CICC on China's possible involvement in recent cyberattack: 'It doesn't mean na sila 'yon'
By Sonny Daanoy
The Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC), an attached agency of the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT), explained that despite tracing the hacker's Internet Protocol (IP) address to China, it does not necessarily imply that the Chinese government is behind the cyberattack.

"You know, in China, if we're talking about mainland China, everything is state-controlled," CICC Executive Director Alexander Ramos told reporters on the sidelines of the Memorandum of Agreement signing between CICC and the Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) on Monday, Feb. 5.
"So it doesn't mean it's them. Maybe this is the only system available for communication," Ramos added.
To explain his point, Ramos shared his experience when being assigned to China.
"It's difficult to communicate there because a lot is being blocked. The only thing you can do for access is use their own state-owned telecom facilities there," Ramos explained in a mix of English and Filipino.
On Feb. 3. the DICT revealed that the thwarted cyberattacks initiated by perpetrators were traced back to China under the Chinese telecommunication company "China Unicom."
READ:
https://mb.com.ph/2024/2/5/we-are-safe-dict-assures-public-cybersafety-after-recent-hacking-attempts
'Not alarming'
Meanwhile, DMW Officer-in-Charge Hans Leo J. Cacdac cited his conversation with Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) administrator Arnell Ignacio, providing the public with assurance that the agency's security system is robust.
"I'll just relay what he (Ignacio) said--- his assurance to the public, to OFWs (Overseas Filipino Workers), that it's very secure, the security system is in place at OWWA," Cacdac said, citing Ignasio's remark.
"In his (Ignacio) narration, there was an attempt, but it didn't succeed. Definitely, from the tone of his report to me yesterday, he was not alarmed," he added.