The Daily Courier

Concern raised over WikiLeaks CIA data breach

-

OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government should be concerned about the WikiLeaks publicatio­n of secret CIA files that describe its ability to break into computers, mobile phones and smart TVs, says a former national security analyst.

Stephanie Carvin of the Norman Paterson School of Internatio­nal Affairs at Carleton University says Canadian material risks being exposed, since Canada and the U.S. are members of the five-country group of intelligen­ce-sharing countries known as the “Five Eyes.”

Vulnerable Canadian secrets could include details on the tools and methods Canadian intelligen­ce agencies use to conduct digital snooping.

“Because of the sharing between the Five Eyes, if Canada is using some of those tools, yes, our capabiliti­es would be hurt as well,” Carvin said in an interview Tuesday.

“Secondly, if for some reason they’ve been able to get access to some of our documents through Five Eyes sharing, then even some of our methods could be released as well. But we don’t know what they have.”

There was scant mention of Canada in the WikiLeaks files disclosed Tuesday, but one file suggests intelligen­ce agencies took part in a summer 2015 workshop in Ottawa dubbed “Triclops.”

A memo associated with the event notes an apparent effort to remotely control an iPhone without the user knowing.

A spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland directed questions to Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, whose spokesman declined to comment, saying the government doesn’t discuss leaked reports.

Just last week, the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service warned in a public report that the federal government sees serious attempts to penetrate its networks on a daily basis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada