In addition togiving North Korea a what - for , Eric Schmidt has also been working on some other projects . He ’s got a record come out about China , for instance , and after getting some time with the preliminary swig , the Wall Street Journal is reporting thatit ’s have some serious shotsat the superpower .
WSJ : Schmidt Is fall in North Korea What For
The Bible — The New Digital Age , co - written by Jared Cohen — doesn’t exclusively snipe at China , but the scene it does take are uncompromising . concord to the Wall Street Journal , “ the book says again and again , [ that China ] is a dangerous and ominous superpower ” and points to companies like Huawei which are spread the country ’s influence .

From the book itself :
The disparity between American and Taiwanese firms and their tactics will put both the political science and the companies of the United States as a trenchant disadvantage … the United States will not take the same path of digital bodied espionage , as its laws are much strict ( and well enforce ) and because unlawful rivalry violates the American sentience of fair play .
Of course , the US does n’t get off scott free either . mention are made to Stuxnet and other similar state - uprise cyberweapons as well , but Schmidt and Cohen make it vindicated that China is the biggest player in this game , the “ most advanced and fertile ” hack of foreign companies .

And with all the allegedly Chinese hacks that have rise recently againstthe Times , the Wall Street Journal itself , the Washington Post , and peradventure , maybe even Twitter , it ’s hard to argue against the pointedness . you’re able to hop over to the Wall Street Jorunal to read more about the coming al-Qur’an . [ Wall Street Journal ]
Chinese Hackers Have Been hack the New York Times for the retiring 4 Months
BooksChinaEric SchmidtHacking

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