Russian Hackers Are Reaching Out To Chinese Hackers

November 18, 2021

An attempt is being made to bring Chinese hackers on board in a Russian-speaking, RAMP hacker forum.

As Flashpoint reports, high-level users and RAMP administrators are actively communicating with new forum members in machine-translated Chinese, urging Mandarin-speaking players to participate in conversions, share tips, and collaborate on attacks.

With the forum reportedly receiving more than 30 new user registrations from China, the partnership between Russian and Chinese hackers could lead to an alliance that could lead to cyber-attacks targeting US targets, vulnerabilities in trade, or even better, recruits.

Further revelations show that the plan was initiated by one of RAMP’s admins who goes by the name “Kajit,” claiming to have spent some time in China and to speak the language.

They also indicated in the previous version of RAMP that they would bring Chinese hackers on board. RAMP is not the only one recruiting Chinese hackers currently.

In its research, Flashpoint noted: “In the screenshot below, XSS user ‘hoffman’ greets two forum members who revealed themselves as Chinese. The threat actors ask them if they could provide information about ransomware and purchase various kinds of system vulnerabilities. The language seems to be machine-translated Chinese.”

For more information, read the original story in BleepingComputer.

Top Stories

Related Articles

December 30, 2025 A fast-moving cyberattack has compromised more than 59,000 internet-facing Next.js servers in less than two days after more...

December 29, 2025 The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has warned that several of its Internet Time more...

December 29, 2025 A critical security flaw has been found in LangChain, one of the most widely used frameworks for more...

December 23, 2025 South Korea will require facial recognition scans to open new mobile phone accounts. The new rule is more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn