MI6 chief: Help needed from tech sector to counter…

MI6 boss ‘C’ warns China can ‘harvest data from around the world’ thanks to artificial intelligence and use its financial power as ‘leverage’ against targets

Richard Moore, also known as ‘Q’, said Beijing used ‘debt traps and data traps’He said China was increasingly using new technologies to threaten the West Argued MI6 would have to get help from tech companies or risk falling behind  



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The head of MI6 today warned about China’s ability to use its data gathering abilities and financial power to wield influence against its adversaries. 

Richard Moore, also known as ‘Q’, said Beijing used ‘debt traps and data traps’ to use as ‘leverage’ against countries and individuals. 

He said the threat was particularly potent because developments in artificial intelligence meant it was able to ‘harvest data from around the world’. 

Mr Moore said MI6 would have to be ‘more open’ and work with the tech sector otherwise it would be unable to keep up. 

Richard Moore, also known as ‘Q’, said Beijing used ‘debt traps and data traps’ to use as ‘leverage’ against countries and individuals

Today he used rare public appearances to set out the need for a ‘sea change’ in the culture of the Secret Intelligence Service.  He also said: 

Understanding China is the ‘single greatest priority’ for MI6 with ‘tectonic plates’ are shifting as its power and willingness to assert itself growsChina is conducting ‘large scale espionage’ operations against the UK and its allies, including targeting government workers and attempting to ‘distort’ political discourseThere is ‘real risk of miscalculation through over confidence’ by China, and any action against Taiwan would be a ‘serious challenge to global stability’ Assessments of the speed with which Afghanistan would be taken by the Taliban were ‘clearly wrong’ but it was ‘overblown to describe it in terms of intelligence failure’ because not even the Taliban had predicted the fall of Kabul so quickly.There is a ‘chronic problem’ over the situation in Ukraine, and Moscow presented an ‘acute threat’ but it needed to be made clear to the Kremlin that the West was ‘not trying to encircle Russia’.MI6 had to recruit from ‘all sections of society’ through an online process rather than relying on personal recommendations as ‘there are risks that you tap on the shoulder people who look like you’.The UK has a ‘great science and tech sector’ and said free societies in the West had advantages because ‘we do have an ability to get the entrepreneurial animal spirits going in a way that perhaps authoritarian regimes don’t’. 

MI6 must partner with tech giants to keep foreign adversaries at bay, says spy chief 

Britain’s intelligence agencies must be prepared to work with tech giants to develop world-class technologies that will keep foreign adversaries at bay, the chief of MI6 will warn.

Richard Moore says the pace of technological advance, from artificial intelligence to quantum computing, means the agencies can no longer simply devise their own solutions to meet the challenges.

In a rare speech to the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, he is expected to say: ‘We cannot hope to replicate the global tech industry, so we must tap into it. Unlike Q in the Bond movies, we cannot do it all in-house.’

‘I cannot stress enough what a sea-change this is in MI6’s culture, ethos and way of working, since we have traditionally relied primarily on our own capabilities to develop the world class technologies we need to stay secret and deliver against our mission.’

Mr Moore, who is known as C in Whitehall and is the only publicly identified member of MI6, will say that while technological advances had the potential to deliver huge benefits, it is his job to look at ‘the threat side of the ledger’.

‘MI6 deals with the world as it is, not as we would like it to be,’ he will say according to advance extracts of his speech. And ‘digital attack surface’ criminals, terrorists and state threats that seek to exploit against us is growing exponentially.

‘According to some assessments, we may experience more technological progress in the next 10 years than in the last century, with a disruptive impact equal to the industrial revolution. As a society, we have yet to internalise this stark fact and its potential impact on global geopolitics. But it is a white-hot focus for MI6.’   

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This morning, Mr Moore highlighted China as one of the countries which had been able to harness the power of technology, coupled with its economic might, to assert itself on the global stage.

Its artificial intelligence capabilities allow Beijing to ‘harvest data from around the world’, he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

‘And it’s also trying to use influence through its economic policies to try and sometimes, I think, get people on the hook.’

China will use its ability to control data and its financial power as ‘leverage’ against targets. 

He said the ‘debt trap’ has allowed China to be given the use of ports – which could be used as naval bases – in countries which are unable to repay loans.

He added: ‘The data trap is this: that, if you allow another country to gain access to really critical data about your society, over time that will erode your sovereignty, you no longer have control over that data.

‘That’s something which, I think, in the UK we are very alive to and we’ve taken measures to defend against.’

China ‘does not share our values and often their interests clash with ours’ and Chinese President Xi Jinping is ‘very clear that we are now in a more assertive stage with China’, he said.

Although he was not seeking an ‘adversarial relationship’ with China ‘we need to be very robust in fighting our corner’, he added.

Mr Moore, known as C in Whitehall, also used a speech to the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London to flesh out why MI6 would have to increasingly rely on outside expertise to counter China and Russia. 

‘MI6 deals with the world as it is, not as we would like it to be,’ he said. 

‘And ‘digital attack surface’ criminals, terrorists and state threats that seek to exploit against us is growing exponentially.

‘According to some assessments, we may experience more technological progress in the next 10 years than in the last century, with a disruptive impact equal to the industrial revolution.

‘As a society, we have yet to internalise this stark fact and its potential impact on global geopolitics.

‘But it is a white-hot focus for MI6.’

He said the threat was particularly potent because developments in artificial intelligence meant it was able to ‘harvest data from around the world’. Pictured: A Chinese robot playing chess

Mr Moore, who took over as chief in October 2020, also said the organisation has to become as diverse as the society it is drawn from if it is to attract the talent it needs.

‘Our adversaries are pouring money and ambition into mastering artificial intelligence, quantum computing and synthetic biology, because they know that mastering these technologies will give them leverage,’ he will say.

‘An intelligence service needs to be at the vanguard of what is technologically possible. This is not new.

‘What is new is that we are now pursuing partnerships with the tech community to help develop world-class technologies to solve our biggest mission problems, and those of MI5 and GCHQ.’

Mr Moore said the pace of technological advances meant MI6 would have to work with the tech sector to keep up. Pictured is the agency’s headquarters in Vauxhall 

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