logo
Chinese hackers and user lapses turn smartphones into a 'mobile security crisis'

Chinese hackers and user lapses turn smartphones into a 'mobile security crisis'

The Hindu4 hours ago

Cybersecurity investigators noticed a highly unusual software crash — it was affecting a small number of smartphones belonging to people who worked in government, politics, tech and journalism.
The crashes, which began late last year and carried into 2025, were the tipoff to a sophisticated cyberattack that may have allowed hackers to infiltrate a phone without a single click from the user.
The attackers left no clues about their identities, but investigators at the cybersecurity firm iVerify noticed that the victims all had something in common: They worked in fields of interest to China's government and had been targeted by Chinese hackers in the past.
Foreign hackers have increasingly identified smartphones, other mobile devices and the apps they use as a weak link in U.S. cyber-defences. Groups linked to China's military and intelligence service have targeted the smartphones of prominent Americans and burrowed deep into telecommunication networks, according to national security and tech experts.
It shows how vulnerable mobile devices and apps are and the risk that security failures could expose sensitive information or leave American interests open to cyberattack, those experts say.
'The world is in a mobile security crisis right now,' said Rocky Cole, a former cybersecurity expert at the National Security Agency and Google and now chief operations officer at iVerify. 'No one is watching the phones.'
U.S. authorities warned in December of a sprawling Chinese hacking campaign designed to gain access to the texts and phone conversations of an unknown number of Americans.
'They were able to listen in on phone calls in real time and able to read text messages,' said Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois. He is a member of the House Intelligence Committee and the senior Democrat on the Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, created to study the geopolitical threat from China.
Chinese hackers also sought access to phones used by Donald Trump and running mate JD Vance during the 2024 campaign.
The Chinese government has denied allegations of cyberespionage, and accused the U.S. of mounting its own cyberoperations. It says America cites national security as an excuse to issue sanctions against Chinese organisations and keep Chinese technology companies from the global market.
'The U.S. has long been using all kinds of despicable methods to steal other countries' secrets,' Lin Jian, a spokesman for China's foreign ministry, said at a recent press conference in response to questions about a CIA push to recruit Chinese informants.
U.S. intelligence officials have said China poses a significant, persistent threat to U.S. economic and political interests, and it has harnessed the tools of digital conflict: online propaganda and disinformation, artificial intelligence and cyber surveillance and espionage designed to deliver a significant advantage in any military conflict.
Mobile networks are a top concern. The U.S. and many of its closest allies have banned Chinese telecom companies from their networks. Other countries, including Germany, are phasing out Chinese involvement because of security concerns. But Chinese tech firms remain a big part of the systems in many nations, giving state-controlled companies a global footprint they could exploit for cyberattacks, experts say.
Chinese telecom firms still maintain some routing and cloud storage systems in the U.S. — a growing concern to lawmakers.
'The American people deserve to know if Beijing is quietly using state-owned firms to infiltrate our critical infrastructure,' U.S. Rep. John Moolenaar, R-Mich. and chairman of the China committee, which in April issued subpoenas to Chinese telecom companies seeking information about their U.S. operations.
Mobile devices can buy stocks, launch drones and run power plants. Their proliferation has often outpaced their security.
The phones of top government officials are especially valuable, containing sensitive government information, passwords and an insider's glimpse into policy discussions and decision-making.
The White House said last week that someone impersonating Susie Wiles, Trump's chief of staff, reached out to governors, senators and business leaders with texts and phone calls.
It's unclear how the person obtained Wiles' connections, but they apparently gained access to the contacts in her personal cellphone, The Wall Street Journal reported. The messages and calls were not coming from Wiles' number, the newspaper reported.
While most smartphones and tablets come with robust security, apps and connected devices often lack these protections or the regular software updates needed to stay ahead of new threats. That makes every fitness tracker, baby monitor or smart appliance another potential foothold for hackers looking to penetrate networks, retrieve information or infect systems with malware.
Federal officials launched a program this year creating a 'cyber trust mark' for connected devices that meet federal security standards. But consumers and officials shouldn't lower their guard, said Snehal Antani, former chief technology officer for the Pentagon's Joint Special Operations Command.
'They're finding backdoors in Barbie dolls,' said Antani, now CEO of Horizon3.ai, a cybersecurity firm, referring to concerns from researchers who successfully hacked the microphone of a digitally connected version of the toy.
It doesn't matter how secure a mobile device is if the user doesn't follow basic security precautions, especially if their device contains classified or sensitive information, experts say.
Mike Waltz, who departed as Trump's national security adviser, inadvertently added The Atlantic's editor-in-chief to a Signal chat used to discuss military plans with other top officials.
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth had an internet connection that bypassed the Pentagon's security protocols set up in his office so he could use the Signal messaging app on a personal computer, the AP has reported.
Hegseth has rejected assertions that he shared classified information on Signal, a popular encrypted messaging app not approved for the use of communicating classified information.
China and other nations will try to take advantage of such lapses, and national security officials must take steps to prevent them from recurring, said Michael Williams, a national security expert at Syracuse University.
'They all have access to a variety of secure communications platforms,' Williams said. 'We just can't share things willy-nilly.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sundar Pichai sees AI as a tool, not a threat: 8 ways tech professionals can maintain their relevance
Sundar Pichai sees AI as a tool, not a threat: 8 ways tech professionals can maintain their relevance

Time of India

time29 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Sundar Pichai sees AI as a tool, not a threat: 8 ways tech professionals can maintain their relevance

In the ever-intensifying tug of war between artificial intelligence and human ingenuity, Google CEO Sundar Pichai didn't pick a side—he reinforced a partnership. At Bloomberg's Tech Conference in San Francisco, Pichai offered more than just a glimpse into Google's future. He dropped a subtle yet seismic remark: 'Whoever is running it [Google] will have an extraordinary AI companion. ' It wasn't a throwaway line. It was a manifesto. As tech companies double down on AI, automating everything from emails to engineering, fear of redundancy looms large. But Pichai's vision breaks from the doomsday narrative. He doesn't see AI as a replacement for people—but as a relentless amplifier of human capability. 'I view this as making engineers dramatically more productive,' he said. He isn't talking about a handover—he's talking about a hand-in-hand future. His own experiments—'vibe coding' with AI-powered tools like Cursor and Replit—speak volumes. It's not just about leading from the front; it's about co-creating with code. And in doing so, Pichai set a powerful precedent: in a world where machines are accelerating, humans must learn how to steer. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Switch to UnionBank Rewards Card UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo For tech professionals standing at the edge of this transformation, the takeaway is clear: if you want to remain relevant in the age of AI, you must evolve into something machines can't replicate. Here's how to stay irreplaceable in a world where your next colleague might be code. Build, don't just operate: Become the architect of automation The future will not be kind to those who merely operate systems built by others. It will reward those who design them. Dive into AI model architecture, algorithm training, and prompt engineering. Whether you're a data analyst or backend developer, re-skill to be a creator of AI tools, not just a consumer. Learn foundational AI principles—vector embeddings, transformers, and tokenization, not just applications like ChatGPT. Anchor your career in the human-only zone AI is fast, but it's not empathetic. It's logical, but not ethical. It can mimic reasoning, but not real-world judgment. Your ability to lead, negotiate, mentor, and listen, those are unautomatable trait. Build a career portfolio rooted in these human-exclusive capabilities. Develop skills in stakeholder communication, ethical reasoning, and emotional intelligence. These are your firewalls. Speak the language of machines—fluently If AI is going to be your co-pilot, learn how to talk to it. Prompt engineering is becoming the new coding. Whether you're training an AI or delegating a task to it, knowing how to communicate effectively with LLMs will be a make-or-break skill. Practise designing layered prompts with context, constraints, and roleplay to get consistent, reliable AI outputs. Think like a product, not just an employee Your resume is no longer a list of qualifications—it's a roadmap of your adaptability. AI systems will commodify many skill sets. The only way to stay valuable is to evolve like a product: Iterate constantly, gather feedback, and reinvent as needed. Build a personal learning system. Set quarterly skill goals, track learning KPIs, and always be in beta. Be the ethicist in the room Tech is no longer neutral. AI decisions affect hiring, health care, policing, and global equity. Professionals who understand algorithmic bias, explainability, and fairness will be invaluable. The more powerful the AI, the more vital it becomes to have humans who can say, 'Should we?' instead of just 'Can we?' Study real-world AI failures (like COMPAS or Amazon's biased hiring tool) to prepare for conversations that matter. Learn to lead across human + machine teams Leadership now requires a hybrid mindset. You must be able to manage human talent while integrating machine output. That means understanding workflows where AI handles execution and humans handle escalation. Use AI for sprint planning, bug triage, or documentation, but keep strategic decision-making firmly in human hands. Stay loud in the public conversation Silence won't protect your career. In an AI-driven world, your voice, whether through writing, speaking, or teaching, becomes a differentiator. Those who shape the narrative are harder to replace. Publish your learnings. Write AI guides. Lead meetups. The more visible your thinking, the more defensible your role. Don't compete with AI, collaborate intelligently Sundar Pichai didn't romanticize a machine-driven world. He recognized that the future belongs to those who can co-create with AI, not fear it. It's not man versus machine. It's man with machine, if you're prepared to grow. In the tug of war between technology and humanity, the rope isn't slipping from your hands. But you must grip harder, with skills, ethics, adaptability, and vision. Because relevance isn't a title, it's a habit. Is your child ready for the careers of tomorrow? Enroll now and take advantage of our early bird offer! Spaces are limited.

'Should China-Nehru link be investigated?': BJP MP Nishikant Dubey slams Rahul Gandhi; asks if 1962 war was 'imposed'
'Should China-Nehru link be investigated?': BJP MP Nishikant Dubey slams Rahul Gandhi; asks if 1962 war was 'imposed'

Time of India

time31 minutes ago

  • Time of India

'Should China-Nehru link be investigated?': BJP MP Nishikant Dubey slams Rahul Gandhi; asks if 1962 war was 'imposed'

BJP MP Nishikant Dubey (left) and Rahul Gandhi/ File photos NEW DELHI: BJP MP Nishikant Dubey on Monday intensified his criticism of Congress leader Rahul Gandhi , calling for a probe into the alleged historic links between the Nehru-Gandhi family and China. His demand stemmed from what he described as "revelations" found in declassified documents from the 1961 Belgrade Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM). In a sharply worded X post shared on Monday, Dubey took aim at India's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru , questioning his foreign policy choices during the formative years of the Cold War. 'Rahul Baba, do you know that at China's behest, your family's patriarch Nehru ji created the new gimmick of non-aligned countries? Look at the member countries of the first conference in Belgrade in 1961. After isolating India from both Russia and America, did any country come to India's defence during or after the 1962 war with China?' Dubey asked. — nishikant_dubey (@nishikant_dubey) The BJP MP went on to allege that the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), championed by Nehru, eventually "benefited" China rather than serving India's strategic interests. Citing the 26th declaration adopted at the Belgrade Summit, Dubey argued that the text revealed Nehru's alignment with Chinese interests. 'Tibet to China, Panchsheel for China, and after making China a permanent member of the United Nations, this conference ordered the UN to recognise China as the sole representative state. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 2025 Top Trending local enterprise accounting software [Click Here] Esseps Learn More Undo By siding with China, did your family impose the 1962 war on India or not?' he said. He followed up with a pointed query directed at Rahul Gandhi: 'Should the relationship between China and the Nehru family be investigated?' The 1961 Belgrade Summit was the inaugural meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement — a coalition of states aiming to stay independent from both the Western and Soviet power blocs. Nehru was a key architect in shaping the principles and objectives of the movement. This is not the first time Dubey has targeted the Congress leadership. He previously accused the Nehru-Gandhi family of compromising India's interests in relation to Pakistan, particularly citing the Indus Waters Treaty. He had also flagged India's financial commitments to Pakistan under the treaty, claiming they were the result of Congress-era policies that weakened India diplomatically.

'Today, AI is like an intern that can work for a couple of hours…,' says OpenAI CEO Sam Altman
'Today, AI is like an intern that can work for a couple of hours…,' says OpenAI CEO Sam Altman

Hindustan Times

time37 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

'Today, AI is like an intern that can work for a couple of hours…,' says OpenAI CEO Sam Altman

The world is steadily transitioning towards embracing Artificial Intelligence (AI), slowly adopting tools and automation processes in day-to-day lives. While the technology is simplifying business processes and tasks, people are now fearing that AI could replace jobs in future. However, many industry experts also assure that AI will work alongside humans. Now, at the Snowflake Summit 2025, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman shares greater insight on how people will start to embrace AI in real time. Reportedly, Altman provided a statement that AI could replace entry-level jobs or interns. However, Gen Z could actually benefit from the technology. This claim also supports the recent Oxford Economics study, which talks about how companies are hiring fewer college graduates in recent times. Know what the OpenAI CEO said more about AI taking human jobs. Also read: Google pauses 'Ask Photos' AI Feature to address performance issues Sam Altman chaired a panel with Snowflake CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy at the Snowflake Summit 2025, during which he said that AI could perform similar tasks to junior-level employees, eventually replacing the hours of work done by interns. Altman stated, 'Today AI is like an intern that can work for a couple of hours, but at some point it'll be like an experienced software engineer that can work for a couple of days.' He further added that AI could resolve business problems and that 'we start to see agents that can help us discover new knowledge.' Also read: Microsoft launches Xbox Copilot beta on Android app to assist gamers with real-time support While it seems like a very practical prediction, it is not the first time we have heard something like this. As businesses and companies are heavily investing in AI tools, it is not only saving them money on hiring resources, but it is so fast tracking certain tasks which used to take hours with human intelligence. But how is Gen Z vastly embracing AI? At Sequoia Capital's AI Ascent event, Altman highlighted how different generations of people are using AI in the real world. He said, many are using AI as a replacement for Google. However, Gen Z is using AI as an advisor, whereas younger generations are using the technology as an operating system. Therefore, people in their twenties are heavily relying on AI tools like as ChatGPT to perform the majority of tasks. This also showcases a great example of how AI will work alongside humans, but this could also create an imbalance in the job market, especially for people who are just starting new in the job industry. Mobile Finder: Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max LATEST specs, features, and price

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store