This is your China Hack Report: Daily US Tech Defense podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here, your friendly neighborhood China-cyber-obsessive, sliding straight into the latest China-linked hacking drama hitting US tech and defense in the last 24 hours. Let’s start with the big one: according to CNN and Reuters reporting over the weekend, US officials now say the Chinese state-backed group Volt Typhoon has quietly expanded its foothold in US critical infrastructure, especially power, ports, and communications tied to Pacific military bases. Microsoft’s threat intel team has been tracking Volt Typhoon for months, but new indicators show fresh implants on US telecom and energy networks, with tradecraft tuned for long-term disruption, not quick data theft. The White House and the Pentagon are treating this as pre‑positioning for potential conflict over Taiwan, not just routine espionage. CISA, the NSA, and the FBI pushed updated joint guidance on these China-nexus actors, urging US critical infrastructure operators to harden edge devices, rip out default credentials on routers and VPNs, and enable strict logging on PowerShell, WMI, and remote management tools that Volt Typhoon loves to live off the land with. They’re telling defenders to hunt for unusual command-line use on admin accounts and mysterious scheduled tasks instead of obvious malware, because this crew is allergic to noisy payloads. On the malware front, several security vendors, including CrowdStrike, Mandiant, and Palo Alto Networks’ Unit 42, reported new variants of custom backdoors associated with APT31 and APT41, both long‑linked to China’s Ministry of State Security. These variants are tuned for cloud environments—think Microsoft 365, Azure, and AWS—abusing OAuth apps and stolen tokens instead of dropping big binary payloads. The FBI has been warning that Microsoft 365 tenants are being hammered by phishing and consent-grant scams that are “not hacking software, they’re hacking trust,” targeting US government contractors, universities, and biotech firms. Hit sectors in the last day: US defense industrial base contractors, regional telecom providers that carry traffic for military installations, and at least one major US university doing dual‑use AI and quantum research. Several reports mention targeted spearphishing of senior engineers and program managers, often spoofing HR, legal, or travel vendors to deliver malicious links. Emergency patching: CISA added multiple network device and gateway vulnerabilities to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog, highlighting that China‑linked actors are actively exploiting older bugs in popular firewalls and VPNs. Organizations are being told to immediately patch or remove unsupported devices, disable unused VPN accounts, and enforce phishing‑resistant multifactor authentication for any remote access. Immediate defensive moves recommended by CISA, NSA, and FBI: implement zero trust principles on high-value networks, segment OT from IT in energy and transport, deploy endpoint detection and response with behavioral analytics, and rehearse incident response for destructive scenarios, not just data theft. They are especially stressing rapid isolation of suspicious hosts and continuous monitoring for data exfiltration to overseas VPS infrastructure. That’s your China Hack Report: Daily US Tech Defense download from Ting. Thanks for tuning in, stay patched, stay paranoid, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta