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Latest coverage for Salt Typhoon

Coverage examines reports on Salt Typhoon, an alleged intrusion set, including infrastructure, disruption, and defensive guidance.

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Salt Typhoon is a name used by security researchers and government agencies for a suspected intrusion set linked in public reporting to compromises of telecommunications and other communications infrastructure. Reported incidents have involved access to provider networks and systems that could expose subscriber information, call-detail records, or communications-related data; the scope and attribution of individual cases remain subject to investigation.

The main security concern is prolonged access to high-value network environments, including internet-facing appliances, administrative systems, and monitoring or lawful-intercept infrastructure. Telecommunications operators and connected organizations should inventory and promptly patch exposed devices, restrict management access, enforce multifactor authentication, segment sensitive systems, rotate potentially exposed credentials, and retain authentication and network telemetry for threat hunting. Investigations should examine persistence and lateral movement rather than treating removal of one account or device as sufficient. Because communications data is highly sensitive, suspected access also warrants careful privacy assessment, evidence preservation, and coordination with applicable disclosure and regulatory processes.

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Months after China-linked spies burrowed into US networks, regulator tears up its own response The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has scrapped a set of telecom cybersecurity rules introduced after the Salt Typhoon espionage campaign, reversing course on measures designed to stop state-backed snoops from slipping back into America's networks.…

AT&T and Verizon refused to hand over the security assessments, says Cantwell US Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) has demanded that Google-owned incident response firm Mandiant hand over the Salt Typhoon-related security assessments of AT&T and Verizon that, according to the lawmakers, both operators have thus far refused to give Congress.…

Networks in US and beyond compromised by Beijing's super-snoops pulling off priv-esc attacks China's Salt Typhoon spy crew exploited vulnerabilities in Cisco devices to compromise at least seven devices linked to global telecom providers and other orgs, in addition to its previous victim count.…

‘No one was kicked off the NTSB in the middle of investigating a crash’ interview Gutting the Cyber Safety Review Board as it was investigating how China's Salt Typhoon breached American government and telecommunications networks was "foolish" and "bad for national security," according to retired US Navy Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery.…

But we mean, you've had nearly four years to patch One of the critical security flaws exploited by China's Salt Typhoon to breach US telecom and government networks has had a patch available for nearly four years - yet despite repeated warnings from law enforcement and private-sector security firms, nearly all public-facing Microsoft Exchange Server instances with this vulnerability remain unpatched.…

Plus: Uncle Sam is cross with this one Chinese biz over Salt Typhoon mega-snooping Decades-old legislation requiring American telcos to lock down their systems to prevent foreign snoops from intercepting communications isn't mere decoration on the pages of law books – it actually means carriers need to secure their networks, the FCC has huffed.…

Slow drip of compromised telecom networks continues The list of telecommunications victims in the Salt Typhoon cyberattack continues to grow as a new report names Charter Communications, Consolidated Communications, and Windstream among those breached by Chinese government snoops.…

When the FBI urges E2EE, you know it's serious business interview In the wake of the Salt Typhoon hacks, which lawmakers and privacy advocates alike have called the worst telecoms breach in America's history, the US government agencies have reversed course on encryption.…

The intrusions allowed Beijing to 'geolocate millions of individuals' AT&T, Verizon, and Lumen Technologies confirmed that Chinese government-backed snoops accessed portions of their systems earlier this year, while the White House added another, yet-unnamed telecommunications company to the list of those breached by Salt Typhoon.…

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