Because of its connections to the group Flax Typhoon’s purported hacking of vital infrastructure, the US has sanctioned China’s Integrity Tech

According to the Reuters report.
The United States Government on January 3 sanctioned China’s Integrity Technology Group, for allegedly being linked to a “prolific hacking group” known as Flax Typhoon.
The US Department of State said in a statement that Integrity Tech was a Chinese government contractor with ties to the Ministry of State Security in the Eastern nations. The article also claimed that the Chinese government was ordering the company’s hackers to attack vital infrastructure in the US and other countries.
Beijing-based Integrity Tech was accused by FBI Director Christopher Wray earlier in September of being “behind” Flax Typhoon and of “collecting intelligence and performing reconnaissance for Chinese government security agencies.”.
Cyber officials have claimed that Integrity Tech “compromised more than 250,000 devices around the world” in an advisory released by the United States and its allies, Australia, Britain, Canada, and New Zealand.
“Jumped to Unwarranted Conclusion,” claims China.
According to the article, China has already stated that the findings on Integrity and Flax Typhoons are “groundless.” According to the report, Chinese authorities have accused the United States and its allies of making “baseless accusations against China” and leaping “to an unwarranted conclusion.”
The targeting of sensitive data and vital infrastructure has drawn attention to a number of Chinese cyberespionage groups, including the Flax Typhoon hacker gang. The Volt and Salt typhoons are two more groups that have been implicated. While the latter has “burrowed” inside US telecom corporations, US officials believe that the old typhoon is getting ready for war with the US.
In a statement released last week, US Treasury authorities said that an unidentified Chinese hacker collective had gained access to the Department’s servers and compromised an unknown quantity of data. The Washington Post later stated that the Treasury’s sanctions office was the target.