After Gmail blocked in China, Microsoft's Outlook hacked, says GreatFire
After Gmail blocked in China, Microsoft's Outlook hacked, says GreatFire
Chinese users of
Microsoft Corp's Outlook email service were subject to a hacking attack
at the weekend, just weeks after Google Inc's Gmail system was blocked
in China, an online censorship watchdog said on Monday.
People using email
clients like Outlook, Mozilla's Thunderbird and apps on their phone with
the SMTP and IMAP email protocols, which are used to send and receive
messages, around Saturday were subject to a "man-in-the-middle" (MITM)
attack, said China-based GreatFire.org.
A MITM attack hijacks an online connection to monitor and sometimes control communications made through that channel.
Attacks
and blocks on foreign internet services have become increasingly common
with China, which operates the world's most sophisticated online
censorship mechanism, known as the Great Firewall, to eliminate any
signs of dissent or challenges to the ruling Communist Party.
Critics
say China has stepped up its disruption of foreign online services like
Google over the past year to create an Internet cut off from the rest
of the world.
GreatFire.org
said on Monday that China's official Cyberspace Administration of China
(CAC) was likely responsible for the MITM attack on Outlook.
"If our accusation is correct, this
new attack signals that the Chinese authorities are intent on further
cracking down on communication methods that they cannot readily
monitor," GreatFire.org said on its website.
Reuters was not able to contact CAC, which does not share contact details, for immediate comment.
Last
month, Google's Gmail email service was shut down in China before
resuming infrequent and heavily disrupted activity, forcing many Chinese
users to adopt domestic email systems.
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