US-China CyberPulse: Defense Updates
This is your US-China CyberPulse: Defense Updates podcast. Name’s Ting. Let’s jack straight into the feed. Over the past few days, US cyber defense against Chinese state-backed hacking has felt less like IT policy and more like a live-fire exercise in slow motion. According to TechJack Solutions’ 2025–2026 threat intel, China‑nexus groups have been running a sustained multi‑front campaign against US and allied tech supply chains, going after code repositories, cloud providers, and insider access all at once. TechJack notes a surge in targeting of semiconductor, AI, and telecom firms, with intellectual property theft and supply‑chain backdoors as the main prize, not quick ransomware paydays. In Washington, the response is tightening. The Wire China just highlighted how a California maker of “TV walls” for the US military ended up in Chinese hands, and how US officials are now scrambling to unwind that deal. That one case is driving fresh scrutiny of Chinese ownership in firms that touch defense networks, data centers, or AI infrastructure. Pair that with new briefings on “data center warfare” from places like West Point’s Modern War Institute, and you get the new mindset: if it routes, stores, or trains data, it’s key terrain. On the technical side, US agencies and big tech have spent the week obsessing over software supply chain armor. Cyber Security Hub reported that more than 20 Linux packages were recently found weaponized, and while they didn’t all trace back to China, that’s exactly the kind of vector Chinese groups have loved in past operations. So you’re seeing accelerated adoption of reproducible builds, software bills of materials, and zero‑trust code signing, especially in critical infrastructure and AI platforms. Policy‑wise, the White House’s earlier executive order on AI security is quietly turning into a de facto standard. The focus on voluntary security reviews for AI models used in national infrastructure is now being reinterpreted through a China lens: if a model can influence grids, logistics, or financial systems, it must be hardened against prompt injection, model theft, and poisoned training data coming from foreign adversaries. Internationally, the US isn’t flying solo. Taipei Times just covered Taiwan’s new platform inviting Chinese nationals to anonymously report on Beijing’s political, military, and cyber activities. That intelligence, plus Japanese and Australian reporting about threats to undersea cables highlighted by the Lowy Institute, is feeding into US‑led joint cyber defense exercises and cable protection plans in the Pacific. Private sector incident‑response firms like CrowdStrike and TeamT5 are closing the loop by sharing fresh tradecraft: TeamT5 recently warned at FIRSTCON that Chinese operators are experimenting with short‑video apps and crypto platforms for malware delivery and command‑and‑control, an evolution beyond old‑school spearphishing. So, listeners, the US‑China CyberPulse this week is clear: less whack‑a‑mole, more fortress‑building around AI, data centers, supply chains, and cables—because those are the new battlefields. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next briefing. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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