
Report warns: A little-known Microsoft program can expose US national security secrets to Chinese hackers
is using engineers in China to help maintain the Defense Department's most sensitive computer systems with minimal US supervision, potentially exposing critical
national security data
to America's leading cyber adversary, a ProPublica investigation revealed this week. The arrangement relies on US citizens with security clearances, known as "
digital escorts
," to oversee foreign engineers remotely. However, these escorts often lack the technical expertise to detect malicious activity from highly skilled Chinese developers who could insert harmful code into federal networks, the investigation found.
"We're trusting that what they're doing isn't malicious, but we really can't tell," said one current escort who spoke anonymously to ProPublica, fearing professional repercussions.
Chinese engineers gain access to Pentagon's most sensitive data
The digital escort system has operated for nearly a decade, allowing Microsoft to bypass Pentagon rules that ban foreign citizens from accessing highly sensitive government data. The Chinese engineers work on "high impact level" information that includes materials directly supporting military operations and data whose compromise "could be expected to have a severe or catastrophic adverse effect" on national security.
Microsoft's arrangement involves Chinese engineers filing support tickets and then remotely instructing American escorts—some earning barely above minimum wage—to input commands into Defense Department cloud systems. Many escorts are former military personnel with little coding experience, creating a dangerous skills gap.
"If someone ran a script called 'fix_servers.sh' but it actually did something malicious then [escorts] would have no idea," Matthew Erickson, a former Microsoft engineer who worked on the escort system, told ProPublica.
Senator demands Pentagon investigation into security risks
The revelations prompted
Senator Tom Cotton
, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, to demand answers from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. In a letter obtained by Reuters, Cotton requested a complete list of contractors using Chinese personnel and details about how digital escorts are trained to detect suspicious activity.
National security experts expressed alarm at the program's existence. Harry Coker, former CIA and NSA senior executive, called it an "avenue for extremely valuable access" that intelligence operatives would covet.
John Sherman, former Defense Department chief information officer, said the situation warrants "a thorough review" by military cybersecurity agencies. The program's low profile meant even Defense Department officials struggled to find personnel familiar with it when contacted by reporters.
AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fibre2Fashion
a few seconds ago
- Fibre2Fashion
US' Amazon posts $18.2 bn Q2 profit, expands fashion & AI capabilities
American e-commerce shopping platform has reported a revenue of $167.7 billion in the second quarter (Q2) of 2025, with net sales rising 13 per cent year-over-year (YoY), or 12 per cent excluding a $1.5 billion favourable foreign exchange impact. The North American sales increased 11 per cent to $100.1 billion, while international sales rose 16 per cent to $36.8 billion (11 per cent excluding FX). Operating income climbed to $19.2 billion from $14.7 billion, driven by gains across all segments, Amazon said in a press release. Amazon has reported strong Q2 2025 results, with net sales up 13 per cent YoY to $167.7 billion and net income rising to $18.2 billion. AI-powered tools enhanced retail and logistics operations. The company launched a Nike storefront and expanded fashion offerings. For Q3 2025, Amazon projects 10â€'13 per cent sales growth and up to $20.5 billion in operating income. The net income stood at $18.2 billion, or $1.68 per diluted share, compared with $13.5 billion, or $1.26 per share, a year earlier. Operating cash flow rose 12 per cent to $121.1 billion for the trailing twelve months, although free cash flow declined to $18.2 billion from $53.0 billion. The company launched a dedicated Nike storefront on allowing US customers to shop a wide range of footwear, apparel, and accessories. It also expanded its product selection with fashion and beauty brands such as Away, Aveda, Marc Jacobs Fragrances, Milk Makeup, and Origins. In addition, Amazon introduced generative AI tools like 'Enhance My Listing' to help sellers keep product descriptions current and compelling—an asset for apparel merchants aiming to optimise visibility and conversion. Enhanced inventory management powered by AI-driven demand forecasting has improved regional accuracy by 20 per cent and streamlined the placement and delivery of millions of popular items. 'Our conviction that AI will change every customer experience is starting to play out as we've expanded Alexa+ to millions of customers, continue to see our shopping agent used by many millions of customers,' said Andy Jassy, president and CEO at Amazon. 'Our AI progress across the board continues to improve our customer experiences, speed of innovation, operational efficiency, and business growth, and I'm excited for what lies ahead.' For the third quarter of 2025, Amazon expects net sales to be between $174 billion and $179.5 billion, or to grow between 10 per cent and 13 per cent YoY. This guidance anticipates a favourable impact of approximately 130 basis points from foreign exchange rates. The operating income is expected to be between $15.5 billion and $20.5 billion, compared with $17.4 billion in third quarter 2024. This guidance assumes, among other things, that no additional business acquisitions, restructurings, or legal settlements are concluded, added the release. Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)


Time of India
a few seconds ago
- Time of India
US Fed judge blocks Trump's plan to end protection from deportation of over 60,000 citizens of Nepal and other nations
San Francisco-based US District Judge Trina Thompson agreed the plaintiffs had shown there was sufficient racial animus behind the decision and that the Trump administration had failed to undertake an "objective review of the country conditions" before ending protections. A migrant is detained by federal immigration officers at U.S. immigration court in Manhattan, New York City, U.S. (File Photo) Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads A federal judge ruled against US President Donald Trump 's administration plans to end protections from deportation for citizens of Nepal Nicaragua and Honduras , barring their removal while the case continues, The Hill Francisco-based US District Judge Trina Thompson agreed the plaintiffs had shown there was sufficient racial animus behind the decision and that the Trump administration had failed to undertake an "objective review of the country conditions" before ending protections."The freedom to live fearlessly, the opportunity of liberty, and the American dream. That is all Plaintiffs seek. Instead, they are told to atone for their race, leave because of their names, and purify their blood," Thompson wrote. "The Court disagrees."The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) ended Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Nepal in June and for Nicaragua and Honduras in July. Each country was initially designated after natural disasters, but the protections can also be offered to people unable to be deported to their home country due to civil moves would require 51,000 Hondurans and nearly 3,000 Nicaraguans who have been in the country for roughly 25 years to leave the county by September. Some 7,000 Nepalese citizens were also set to lose protections in just days, as per The reviewed a number of prior comments from Trump as well as Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem, including comments from the secretary referring to migrants as criminals and gang members, and the president stating that migrants were "poisoning the blood of our country.""Indeed, code words may demonstrate discriminatory intent," she wrote, The Hill quoted. "Color is neither a poison nor a crime."Thompson said the DHS failed to do the fulsome review required to end TPS, determining the Trump administration did not consider conditions beyond recovery from the hurricanes that rocked the Central American countries and the earthquake that sparked the designation for Nepal, as per The Hill.


Indian Express
a few seconds ago
- Indian Express
Even before Trump's ‘penalty' threat, Indian refiners began cutting down on Russian oil imports
Amid increasing pressure on India from the US and other Western powers over the past couple of months, Indian refiners — led by public sector players — began cutting down on Russian oil imports, much before US President Donald Trump's announcement earlier this week of an unspecified tariff 'penalty' on New Delhi for its defence and energy imports from Moscow. Latest vessel tracking data shows that July deliveries of Russian crude — which would have been contracted May or early June — to Indian refiners fell significantly. Industry and trade sources also indicated that Indian public sector refiners have, for the time being, halted future contracting of Russian oil, the mainstay of India's oil imports for the better part of the past three years. Trump has now said that he 'heard' that India will no longer be buying oil from Russia, calling it a 'good step', but also added that he is not sure if the information is 'right or not'. 'Well, I understand India no longer is going to be buying oil from Russia. That's what I heard. I don't know if that's right or not, but that's a good step. We'll see what happens,' Trump told reporters in the US on Friday. Meanwhile, India — the world's third-largest consumer of crude oil with an import dependency level of over 85 per cent — continues to maintain that its oil purchases are commercial decisions. 'We take decisions based on the price at which oil is available in the international market and depending on the global situation at that time,' Ministry of External Affairs Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said Friday in response to a question on whether Indian refiners have stopped buying Russian oil over the past few days. Industry insiders, experts, and trade sources indicate that renewed pressure and threats from the US and Europe over the past few weeks have cast a shadow on India's Russian oil imports, and could mark the beginning of Indian refiners pivoting away from Moscow's oil. So far, India had successfully managed to walk 'the fine line between energy security and geopolitical pressure', but its options now appeared limited, one expert said, adding that Indian refiners 'must now plan not just for commercial shifts, but for systemic geopolitical realignment'. Deliberations are on between the government and other stakeholders — primarily refiners — on managing the situation and assessing the choices on the table for India, sources said. With a pre-emptive reduction in Russian oil imports, some bit of signaling has already taken place. The next steps would most likely be decided on how the India-US dynamic evolves, and more importantly, whether or not Trump decides to further harden the American stance and rhetoric against Russia. Any breakthrough between the White House and Kremlin over the Russia-Ukraine war would most likely ease the pressure on buyers of Russian crude. This renewed pressure from the West — forcing Russia's top trade partners to cut down on imports from the country — are aimed at forcing the Kremlin's hand into ending the war in Ukraine. For Trump, who wants the three-year-old Russia-Ukraine war to end within days, this is an opportune time to pressurise countries like India and China over their Russian imports, given the sensitive trade negotiations that these countries are holding with the US. India's Russian oil imports in July were at 1.6 million barrels per day (bpd), down 24 per cent from June levels, and 23.5 per cent from volumes delivered in July of last year, according to latest tanker data from global real-time data and analytics provider Kpler. The share of Russian crude in India's oil import basket in July contracted notably to around 33.8 per cent from July's 44.5 per cent. While the drop in oil imports from Russia is evidently more pronounced among Indian state-owned refiners, likely reflecting heightened compliance sensitivity amid mounting risks, private sector refiners—who account for over half of Russian crude imports, have also reduced exposure to Moscow's oil. The reduction in import volumes from Russia in July was offset by higher crude deliveries from other suppliers — mainly Iraq, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, the US, Nigeria, and Kuwait — all of which expanded their share in India's oil imports vis-à-vis June levels. With much of the West shunning Russian crude following the country's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Russia began offering discounts on its oil to willing buyers. Indian refiners were quick to avail the opportunity, leading to Russia — earlier a peripheral supplier of oil to India — emerging as India's biggest source of crude, displacing the traditional West Asian suppliers. While the discounts have varied over time, Russian oil flows to India largely remained robust despite Western pressure and limited sanctions on Russia's oil trading ecosystem. But the appears to be changing now, and fast. 'On one side, the EU's (European Union's) sanctions — effective from January 2026 — ban imports of refined products derived from Russian-origin crude, forcing Indian refiners to segment crude intake and product flows. On the other hand, the US tariff threat raises the possibility of secondary sanctions that would directly hit the shipping, insurance, and financing lifelines underpinning India's Russian oil trade. Together, these measures sharply curtail India's crude procurement flexibility, raise compliance risk, and introduce significant cost uncertainty…(it) represents a double whammy for Indian refiners,' said Sumit Ritloia, Lead Research Analyst, Refining & Modeling at Kpler. Before this week's tariff announcement by Trump mentioning a 'penalty' on India, India's significant Russian oil imports were being subjected to a more aggressive stance by Western powers for a few weeks. Trump himself had had threatened 'biting' secondary tariffs of 100 per cent on buyers of Russian exports, and the European Union last month announced a sanctions package, widely seen as the most comprehensive effort yet by the EU to restrict Russia's revenue stream, placing a ban on import of fuels into Europe if made from Russian oil in third countries like India, and also sanctioning Indian refiner Nayara Energy, in which Russian oil giant Rosneft holds 49.13 per cent stake. According to Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri, the massive market share of Russian crude in India's oil imports doesn't mean that India is dependent on Russia for oil, and other suppliers can quickly come in to replace Russian volumes if there is any major disruption. 'I don't feel any pressure in my mind. India has diversified the sources of supply… I'm not worried at all. If something happens, we'll deal with it…there is sufficient supply available,' Puri had said at an event earlier in July. He added that India in recent years has expanded its crude sourcing slate from 27 countries to around 40 countries, and enough oil was available globally for India to buy and ensure energy security. If India indeed decides to shift away from Russian crude, industry insiders and experts expect New Delhi to negotiate a potential wind-down period for reducing supplies, as replacing the massive volumes of Russian oil supply overnight is impossible, according to industry insiders. It would take at least three-four months to substantially cut down on imports and shift to other suppliers — mainly in West Asia, but also in Africa, and even the US and Latin America. Loss of discounted Russian barrels would certainly push up the relative cost of imports by a few dollars a barrel, which in turn would inflate India's oil import bill by billions of dollars on an annualised basis. Additionally, if global oil prices rise in the eventuality of most of Russian oil going off the market, the hit for India would be amplified further. 'Replacing Russian crude isn't plug-and-play…it is no easy feat—logistically daunting, economically painful, and geopolitically fraught. Supply substitution may be feasible on paper, but it remains fraught in practice. Gulf barrels come with pricing rigidity, African grades add freight volatility, and Latin American flows face availability constraints,' said Ritolia. India's traditional crude suppliers in West Asia — chiefly Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE — would be the logical fall-back, but Indian refiners will have to grapple with significant constraints as they reduce Russian oil imports. A lot of the crude from West Asia comes through term contracts, unlike spot purchases of Russian crude, which may force Indian refiners to commit to higher annual offtake of West Asian oil, which is more rigidly priced compared to discounted Russian crude. Also, a number of Indian refineries that had gotten attuned to processing Russian crude in large volumes may see an impact on their product yield and refinery configurations due to crude quality mismatch. India is also expected to sustain its ongoing efforts to diversify its sources of crude oil. Geopolitical shifts, freight economics, and refinery economics are expected to continue shaping India's crude sourcing decisions and diversification strategy. Sukalp Sharma is a Senior Assistant Editor with The Indian Express and writes on a host of subjects and sectors, notably energy and aviation. He has over 13 years of experience in journalism with a body of work spanning areas like politics, development, equity markets, corporates, trade, and economic policy. He considers himself an above-average photographer, which goes well with his love for travel. ... Read More