The Australian Broadcasting and other officials blamed China for hacking Australia’s Weather Bureau of Meteorology. The officials said that “the computer system misbehaved and uncontrollable by means somebody is playing with our computer system” unfortunately compromised the computer system of the federal government. Other officials citing the same that they didn’t even have the evidence to blame China, but still, it is quite sure regarding China’s growing hacking activities all over the world make life-critical – other weather broadcast agencies are also being affected after the hacking, which will cost millions of dollars to fix the same. The National Broadcaster cited, “Computers have been compromised but still we have not identified the breach location of the hackers, and the investigators are investing the bitter truth”
Officials Blame China For Hacking Australian Weather Bureau
Now the question arises that where the security has gone. – the internal computer system security has lapped its system to breach any external invader into it. Apart from this, the head officials from the weather bureau have refused to comment on this matter; according to the official site of the Australian Weather Bureau – the online statement that computer security is fully secure. The blame on a single country is not direct comment – it’s based on several hacking activities from the side of China, previously China refused to accept the blame regarding the access to the e-mail of Senior Australian officials, which also included Prime Minister Julia Gillard – another several blame direct to China from the US also – US blame for hacking and surveillance of American multinational companies to steal several secret trading information. The report in an email received by ABC channel that the Australian government does not want to disclose any matter related to the hacking activity from which region, but other officials are directly blaming China regarding the hack. Now the government is trying to hire more computer experts from Australia and making security more unreachable, as the report says.