Post by account_disabled on Mar 12, 2024 2:04:31 GMT -6
We are facing one of the most important cases of espionage due to hardware hacking in history," according to Bloomberg. This is news that Apple's CEO, Tim Cook, did not like and therefore decided, for the first time in the company's history, to ask a media outlet to retract said news.
This is a report published by Businessweek, a well-known weekly business magazine from the Bloomberg economic agency, in which several specialists claim that China secretly entered the infrastructure of Apple, Amazon and other important technology firms.
For the first time in Apple's history, the company asked a media outlet to retract this news:
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According to the report, the Asian country used a series of tiny chips to "infiltrate" American companies.
With this, more than 30 were affected by the Czech Republic Mobile Number List alleged espionage by China through a company of Taiwanese origin called Supermicro.
In addition, several experts stated that China used chips the size of a grain of rice to remotely access company networks, and that they even bribed executives at Apple and Amazon to include them in their servers.
However, Cook told Buzzfeed that Bloomberg "needs to do the right thing and back off." According to the report, China "infiltrated" Apple and other American companies.
This document is generating controversy in the technology industry and also had an almost immediate impact on the affected companies, says BBC technology correspondent Dave Lee.
What remains now is an intense rift between a magazine famous for its exhaustive fact-checking and the companies that have firmly denied the accusations," explains the journalist.
For the first time Apple retracts
Cook asked Bloomberg for a rectification because what they published "turned the company upside down"
Apple's denials coincide with those of Amazon and also with those of government agencies in the United States.
This is a report published by Businessweek, a well-known weekly business magazine from the Bloomberg economic agency, in which several specialists claim that China secretly entered the infrastructure of Apple, Amazon and other important technology firms.
For the first time in Apple's history, the company asked a media outlet to retract this news:
Tweet this phrase.
According to the report, the Asian country used a series of tiny chips to "infiltrate" American companies.
With this, more than 30 were affected by the Czech Republic Mobile Number List alleged espionage by China through a company of Taiwanese origin called Supermicro.
In addition, several experts stated that China used chips the size of a grain of rice to remotely access company networks, and that they even bribed executives at Apple and Amazon to include them in their servers.
However, Cook told Buzzfeed that Bloomberg "needs to do the right thing and back off." According to the report, China "infiltrated" Apple and other American companies.
This document is generating controversy in the technology industry and also had an almost immediate impact on the affected companies, says BBC technology correspondent Dave Lee.
What remains now is an intense rift between a magazine famous for its exhaustive fact-checking and the companies that have firmly denied the accusations," explains the journalist.
For the first time Apple retracts
Cook asked Bloomberg for a rectification because what they published "turned the company upside down"
Apple's denials coincide with those of Amazon and also with those of government agencies in the United States.