headline that Fox News put out hit the front page of foxnews.com. That's the difference.
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Cowboy Neal also cries fewer Crisco tears into his Golden Grams in public than Glen Beck does. That's another (pretty big) difference.
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Crisco tears into his Golden Grams
I failed to make sense of this even with an internet search, can you translate for me?
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I think it is about how Crisco creates a flakier crust (just don't over mix).
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Fat people would cry/sweat Crisco which is a common shortning agent used in making high-fat content foods such as some cakes and cookies. It's a fat joke.
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Impossible, there has to be some way to reconsider what was said to create some light in which it is true. This is slashdot, it can't contain incorrect information. Never has, never will.
Not to mention TCP connections would break (Score:4, Informative)
http://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/2010-November/027839.html describes it
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You'd think if they wanted to capture some sensitive data they could employ some of the normal methods like trying to gain access to a specific system - or at least planting some form of promiscuous reciever/interceptor so they wouldn't get caught within a few minutes.
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Open TCP connections would die when the prefixes were blackholed anyway, and new ones wouldn't establish
Perhaps you are assuming they wouldn't have done one of two things.... (1) maintain the TCP connection by forging acknowledgements. Or (2) drop captured packets off somewhere else on the internet, via tunnels placed strategically to ensure the packet reached its ultimate destination. If they did this, the TCP connections would just experience higher latency, the programs at the endpoints would have
I for one ... (Score:1, Funny)
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... welcome our new chinese overlords
I would wait an hour before making that statement.
As with most (Score:2, Interesting)
I would be surprised that the government was letting sensitive data from military branches route out unencrypted. Le
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I think that china's ballsy move with rare earths is a power play to say "don't fuck with us"
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Hold it! Are you trying to suggest there's something wrong with sending a Chinese female citizen to the labor camp for re-tweeting a joke?
Or that using the dead bodies of enslaved political dissidents, after their murders, as a money-making scheme called "The Bodies Exhibit" which the running dogs of capitalism will pay to eat up, is somehow amoral?
We are brothers.....
Looks like a job for DHS... (Score:2)
Maybe one of the new regulations that they mandate should be BGP route origin validation and proper response (filtering the announcement of the specific route in preference of a route with a valid origin bit)?
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14% of all people know THAT!
Not surprising at all (Score:3, Insightful)
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This (in my experience) is true. I haven't quantified this figure very recently (I have more useful ways to spend my time, since my anecdotal impression is unchanged), but last time I checked the proportion was over 98%.
However, the Chinese take the prize in the number of scam sites. I apologise in advance if the following comes across as racist, but sometimes it seems almost as if there is so
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I can't remember exactly where I could read it, but I did read that there was 30% of all Internet traffic going by California alone. I wonder how that was in fact checked, but had all the reasons in the world to believe it. Now, I wrote "USA" because I thought it was very difficult to check for geographic locations of routes. But that's not it: I do check for it very often myself. I in fact believe tha
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When you mention California I suspect that the 30% number may have been from an article about the infamous Room 641A.
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The system known as ECHELON is an interception system which differs from other intelligence systems in that it possesses two features which make it quite unusual:
The first such feature attributed to it is the capacity to carry out quasi-total surveillance. Satellite receiver stations and spy satellites in particular are alleged to give it the ability to intercept any telephone, fax, Internet or e-mail message sent by any individual and thus to inspect its contents.
The second unusual feature of ECHELON is said to be that the system operates worldwide on the basis of cooperation proportionate to their capabilities among several states (the UK, the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand), giving it an added value in comparison to national systems: the states participating in ECHELON (UKUSA states) can place their interception systems at each otherís disposal, share the cost and make joint use of the resulting information.
This quote is from this publicly available EU report from 2001 [europa.eu]. The document further explains how sigint has become easier since the internet age, since all information passes trough a small amount of central nodes. They also recommend encrypting all sensitive information (especially data that can be abused in industrial espionage, because a
I want to believe... (Score:2)
Sounded alarmist (Score:2, Insightful)
The post that was referred to sounded alarmist in the first place so I doubt most people gave it too much thought.
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Media abuses this formula too much these days... (Score:3, Insightful)
2. FUD
3. ???
4. Profit!
PS: Media includes sites such as /.
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It sells newspapers though - and let's face it, journalists are in the business of 'selling newspapers' of some kind or another. If they are blatantly wrong then they can print another sensationalist story later on about how they were hoodwinked in an effort to get mileage out of the same story and...sell more newspapers.
Comments (Score:2)
Republicans use Fox.
Democrats use the Daily Show.
I use Slashdot comments.
Everyone has their news sources of choice. I'm fairly certain there is no sure source of information: even your own memory goofs up (see that game "Telephone" from elementary school). We do the best we can. The problem, these days, is that the "trusted" sources of information are going for the excitement factor rather than the truthiness factor. So "Aliens land in LA!" takes precedence over "Mexican immigrants take boat to San Dieg
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I thought you said the Aliens went to LA?
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It's all Southern California: blonde and well-tanned.
Volume doesn't matter (Score:2, Insightful)
The volume of traffic captured isn't as important as the actual traffic received.
According to the low volume making it ok, if someone could steal 100 bytes off your 600gb hard drive, you'd be ok with that because it is such a small percentage. If that 100 bytes contained everything needed to use your credit card, would you still feel the same? It's the data that is important, not the volume.
Negative, stranger... (Score:2)
Worried where you internet data goes? (Score:1)
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Or just SSL with AES256 or better :P