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After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

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matr1x
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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby matr1x » June 3rd, 2020, 5:04 pm

The number of cases underreporting

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby Ben_spanna » June 4th, 2020, 7:39 am

I think this should now be changed to After the Pandemic how will the world see the great United S of A ??? cause surely after this their covid cases are going to hit an all time high....

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby adnj » July 10th, 2020, 3:53 pm

Backdoor accounts discovered in 29 FTTH devices from Chinese vendor C-Data

The backdoor accounts grant access to a secret Telnet admin account running on the devices' external WAN interface.



Two security researchers said this week that they found severe vulnerabilities and what appears to be intentional backdoors in the firmware of 29 FTTH OLT devices from popular vendor C-Data.

FTTH stands for Fiber-To-The-Home, while OLT stands for Optical Line Termination.

The term FTTH OLT refers to networking equipment that allows internet service providers to bring fiber optics cables as close to the end-users as possible.

As their name hints, these devices are the termination on a fiber optics network, converting data from an optical line into a classic Ethernet cable connection that's then plugged in a consumer's home, data centers, or business centers.

These devices are located all over an ISP's network, and due to their crucial role, they are also one of today's most widespread types of networking devices, as they need to sit in millions of network termination endpoints all over the globe.

Seven very severe vulnerabilities

In a report published this week, security researchers Pierre Kim and Alexandre Torres said they discovered seven vulnerabilities in the firmware of FTTH OLT devices manufactured by Chinese equipment vendor C-Data.

Kim and Torres said they confirmed the vulnerabilities by analyzing the latest firmware running on two devices, but they believe that the same vulnerabilities impact 27 other FTTH OLT models, as they run similar firmware.

The vulnerabilities are as bad as it gets, but by far, the worst and most disturbing of the seven is the presence of Telnet backdoor accounts hardcoded in the firmware.

The accounts allow attackers to connect to the device via a Telnet server running on the device's WAN (internet-side) interface. Kim and Torres said the accounts granted intruders full administrator CLI access.

The two researchers said they found four username-password combinations hidden in the C-Data firmware, with backdoor accounts differing per device, based on the device model and firmware version.

suma123/panger123
debug/debug124
root/root126
guest/[empty]

But this initial backdoor CLI access could then be used to exploit other vulnerabilities. For example, Kim and Torres said an attacker could also exploit a second bug to list credentials in cleartext in the Telnet CLI for all the other device administrators; credentials that could be used at a later point in case the backdoor account is removed.

A third vulnerability also allowed the attacker to execute shell commands with root privileges from any CLI account.

The fourth bug was discovered in the same Telnet server running on the WAN interface. Kim and Torres said that this server could be abused to crash the FTTH OLT device. Since the server was running by default on the WAN interface, this bug could be used to sabotage an ISP's network if they're not filtering traffic towards the FTTH OLT devices.

But the devices were also running a web server that was included to power the device's management web panel. Here, Kim and Torres found the fifth bug. Just by downloading six text files from this web server, an attacker could get his hands on cleartext account credentials for the device's web interface, Telnet server, and SNMP interface.

In case any of the passwords are found in an encrypted format, Kim and Torres say that this is not a problem either, as credentials are usually secured with an easy to break XOR function.

And last, but not least, the two researchers pointed out that all management interfaces on the tested devices ran in cleartext modes, with HTTP rather than HTTPS, Telnet instead of SSH, and so on. They said this opened devices and the ISPs that used them to easy MitM (man-in-the-middle) attacks.

https://www.zdnet.com/article/backdoor- ... or-c-data/

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby adnj » July 22nd, 2020, 9:28 pm

Rubio: Chinese consulate in Houston was 'massive spy center'



The U.S. directed the closure of the consulate on Tuesday. The Chinese government said Wednesday morning that they had been instructed to do so without warning, but Rubio claims the move was "long overdue."

"#China’s Houston consulate is a massive spy center, forcing it to close is long overdue," he said, describing it as a "central node" of the Chinese Communist Party's spy operations.

"This needed to happen," he tweeted.

China called the closure an “unprecedented escalation" by the United States and threatened to retaliate, according to the South China Morning Post.

“China demands the U.S. revoke the wrong decision. If the U.S. went ahead, China would take necessary countermeasures,” said Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin.

State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said in a statement to Fox News that the closure directive was issued "to protect American intellectual property and Americans' private information.”

The U.S. "will not tolerate the PRC’s violations of our sovereignty and intimidation of our people, just as we have not tolerated the PRC’s unfair trade practices, theft of American jobs, and other egregious behavior," she added. "President Trump insists on fairness and reciprocity in U.S.-China relations."

Documents were burned inside the consulate’s courtyard Tuesday evening, KPRC-TV in Houston reported.

"You could just smell the paper burning,” a witness told the station. “But, all the firefighters were just surrounding the building. They couldn’t go inside.”

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/rubio- ... spy-center

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby KM_2NR » July 22nd, 2020, 11:56 pm

adnj wrote:Rubio: Chinese consulate in Houston was 'massive spy center'



The U.S. directed the closure of the consulate on Tuesday. The Chinese government said Wednesday morning that they had been instructed to do so without warning, but Rubio claims the move was "long overdue."

"#China’s Houston consulate is a massive spy center, forcing it to close is long overdue," he said, describing it as a "central node" of the Chinese Communist Party's spy operations.

"This needed to happen," he tweeted.

China called the closure an “unprecedented escalation" by the United States and threatened to retaliate, according to the South China Morning Post.

“China demands the U.S. revoke the wrong decision. If the U.S. went ahead, China would take necessary countermeasures,” said Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin.

State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said in a statement to Fox News that the closure directive was issued "to protect American intellectual property and Americans' private information.”

The U.S. "will not tolerate the PRC’s violations of our sovereignty and intimidation of our people, just as we have not tolerated the PRC’s unfair trade practices, theft of American jobs, and other egregious behavior," she added. "President Trump insists on fairness and reciprocity in U.S.-China relations."

Documents were burned inside the consulate’s courtyard Tuesday evening, KPRC-TV in Houston reported.

"You could just smell the paper burning,” a witness told the station. “But, all the firefighters were just surrounding the building. They couldn’t go inside.”

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/rubio- ... spy-center


Obviously they were engaged in some shady practices if they just burned everything.
#boycottchina

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby maj. tom » July 31st, 2020, 9:18 am

Seems like China stepping up into bio- and eco-terrorism. Playing the long game to collapse the food chain and eco-system? They're sending seeds to random people across all states and provinces in USA and Canada.

Mystery seeds from China are landing in Americans' mailboxes

Updated on: July 29, 2020 / 7:45 PM / CBS/AP

The USDA and agriculture officials across the U.S. have issued warnings about unsolicited shipments of foreign seeds and advised people not to plant them. Officials are concerned the mystery seeds, which appear to have originated in China, could be invasive plant species.

Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles said earlier. The types of seeds are unknown and could be harmful, he said, stressing they should not be planted.

"We don't know what they are, and we cannot risk any harm whatsoever to agricultural production in the United States," he said. "We have the safest, most abundant food supply in the world and we need to keep it that way."
"Unsolicited seeds could be invasive and introduce unknown diseases to local plants, harm livestock or threaten our environment."
"Pls don't plant seeds from unknown origins!" the agency tweeted.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/china-seed ... solicited/



Toronto woman mystified by bag of seeds in her mail — so are federal officials worried about invasive species

The small grey package struck Java D'Ignazio as unusual — it was very thin, had no customs documentation and a strange scribble over where the sender is supposed to sign. She thought maybe one of her children sent her a gift in the mail.

Canadian Food Inspection Agency probing at least 350 reports of unsolicited packages of seeds.

It had her correct name, address and phone number and said the contents were one studded earring valued at $4.91. But when she opened it, she found a small bag of tiny, reddish-brown seeds, apparently sent from Singapore.

D'Ignazio is just one of hundreds Canadians who have received similar packages of seeds. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) says it knows of at least 350 cases and it believes there are many more. The agency is worried the seeds might belong to an invasive species or introduce harmful pests to the country.
Image
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ ... -1.5669601

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby death365 » July 31st, 2020, 12:22 pm

but seriously how hard is it to just dna check the seeds, i think its maybe trump people send it to look like it come from china .

he did try an delay the elections yesterday, getting desperate enough to try anything.



maj. tom wrote:Seems like China stepping up into bio- and eco-terrorism. Playing the long game to collapse the food chain and eco-system? They're sending seeds to random people across all states and provinces in USA and Canada.

Mystery seeds from China are landing in Americans' mailboxes

Updated on: July 29, 2020 / 7:45 PM / CBS/AP

The USDA and agriculture officials across the U.S. have issued warnings about unsolicited shipments of foreign seeds and advised people not to plant them. Officials are concerned the mystery seeds, which appear to have originated in China, could be invasive plant species.

Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles said earlier. The types of seeds are unknown and could be harmful, he said, stressing they should not be planted.

"We don't know what they are, and we cannot risk any harm whatsoever to agricultural production in the United States," he said. "We have the safest, most abundant food supply in the world and we need to keep it that way."
"Unsolicited seeds could be invasive and introduce unknown diseases to local plants, harm livestock or threaten our environment."
"Pls don't plant seeds from unknown origins!" the agency tweeted.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/china-seed ... solicited/



Toronto woman mystified by bag of seeds in her mail — so are federal officials worried about invasive species

The small grey package struck Java D'Ignazio as unusual — it was very thin, had no customs documentation and a strange scribble over where the sender is supposed to sign. She thought maybe one of her children sent her a gift in the mail.

Canadian Food Inspection Agency probing at least 350 reports of unsolicited packages of seeds.

It had her correct name, address and phone number and said the contents were one studded earring valued at $4.91. But when she opened it, she found a small bag of tiny, reddish-brown seeds, apparently sent from Singapore.

D'Ignazio is just one of hundreds Canadians who have received similar packages of seeds. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) says it knows of at least 350 cases and it believes there are many more. The agency is worried the seeds might belong to an invasive species or introduce harmful pests to the country.
Image
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ ... -1.5669601

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby adnj » July 31st, 2020, 12:47 pm

Mysterious seeds sent from China to thousands of Americans across the US may be part of a giant online reviews scam

At least 31 states reported complaints of receiving unsolicited seed packets

The plant seeds were often mislabeled as jewelry or toys and sent from China

Now police believe it was a 'brushing' scam designed to post fake online reviews 

Positive reviews are then posted on the receiver's behalf as a verified owner

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... olved.html

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby 88sins » July 31st, 2020, 2:15 pm

that online review/fake sales scam cycles around every few years. And is not only seeds they send. Basically they would ship anything that cheap, available and light so shipping cheap.

Dem alone know how they make money doing that.

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby adnj » December 1st, 2020, 7:31 am

Old and young, Chinese vent anger at move to raise retirement age

China’s retirement age, among the world’s lowest, has remained unchanged for more than 40 years at 60 for men and 55 for women white-collar workers.

Tom Hancock

Bloomberg

30 Nov 2020

China is making a new push to raise one of the world’s lowest retirement ages as it tries to cope with a rapidly aging population, a move that’s already fueling public discontent and will test the Communist Party’s ability to implement reforms.

The ruling party alluded to the change earlier this month when it released an outline of its five-year economic plan, which included a recommendation to “implement postponing the retirement age.” Specific measures in the plan are due to be unveiled in March.

China’s retirement age has remained unchanged for more than four decades at 60 for men and 55 for female white-collar workers, even as life-expectancy has risen. In places like Japan and Taiwan, most men and women can retire and start drawing a pension at 65.

The global average was 62.7 years for men and 61.3 years for women, according to an analysis of 70 countries by insurer Allianz SE.

https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/economy/2 ... ge-from-60

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby elec2020 » December 1st, 2020, 8:22 am

^ Chinese people allowed to feel discontent for their government's decisions? also why women allowed to retire earlier than men. equality? yhhhh sure

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby timothymcdavid » December 1st, 2020, 9:03 am

Chinese people are much less sheeple than expected ... Wonder how people will feel when the TTGOV ups the retirement age here.

In China a man can expect to live for 76 upping the retirement age to 65 means the average guy can expect to enjoy over 10 of their golden years ... average life expectancy of a man in Trini is 68 and we are talking about making the retirement age 65 ... That brings new meaning to the words work till you dead.

As for Men and Women being treated differently that is a fact all this feminist BS about living in a patriarchy is crap it is only the elite the 1% that determine how things go for the vast majority of us who largely happen to men. Men world over are regarded disposable a war to fight, a dirty, dangerous or thankless job to do there is always a simp i mean man for the job.

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby Dizzy28 » December 1st, 2020, 9:19 am

China is a Cancer the world keeps ignoring however Xi is a boss. He manipulates the world for China's gain and the world keeps falling for it

China is locking up millions of Muslims in concentration camps but the Muslim world boycotting French goods over cartoons
China has recently laid claim to 785km2 of land not under dispute in Bhutan
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-55004196
It is accepted that Covid most likely is a Chinese originated disease however over the past week CCP sanctioned media have been running stories on how Covid actually emanated in India
https://www.theweek.in/news/world/2020/ ... india.html
A country with significant human rights issues but China has been doctoring photos of Australian soliders in Afghanistan to portray the Aussies as savages
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/12/ ... ldier-post

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Re: After the pandemic-How the world will change and dealings with China

Postby 88sins » December 1st, 2020, 11:02 am

timothymcdavid wrote:Chinese people are much less sheeple than expected ... Wonder how people will feel when the TTGOV ups the retirement age here.

In China a man can expect to live for 76 upping the retirement age to 65 means the average guy can expect to enjoy over 10 of their golden years ... average life expectancy of a man in Trini is 68 and we are talking about making the retirement age 65 ... That brings new meaning to the words work till you dead.

As for Men and Women being treated differently that is a fact all this feminist BS about living in a patriarchy is crap it is only the elite the 1% that determine how things go for the vast majority of us who largely happen to men. Men world over are regarded disposable a war to fight, a dirty, dangerous or thankless job to do there is always a simp i mean man for the job.



All women potentially and occasionally embrace feminism, and want everything exactly the same as a man.


Until war breaks out and they faced with a draught, then all you hear is "i cyah do dat cuz I izza woman"

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