Chinese police are investigating an unauthorized and highly unusual online dump of documents from a private security contractor linked to the nation’s top policing agency and other parts of its government — a trove that catalogs apparent hacking activity and tools to spy on both Chinese and foreigners.

Among the apparent targets of tools provided by the impacted company, I-Soon: ethnicities and dissidents in parts of China that have seen significant anti-government protests, such as Hong Kong or the heavily Muslim region of Xinjiang in China’s far west.

The dump of scores of documents late last week and subsequent investigation were confirmed by two employees of I-Soon, known as Anxun in Mandarin, which has ties to the powerful Ministry of Public Security. The dump, which analysts consider highly significant even if it does not reveal any especially novel or potent tools, includes hundreds of pages of contracts, marketing presentations, product manuals, and client and employee lists.

  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    And any government can just buy your data from Google etc whenever it wants, no warrants needed. No one has privacy anymore.

    • fastandcurious@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      ‘Nooo, but it’s different when the US does it🤡’ Fuck US, Fuck China, Fuck anyone who doesn’t respect peoples privacy, Fuck people who think/claim/defend that US is any better than China in most circumstances