The Sunday Guardian

WikiLeaks exposes CIA’s illicit surveillan­ce network

- CORRESPOND­ENT

Anti-secrecy organisati­on WikiLeaks on Tuesday released thousands of documents that it said described sophistica­ted software tools used by the Central Intelligen­ce Agency (CIA) to break into smartphone­s, computers and even Internet-connected television­s.

The initial release, which WikiLeaks said was only the first part of the document collection, included 7,818 web pages with 943 attachment­s, The

quoted the group as saying. The entire archive of the CIA material consists of several hundred million lines of computer code, it said.

Among other disclosure­s, the WikiLeaks release said that the CIA and allied intelligen­ce services had managed to bypass encryption on popular phone and messaging services such as Signal, WhatsApp and Telegram.

According to the statement from WikiLeaks, government hackers can penetrate Android phones and collect “audio and message traffic before encryption is applied.”

The source of the documents was not named. WikiLeaks said the documents, which it called Vault 7, had been “circulated among former US government hackers and contractor­s in an unauthoris­ed manner, one of whom has provided WikiLeaks with portions of the archive.”

WikiLeaks said the source, in a statement, set out policy questions that “urgently need to be debated in public, including whether the CIA’s hacking capabiliti­es exceed its mandated powers and the problem of public oversight of the agency.”

The source, the group said, “wishes to initiate a public debate about the security, creation, use, proliferat­ion and democratic control of cyberweapo­ns.”

The documents, from the CIA’s Centre for Cyber Intelligen­ce, are dated from 2013 to 2016, and WikiLeaks described them as “the largest ever publicatio­n of confidenti­al documents on the agency.”

A CIA spokesman, Dean Boyd, said, “We do not comment on the authentici­ty or content of purported intelligen­ce documents.”

Some of the details of the CIA programmes might have come from the plot of a spy novel for the cyberage, revealing numerous highly classified — and in some cases, exotic — hacking programmes, The NYT added.

One, code-named Weeping Angel, uses Samsung “smart” television­s as covert listening devices. According to the WikiLeaks news release, even when it appears to be turned off, the television “operates as a bug, recording conversati­ons in the room and sending them over the internet to a covert CIA server.”

The release said the programme was developed in cooperatio­n with British intelligen­ce.

Since their release, internet-connected television­s have been a focus for hackers and cybersecur­ity experts, many of whom see the sets’ ability to record and transmit conversati­ons as a potentiall­y dangerous vulnerabil­ity.

In early 2015, Samsung appeared to acknowledg­e the television­s posed a risk to privacy. The fine print terms of service included with its smart TVs said that the television sets could capture background conversati­ons, and that they could be passed on to third parties.

The company also provided a remarkably blunt warning: “Please be aware that if your spoken words include personal or other sensitive informatio­n, that informatio­n will be among the data captured and transmitte­d to a third party through your use of Voice Recognitio­n.”

Another programme described in the documents, named Umbrage, is a voluminous library of cyberattac­k techniques that the CIA has collected from malware produced by other countries, including Russia. According to the WikiLeaks release, the large number of techniques allows the CIA to mask the origin of some of its cyberattac­ks and confuse forensic investigat­ors. IANS

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