
Ever wonder why Google reacted the way it did?
While many were pleased that Google stood up to China
over the hacking of its email accounts, questions were raised over why the
search engine outfit felt this was so important.
After all, while it was terrible that a handful of human
rights activists were hacked, it was hardly worth closing the Chinese office
over. According to new information it appears that the hack was
more dangerous than was first announced. The December cyberattack hit the company's password
system that millions of people worldwide use to access almost all of the
company's Web services.
According to the New York Times the closely-guarded
program is considered a crown jewel at Google, enabling users and employees to
sign in with their password only once to operate various services including
e-mail and business applications. Code-named Gaia the program was described publicly only
once at a technical conference four years ago.
While the intruders do not appear to have stolen
passwords of Gmail users, and Google quickly started to bolster security based
on the fears that the intruders may find weaknesses that Google might not know
about. This explains why Google claimed that the hack was
"a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate
infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of
intellectual property from Google."
However the hack it described was hardly sophisticated.