Skip to content
  • Insurance Journal
  • Insurance Journal TV
  • Academy of Insurance
  • MyNewMarkets.com
  • Carrier Management
Claims Journal - Insurance news and resources for claims adjusters

Featured Stories

  • What Moving to Schedule III Means for Cannabis Insurance
  • Tesla Drivers Are Buying Escape Tools Avoid Getting Trapped
  • Enlyte to Acquire Parts Procurement Marketplace PartsTrader
  • Front Page
  • Most Popular
  • AI & Technology
  • Expert Viewpoints
  • Research
  • Videos/Podcasts
  • Newsletters

‘Large Number’ of Americans’ Metadata Stolen by Chinese Hackers, Senior Official Says

By Raphael Satter | December 9, 2024
Email This Subscribe to Newsletter
Email to a friend Facebook Tweet LinkedIn Print Article
  • Article

A large number of Americans’ metadata has been stolen in the sweeping cyberespionage campaign carried out by a Chinese hacking group dubbed “Salt Typhoon,” a senior U.S. official told journalists on Wednesday.

The official declined to provide specific figures but noted that China’s access to America’s telecommunications infrastructure was broad and that the hacking was still ongoing.

Related: Chinese Hackers Breached Eight US Telecom Providers, White House Says

“We believe a large number of Americans’ metadata was taken,” said the official, who spoke to reporters on condition that their name be withheld. Pushed on whether that might include every American cell phone’s records, the official said: “We do not believe it’s every cell phone in the country, but we believe it’s potentially a large number of individuals that the Chinese government was focused on.”

Dozens of companies across the world had been hit by the hackers, the official said, including “at least” eight telecommunications and telecom infrastructure firms in the United States.

U.S. officials have previously alleged the hackers targeted Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Lumen and others. T-Mobile has said no customer data was compromised in its case and Lumen said there is no evidence customer data was accessed on its network but, in at least some other cases, the hackers are alleged to have stolen telephone audio intercepts along with a large tranche of call record data.

Related: T-Mobile Caught Hackers Early, Averting Data Leak

Call record metadata is sometimes described as the who, what, when, and where of phone calls. It doesn’t include the content of a call but can include who a call was placed to, how long it lasted, and where it was made from. Even without the content, call record metadata — especially when captured in bulk — can reveal extraordinarily granular details about a person’s life, work, and intimate relationships.

The official said the White House had made tackling the Salt Typhoon hackers a priority for the federal government and that President Joe Biden had been briefed several times on the intrusions.

The press call occurred as U.S. government agencies held a separate, classified briefing for all senators on Salt Typhoon’s efforts to compromise American telecommunications companies.

Related: NSA Director Wants Industry to Disclose Details of Telecom Hacks

The FBI, Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines, Federal Communications Commission Chair Jessica Rosenworcel, the National Security Council and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency were among the participants in the closed-door briefing, officials told Reuters.

(Reporting by Raphael Satter; editing by Chris Sanders and Lincoln Feast.)

Copyright 2025 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Was this article valuable?

Thank you! Please tell us what we can do to improve this article.

Thank you! % of people found this article valuable. Please tell us what you liked about it.

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

Pacific Northwest Braces for Even More Flooding Rain This Week
OpenAI And Microsoft Sued Over Murder-Suicide Blamed on ChatGPT
‘Dream Is in Sight:’ Chamber, Reinsurers, Insurers Urge Florida to Stay the Course
Tesla Drivers Are Buying Escape Tools and Cars to Avoid Getting Trapped Inside
newsletter

Want to stay up to date?

Get the latest insurance news
sent straight to your inbox.

Email This Subscribe to Newsletter
Email to a friend Facebook Tweet LinkedIn Print Article
  • Categories: NewsTopics: cyber, hacking, Metadata, Salt Typhoon
  • Have a news tip? Email us at newsdesk@claimsjournal.com

See All Comments (0)

More News
Wells Fargo Sued by Ex-Manager Who Said Bank Faked Diversity
Apollo Expands Asset-Level Risk Reviews to Reflect Impact of Extreme Weather
Insurance AI Demo Day Calendar Announced
Instacart to Pay $60 Million in FTC Consumer Protection Case
More News Features

Read This Next

  • ‘Large Number’ of Americans’ Metadata Stolen by Chinese Hackers, Senior Official Says
  • Marijuana's Move to Schedule III: What it Really Means for Cannabis Insurance
  • Wells Fargo Sued by Ex-Manager Who Said Bank Faked Diversity
  • TikTok Monitored Grindr Activity in Violation of GDPR, Group Alleges
  • Instacart to Pay $60 Million in FTC Consumer Protection Case

Claims News

  • Latest news
  • Most Popular News
  • News by Topic
  • Yesterday

Site Search

Features

  • AI & Technology
  • Expert Viewpoints
  • Claims Videos & Podcasts
  • Claims Jobs
  • Industry Events
  • Newswire

Connect with us

  • Email Newsletters
  • For Your Website
  • RSS Feeds
  • X (Twitter)
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Do Not Sell My Info

Claims Journal

  • Submit News
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact Us
  • Link to Us

Wells Media Group Network

  • Insurance Journal
  • MyNewMarkets.com
  • Insurance Journal TV
  • Academy of Insurance
  • Carrier Management
© 2025 by Wells Media Group, Inc. Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Site Map