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Microsoft charges China for cyberattacks targeting the smaller nations

The IT giant Microsoft has claimed that state-affiliated actors from China are responsible for cyberattacks on less developed countries in its most recent Digital Defence Report for 2022.

According to Microsoft’s most recent research, state-affiliated entities from China are utilising cyber espionage to target smaller countries all over the world and expand their influence in the global economy and military.

“The cyberattacks affected countries in Oceania, Africa, the Caribbean, the Middle East, and the Global South, including, among others, Namibia, Mauritius, and Trinidad and Tobago. China’s capacity to discover “zero-day vulnerabilities”—unpatched software flaws that were previously unknown to vendors—is a major contributor to many of these attacks “said the research.

ZERO-DAY VULNERABILITY EXPLOITATION

As cybersecurity measures increase throughout organisations, hackers find fresh and original ways to launch assaults. “Zero-day vulnerability” refers to the discovery and use of undiscovered security faults, errors, or weaknesses in software code.Once these newly acknowledged vulnerabilities are publicly exposed, they are commoditised and rapidly reused by other nation-states and criminal adversaries in a threat actor ecosystem.

In the report published last week, Microsoft claimed an increased use of zero-day exploits by Chinese adversaries over the last year.

CHINA EXPANDING GLOBAL TARGETING IN 2022

In its 114-page research, Microsoft also noted that China will keep juggling its position in a complicated geopolitical environment and use cyber exploitation strategies to promote its strategic, political, military, and economic objectives. The nation aims to resurrect its investment framework with the EU through the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). However, the dispute over Taiwan and the South China Sea with the United States and its allies has strained its ties with a number of nations.

The tech giant’s observation of a pattern also indicates that China’s influence would increase as it forges bilateral commercial ties with more nations, frequently in accordance with the BRI project.

The study added that Chinese nexus players continue to target individuals in the government, diplomatic, and non-governmental sectors in order to learn more about “economic espionage or traditional intelligence collection aims.” 
Even after Microsoft’s interference, the threat actors (NICKEL) continued to target several governments in Europe and Latin America in an effort to reclaim lost access. 
The ongoing determination to take use of the same government organisations is evidence of the task’s importance on higher scale.

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