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BackUK Warns Businesses of China-Linked Hacking Using Everyday Devices
UK Warns Businesses of China-Linked Hacking Using Everyday Devices
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Guardian UK4/23/2026Tech2 min readUnited Kingdom

UK Warns Businesses of China-Linked Hacking Using Everyday Devices

NCSC and allies alert to sophisticated cyber-attacks exploiting routers and IoT devices as covert networks

Quick Look

  • The UK’s National Cyber Security Centre and agencies in nine other countries have warned of persistent attempts by Beijing-backed hacking groups to exploit vulnerable everyday devices such as wifi routers, printers and web cameras to launch cyber-attacks.
  • The advisory warns of a major shift in Chinese tactics to using internet-connected devices to obscure attack origins, with the NCSC believing the majority of China-nexus threat actors are now using these covert networks or botnets.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The NCSC has previously attributed cyber-attacks to Chinese state-sponsored groups, but this joint advisory represents a coordinated international effort to expose the scale of China's use of compromised everyday devices for espionage. The technique allows attackers to obscure their true origin by routing attacks through hacked consumer devices.

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British businesses are being urged to step up their vigilance against a China-linked hacking ploy that uses everyday devices for espionage. The UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) and agencies in nine other countries have warned of persistent attempts by Beijing-backed groups to hack equipment such as wifi routers to launch cyber-attacks. Known as "covert networks" or "botnets", they typically target vulnerable equipment – for instance devices that have not had a software update or are old – as a base for staging activities such as surveillance and data theft. The NCSC said the technique was used by the majority of China-linked hackers. Richard Horne, the centre's chief executive, said on Wednesday that China's intelligence and military agencies had an "eye-watering level of sophistication in their cyber operations". Speaking at his NCSC's annual conference in Glasgow, he said: "We face more than just a capable cyber threat but a peer competitor in cyberspace." The advisory notice from the NCSC and cyber agencies in countries including the US, Australia, Canada and Germany warns there has been a "major shift" in Chinese tactics to using devices linked to the internet as a means of obscuring where an attack comes from. The most commonly hijacked devices are routers but printers and web cameras are also vulnerable. Security officials compare routers to virtual private networks, which allow web users to obscure their location. They say a household's wifi router could be used as a conduit for attacking an unrelated major company. While the NCSC guidance is not directed at members of the public who might be unwittingly providing a launchpad for espionage, it urges companies and organisations to take a number of steps such as mapping out their IT systems, including connections to consumer broadband networks. It also recommends multifactor authentication – where users are asked to give another form of verification along with their password – for members of staff trying to access a system remotely. They also advise limiting network connections to external devices. The centre said in the advisory notice published on Thursday: "The NCSC believes that the majority of China-nexus threat actors are using these networks, that multiple covert networks have been created and are being constantly updated, and that a single covert network could be being used by multiple actors. These networks are mainly made up of compromised small office home office routers, as well as internet of things [connected devices] and smart devices." A China-backed group, dubbed Volt Typhoon by western authorities, has been flagged by agencies as a user of covert networks and has quietly burrowed into key US infrastructure including rail, aviation and water systems. The NCSC said these covert networks were now built and maintained by private Chinese companies. In one example, a Chinese business created a covert network by infecting 200,000 devices worldwide. This year, Google announced it had disrupted a "residential proxy" network where cybercrime groups and state actors used hacked household and IT devices to launch attacks.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • More countries will join the joint cyber defense advisory in coming months

    Likely · Within months

  • UK government will announce additional cybersecurity funding for critical infrastructure

    Possible · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • Which specific Chinese companies are building these covert networks?
  • How many UK businesses have been affected?
  • What specific defenses are recommended for small businesses?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian UK.

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