BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  FlamingChina hacker claim
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Fri, 10 Apr 2026 10:16:40 -0500
-----------------------------------------------------------
FlamingChina hacker claims to have stolen over 10 petabytes of advanced
military data from Chinas National Supercomputing Center in possibly the
biggest hack of all time

Date:
Thu, 09 Apr 2026 18:05:00 +0000

Description:
A hacker is claiming to have breached Chinese supercomputer through a
compromised VPN domain.

FULL STORY
An individual or group calling itself 'FlamingChina'
claims to have stolen over 10 petabytes of highly sensitive military
information from Chinas National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin. 

The breach remains unverified, but samples posted by the hacker show research
across various fields including aerospace engineering, military research,
bioinformatics, fusion simulation and more, the group says. The hacker is now
offering a potentially record-breaking dataset for sale with a price tag in
the hundreds of thousands of dollars in cryptocurrency.

What was in the stolen data?

FlamingChina claims the data stolen includes highly
secret information from top organizations such as Aviation Industry
Corporation of China (AVIC), the Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China
(COMAC), and Chinas National University of Defense Technology. 

Analysis performed by experts and shared by CNN suggests that the data may be
genuine, and contains schematics and renderings of military equipment,
including aircraft, missiles, and bombs. 

FlamingChina posted the data for sale on February 6 2026, claiming the
extraction took place over several months. 

The breach, if confirmed, could help explain why multiple top experts in
aviation, nuclear weapons, radar and missile systems were seemingly removed
from the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE) site without explanation at 
some point in March of this year.

Speaking to CNN , Dakota Cary, a consultant at cybersecurity firm 
SentinelOne, said that the samples stolen are exactly what I would expect to
see from the supercomputing center. 

You would use supercomputer centers for large computational tasks. The swath
of samples that the sellers put out kind of really speaks to the breadth of
customers that this supercomputing center had, Cary continued. How did
FlamingChina extract 10 petabytes of data? The haul of 10 petabytes is an
enormous amount of data, as there are 1024 terabytes in a petabyte, meaning
the total breach is around 10,240 terabytes, or well over 10 million
gigabytes.

Cybersecurity researcher and author of the blog NetAskari, Marc Hofer, 
claimed to have spoken to someone claiming to be FlamingChina via Telegram.
The hacker said that they used a compromised VPN domain to gain access to the
Tianjin supercomputer. 

They claimed that the 10 petabytes of data was slowly extracted over a period
of six months using a botnet. The botnet would steadily extract and download
the data from multiple supercomputer servers at the same time. The steady 
flow of small packets of data was likely intended to prevent any defense
mechanisms from spotting a large flow of outgoing data. 

FlamingChina was likely able to successfully pull off the heist because it
relied less on malware, and more on vulnerabilities within the supercomputers
architecture. What is the National Supercomputer Center? The National
Supercomputer Center of Tianjin was opened in 2009, and serves over 6,000
entities with the high-speed computing power needed for complex simulations.
The supercomputer is used by entities across the research, industrial, and
defense sectors. Supercomputers are often used for aviation modeling, nuclear
detonation simulations, and even AI training. 

Numerous military, defense, and intelligence projects likely relied on the
National Supercomputer Center for modeling and simulations, making the 
dataset a potentially attractive asset to foreign intelligence agencies - 
even with the hefty price tag. 

The Tianjin Economic Development Area website describes the supercomputer as
an indispensable technology support for cutting-edge S&T innovation and
industry upgrading that serves increasingly diversified clients from research
institutes, universities, government agencies to businesses and beyond.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/flamingchina-hacker-claims-to-have-stol
en-over-10-petabytes-of-advanced-military-data-from-chinas-national-supercompu
ting-center-in-possibly-the-biggest-hack-of-all-time

$$
--- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
 * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/107)

-----------------------------------------------------------
[Voltar]