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Breach at Amnesty International Canada by alleged Chinese hackers

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Breach at Amnesty International Canada by alleged Chinese hackers

The Canadian chapter of Amnesty International has uncovered a security compromise that was discovered in early October and connected to a threat group that was probably supported by China.

The international human rights NGO claims that on October 5, when it noticed unusual activity on its IT infrastructure, it became aware of the hack.

The NGO contacted cybersecurity company Secureworks to look into the incident and defend its networks after it became aware of it.

Amnesty International Canada stated that preliminary findings from the inquiry “suggest that a digital security compromise was performed using tools and techniques connected with specific advanced persistent threat groups (APTs)”.

Later, forensic specialists with the top international cyber-security company Secureworks determined that the attack was probably carried out by “a threat organisation funded or tasked by the Chinese state.”

Based on the attackers’ tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) and the material they targeted—all of which were consistent with known Chinese state hacker tactics and methods—the attack was connected to a suspected Chinese threat organisation.

There is no proof of data exfiltration.
There is currently no proof, according to Secureworks’ analysis, that the attackers stole donor or membership information.

The NGO alerted personnel, funders, and other stakeholders about the security breach and reported it to the appropriate law enforcement agencies.

According to Amnesty International Canada Secretary General Ketty Nivyabandi, “This example of cyberespionage relates to the increasingly perilous situation that activists, journalists, and civil society alike must navigate today.”

“There has never been a more pressing need for and relevance of our work to look into and condemn these activities. We shall keep drawing attention to human rights abuses, no matter where they take place, and oppose governments’ use of digital monitoring to suppress human rights.”

Given Amnesty International’s reporting and analysis on the continued violations of human rights committed by the Chinese government, the attack is not shocking.

 

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Russian processor manufacturers are prohibited from using ARM because of UK sanctions.

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Russian processor manufacturers are prohibited from using ARM because of UK sanctions.

On Wednesday, the UK government expanded its list of sanctioned Russian organisations by 63. The two most significant chip manufacturers in Russia, Baikal Electronics and MCST (Moscow Center of SPARC Technologies), are among them.

Since the licensee, Arm Ltd., is situated in Cambridge, England, and must abide by the penalties, the two sanctioned firms will now be denied access to the ARM architecture.

contacting inactive entities

The UK government provided the following justification for the restrictive measures put in place against Baikal and MCST:

The clause’s goal is to persuade Russia to stop acting in a way that threatens Ukraine’s territorial integrity, sovereignty, or independence or that destabilises Ukraine.

The two companies are important to Russia’s ambitions to achieve technical independence since they are anticipated to step up and fill the gaps left by the absence of processors built by Western chip manufacturers like Intel and AMD.

The two currently available most cutting-edge processors are:

Eight ARM Cortex A57 cores running at 1.5 GHz and an ARM Mali-T628 GPU running at 750 MHz make up the 35 Watt Baikal BE-M1000 (28nm) processor.
MCST Elbrus-16S (28nm), a 16-core processor clocked at 2.0 GHz, is capable of 1.5 TFLOP calculations, which is a tenth of what an Xbox Series X can do. Baikal BE-S1000 (16nm), a 120 Watt processor featuring 48 ARM cores clocked at 2.0 GHz, MCST Elbrus-8C (28nm), a 70 Watt processor featuring eight cores clocked at 1.3 GHz,
Russian businesses and organisations that evaluated these chips in demanding applications claim that they fall short of industry standards and are even unacceptably priced.

Although the performance of these processors and the far poorer mid-tier and low-tier chips with the Baikal and MCST stickers is not very spectacular, they could keep some crucial components of the Russian IT sector operating amid shortages.

In reality, MCST recently bragged that it was “rushing to the rescue” of vital Russian enterprises and organisations, successfully filling the void left in the domestic market.

sanctions’ effects
Given that Russia has previously demonstrated its willingness to relax licencing requirements in order to mitigate the consequences of Western-imposed limitations, it is simple to discount the application and impact of the UK’s sanctions.

It is crucial to keep in mind that the Baikal and MCST processors are produced in foreign foundries, such as those owned by Samsung and TSMC, and that neither of them would violate Arm’s licencing policies or international law to serve Russian objectives.

The only option is to bring the production home and break the law as Baikal, which has a legitimate licence to produce at 16nm, only has a design licence for its next products.

The fact that chip fabrication in Russia can only now be done at the 90nm node level presents yet another significant issue. That was the same technology NVIDIA employed in 2006 for its GeForce 7000-series GPUs.

To combat this in April 2022, the Russian government has already approved an investment of 3.19 trillion rubles (38.2 billion USD), although increasing domestic production will take many years. In the best-case scenarios, 28nm circuits will be able to be produced by Russian foundries by 2030.

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PE firm Insight Allies spends $290M for a bulk risk in CivicPlus, which provides software and also various other innovation to greater than 4,000 municipal governments (AJ Dome/Manhattan Mercury).

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PE firm Insight Allies spends

PE firm Insight Partners invests $290M for a majority stake in CivicPlus, which provides software and other technology to more than 4,000 municipal governments (AJ Dome/Manhattan Mercury)

AJ Dome / Manhattan Mercury:
PE firm Insight Partners invests $290M for a majority stake in CivicPlus, which provides software and other technology to more than 4,000 municipal governments  —  A Manhattan software business owner says a multimillion-dollar investment into the company will not change the company’s makeup.

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EXAMINING THE LINKS BETWEEN THE RATIONALIST COMMUNITY, WITH SLATE STAR CODEX BLOG AS ITS EPICENTER, AND INFLUENTIAL LEADERS IN TECH, INCLUDING OPENAI’S FOUNDERS (CADE METZ/NEW YORK TIMES)

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EXAMINING THE LINKS BETWEEN THE RATIONALIST COMMUNITY

Examining the links between the Rationalist community, with Slate Star Codex blog as its epicenter, and influential leaders in tech, including OpenAI’s founders  —  Slate Star Codex was a window into the psyche of many tech leaders building our collective future.  Then it disappeared.

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