Nov 282012
 
Chinese Hackers with suspected links to the government nearly ruinedt a California software company tin an orchestrated attack that mirrors others against companies, government departments and political parties.
The company, Solid Oak, managed to get a confidential legal settlement that has stabilized its financial position and stopped the harassment but it is a case study in how pervasive, ruthless and damaging internet crime can be.
Bloomburg  provided this comprehensive report of the case and the mafia like tactics employed to gain a commercial advantage.

During his civil lawsuit against the People’s Republic of China, Brian Milburn says he never once saw one of the country’s lawyers. He read no court documents from China’s attorneys because they filed none. The voluminous case record at the US District courthouse in Santa Ana, California, contains a single communication from China: a curt letter to the US State Department, urging that the suit be dismissed.

That doesn’t mean Milburn’s adversary had no contact with him.

For three years, a group of hackers from China waged a relentless campaign of cyber harassment against Solid Oak Software, Milburn’s family-owned, eight-person firm in Santa Barbara, California. The attack began less than two weeks after Milburn publicly accused China of appropriating his company’s parental filtering software, CYBERsitter, for a national internet censoring project. And it ended shortly after he settled a US$2.2 billion lawsuit against the Chinese government and a string of computer companies last April.

Continue reading »