Salt Typhoon Strikes Again: 9-Month Breach Bombshell Rocks National Guard episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 16, 2025 · 5 MIN

Salt Typhoon Strikes Again: 9-Month Breach Bombshell Rocks National Guard

from Digital Frontline: Daily China Cyber Intel · host Inception Point AI

This is your Digital Frontline: Daily China Cyber Intel podcast. Listeners, welcome to another pulse-pounding edition of Digital Frontline: Daily China Cyber Intel, where I, Ting, your punctilious but playful cyber sleuth, break down the latest in PRC cyber shenanigans and how you can keep out of their digital crosshairs. No nonsense—let’s punch straight into the breach. The biggest bombshell? The infamous Chinese APT group Salt Typhoon has been confirmed by the Department of Defense to have burrowed deep into a major U.S. state’s Army National Guard network for a staggering nine months. This group didn’t just sneak in—they moved laterally, mapped network topologies, scooped up personal info on service members, even diagrammed sensitive backend architectures, all thanks to a clever cocktail of misconfigurations and, possibly, zero-day exploits according to a recent memo from the Department of Homeland Security. While officials aren’t naming the state, the intrusion hit especially hard since National Guard units plug right into state law enforcement “fusion centers” in 14 states, which basically means Salt Typhoon potentially positioned itself for access to more networks via shared intelligence pipelines. Salt Typhoon’s claim to infamy isn’t new. Remember last year’s AT&T and Verizon breaches? That was them, too. They wiretapped presidential campaign comms and legislative offices, showing they’re as comfortable spying on politicians as they are slicing through infrastructure. This time, their tools included chaining old CVEs from brands like Cisco and Palo Alto, while their evasion game stayed strong with modular malware, credential dumps, and good old privilege escalation. On the prevention side, experts are adamant: PATCH. YOUR. DEVICES. Now. Especially Chrome—CVE-2025-6558 is out there, so make patching a dinner date with your IT team. Segment your network, audit edge devices, and if you run any telecom, start watching logs like a hawk. Bixleap and other AI platforms proved invaluable for early threat hunting this week—if you’re still hunting bad actors manually, it’s time to try machine help. Not to be outdone in the news, the infamous “digital escort” plot twist surfaced when it was uncovered that Microsoft let China-based engineers assist with Pentagon cloud systems—the catch? Their U.S.-based supervisors often lacked the right technical chops, making the set-up comically vulnerable. Security pros are calling it a national embarrassment; this is sensitive “Impact Level 4 and 5” data, which supports frontline military operations. Both Microsoft and government spokespeople are defending their frameworks, but national security experts are demanding Congressional investigations, with some, like Michael Lucci at State Armor Action, demanding criminal penalties if the worst supervision fears are confirmed. Meanwhile, advanced persistent threats weren’t limited to just operational networks. Congress is weighing the controversial new Chip Secu This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

This is your Digital Frontline: Daily China Cyber Intel podcast. Listeners, welcome to another pulse-pounding edition of Digital Frontline: Daily China Cyber Intel, where I, Ting, your punctilious but playful cyber sleuth, break down the latest in PRC cyber shenanigans and how you can keep out of their digital crosshairs. No nonsense—let’s punch straight into the breach. The biggest bombshell? The infamous Chinese APT group Salt Typhoon has been confirmed by the Department of Defense to have burrowed deep into a major U.S. state’s Army National Guard network for a staggering nine months. This group didn’t just sneak in—they moved laterally, mapped network topologies, scooped up personal info on service members, even diagrammed sensitive backend architectures, all thanks to a clever cocktail of misconfigurations and, possibly, zero-day exploits according to a recent memo from the Department of Homeland Security. While officials aren’t naming the state, the intrusion hit especially hard since National Guard units plug right into state law enforcement “fusion centers” in 14 states, which basically means Salt Typhoon potentially positioned itself for access to more networks via shared intelligence pipelines. Salt Typhoon’s claim to infamy isn’t new. Remember last year’s AT&T and Verizon breaches? That was them, too. They wiretapped presidential campaign comms and legislative offices, showing they’re as comfortable spying on politicians as they are slicing through infrastructure. This time, their tools included chaining old CVEs from brands like Cisco and Palo Alto, while their evasion game stayed strong with modular malware, credential dumps, and good old privilege escalation. On the prevention side, experts are adamant: PATCH. YOUR. DEVICES. Now. Especially Chrome—CVE-2025-6558 is out there, so make patching a dinner date with your IT team. Segment your network, audit edge devices, and if you run any telecom, start watching logs like a hawk. Bixleap and other AI platforms proved invaluable for early threat hunting this week—if you’re still hunting bad actors manually, it’s time to try machine help. Not to be outdone in the news, the infamous “digital escort” plot twist surfaced when it was uncovered that Microsoft let China-based engineers assist with Pentagon cloud systems—the catch? Their U.S.-based supervisors often lacked the right technical chops, making the set-up comically vulnerable. Security pros are calling it a national embarrassment; this is sensitive “Impact Level 4 and 5” data, which supports frontline military operations. Both Microsoft and government spokespeople are defending their frameworks, but national security experts are demanding Congressional investigations, with some, like Michael Lucci at State Armor Action, demanding criminal penalties if the worst supervision fears are confirmed. Meanwhile, advanced persistent threats weren’t limited to just operational networks. Congress is weighing the controversial new Chip Secu This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Salt Typhoon Strikes Again: 9-Month Breach Bombshell Rocks National Guard

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Darknet Discussions Darknet Discussions Welcome to "Darknet Discussions," the podcast that gets into the shadows of the internet to bring you the most intriguing, enlightening, and sometimes unsettling stories from the dark web. Hosted by seasoned darknet aficionados, each episode of "Darknet Discussions" explores the intricate dynamics of darknet markets, cybersecurity threats, and the digital underworld. Join us as we interview experts, discuss the latest trends in cybercrime, and shed light on the technologies that operate beneath the surface of everyday internet use. Also, we occasionally go off on a tangent about something completely unrelated. The Digital Experience Show by Enonic Enonic All you need to know about digital strategy, digital experiences, and CMS are covered in this podcast. Powered by NotebookLM. Christadelphian Encouragements CE.captivate.fm Christadelphian Encouragements provides sermons, exhortations, bible studies, memorials, and daily readings from around the world. Please visit ChristadelphianEncouragements.Com and our content creators websites for more information and Christian audio content. CISO Perspectives (public) N2K Networks This season on CISO Perspectives, host Kim Jones explores some of the challenges of leading through uncertainty. We explore the complexity of the changing nature of regulation and working with the federal government, the evolution of privacy and fraud, and how emerging technologies like AI and quantum computing are changing cyber. When you don’t know what questions to ask, you’re afraid to ask, or don’t know who to ask, CISO Perspectives provides the foundation for learning in this brave new world.

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This episode was published on July 16, 2025.

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This is your Digital Frontline: Daily China Cyber Intel podcast. Listeners, welcome to another pulse-pounding edition of Digital Frontline: Daily China Cyber Intel, where I, Ting, your punctilious but playful cyber sleuth, break down the latest in...

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