USA TODAY US Edition

WikiLeaks offers access to hacking tools

Founder Assange says he wants tech firms to have data so others don’t get hacked

- John Bacon @jmbacon USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Kevin Johnson, Doug Stanglin; Elizabeth Weise

WikiLeaks will allow tech companies access to much more detailed informatio­n about CIA hacking techniques so they can “develop fixes” before the informatio­n is widely published, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said Thursday.

Assange spoke two days after WikiLeaks published thousands of documents it said revealed hacking tools the CIA developed to break into servers, smartphone­s, computers and TVs. The news conference took place at Ecuador’s embassy in London, where Assange has been holed up since seeking asylum in 2012.

“The Central Intelligen­ce Agency lost control of its entire cyber weapons arsenal,” Assange said. “This is an historic act of devastatin­g incompeten­ce to have created such an arsenal and stored it all in one place and not secured it.”

Assange said that some tech firms have reached out seeking more details about the CIA tools. He said WikiLeaks hasn’t published the details because it doesn’t want “journalist­s and people of the world, our sources, being hacked using these weapons.” The best way to avoid that, he said, is to give companies such as Apple, Google and Samsung access first.

“We have decided to work with them, to give them some exclusive access to some of the technical details we have, so that fixes can be pushed out,” Assange said.

Some tech giants, Google and Apple among them, said many of the apparent vulnerabil­ities exposed in the documents have already been patched. Microsoft issued a statement Thursday saying most of the issues appeared to involve problems with older technology that had been addressed with more modern software systems. Other companies said they are continuing to evaluate the WikiLeaks informatio­n.

CIA spokesman Dean Boyd declined to vouch for the integrity of the WikiLeaks material. Boyd has stressed the CIA is prohibited from conducting electronic surveillan­ce targeting individual­s in the U.S. and “does not do so.”

“As we’ve said previously, Julian Assange is not exactly a bastion of truth and integrity,” Boyd said Thursday. “Despite the efforts of Assange and his ilk, CIA continues to aggressive­ly collect foreign intelligen­ce overseas to protect America from terrorists, hostile nation states and other adversarie­s.”

WikiLeaks says the CIA hacking division involved “more than 5,000 registered users and had produced more than a thousand hacking systems, trojans, viruses, and other ‘weaponized’ malware.” The informatio­n circulated among former government hackers and contractor­s, one of whom provided the website with portions of it, WikiLeaks claims.

The FBI launched a criminal investigat­ion into the release of the document cache, a U.S. official told USA TODAY this week. The official, who was not authorized to comment publicly, said the inquiry will determine whether the disclosure represente­d a breach from the outside or a leak from inside the spy agency. A separate review will attempt to assess the damage, the official said.

WikiLeaks has conducted a global crusade to expose government secrets in recent years.

Assange sought asylum in Ecuador’s embassy more than four years ago to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden, where he has been accused of sexual assault, and the United States, where he fears possible espionage charges. But his position is tenuous. Guillermo Lasso, the front-runner in Ecuador’s presidenti­al runoff set for April 2, has said that if elected he will evict Assange.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange went into hiding at Ecuador’s embassy in London to avoid sex assault and espionage charges.
GETTY IMAGES WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange went into hiding at Ecuador’s embassy in London to avoid sex assault and espionage charges.

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