Arab Times

WikiLeaks aid on CIA holes could be a ‘mixed blessing’

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NEW YORK, March 11, (AP): WikiLeaks has offered to help the likes of Google and Apple identify the software holes used by purported CIA hacking tools — and that puts the tech industry in something of a bind.

While companies have both a responsibi­lity and financial incentive to fix problems in their software, accepting help from WikiLeaks raises legal and ethical questions. And it’s not even clear at this point exactly what kind of assistance WikiLeaks can offer.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said Thursday that the anti-secrecy site will help technology companies find and fix software vulnerabil­ities in everyday gadgets such as phones and TVs. In an online news conference, Assange said some companies had asked for more details about the purported CIA cyberespio­nage toolkit that he revealed in a massive disclosure on Tuesday.

“We have decided to work with them, to give them some exclusive access to the additional technical details we have, so that fixes can be developed and pushed out,” Assange said. The digital blueprints for what he described as “cyberweapo­ns” would be published to the world “once this material is effectivel­y disarmed by us.”

Any conditions WikiLeaks might set for its cooperatio­n weren’t immediatel­y known. Nor was it clear if WikiLeaks holds additional details on specific vulnerabil­ities, or merely the tools designed to exploit them.

Apple declined comment on the WikiLeaks offer, and Google didn’t respond to requests for comment. Microsoft said it hopes that anyone with knowledge of software vulnerabil­ities would report them through the company’s usual channels.

Tech companies could run into legal difficulti­es in accepting the offer, especially if they have government contracts or employees with security clearances.

“The unauthoriz­ed release of classified documents does not mean it’s unclassifi­ed,” said Stewart Baker, a former official at the Department of Homeland Security and former legal counsel for the National Security Agency. “Doing business with WikiLeaks and reviewing classified documents poses a real risk for at least their government contractin­g arms and their cleared employees.”

Other lawyers, however, are convinced that much of the informatio­n in the documents is so widely known that they are now part of the public domain. That means tech companies would be unlikely to face any legal liability for digging deeper with WikiLeaks.

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