US probes alleged India hacking of commission
WASHINGTON (AFP): US authorities have been asked to investigate allegations that hackers India
used back-door codes provided by companies to spy on private exchanges by a US commission on China, an official said Tuesday.
A hacker group
calling itself the Lords of Dharmaraja released excerpts of documents that it said were part of an Indian intelligence unit's surveillance of the
US-China Economic and Security Review Commission.
"We are aware of these reports and have contacted relevant authorities to investigate the
matter," commission spokesman Jonathan Weston said. He declined further comment.
The commission, which consists of 12 experts, was set up by
Congress in 2000 to monitor the security implications of US trade with China. It publicly releases findings and recently produced an extensive study
on alleged Chinese cyber-espionage.
The email exchanges released by the hackers showed the commissioners discussing their wording on issues
such as arms sales to Taiwan and China's currency valuation but did not appear to contain bombshells.
However, a purported document on Indian
military letterhead states that spies were able to access the exchanges through a "backdoors" method made available to Indian authorities by
communication companies.
"Decision was made earlier this year to sign an agreement with mobile manufacturers in exchange for the Indian market
presence," said the alleged document dated October 6.
It specifically names BlackBerry smartphones' Canadian maker Research In Motion (RIM),
US tech giant Apple and Finnish mobile manufacturer Nokia.
It was not possible to verify independently the authenticity of the document, which
unclearly speaks of authorization for the operation by "the President."
Representatives from the companies and the Indian embassy in
Washington did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
India a year ago resolved a prolonged standoff with RIM after authorities
complained that terrorists could use encrypted BlackBerry messages.
BlackBerry said in January 2011 it would allow the Indian government to
monitor BlackBerry messenger and public email services, but not corporate emails.
India has uneasy relations with fellow Asian giant China.
India recently lodged a protest after two of its nationals alleged that they were tortured in a hotel room over a business dispute in the city of
Yiwu.
Relations also remain tense over a border dispute and India's welcoming of thousands of Tibetans who fled Chinese rule, including the
Dalai Lama.
Cyber-spying: India denies hacking into US emails
NEW DELHI/WASHINGTON (PTI): India has dismissed claims that its
military intelligence had snooped into emails of an American commission that monitors economic and security matters with China with the help of mobile
service providers.
The issue surfaced after an alleged memo from the Director General of Military Intelligence, Foreign Division appeared in
the cyber world, according to which Indian officials discuss plans to target the US-China commission.
The documents shown in the memo doing
rounds on the internet are forged and don't belong to us, Army sources said here. However, the US has already ordered an investigation into these
claims.
"We are aware of these reports and have contacted relevant authorities to investigate the matter," said US-China Economic and
Security Review Commission spokesman Jonathan Weston.
"We are unable to make further comments at this time," said Weston, who was responding
to questions about the alleged memo.
The memo stated that the Indian military used "backdoors" provided by RIM ( Research in Motion), Nokia,
Apple and unspecified other mobile service providers.
[Times of India]
Print Version |