America’s top cybersecurity and law enforcement officials made a coordinated push Tuesday to raise awareness about cyber threats from foreign actors in the wake of an intrusion of U.S. telecom equipment dubbed Salt Typhoon. The hackers are linked to the Chinese government and they still have a presence in U.S. systems, spying on American communications, in what Sen. Mark Warner from Virginia has called “the worst hack in our nation’s history.”
Officials with the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and FBI went so far as to urge Americans to use encrypted messaging apps, according to a new report from NBC News, something that’s ostensibly about keeping foreign hackers out of your communications.
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“Our suggestion, what we have told folks internally, is not new here: encryption is your friend, whether it’s on text messaging or if you have the capacity to use encrypted voice communication. Even if the adversary is able to intercept the data, if it is encrypted, it will make it impossible,” Jeff Greene, executive assistant director for cybersecurity at CISA, said on a press call Tuesday according to NBC News.
The unnamed FBI agent on the call with reporters echoed the message, according to NBC News, urging Americans to use “responsibly managed encryption,” which is a rather big deal when you remember that agencies like the FBI have been most resistant to Silicon Valley’s encryption efforts.
The hackers behind Salt Typoon failed to monitor or intercept anything encrypted, meaning that anything sent through Signal and Apple’s iMessage was likely protected, according to the New York Times. But the intrusion for all other communications was otherwise extremely galling. The hackers had access to metadata, including information on messages and phone calls along with when and where they were delivered. The hackers reportedly focused on targets around Washington, D.C.
The most alarming sort of intrusion in Salt Typhoon involved the system used by U.S. officials to wiretap Americans with a court order
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Source: FBI Warns Americans to Start Using Encrypted Messaging Apps
It’s not like people have not been warning governments all over the world that there is no such thing as a safe backdoor to encryption and that forbidding encryption leads to a world of harm. We knew this, but still the idiots in charge wanted keys to encryption. The key, once it is in the hands of “baddies” will still work. It really does show the absolute retardation of government spy people who say breaking encryption will make us safer.
Robin Edgar
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