Hundreds of Millions of Chinese Chat Logs Leak Online (ft.com) 41
Hundreds of millions of private chat logs from Chinese users have been left exposed on the internet, a researcher has found, in another worrying case of weak data protection in China. Financial Times reports: Victor Gevers, a security researcher at the cyber-security organisation GDI Foundation, said that he had found a database of 364m records [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; alternative source.], containing social media profiles and chat logs linked to names and identity card numbers.
The database was freely accessible online to anyone who searched for its IP address, and user profiles were stored together with photographs, addresses and locations, said Mr Gevers. The main database was piping data to 17 other servers depending on which area the data came from, Mr Gevers said. [...] A large number of the records had the names and addresses of web cafes on them. Chinese cyber-security experts have long warned that web cafes collect vast amounts of customer data.
The database was freely accessible online to anyone who searched for its IP address, and user profiles were stored together with photographs, addresses and locations, said Mr Gevers. The main database was piping data to 17 other servers depending on which area the data came from, Mr Gevers said. [...] A large number of the records had the names and addresses of web cafes on them. Chinese cyber-security experts have long warned that web cafes collect vast amounts of customer data.
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"This is true of every. single. article. you link that is also paywalled."
He works in the subscription department of the Financial Times, it's an ad.
Re:May be paywalled? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Once you have read the "free/sample" articles, you are required to pay for the subscription.
I think AC's point is that WSJ has zero "'free/sample' articles".
Re:May be paywalled? (Score:4, Funny)
C'mon. It IS paywalled. Just because you pay to get through the paywall doesn't mean it isn't paywalled. It just means that you have paid to get through the wall.
This is true of every. single. article. you link that is also paywalled.
This is Slashdot.
You're not supposed to actually read the article.
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That's the difference between the crypto-dictatorial regimes in communist China and in capitalist America: in the former, sites are police-firewalled. In the latter, they're paywalled. In both cases, there's a fucking wall.
Not us! (Score:1)
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And Huawei wants the world to believe they'd NEVER collect data for the government. Yeah, sure.
Where did Huawei ever come into this discussion? Huawei was never mentioned here or in TFA until you brought it up. This looks like some kind of social media rig-up that streams data to local police for manual inspection. Whatever Huawei is doing, it had no part in this that I can see. Basically this operation is a similar but somewhat less advanced version of what the USA's very own NAS is doing in the US, and everywhere else they can get away with it, i.e. the wholesale warehousing of online data in order
Re: Not us! (Score:4, Informative)
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Freishutz: Hello, Chinese Government/Communist Party?
CG/CP: Yes.
Freishutz: We here on Slashdot would like hard proof that Huawei either is or is not providing you with information. Please post it here.
CG/CP: Sure thing, Boss, we gonna get right on that...errrmm...just as soon as we have another Party Congress and can establish its place in a new 5 year plan. The new 5 year plan should be available in around 15 years. Can you wait?
Freishutz: Yup, sure, we trust you.
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Freishutz: Hello, Chinese Government/Communist Party?
CG/CP: Yes.
Freishutz: We here on Slashdot would like hard proof that Huawei either is or is not providing you with information. Please post it here.
CG/CP: Sure thing, Boss, we gonna get right on that...errrmm...just as soon as we have another Party Congress and can establish its place in a new 5 year plan. The new 5 year plan should be available in around 15 years. Can you wait?
Freishutz: Yup, sure, we trust you.
Oh, my, you accused me of being a communist ... *thud* ... *thud* ... *thud* ... your words, given weight by your awesome wit and oratory skill, pierce my should like arrows.
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It may not be unreasonable to you, but I really don't care about what you find reasonable or not. Really, I don't give a whit. I am not at trial, I am expressing an opinion and therefore am under no obligation to prove or disprove anything, all of which is still legal in the US at this time. I provide no link to any "right-wing blog" yet you make a point of accusing me of such; sounds like you're the one with a prejudice/censorship problem. So perhaps you can absorb that the opinions expressed by the posters are theirs and do not indicate anything other than their opinions; perhaps not. One thing I know for sure, I don't have to "prove" anything to you.
So, where is your proof? Having trouble finding any? Because your entire post contained only this: https://youtu.be/hsPtqjwcMx [youtu.be]
... so pony yup or shut up.
I really don't care what accusations you pull out of your rectum and hurl around like an angry chimp until you can prove them
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You are ... not really playing with a full deck of cards, are you?
https://www.wsj.com/articles/two-china-tech-titans-wrestle-over-user-data-1501757738
It's not even a question anymore that Huawei is trying to do whatever it can to become the top cellphone maker in the world (the above is just an example of its practices in China).
If you think western companies are bad at tricking people into giving up their data, it is nothing compared to what Huawei does.
Firstly that site is paywalled and linking to it is downright rude. Secondly what little the paywall didn't hide is:
To build its AI capability—so that its phones can, say, make restaurant suggestions based on a user’s text messages—Huawei Technologies Co. is collecting user-activity information on its advanced Honor Magic smartphone. Among the information captured: text messages sent using the popular WeChat social-media app.
That is a pretty accurate description of what Google, Face
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Doesn't matter (Score:2)
6 billion people can't read it, it's in Chinese.
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6 billion people can't read it, it's in Chinese.
I'm sure most of it is mundane chatter anyway with out anything interesting to most people. Just millions of people saying "I'm hungry, but I just ate lunch."
no data - no cry! (Score:3)
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There goes the entire birth control industry in a giant, ugly puff of logic.
Official Obligatory Anti-PC Troll Response: (Score:1)
A million lines of, "Oh Wei, I love you long time!"
no problem (Score:1)
Why do they monitor gamers? (Score:2)
It is most likely that this system is only for tracking gamers as most of the sample dialogs appears to be about this subject.
Can someone, maybe from China, come up with a good explanation why they seem to have such a particular interest in gamers?
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