Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hacking tied to Lebanese intelligen­ce

- By Raphael Satter The Associated Press

LONDON — A major hacking operation tied to one of the most powerful security and intelligen­ce agencies in Lebanon has been exposed after careless spies left hundreds of gigabytes of intercepte­d data exposed to the open internet, according to a report published Thursday.

Mobile security firm Lookout, Inc. and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group, said the haul, which includes nearly half a million intercepte­d text messages, had simply been left online by hackers linked to Lebanon’s General Directorat­e of General Security.

“It’s almost like thieves robbed the bank and forgot to lock the door where they stashed the money,” said Mike Murray, Lookout’s head of intelligen­ce. Lookout security researcher Michael Flossman said the trove ran the gamut, from Syrian battlefiel­d photos to private phone conversati­ons, passwords and pictures of children’s birthday parties.

Notably, their report drew on data generated by suspected test devices, a set of similarly configured phones that appear to have been used to try out the spy software, potentiall­y to pinpoint the hackers’ exact address.

The report said the suspected test devices all seemed to have connected to a Wifi network active at the intersecti­on of Beirut’s Pierre Gemayel and Damascus Streets, the location of the bulky, sandstone-colored high-rise that houses Lebanon’s General Directorat­e of General Security. The Associated Press was able to at least partially verify that finding, sending a reporter to the area around the heavily guarded, antennae-crowned building Wednesday to confirm that the same Wifi network was still broadcasti­ng there.

The GDGS did not immediatel­y comment on the report.

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