Google Says Hackers in China Stole Gmail Passwords

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Google said that hundreds of users of Gmail, its e-mail service, had been the targets of clandestine attacks apparently originating in China that were aimed at stealing their passwords and monitoring their e-mail. The company said the victims included senior government officials in the United States, Chinese political activists, officials in several Asian countries, military personnel and journalists. Google said that once the intruders had logged into the accounts, they could change settings for mail forwarding so that copies of messages would be sent to another address. The company said it had “disrupted” the campaign and had notified the victims as well as government agencies. The company recommended that Gmail users take additional security steps, like using a Google service known as two-step verification, to make it more difficult to compromise their e-mail accounts. But it emphasized that the password thefts were not the result of a general security problem with Gmail.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said that the government had no involvement in any such attacks, declaring that it “consistently opposes any criminal activities that damage the Internet and computer networks including hacking and cracks down these activities according to law.”


Google Says Hackers in China Stole Gmail Passwords Ensuring your information is safe online (Google) Google Suspects China in Passwords Incident (Bloomberg) China rejects Google’s e-mail hack claims (FT) Phishing scam hits some very important Gmail users (Politico) Google says hackers based in China accessed U.S. officials’ Gmail accounts (WashPost) Hillary Clinton says FBI will investigate Gmail hacking; China denies involvement (Los Angeles Times)