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BEIJING, April 1 (Xinhuanet) -- China is expected to pass a new set of rules and regulations to gradually establish an Internet emergency control mechanism this year in a fresh effort to curb soaring Internet hacks and attacks that have seriously threatened the safety of public
and private information, Friday's China Youth Daily reported.
"China should increase cooperation between different
departments and arouse the entire society so as to form an Internet emergency
control mechanism that is agile, sensitive and effective," said an official with
the Ministry of Information Industry, for whom the paper gave no name.
He said the mechanism should serve to ensure all
Internet-related safety incidents are detected in time, and analyzed and
responded to promptly.
Soaring Internet incident reports have alarmed both
the Chinesegovernment and companies.
In 2004, the National Computer Network Emergency
Response Technical Team/Coordination Center (CNCERT), a key body responsible for
collecting domestic Internet incidents, received atotal of 64,686 incident
reports, nearly five times that of the previous year.
Among all the reports, 45.91 percent were about web
page modifications and the rest junk mails or viruses including 'the worm' and
the 'Trojan horses' that have troubled Chinese netizens for years.
Statistics from the center also found government
websites turn out to be the easiest targets for attackers.
"Today's Internet virus is far more contagious than
those in nature," said the center. "The government should add more helpful rules
to its current legal system so as to form a more favorable legal environment."
The paper acknowledged that the use of visa accounts,
user names, passwords and social welfare numbers has become a favorite measure
of attackers to steal money.
Many websites of domestic financial institutions,
including theBank of China, have been mimiced, according to early reports by
local media.
In 2004, CNCERT received 223 reports of mimicing, in
sharp contrast to only one case in 2002 and 2003. The victims were mainly
financial and electronic websites.
As e-commerce, online payment services and bank
business becomemore popular, so do the impersonations, it said.
"It's simply a monster from science fictions. It can
not only reproduce and spread itself but also produce offspring that are totally
different in types," said Cai Jun, a Chinese anti-virus expert, describing a
newly appeared "I-Worm.Jeans.a" worm which isbelieved to be one created by
"29A", a notorious virus maker.
The virus' features change frequently and
automatically after infecting a computer, he said, noting that that
characteristic makes the virus hard to delete.
According to an Internet safety report by Symantec, a
transnational that provides anti-virus solutions, of all the 50 top new computer
threats it detected in 2004, 27 virus are used tosteal clients' personal
information. In 2003, the number was 18.
"Theft of individuals' identification information
such as bank account password and credit card number is quite likely to become
more rampant in 2005," predicted Symantec.
Like those in Western countries, both Chinese
authorities and companies which have now fully realized the damage that can be
caused by Internet crimes are carrying out campaigns against them.
According to statistics, Internet-related counterfeit
and fraudled to global losses of about 32.2 billion US dollars in 2003. Enditem
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