White House Officials Meet With Telecom Executives Over China Hack
The FBI and CISA jointly stated that the CCP’s cyber efforts against the United States is a ‘broad and significant cyber espionage campaign.’
The Wall Street Journal was the first to confirm that major telecommunications companies including AT&T and Verizon were the target of a large scale cyberattack that was part of the “Salt Typhoon” campaign, which is backed by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Hackers reportedly had access to the network for months or longer.
“The meeting was an opportunity to hear from telecommunications sector executives on how the U.S. Government can partner with and support the private sector on hardening against sophisticated nation state attacks,” the White House officials said in a statement.
The industry and U.S. officials alike have pointed out that while the CCP uses a whole-of-state approach in its cyberattacks against U.S. institutions, the targets are individual private entities, which do not have an intelligence sharing mechanism across the industry or with the government.
The FBI and CISA believe that the CCP-backed hackers were after customer call records and private communications, targeting people involved in government and political activity, and evidence obtained by law enforcement via warrants.
U.S. lawmakers and intelligence officials have sounded the alarm on several large-scale, CCP-backed cyberattack campaigns.
Intelligence officials have also warned that the CCP-backed campaigns are “not consistent with traditional cyber espionage or intelligence gathering operations.” In the case of “Volt Typhoon,” officials believe hackers are prepositioning themselves on critical IT networks to monitor and disrupt in the event of conflicts.