98COBRA#770
09-13-2005, 12:26 PM
Anyone else read this or can you find this article and post it.
A good read (to me) about:
The Invasion of the Chinese Cyberspies (and the man who TRIED to stop them)
Talk about shoot the messenger.......I really believe the man was trying to
help our country from harm.
He paid a price for this!
He brought to light a group some 30 to 40 hackers strong working non stop
24-7-365 stealing US military info but China say oh no thats not true :rolleyes: .
I found it but could not download it all Damn it!
The Invasion of the Chinese Cyberspies (And the Man Who Tried to Stop Them)
An exclusive look at how the hackers called TITAN RAIN are stealing U.S. secrets
By NATHAN THORNBURGH
It was another routine night for Shawn Carpenter. After a long day analyzing computer-network security for Sandia National Laboratories, where much of the U.S. nuclear arsenal is designed, Carpenter, 36, retreated to his ranch house in the hills overlooking Albuquerque, N.M., for a quick dinner and an early bedtime. He set his alarm for 2 a.m. Waking in the dark, he took a thermos of coffee and a pack of Nicorette gum to the cluster of computer terminals in his home office. As he had almost every night for the previous four months, he worked at his secret volunteer job until dawn, not as Shawn Carpenter,...
A good read (to me) about:
The Invasion of the Chinese Cyberspies (and the man who TRIED to stop them)
Talk about shoot the messenger.......I really believe the man was trying to
help our country from harm.
He paid a price for this!
He brought to light a group some 30 to 40 hackers strong working non stop
24-7-365 stealing US military info but China say oh no thats not true :rolleyes: .
I found it but could not download it all Damn it!
The Invasion of the Chinese Cyberspies (And the Man Who Tried to Stop Them)
An exclusive look at how the hackers called TITAN RAIN are stealing U.S. secrets
By NATHAN THORNBURGH
It was another routine night for Shawn Carpenter. After a long day analyzing computer-network security for Sandia National Laboratories, where much of the U.S. nuclear arsenal is designed, Carpenter, 36, retreated to his ranch house in the hills overlooking Albuquerque, N.M., for a quick dinner and an early bedtime. He set his alarm for 2 a.m. Waking in the dark, he took a thermos of coffee and a pack of Nicorette gum to the cluster of computer terminals in his home office. As he had almost every night for the previous four months, he worked at his secret volunteer job until dawn, not as Shawn Carpenter,...