美国“考虑限制中国黑客出席美黑客大会”


“黑客大会” 和“黑帽子大会”今年8月将在拉斯维加斯举行。

美国政府一位不具名高级官员对路透社表示,华盛顿正考虑限制给中国黑客发放签证,阻止他们出席夏天在拉斯维加斯举行的两个重量级黑客大会。

路透社说,此举将是美国“遏制中国网络间谍活动的一个组成部分”。

美国司法部5月19日宣布以网络间谍为由起诉5名中国军官,指控他们对美国展开网络攻击,从事经济间谍及盗取商业机密。这是美国政府首次正式指控中国军人从事网络间谍活动。

针对美方指控,中国外交部传召美国驻华大使提出严正交涉,并反驳美方捏造事实,反指美国才是全球最大网络攻击来源。

全球黑客云集的两场黑客大会——“黑客大会” (Def Con)和“黑帽子大会”(Black Hat)今年8月将在拉斯维加斯举行。

两场黑客大会的组织者表示,他们对华盛顿正在考虑的措施不知情,但他们认为,限制中国黑客参加大会并非好办法。

“黑客大会”和“黑帽子大会”发起人和组织者杰夫·莫斯,以及负责审查黑客演示内容的黑帽子成员维索普尔都表示,限制中国黑客入境美国对中国黑客的网络攻击能力不会产生实质的影响。

维索普尔表示,“黑帽子大会”的讲话都会录音,并在大会上出售,阻止中国黑客亲自出席拉斯维加斯举行的大会,并不能对中国黑客造成实质影响。他对路透社说,“这只是个象征性举动”。

“黑帽子大会”被认为是信息安全领域的顶级盛会。美国媒体说,已有几名中国公民报名出席“黑帽子大会”并在大会上发言,但没有人报名在“黑客大会”上发言。

该官员说:“我们一直试图(与中方)展开建设性对话。美国国务院和国防部都曾前往中国,向中方展示(中国人民解放军)黑客攻击的证据,但这些形式的交流并没有取得多少进展”。

美国华尔街日报星期五首先报道了美国考虑限制中国黑客获得入境签证出席美国黑客大会的可能。

报道援引美国官员说,如果中国当局不遏制黑客的网络间谍活动,美国政府将考虑采取一系列报复性措施应对有关局面。

华尔街日报星期五报道称,美方的其它选择措施还包括,公布受到指控的中国黑客从事网络攻击的额外证据,以及对被起诉人士有关联的人员或机构实施商业和金融制裁。

美国黑客大会组织者说,10至12位中国公民申请出席科罗拉多本周举行的一个太空和网络会议,但他们的签证申请上周被拒。

该会议由美国太空基金会主持。发言人包括美国国家情报总监克拉珀,以及美国情报和军方高层官员。

原文:
http://cn.reuters.com/article/companyNewsEng/idCNL1N0OA0BF20140524

U.S. may act to keep Chinese hackers out of Def Con hacker event

Washington is considering using visa restrictions to prevent Chinese nationals from attending popular summer hacking conferences in Las Vegas as part of a broader effort to curb Chinese cyber espionage, a senior administration official said Saturday.

The official said that Washington could use such visa restrictions and other measures to keep Chinese from attending the August Def Con and Black Hat events to maintain pressure on China after the United States this week charged five Chinese military officers with hacking into U.S. companies to steal trade secrets.

China has denied the charges, saying they were "made up."

Organizers of the two conferences said they knew nothing about any efforts under consideration by Washington, but that they believed limiting participation from China was a bad idea.

Jeff Moss, founder of both Def Con and Black Hat, could not be reached, although he posted his thoughts on Twitter: "First I have heard of it, boarding flight to D.C. now. I don't think it helps build positive community."

Chris Wysopal, a Black Hat review board member, said restricting access would have little impact. Hacking talks from both conferences are videotaped and sold on DVDs or posted on the web.

Members of the community of hackers and security professionals who present at Def Con and Black weighed in on Twitter. Responses ranged from bemusement to anger.

"That is terrible," said Richard Westmoreland.

"Racism by the U.S: No Chinese people allowed at Defcon," tweeted Valdes Nzalli.

"Something tells me that the Chinese hackers who the U.S. gov are worried about don't go to defcon anyways," said Steve Manzuik.

Def Con's official Twitter feed posted a tongue-in-cheek response: "If you are going to speak at or attend #DEFCON & you need a visa to enter U.S. please contact us for invite letter to help your app."

At Black Hat, an employee of Chinese security software maker Qihoo 360 is scheduled to speak on software vulnerabilities while two researchers with Chinese University of Hong Kong are set to talk on hacking social media. Def Con does not have any Chinese nationals on its roster.

It would be tough to prevent Chinese from attending Def Con because its privacy-conscious organizers only take cash and badges have no names.

U.S. agencies are weighing a range of options if China does not a curb its cyber espionage, said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly.

"We've tried to have a constructive dialogue. The State Department and the Defense Department have traveled to China to share evidence of hacking by the (People's Liberation Army), but those types of interchanges have not sparked a lot of progress or reciprocity," said the official.

The possible visa restrictions were first reported by the Wall Street Journal. It said other options for increasing pressure include releasing new evidence about the alleged hacking operations.

Ten to 12 Chinese citizens were unexpectedly denied visas last week to attend a space and cyber conference hosted by the Space Foundation in Colorado this week, the organizers said.

Speakers included Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and other high-ranking U.S. intelligence and military officials.

State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said visa applications were confidential, but cautioned against drawing a connection between the denials and indictments of the hackers.
免责声明:文章内容不代表本站立场,本站不对其内容的真实性、完整性、准确性给予任何担保、暗示和承诺,仅供读者参考,文章版权归原作者所有。如本文内容影响到您的合法权益(内容、图片等),请及时联系本站,我们会及时删除处理。查看原文

为您推荐