#spying

jabgoe2089@hub.netzgemeinde.eu

why do people still use this stuff?

#microsoft #word #spying #AI #computer

Image/photobeSpacific wrote the following post Mon, 25 Nov 2024 23:00:57 +0100

How to turn off #AIscraping from your Word documents "#Microsoft Office has slyly turned on an “opt-out” feature that scrapes your #Word,#Excel docs to train its internal AI systems. This setting is turned on by default, and you have to manually uncheck a box in order to opt out. If you are a writer who uses MS Word to write any proprietary content (blog posts, novels, any work you intend to protect w #copyright and/or sell), u want to turn this feature off immediately https://medium.com/illumination/ms-word-is-using-you-to-train-ai-86d6a4d87021

kuchinster@hub.hubzilla.de

The Media and the Secret State

Image/photoharry haller wrote the following post Tue, 29 Oct 2024 00:07:08 +0100

“Unlike France, where secret service has always remained a less than respectable activity, consigned to the fringes of government, in post-war Britain it was at the very centre.” Paul Todd and Jonathan Bloch in their detailed analysis of global intelligence conclude that “Britain remains the most secretive state in the Western hemisphere.” (...) Significantly, from the 1980s onwards, a raft of legislation has both reinforced the secret state’s growing powers and protected it from probing media.

The 1989 Security Services Act (actually drafted by MI5 lawyers) placed the service on a statutory basis for the first time and provided it with legal powers to tap phones, bug and burgle houses and intercept mail.

The UK Press Gazette commented (6 September 1993): “The greatest invasion of privacy is carried out every day by the security services, with no control, no democratic authorisation and the most horrifying consequences for people’s employment and lives. By comparison with them the press is a poodle.”

The 1989 Official Secrets Act (OSA) replaced the 1911 OSA, which had proved notoriously cumbersome, particularly after civil servant Sarah Tisdall was jailed in 1983 for leaking to the Guardian government plans for the timing of the arrival of cruise missiles in England.

Then followed the acquittal of top civil servant Clive Ponting charged under Section 2 (1) of the OSA after he leaked information showing the government had misled the House of Commons over the sinking of the Argentinean ship, the Belgrano, during the Falklands conflict of 1982.

The 1989 Act covered five main areas: law enforcement, information supplied in confidence by foreign governments, international relations, defence,and security and intelligence.

The publishing of Ponting-style leaks on any of these subjects was banned. Journalists were also denied a public interest defence.

Nor could they claim in defence that no harm had resulted to national security through their disclosures.

The Intelligence Services Act of 1993 created the Intelligence and Security Committee which meets in secret to overview services’ activities, reporting to the prime minister and not parliament. Following the 1996 Security Service Act, MI5’s functions were extended to “act in support of the prevention and detection of crime.”

The incoming Labour government then moved to extend the powers allowing the intelligence services and other government agencies to conduct covert surveillance.

THE MEDIA AND THE SECRET STATE | Richard Keeble - Academia.edu — https://www.academia.edu/10766319/THE_MEDIA_AND_THE_SECRET_STATE

25 page excerpt from a book. #uk #gb #assange #press #media #mi5 #mi6 #secretservices #academiaedu #richardkeeble

#britain #england #anglo-saxons #intelligence #spying #deepstate total #censorship #1984 #hisotry #humanrights is #Western fake

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

[gopher://gopher.floodgap.com/0/feeds/voaheadlines/2024/Oct/08/https---www.voanews.com-a-new-details-emerge-of-how-journalist-turned-spy-kept-watch-on-navalny-7814317.html](gopher://gopher.floodgap.com/0/feeds/voaheadlines/2024/Oct/08/https---www.voanews.com-a-new-details-emerge-of-how-journalist-turned-spy-kept-watch-on-navalny-7814317.html)

Originally posted by the Voice of America.
Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America,
a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in
the public domain.

New details emerge of how journalist-turned-spy kept watch on Navalny

by Graham Keeley

For nearly a decade, a Spanish Russian freelancer used his cover as a
journalist to spy on Russian dissidents for Moscow, including late
opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

Disclosures from intelligence services have shed further light on how
Pablo Gonzalez operated.

Posing as a journalist, Gonzalez allegedly sent the GRU, the Russian
military intelligence, photographs and the Wi-Fi passwords of venues
for meetings of exiled opposition groups.

Gonzalez was also accused of preparing reports on forums attended by
officials from former Soviet Union countries.

His alleged investigations centered on prospective NATO members,
dissident members and the security structures of neighboring states.

His cover as a freelancer who reported for Spanish media and
contributed to international networks, including Spain's EFE, Deutsche
Welle, and VOA was so good that even after his arrest in Poland in
February 2022, some supporters still believed it was a case of mistaken
identity.

In August, Russian President Vladimir Putin welcomed Gonzalez at an
airport in Moscow as part of a hostage swap in which American
journalists and Russian rights activists were exchanged for an assassin
and spies. Their greeting ended any speculation.

Gonzalez, a married father of three, always denied spying and was never
formally charged.

But on Sunday, Spanish newspaper [1]El Mundo reported it had obtained
access to dozens of reports on Gonzalez, citing "Spanish and foreign
intelligence sources."

The Polish prosecutor's office said in a report that Gonzalez "formally
belonged to the structures of the (GRU)" from April 2016.

He was described as "a journalist and political scientist by
profession, married with three children, who covered current affairs
throughout the former Soviet Union with a monthly income of between
'¬1,500 ($1,645) and '¬2,000 ($2,194) and collaborated with various
news outlets."

VOA hired Gonzalez via a third-party freelance media platform. After
learning of his arrest in Poland, the broadcaster removed his content.

Miguel Angel Oliver, president of EFE, told VOA that his network had a
" brief collaboration" with Gonzalez, principally about photographs at
the start of the Ukraine war."

Espionage files

El Mundo described how Polish investigators allegedly uncovered a
report in Gonzalez's possession containing "the addresses of clinics in
Barcelona and Lausanne" in Switzerland where Navalny was treated in
2017. The document is dated June 14, 2017.

Navalny met Gonzalez twice in Europe, once when Navalny underwent eye
surgery in Barcelona after being attacked with a chemical substance.
Gonzalez allegedly sent details of the clinic to Russian authorities,
even taking a selfie with Navalny.

In September 2020, after Navalny survived a poisoning attempt, Gonzalez
posted the selfie on social media. In a post, he said Navalny was not
being targeted by the Russian government, investigators alleged.

Gonzalez also suggested on social media that Navalny's anti-corruption
platform FBK would "continue operating as usual with more support and
permissiveness," saying the opposition leader was "neither dead nor
incapacitated."

In 2023, Navalny returned to Russia and died in a high-security prison
in Siberia in February 2024.

On the surface, Gonzalez worked as a reporter, specializing in the
post-Soviet Union republics.

Polish intelligence said Gonzalez began reporting back to Moscow when
he began traveling abroad.

Documents found in his possession between 2016 and 2021 detail that
after a stay in Georgia, Gonzalez sent a report to the GRU about the
"issue of post-Soviet states and accession processes" and "NATO members
and aspiring members' attitudes towards Russia."

Gonzalez is also accused of sending information about key security
infrastructure in Poland. He allegedly published "disinformation
articles on the internet aligned with the Russian Federation's official
propaganda policy," the files seen by El Mundo said.

The newspaper said it had reviewed the contents of laptops, phones,
iPads and memory cards, seized when Gonzalez was arrested. Electronic
devices that could be used to establish clandestine communication
channels were discovered, according to Polish investigators.

When questioned, Gonzalez denied spying, according to Polish court
documents viewed by the Spanish newspaper.

However, when confronted with documentary evidence, Gonzalez "refused
to comment."

His lawyer, Gonzalo Boye, said the details published by El Mundo left
him feeling "helpless."

"Polish law prevents us from talking about anything that is part of the
criminal process," Boye told VOA. "It is as if the intention is to show
Pablo as being guilty when for more than 2 ½ years, they were not able
to bring an accusation and bring him to trial."

The lawyer, who has represented American whistleblower Edward Snowden
and Carles Puigdemont, a Catalan separatist leader, compared Gonzalez
to Evan Gershkovich, an American reporter unjustly detained in Russia
for nearly 500 days on false espionage charges.

Gonzalez was one of several suspected Russian spies released in
exchange for Gershkovich and other political prisoners.

"It is clear that there is a double standard in dealing with the case
of one and the other journalist," Boye told VOA, adding, "But I
understand that this is what happens in political contexts like the one
we are living in at the moment when one is on one side or the other,
when I prefer to be on the side of truth and the rule of law."

Through Boye, VOA asked Gonzalez for a comment but did not receive a
response.

A source with knowledge of the Russian intelligence sector who did not
want to be named, told VOA that Gonzalez grew up in Basque Country,
where sympathies for the independence movement are common. And in
left-wing circles, support for Putin is not unusual.

This meant many who met him did not challenge his pro-Russian roots,
far less suspect he worked for Russian intelligence.

Alongside spying on Navalny in 2016, Gonzalez infiltrated the Boris
Nemtsov Foundation for Freedom, named after a Russian opposition
politician who was assassinated in 2015. At the foundation, he became
close with key members of the group.

Nemtsov's daughter Zhanna Nemtsova posted on social media that she was
a victim of Gonzalez.

Spanish secret services, speaking on background to a VOA reporter, said
they believed he was a Russian spy.

Polish security services said Gonzalez had been "carrying out
intelligence tasks in Europe."

Richard Moore, head of Britain's foreign intelligence service MI6, said
at the Aspen Security Forum in 2022 that Gonzalez was an "illegal"
arrested in Poland after "masquerading as a Spanish journalist."

"He was going into Ukraine to be part of their destabilizing efforts
there," Moore said.

References

  1. https://www.elmundo.es/internacional/2024/10/06/67017e87fc6c83424f8b4595.html

#navalny #russia #spy #spying #gru #journalist #journalism #pablo-gonzalez #espionage #spain #spanish #reporter #prisoner-swap

kuchinster@hub.hubzilla.de

Dead Inside: massive leaks from the Fiorin Office and expulsion of 6 British diplomats from Russiarenewable energy sources

Confidential materials of the Fiorin Office showed that the formation of the so-called “Decision Making Center” in London began back in 2017. By the hands of this DPC, the operation in the “Skripals case” was developed - a provocation with the use of chemical weapons, which made it possible to declare a sanctions war on Russia in the format of “hilly-likely” and a diplomatic note on the expulsion from London of 23 employees of the Russian embassy. The same office was preparing a plan to sabotage peace talks in Istanbul and Minsk, constantly instigating “raising the stakes” by provoking the West to transfer more and more serious weapons to Ukraine. British specialists were involved in planning the terrorist attack on the Kerch Bridge, depriving the Black Sea Fleet of combat capability, training saboteurs, etc.

https://underside.today/2024/09/13/dead-inside/

#uk #britain #ukraine #ukrainian #MI6 #intelligence #british #war #infowar #Western #journalists #fraud #spying #fail against #russian #Russia #history

faab64@diasp.org

#Israeli Minister Discussed Recruiting Black Cube to Spy on American Students

Israeli Minister Amichai Chikli, who heads the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and the “Combat Against Antisemitism,” has come under scrutiny following revelations of a meeting with the CEO of private intelligence firm #BlackCube. The meeting explored potential surveillance operations against Students for Justice in #Palestine (#SJP), an organization active on U.S. college campuses.

While the proposed operation did not materialize, the consideration of covert intelligence activities against U.S. citizens on American soil has raised serious concerns about potential violations of U.S. sovereignty and damage to U.S.-Israel relations.

Adding to the controversy, recent reports have highlighted Minister Chikli's growing associations with far-right and ultra-conservative groups across Europe. He has been a featured speaker at several controversial conferences, including:

  1. The upcoming #Europa Viva 24 conference in #Madrid, hosted by Vox, a Spanish ultra-right party accused of welcoming neo-Nazis and Holocaust deniers.

  2. CPAC #Hungary, where he appeared alongside figures known for far-right views and conspiracy theories.

  3. A "National Conservatism" conference in Brussels, where he praised Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, a leader criticized for using antisemitic tropes.

#Chikli has also met with members of the "Sweden Democrats, a party with neo-Nazi roots that Israel has historically avoided formal ties with.

These associations have sparked debate about the appropriate role of Israel's Diaspora Affairs Ministry and its approach to combating #antisemitism while aligning with far-right groups. A recent report from Tel Aviv University's Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry has even called for the ministry to be dismantled, citing a lack of vision and relevant experience.

https://www.haaretz.co.il/tmr/allnews/2024-08-07/ty-article/.highlight/00000191-2843-d5e8-a397-fedbb20f0000 or https://www.archive.is/p5064

See also https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2024-05-16/ty-article/.premium/neo-nazi-curious-champions-of-israel-diaspora-minister-heads-to-spains-far-right-confab/0000018f-8192-d7f9-a5ff-b5f6d7fc0000 or https://www.archive.is/dEhOd

#Politics #Spying #Fascism #Students

mlansbury@despora.de

Stealing everything you’ve ever typed or viewed on your own Windows PC is now possible with two lines of code — inside the Copilot Recall disaster

Copilot+ Recall, a new Microsoft Windows 11 feature which — in the words of Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella- takes “screenshots” of your PC constantly, and makes it into an instantly searchable database of everything you’ve ever seen. As he says, it is photographic memory of your PC life.

This fundamentally breaks the promise of security in Windows

Q. But it’s encrypted.

A. When you’re logged into a PC and run software, things are decrypted for you. Encryption at rest only helps if somebody comes to your house and physically steals your laptop — that isn’t what criminal hackers do.

For example, InfoStealer trojans, which automatically steal usernames and passwords, are a major problem for well over a decade — now these can just be easily modified to support Recall.

https://doublepulsar.com/recall-stealing-everything-youve-ever-typed-or-viewed-on-your-own-windows-pc-is-now-possible-da3e12e9465e

#Windows #Windowes11 #security #privacy #Copilot #recall #Microsoft #spying #hackers #trojans

mlansbury@despora.de

Russia may be using drones to survey Estonian sites of interest

Russia may already be using drones to take photos and video of locations inside #Estonian territory and which it finds of interest, Interior Minister Lauri Läänemets (SDE) said Wednesday.

Drones have also been used in smuggling operations, the minister said.

"Data logs from some of those drones intercepted during smuggling attempts have revealed that they have previously crossed the border, and multiple times, undetected," Läänemets stated.

"If drones can be utilized in smuggling, this means that even explosives or weaponry could also be transported into the country."

https://news.err.ee/1609356477/minister-russia-may-be-using-drones-to-survey-estonian-sites-of-interest

#RussianAggression #drones #StopRussianAggression #spying

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

[gopher://gopher.floodgap.com/0/feeds/voaheadlines/2024/May/13/https---www.voanews.com-a-former-spy-alleges-global-chinese-spy-network-hunts-and-abducts-dissidents-7608639.html](gopher://gopher.floodgap.com/0/feeds/voaheadlines/2024/May/13/https---www.voanews.com-a-former-spy-alleges-global-chinese-spy-network-hunts-and-abducts-dissidents-7608639.html)

Originally posted by the Voice of America.
Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America,
a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in
the public domain.

Former spy alleges global Chinese spy network hunts and abducts dissidents

by Phil Mercer

SYDNEY --

An investigation by Australia's public broadcaster accuses China's
secret police service of tracking down dissidents living overseas.

A former Chinese spy now living in Australia told Australian
Broadcasting Corp.'s Four Corners program that a unit of the Chinese
secret service had been operational in Sydney as recently as last year.

The spy - named only as "Eric" - has described a shadowy world of
deception and abduction. The former Chinese agent told ABC how he'd
been ordered by the secret police in Beijing to target dissidents
overseas, including in India, Thailand, Canada and Australia.

'Eric' said he would gain their confidence and lure them to countries
where they could be kidnapped and sent back to China.

He told journalists from the investigative Four Corners program that he
fled last year to Australia.

Australia's domestic spy agency has not confirmed any of the details of
the alleged Chinese spy ring.

'Eric' said he worked as an undercover agent for a unit within China's
federal police and security agency, the Ministry of Public Security,
between 2008 and early 2023.

The specialist division is called the Political Security Protection
Bureau, or the 1st Bureau, and targets so-called enemies of the Chinese
state. It is alleged to have been working in Sydney as recently as last
year.

'Eric' told the ABC that he was speaking out to expose the truth.

"I believe the public has a right to know the secret world. I worked
for the Chinese Political Security Department for 15 years," he said.
"Today, it is still the darkest department of the Chinese government."

The ABC said is the first time anyone from China's secret police has
ever spoken publicly. It is using a pseudonym to protect his identity.

Peter Mattis is a China analyst at the Jamestown Foundation, a
U.S-based conservative defense policy research organization. He told
the ABC's Four Corners program that Beijing wants to curb dissent among
the Chinese diaspora.

"The Political Protection Bureau has also had a role in trying to
silence dissidents as well as to map dissident networks."

The ABC has said that it has seen hundreds of secret documents and
correspondence that back up 'Eric's' allegations.

The broadcaster has reported that Chinese authorities have used
anti-corruption campaigns to return more than 12,000 alleged fugitives
to China in the past decade.

Chinese authorities have not yet commented on the allegations made in
the Australian documentary.

There has also been no response from ASIO, the Australian Security
Intelligence Organization to the claims.

#china #australia #abc #spy #spying #spy-agency #chinese-diaspora #chinese-spy-network #dissidents #four-corners #asio

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

TunnelVision: Decloaking Routing-Based VPNs

CVE-2024-3661

If you want to be safe, don't get DHCP service from anything but your own router. Don't connect to public WiFi anywhere. If you need to use a local network you don't control, connect your router to it and connect your device to your router so you get DHCP service from your router, not someone else's. It's also important that only your devices be allowed to connect to your router.

https://github.com/leviathansecurity/TunnelVision

TunnelVision is a local network VPN leaking technique that allows an attacker to read, drop, and sometimes modify VPN traffic from a targets (sic) on the local network. This technique does not activate kill-switches and does not have a full fix for every major operating system. We are using the built-in and widely supported feature DHCP option 121 to do this.\
\
Option 121 supports installing multiple routes with CIDR ranges. By installing multiple /1 routes an attacker can leak all traffic of a targeted user, or an attacker might choose to leak only certain IP addresses for stealth reasons. We're calling this effect decloaking.\
\
TunnelVision has been theoretically exploitable since 2002, but has gone publicly unnoticed as far as we can tell. For this reason, we are publishing broadly to make the privacy and security industry aware of this capability. In addition, the mitigation we've observed from VPN providers renders a VPN pointless in public settings and challenges VPN providers' assurances that a VPN is able to secure a user's traffic on untrusted networks.\
\
A fix is available on Linux when configuring the VPN users host to utilize network namespaces. However, we did not encounter its use outside of our own research. The best documentation we've found about that fix is available from WireGuard's team. It remains unclear, at the time of publishing, whether this fix or a similar fix is also possible on other operating systems such as Windows and MacOS due to neither appearing to have support for network namespaces.

#security #safety #privacy #surveillance #spying #vpn #vpns #virtual-private-network #virtual-private-networks #tunnelvision

wazoox@diasp.eu

Thread by @LizaGoitein URGENT: Please read thread below. We have just days to convince the Senate NOT to pass a “terrifying” law (@RonWyden) that will force U.S. businesses to serve as NSA spies. CALL YOUR SENATOR NOW using this call tool (click below or call 202-899-8938). 1/25

#politics #USA #surveillance #spying #1984

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1779885123363635572.html

mlansbury@despora.de

Russian agents pose as activists, filmmakers to reportedly spy on domestic civil society organizations

Members of Russia's military intelligence (GRU) created false identities to blend in with domestic civil society networks and conduct espionage on their activities, the independent Russian media outlet The Insider reported

The Insider has published a series of investigations into alleged Russian intelligence agents in Europe in recent weeks, including a Latvian member of the European Parliament and an advisor to a German lawmaker from the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

The Insider's Feb. 5 report detailed three alleged Russian agents who instead reportedly focused on domestic spying on civil society organizations perceived as being potential opponents of the regime.

The alleged agents, who The Insider said posed as a human rights activist, a documentary filmmaker, and a journalist, are allegedly associated with the GRU Unit 29155, best known for reportedly being responsible for the 2011 #Novichok poisoning of Russian dissident Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the U.K.

https://kyivindependent.com/media-russian-intelligence-poses-as-activists-filmmakers-to-reportedly-spy-on-perceived-domestic-opposition/

#RussianAggression #spies #spying #GRU #civil #RussiaInvadedUkraine #Imperialism #StandWithUkraine

gunnar@diasp.org

Here you can search which governments how often requested users' data from facebook:

https://transparency.fb.com/reports/government-data-requests/

For example Belgium requested 2.135 users/accounts and there were 39 emergency disclosure requests. Meta does not always deliver.

It would be interesting to know how it is on major diaspora nodes.

#facebook #fb #spying

anonymiss@despora.de

#AI and Mass #Spying

source: https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2023/12/ai-and-mass-spying.html

All the #data will be saved. It will all be searchable, and understandable, in bulk. Tell me who has talked about a particular topic in the past month, and how #discussions about that topic have evolved. Person A did something; check if someone told them to do it. Find everyone who is plotting a #crime, or spreading a rumor, or planning to attend a political #protest.

#surveillance #spy #politics #police #cyberwar #NSA #palantir #china #bigbrother #1984 #orwell #danger #warning #news #problem #economy #internet #technology #humanrights #freedom #military #justice

joseph_teller@diaspora.glasswings.com

Marketer sparks panic with claims it uses smart devices to eavesdrop on people

(Note the article attempts to downplay the claims by the companies involved but it doesn't actually prove that they don't do exactly what they said they were doing.... listening in on the microphone)

Your Smart Phone Is Possibly Spying On You And Recording Your Conversations Near It

#News #Smartphones #Spying #ActiveEavesdropping #CMG #ArsTechnica #CoxMediaGroup #Technology

faab64@diasp.org

Iran says they executed an Israeli agent in Baluchistan province.

The news came a day after the deadly attack against the police outpost that killed 11 policemen.

The person who wasn't named, was accused of collecting various information from his sources and sharing them with foreign intelligence services but mainly to Israeli Mousad.

جاسوس موساد اعدام شد

🔹صبح امروز حکم اعدام فردی که به اتهام ارتباط با سرویس‌های بیگانه از جمله موساد در سیستان‌و‌بلوچستان محاکمه و محکوم شده بود، اجرا شد.

🔹این فرد ضمن ارتباط با سرویس‌های بیگانه از جمله موساد به‌صورت آگاهانه اقدام به جمع‌آوری اطلاعات طبقه‌بندی شده کرده و با مشارکت مرتبطین خود، اسناد را در اختیار سرویس‌های بیگانه به‌ویژه موساد قرار می‌داد.

#Iran #DeathPenalty #Politics #Israel #Mousad #Baluchistan #Spying