The Chicom cyber attacks

 Washington Examiner:

In a rare coordinated action on Monday, the United States, Britain, and the European Union condemned Beijing over its exploitation of Microsoft Exchange servers.

The U.S. and Britain have also attributed broader attacks to China's civilian intelligence service, the Ministry of State Security. In a very telling example of its deference to Beijing, the EU only attributed the Microsoft Exchange attack to actors located on Chinese soil. Still, China's aggression and ambition here are defining. The Microsoft Exchange attack makes Russia's recent SolarWinds intrusion look like a polite request for classified information in comparison.

Addressing China's broader cyber-espionage campaign, the Department of Justice says that the MSS successfully stole information related to "sensitive technologies used for submersibles and autonomous vehicles, specialty chemical formulas, commercial aircraft servicing, proprietary genetic-sequencing technology and data, and foreign information to support China’s efforts to secure contracts for state-owned enterprises within the targeted country (e.g., large-scale high-speed railway development projects)."

The British government says that the Microsoft Exchange attack affected 30,000 corporations in the U.S. and many more globally. Britain also says the attack "was highly likely to enable large-scale espionage, including acquiring personally identifiable information and intellectual property."

...

There is much more.

This looks like a massive theft of intellectual property in the US and other countries to make up for the failures of communism to create this information on its own. 

See, also:

US Charges 4 Chinese Nationals Working With Spy Agency in Global Hacking Campaign

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