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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2025-09-07 14:14:29.610
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Czech cyber agency warns against Chinese tech in critical infrastructure. The Czech Republic's National Cyber and Information Security Agency (NUKIB) is instructing critical infrastructure organizations in the country to avoid using Chinese technology or transferring user data to servers located in China. The agency warned that these actions constitute a significant cybersecurity threat and should be entirely avoided unless there's a reasonable justification for continuing the practice. The NUKIB states that it has re-evaluated its risk estimate of significant disruptions caused by China, now assessing it at a "High" level, indicating a high probability of occurrence. "Current critical infrastructure systems are increasingly dependent on storing and processing data in cloud repositories and on network connectivity enabling remote operation and updates," reads NUKIB's warning. "In practice, this means that technology solution providers can fundamentally influence the operation of critical infrastructure and/or access important data, making trust in the reliability of the supplier absolutely crucial." NUKIB noted that it has already confirmed malicious activities of Chinese cyber-actors targeting the Czech Republic, including a recent APT31 campaign targeting the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Additionally, the agency emphasizes that the Chinese government has access to data stored by private cloud service providers within the country, ensuring that sensitive data is always within its reach. Apart from critical infrastructure, NUKIB also warns about consumer devices, such as smartphones, IP cameras, electric cars, large language models, and even medical devices and photovoltaic converters manufactured by Chinese firms. These are all characterized as risky devices that can transfer potentially sensitive data to Chinese infrastructure. All entities subject to the Czech Cybersecurity Act, including energy, transport, healthcare, public administration, financial services, and other critical industries, must adopt security measures to mitigate risks. NUKIB's warning does not impose a ban on transferring data to the PRC or allowing remote administration from it, but critical infrastructure organizations must now include the threat in their risk analysis and decide what measures need to be applied to mitigate it. The order, with its full text available here, is not legally binding for the general public. However, NUKIB still recommends that Czech nationals carefully consider the bulletin and evaluate the products they use. Picus Blue Report 2025 is Here: 2X increase in password cracking 46% of environments had passwords cracked, nearly doubling from 25% last year. Get the Picus Blue Report 2025 now for a comprehensive look at more findings on prevention, detection, and data exfiltration trends.
Daily Brief Summary
The Czech Republic's cybersecurity agency, NUKIB, advises critical infrastructure organizations to avoid Chinese technology and data transfers to China due to elevated security risks.
NUKIB's risk assessment of disruptions from China has been updated to a "High" level, indicating a significant probability of occurrence.
The agency has confirmed malicious activities by Chinese cyber actors, including an APT31 campaign targeting the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Concerns include Chinese government access to data stored by private cloud services within China, posing risks to sensitive information.
NUKIB's warning extends beyond infrastructure to consumer devices like smartphones and medical equipment, which may transfer data to Chinese servers.
Critical sectors such as energy, healthcare, and finance must incorporate these threats into their risk analyses and implement mitigation strategies.
While not legally binding, the guidance urges Czech entities to evaluate Chinese products and adopt necessary security measures.