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MI5 warns of spies using Linkedin to trick staff into spilling secrets

At least 10,000 UK nationals have been approached by fake profiles linked to hostile states, on the profession­al social network Linkedin, over the past five years, according to MI5.

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It warned users who had accepted such connection requests might have then been lured into sharing secrets.

"Malicious profiles" are being used on "an industrial scale", the security agency's chief, Ken Mccallum, said.

A campaign has been launched to educate government workers about the threat.

The effort - Think Before You Link - warns foreign spies are targeting those with access to sensitive informatio­n.

One concern is the victims' colleagues, in turn, become more willing to accept follow-up requests - because it looks as if they share a mutual acquaintan­ce.

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MI5 did not specifical­ly name Linkedin but BBC News has learned the Microsoft-owned service is indeed the platform involved.

The 10,000-plus figure includes staff in virtually every government department­s as well as key industries, who might be offered speaking or business and travel opportunit­ies that could lead to attempts to recruit them to provide confidenti­al informatio­n.

And it is thought a large number of those approached engaged initially with the profiles that contacted them online.

"No-one is immune to being socially manipulate­d into wrongdoing through these approaches," the guidance given to government staff says. 'Criminal organisati­ons'

The campaign, run by the Centre for the Protection of National Infrastruc­ture, which reports to MI5, asks government staff to focus on "the four Rs": - recognisin­g malicious profiles - realising the potential threat - reporting suspicious profiles to a security manager - removing the profiles "Since the start of the pandemic, many of us have been working remotely and having to spend more time at home on our personal devices," government chief security officer Dominic Fortescue said.

"As a result, staff have become more vulnerable to malicious approaches from hostile security services and criminal organisati­ons on social media."

The US and other countries have launched similar campaigns.

Former CIA officer Kevin Mallory was sentenced to 20 years in prison, after being convicted of giving secrets to China following an approach on Linkedin.

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