Ad End 1 February 2024
Ad Ends 13 January 2025
ad End 25 April 2025
Ad Ends 20 January 2025
Ad expire at 5 August 2024
banner Expire 25 April 2025
What's new
banner Expire 15 January 2025
banner Expire 20 October 2024
UniCvv
adv exp at 23 August 2024
casino
swipe store
Carding.pw carding forum
BidenCash Shop
Kfc CLub

Western spooks banned Lenovo PCs after finding back doors

File_closed07

TRUSTED VERIFIED SELLER
Staff member
Joined
Jun 13, 2020
Messages
7,515
Reaction score
916
Points
212
Awards
2
  • trusted user
  • Rich User
Chinese PC giant Lenovo has been banned from supplying kit for the top secret networks of western intelligence agencies after security concerns emerged when backdoor vulnerabilities were detected, according to a new report.

Unnamed intelligence and defence “sources” in the UK and Australia confirmed to the Australian Financial Review that a written ban was slapped on the firm almost a decade ago in the mid-2000s. The timeframe offered matches Lenovo's 2005 acquisition of IBM's PC business.

Serious backdoor vulnerabilities in hardware and firmware were apparently discovered during the tests which could allow attackers to remotely access devices without the knowledge of the owner.

The ban applies to various agencies in the Five Eyes alliance (UK, US, Canada, New Zealand and Australia) where such rules are normally implemented across the board given the interconnected nature of some of their classified networks, AFR said.

GCHQ, MI5, MI6, the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, the Australian Secret Intelligence Service, and the NSA were all named as participating in the Lenovo ban. However, it only applies to the most highly restricted networks and the Chinese firm remains a significant government IT provider to other government agencies in these countries.

The revelations will be a concern for private businesses just as the US Congressional report on Huawei and ZTE last year which branded these Chinese firms a national security risk.

It’s unclear whether the results of the government testing of Lenovo kit were ever shared with the private sector, although Lenovo’s position as the leader of the global PC market would seem to suggest not.

While the company is a global publicly traded business with headquarters in North Carolina as well as Beijing, its biggest shareholder is Legend Holdings, a firm which itself is part-owned by government body the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

There is also widespread suspicion in the West that even non-state owned businesses have close ties with Beijing through the ubiquitous Communist Party committees which operate within them.

Lenovo's Hong Kong-based PR couldn't immediately be reached for comment, although a statement sent to AFR said it was unaware of the ban.

It added :



Quote:[Our] products have been found time and time again to be reliable and secure by our enterprise and public sector customers and we always *welcome their engagement to ensure we are meeting their security needs.
The news comes a week after former NSA and CIA chief Michael Hayden argued in an interview with the AFR that Huawei represents an “unambiguous national security threat to the US and Australia”.
 
Ad End 1 February 2024
Top