CNN: Taiwan downplays China TV hacking (excerpt)
September 26, 2002
(Clearwisdom.net) TAIPEI, Taiwan --Taiwan has downplayed an allegation by
Beijing that a Taiwanese broadcast operation was used by the Falun Gong to hack
into China's TV satellite systems. Following an emergency meeting Wednesday morning, Taiwan telecom official Lin
Chingh-chich said Beijing's accusation "is a bit far-fetched."
China claimed the source of the hacking was on Yangming Mountain, outside the
capital of Taipei, where several television and telecommunications companies
have installed satellite dishes and other equipment.
But Lin was skeptical that China would be able to accurately pinpoint the
source of the hacking, saying that the area from which the attack could have
originated includes all of Taiwan and neighboring islands in the Pacific Ocean.
"This happened several days ago, and it's difficult to locate the source,"
said Lin, director of the radio spectrum management department at the
Directorate General of Telecommunications.
He added that the hacking could have been done from a vehicle with mobile
broadcasting equipment.
China had demanded that Taiwan track down and punish the alleged hackers, and
warned that failing to take measures to prevent such broadcasts would further
hurt already difficult relations.
Taiwan has stepped up searches on Yangming Mountain and other areas in
Taipei, but officials are asking for more information from China.
Broadcast from Taiwan
Beijing is set to handover technical data showing that a pirate broadcast
operation indeed emanated from northern Taiwan and replaced regular TV
programming with images of the Falun Gong.
[...]
Government spokesman Chuang Suo-hang alleged Chinese hackers have targeted
Taiwan, and have broken into 42 government computer systems and 216 Taiwanese
Web sites from November 2001 to July 2002.
"It happens all the time," he said noting that documents and information were
stolen from the sites in some cases.
Pirate broadcasting on radio and television was common in Taiwan until the
mid-90s when the government relaxed regulations, opened new frequencies and
handed out more broadcasting licenses.
Dissidents, independence activists and other groups would interrupt
broadcasts and disrupt signals.
Taiwan and China split amid civil war in 1949, and political relations remain
tense between the rivals.
'Propaganda'
Chang Ching-hsi, a Falun Gong member and economics professor at the elite
National Taiwan University, said,
"I don't know anything about this [...]"
Falun Gong has made a practice in recent months of hacking into local TV
feeds and broadcasts, often broadcasting transmissions to tell the benefits of
the group and persuade the citizenry that Chinese authorities have treated it
unfairly.
[...]
Last week, 15 people convicted of breaking into a cable system to show Falun
Gong videos were sentenced to up to 20 years in prison.
The sentences were among the longest yet imposed in the campaign to crush the
spiritual movement, which had millions of followers before it was banned.
Thousands of Falun Gong followers have been detained since the group was
outlawed in 1999.
http://asia.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/asiapcf/east/09/25/taiwan.falungong/index.html
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