What is RSS feed? | About Us
RSSMicro - RSS Feed Search Engine
Dedicated RSS Feed Search Engine
Search for News, Blogs, and RSS Feeds

Chinese Espionage

 
Search 4.3 million RSS feeds, the most comprehensive RSS feed search on the web.
TOP STORIES
5,800 news sources, updated continuously
RSSMicro results for Chinese Espionage
Show All Time Results  |  Sort by: Date
RSS Feed
Search Score Search Score: 3/10

Why Bush Will Pardon AIPAC for Espionage
51 days ago
GeoGraffiti on iPhone great for espionage, scavenger hunts
60 days ago
Espionage or random robbery?
84 days ago
Books of The Times: Espionage and Dread, With War Offstage
136 days ago

Source: www.japansoc.com --- 18 days ago
Seems the Chinese are legislating that certain "product information" would need to be revealed to them before a company can get a certificate to sell an electrical product in China. Japanese manufacturers are not happy. Sounds awful dodgy to me, too lol! 5 Soc(s) ...
Source: news.yahoo.com --- 71 days ago
AFP - A US federal court sentenced a Chinese woman to 18 months in prison on Friday for her role in an Espionage case involving a former Pentagon employee who handed secret military documents to a Chinese spy, her attorney said. ...
Source: www.moreover.com --- 5 days ago
The prosecution of an American company called Syren Technology offers a tantalizing hint of the Espionage threat posed by fake Chinese computer parts. ...
Source: gizmodo.com --- 7 days ago
BusinessWeek reports that counterfeit hardware has been found to be the cause of several malfunctions in high-level military machinery. The phony infiltration has a distinct possibility of leading to Espionage or sabotage. In other words, move over, Meizu M8 : you're not the biggest faker in town anymore. Several crashes of military aircraft can be attributed to knockoff chips, but more insidiously, internal military data might be at risk. Melissa E. Hathaway, a head of cybersecurity at the FBI, says, "Counterfeit products have been linked to the crash of mission-critical networks, and may also contain hidden 'back doors' enabling network security to be bypassed and sensitive data accessed [by hackers, thieves, and spies]." Robert P. Ernst, who investigates counterfeiting for the U.S. Navy, estimates that 15% of the spare or replacement microchips bought by the Pentagon are fake. Where do these parts actually come from? Made in, as BusinessWeek colorfully puts it, the "Chinese hinterland," a lot of these components are made on the cheap and sold to the government for much less than name-brands can offer. To be fair, no evidence of terrifying Espionage has been found; all of the problems are due to crappy chips failing to work at the worst times, which really should have been expected, since the military has been paying half the price for the same product. But you can start to take off that tin foil hat, because steps are being ta ...
Source: gizmodo.com --- 39 days ago
Why God, why? Just as Man was on the cusp of a real-life invisibility cloak—otherwise known as the gateway to the secrets of international government and the girl's locker room—some stupid-head Chinese scientists have already learned to thwart it. The theoretical "anti-cloak" would be a piece of material with identical optical bending properties to the original cloak. When the anti-cloak comes into contact with the invisibility cloak, it would bend light in such a way that the cloak becomes partially visible again. But wait...apparently the anti-cloak can actually work to make the invisibility EVEN BETTER. OK, we're listening... The flaw with the current (presumably scalable) methods of creating invisibility cloaks is that when the light bends around the user, that means the user is in complete darkness with no way to see the world outside. Needless to say, this isn't what we had in mind at all. With the anti-cloak, a tiny bit of the invisibility cloak could allow light in for a peep hole. And positioned correctly, such holes could usher in an entirely new era of Espionage and/or lingerie. [ ScienceDaily ] ...
Source: www.iht.com --- 94 days ago
A Defense Department analyst and two intelligence operatives with ties to Beijing are awaiting sentencing for their part in illegally transferring information to China. ...
Source: hughhewitt.blogtownhall.com --- 16 days ago
Shu Quan-Sheng was born in Shanghai, and has become a naturalized United States citizen. He is now in deep trouble though, having been charged with Espionage in connection with the selling of liquid fueled rocket... ...
Source: www.politics.ie --- 14 days ago
by Twin Towers (Posted 4 hours ago) Given their aversion to being counted and visible as evidenced by their mass evasion of census 2006 and the handpicked nature of those allowed to travel by the Chinese state and their observable interest in photography as a hobby. Could Ireland's gombeen employing classes be facilitating industrial and economic Espionage? href="http://www.politics.ie/viewtopic.php?f=161&t=41664"> ...
Source: www.newsobserver.com --- 39 days ago
A Wake County judge has ruled that Chinese businesses committed corporate Espionage and stole trade secrets from Serenex, a Durham bio-pharmaceutical company. ...
Source: www.computerweekly.com --- 32 days ago
In view of the cyber-warfare dimension to the Russia-Georgia conflict, and the Chinese cyber-Espionage ongoing against the west since c.2003 ("Titan Rain",... ...
Source: www.computerweekly.com --- 11 days ago
In view what has been called the "cyber-warfare" dimension to the Russia-Georgia conflict, and the reported Chinese cyber-Espionage ongoing against the west... ...
Source: www.computerweekly.com --- 16 days ago
In view of the cyber-warfare dimension to the Russia-Georgia conflict, and the Chinese cyber-Espionage ongoing against the west since c.2003 ("Titan Rain", and so on), how concerned should we in the UK be about state-sponsored hacking? ...
Source: newscri.be --- 42 days ago
BEIJING, Aug. 31 (Xinhua) -- Wu Jing Lian, a Chinese ... ...
Source: wombletradesecrets.blogspot.com --- 62 days ago
From the AP via Google, a follow up to our earlier post here , concerning an economic Espionage case against a Chinese national, Yu Xin Kang, convicted of aiding and abetting the earlier-convicted Tai Shen Kuo. She was Kuo's mistress. According to prosecutors in the Northern District of Virginia, between March 2007 and February, Kuo obtained secrets on U.S. military sales to Taiwan and updates on Taiwan's new air defense system. Kang acted as a go-between for Kuo, helping him get information to a handler affiliated with the Chinese military. Kang was sentenced to 18 months in prison, less than the government wanted, based on the judge's conclusion that she was a puppet in the Espionage and only "a minor participant." I hope everyone is looking forward to the Opening Ceremonies in Beijing on Friday. Keep those laptops closed! ...
Source: gradpadscansion.blogspot.com --- 21 days ago
Today: An upper-60s couple in adjoining booth on a lovely afternoon a week after Hurricane Ike: He, unlike his wife and I, has a view of the parking lot, says something about the sky clouding up. She: Has Hurricane Ike come through yet? I heard we were supposed to get rain. He: Yes, it was sometime earlier. There was another one, but it's not supposed to hit. [I assume he meant Hanna, which was gone before Ike hit Texas] ...I come back with more shrimp dumplings and Shao Mai; their talk draws me away from the muted televisions hanging from the ceiling. She: You know, I have a lot of respect for how Sarah Palin dresses . You know that 80s look is my style, and seeing her on TV makes me think..well...that it's not gone. It's not like the fashions girls wear today... What those girls wear today is... The tone implies a facial expression of certain disdain I can't see from my position hunched over my plate. Her husband says something related to Palin, but moves away from fashion, a subject that doesn't sound like his forte. He: I just don't get why they hate her so much. She: It's because of her faith. He: They're all so full of hate. All these liberals--where does the hate come from? She: It's because they don't have the Lord. Without the Lord, all those Liberals have is hate. Have you had the ice cream yet? He: No. She: It's firm, it's good. The Coke is good today too. They've got the mix just right. I'll take my Celebrex when we get home ...
Source: wombletradesecrets.blogspot.com --- 86 days ago
From the Associated Press, via Chron.com, a story concerning a former Pentagon analyst, Gregg W. Bergersen, 51, of Alexandria, Virginia, who was sentenced Friday to almost five years in prison for giving secret information about U.S.-Taiwan military relations to a New Orleans furniture salesman who turned out to be a Chinese spy. Bergersen thought that Louisiana businessman Tai Kuo, the recipient of the information, was aligned with the Taiwanese government and that the information was furthering the establishment of a sophisticated new air defense system in Taiwan, called Po Sheng. But, according to the AP, Kuo was actually a spy for the People's Republic of China and was relaying the information provided by Bergersen to the Communist regime in Beijing. In return, prosecutors said, Bergersen got thousands of dollars from Kuo, as well as gambling trips to Las Vegas and Kuo's promise of future employment. The 57-month sentence imposed by U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema was less than the sentence of seven to nine years sought by the government. Brinkema said she departed from the federal sentencing guidelines, which also called for a 7- to 9-year term, in part because of a classified memo filed by the government that apparently detailed the damage caused by Bergersen's actions and indicated that the harm was not too substantial. ...
Source: www.marylandiplaw.com --- 34 days ago
2008 Maryland trademark filings and registrations continue to trail 2007 numbers: Wake County, North Carolina, Superior Court Judge Donald Stephens ruled September 3, 2008, that two Chinese companies and a former Serenex employee must pay Serenex $57.5 million for damages. Serenex brought the action against the companies and former employee alleging corporate Espionage and stolen trade secrets. [Womble Carlyle Trade Secret Blog ]   No. of IP-related lawsuits filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland in August 2008: 9   Top states in Technology and Science, according to Milken Institute (with 2004 rankings): 1) Massachusetts (1) 2) Maryland (4) 3) Colorado (3) 4) California (2) 5) Washington (6) 6) Virginia (5) 7) Connecticut (10) 8) Utah (9) 9) New Hampshire (12) 10) Rhode Island (11) ...
Source: www.securinginnovation.com --- 30 days ago
"Serenex's intellectual property constitutes its most valuable asset," North Carolina Judge Stephens wrote in his court order awarding, for theft of trade secrets by former employee chemist Yunsheng Huang, $57 Million in damages to the Durham-based drug development company recently acquired by Pfizer. According to news reports: Serenex alleged that Huang stole experimental cancer treatment formulations and delivered them to business partners in China. As the case unfolded in Wake County last year, Huang fled to the People's Republic of China, according to court documents. The corporate Espionage case highlights a particular vulnerability of the Triangle's research-and-development firms. The financial value of their research depends on secrecy. Serenex went to elaborate lengths to protect its trade secrets, including devising internal code names for proprietary chemical formulas to fool computer hackers.. But, as is often the case, the greatest vulnerability of trade secrets was not computer hackers but the " inside job " of a company employee. Serenex was the victim of corporate Espionage carried out by Yunsheng Huang, a former Serenex chemist and, it is alleged, Tongxiang Zhang, a member of the Chinese Communist Party who runs the Chinese companies to which Huang delivered the Serenex trade secrets. It is doubtful that the company will ever recover any of the judge's award for the damages determined to have been suffered by this theft ...

Find more results for Chinese Espionage on RSSMicro.com

Subscribe
 

Copyright © 2008 RSSMicro.com