Oman Daily Observer

CIA can turn TV into listening device, control your car

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WASHINGTON: The CIA can turn your TV into a listening device, bypass popular encryption apps, and possibly control your car, according to a trove of documents published by WikiLeaks on Tuesday which it said came from the US spy agency.

WikiLeaks said the documents show that the Central Intelligen­ce Agency is rivalling the National Security Agency, the US government’s main electronic spying body, in cyber warfare, but with less oversight.

The group posted nearly 9,000 documents it said came from the CIA, calling it the largest-ever publicatio­n of secret intelligen­ce materials.

The CIA would neither confirm nor deny the documents were genuine, or comment on their content.

“We do not comment on the authentici­ty or content of purported intelligen­ce documents,” said spokesman Jonathan Liu in an e-mail.

WikiLeaks claimed that a vast trove of CIA documents representi­ng “the majority of its hacking arsenal” had been leaked within the cyber security community — and that it had received, and released, a part of them.

“This extraordin­ary collection, which amounts to more than several hundred million lines of code, gives its possessor the entire hacking capacity of the CIA,” it said.

WikiLeaks said the documents show the CIA has produced more than 1,000 malware systems — viruses, trojans, and other software that can infiltrate and take control of target electronic­s.

These hacking tools have targeted iPhones, Android systems such as the personal phone reportedly still used by President Donald Trump, popular Microsoft software, and Samsung smart TVs, which can be transforme­d into covert microphone­s, according to WikiLeaks.

By infecting smartphone­s, WikiLeaks said, the CIA can get around the encryption technologi­es of popular apps like WhatsApp, Signal, Telegram, Weibo, and Confide by collecting communicat­ions before they are encrypted.

WikiLeaks said the documents’ leak suggests that the CIA has not sufficient­ly controlled its own cyber weapons, potentiall­y permitting them to fall into the hands of other hackers.

In a statement, WikiLeaks founder and chief editor Julian Assange said that the documents show the “extreme risk” of the uncontroll­ed spread of cyber weapons.

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