Archive for the ‘NSA’ Category

Reality Winner Release Date, Trailer, and More – The Mary Sue

In August 2018, U.S. Air Force veteran and former NSA translator Reality Winner was sentenced to five years and three months in prison for leaking an NSA intelligence report regarding Russias involvement in the 2016 United States presidential elections, in the form of hacking and accessing voter registration rolls. It was the longest sentence ever received for someone convicted of releasing private government information to the public.

Her story is a markedly significant one, to say the least, and filmmaker Sonia Kennebeck has every intention on making sure that everyone will know it.

Indeed, Kennebeck has partnered with Codebreaker Films to bring us Reality Winner, the upcoming documentary on the high-profile whistleblower, complete with firsthand accounts from Winner herself, commentary from The Intercept (the outlet that Winner sent the documents to), and never-before-seen footage of her interrogation by the FBI.

Its the latest in a long line of media based on Winners story, which started with the 2019 Tina Satter play Is This a Room, the script for which was based on the transcript from the FBIs interview with Winner. It will also be Kennebecks second documentary on the subject following 2021s United States vs. Reality Winner and comes on the heels of the Sydney Sweeney-led crime drama Reality, which released to Max in May this year.

Her story prompted increased discourse around the Espionage Act and the dangers it can directly and indirectly pose to democracy, Indeed, if revealing that Russia was taking direct action to influence the United States most important election (to say nothing of the fact that they ultimately got the result they wanted) somehow turns you into an enemy of the state, then perhaps said state is worth being the enemy ofif your goal is to be remembered fondly in history books a century from now.

Reality Winner will release to theaters on October 11, with a video-on-demand release scheduled for October 31.

(featured image: Codebreaker Films)

Have a tip we should know? [emailprotected]

Go here to see the original:
Reality Winner Release Date, Trailer, and More - The Mary Sue

Cyber Firm Started By Ex-Director Of NSA Prepares For Bankruptcy – Aviation Week

https://aviationweek.com/themes/custom/particle/dist/app-drupal/assets/awn-logo.svg

U.S. Army Gen. (ret.) Keith Alexander

Credit: National Security Agency

IronNet, a cybersecurity startup that counted former National Security Agency Director and U.S. Army Gen. (ret.) Keith Alexander as a co-founder and which went public as part of the so-called special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) craze, is apparently preparing to file for bankruptcy. This month...

Cyber Firm Started By Ex-Director Of NSA Prepares For Bankruptcy is published in Aerospace Daily & Defense Report, an Aviation Week Intelligence Network (AWIN) Market Briefing and is included with your AWIN membership.

Already a member of AWIN or subscribe to Aerospace Daily & Defense Report through your company? Loginwith your existing email and password.

Not a member? Learn how you can access the market intelligence and data you need to stay abreast of what's happening in the aerospace and defense community.

Apple app store ID

6447645195

Apple app name

apple-itunes-app

App argument URL

https://shownews.aviationweek.com

Read more here:
Cyber Firm Started By Ex-Director Of NSA Prepares For Bankruptcy - Aviation Week

No special exemption for actions like this: US NSA – IndiaTimes

WASHINGTON: The Biden White House on Thursday threw its weight behind Ottawas investigation of allegations about Indias hand in the assassination of a pro-Khalistan separatist in Canada in June, saying it took the accusation seriously and that there is not some special exemption you get for actions like this. It is a matter of concern for us. It is something we take seriously... Regardless of the country, we will stand up and defend our basic principles. And we will also consult closely with allies like Canada as they pursue their law enforcement and diplomatic process, US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said in response to a question about whether the incident could drive a wedge between the United States and India given their burgeoning ties.

Sullivan refuses to confirm Bidens Republic Day trip

Concerning reports: Australian FM Penny Wong on Canadian PM Trudeau's allegations against India

Canada warns citizens to avoid travelling to J&K: Issues travel advisory for India amid Khalistan row

The closing of ranks in the Anglospheric alliance (strictly speaking the US does not have an official language like the other four) came amid disquiet in Indian quarters that its diplomats were being spied on and are being implicated on the basis of leaks. The Liberal Trudeau government is under pressure from Conservative opposition in Canada to back up its allegations against India with evidence, which New Delhi says has not been shared with it.

India Canada Clash: Were Indian diplomats under "SURVEILLANCE" in Canada? | Hardeep Nijjar Killing

"We underscore our commitment to upholding international law as the foundation for stability and equitable treatment of all member states," a joint statement issued by the group said, in a broad statement that could apply as much to Canada as India.

Is Justin Trudeau's career about to end?

Canada accuses Indian govt agents of being involved in murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar

Follow this link:
No special exemption for actions like this: US NSA - IndiaTimes

New revelations from the Snowden archive surface – ComputerWeekly.com

He risked his neck. When Edward Snowden chose to expose the US National Security Agency (NSA)s mass surveillance, Leviathan, and that of its British counterpart, GCHQ, 10 years ago, he put his life on the line. And he has always declared he has never regretted it.

But years after his act of extraordinary courage, the Snowden archive remains largely unpublished. He trusted in journalists to decide what to publish. In an article published in June 2023, by Guardian Pulitzer Prize winner Ewen MacAskill who flew to Hong Kong with Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras to meet Edward Snowden McAskill confirmed most of the archive has not been made public. In the end, we published only about 1% of the document, he wrote.

What does the remaining 99% of the Snowden archive contain? A decade on, it remains shrouded in secrecy.

A doctoral thesis by American investigative journalist and post-doctoral researcher Jacob Appelbaum has now revealed unpublished information from the Snowden archive. These revelations go back a decade, but remain of indisputable public interest:

These revelations have surfaced for the first time thanks to a doctoral thesis authored by Appelbaum towards earning a degree in applied cryptography from the Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands.

Communication in a world of pervasive surveillanceis a public document and has been downloaded over 18,000 times since March 2022 when it was first published.

Appelbaums work, supervised by professors Tanja Lange and Daniel J Bernstein, is among the top 10 most popular PhD theses at the Eindhoven University.

When we asked whether the US authorities had contacted the Eindhoven University of Technology to object to the publication of some of the revelations from the Snowden files, a university spokesperson replied that they had not.

In 2013, Jacob Appelbaum published a remarkable scoop for Der Spiegel, revealing the NSA had spied on Angela Merkels mobile phone. This scoop won him the highest journalistic award in Germany, the Nannen Prize (later known as the Stern Award).

Nevertheless, his work on the NSA revelations, and his advocacy for Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, as well as other high-profile whistleblowers, has put him in a precarious condition. As a result of this, he has resettled in Berlin, where he has spent the past decade.

In June 2020, when the United States issued a second superseding indictment against Julian Assange, it was clear Appelbaums concerns were not a matter of paranoia; the indictment criminalises political speeches given by Assange as well as by former WikiLeaks journalist Sarah Harrison and by Jacob Appelbaum himself, identified under the codename, WLA-3.

Public speeches made by Appelbaum taking a humorous and provocative tone and with titles like Sysadmins of the World, Unite! were interpreted as an attempt to recruit sources and as incitement to steal classified documents. To this day, however, there are no publicly known charges against Appelbaum or Harrison.

We asked Jacob Appelbaum, currently a post-doctoral researcher at the Eindhoven University of Technology, why he chose to publish those revelations in a technically written thesis rather than a mass-circulation newspaper.

He replied: As an academic, I see that the details included are in the public interest, and highly relevant for the topic covered in my thesis, as it covers the topic of large-scale adversaries engaging in targeted and mass surveillance.

One of the most important unpublished revelations from the Snowden archive regards American semiconductor supplier Cavium. According to Appelbaum, the Snowden files list Cavium as a successful SIGINT enabled CPUs vendor.

The NSAs successful cryptographic enabling is by definition the introduction of intentional security vulnerabilities that they are then able to exploit, and they do exploit them often in an automated fashion to spy, he said. One such method is sabotaging a secure random generator.

A random number generator that is unpredictable to everyone is an essential requirement for meaningful cryptographic security. In most cases, the NSA sabotage happens in a way where the owners, developers, and users are unaware of the sabotage as a core goal.

The purpose of this sabotage is to allow the NSA to breach the security offered by a given company, device and/or other services.

At no point does Appelbaum write or even suggest that Cavium was complicit in these sabotage activities or was aware of them.

The Snowden documents date back to 2013. In 2018, Cavium was acquired by US company Marvell Technology, one of the two firms which, according to financial services giant JP Morgan, will dominate the custom-designed semiconductors market driven by artificial intelligence.

We contacted Marvell to ask a series of questions, including whether Caviums CPUs have basically remained the same in the past decade, and whether its certain Cavium CPUs, which, according to the 2013 Snowden files, were backdoored, are no longer marketed and in use.

We also asked Marvell whether the company conducted any internal investigations after we informed them about Appelbaums revelation. One of the co-founders of Cavium, Raghib Hussain, is currently one of the presidents of Marvell.

Marvell has not provided answers to our specific questions. Its vice-president for corporate marketing, Stacey Keegan, said it did not implement backdoors for any government.

Marvell places the highest priority on the security of its products, she said. Marvell does not implement backdoors for any government. Marvell supports a wide variety of protocols and standards including IPsec, SSL, TLS 1.x, DTLS and ECC Suite B.

Marvell also supports a wide variety of standard algorithms including several variants of AES, 3DES, SHA-2, SHA-3, RSA 2048, RSA 4096, RSA 8192, ECC p256/p384/p521, Kasumi, ZUC and SNOW 3G.

All Marvell implementations are based on published security algorithm standards, Keegan continued. Marvells market leading NITROX family delivers unprecedented performance for security in the enterprise and virtualised cloud datacentres.

The NITROX product line is the industry leading security processor family designed into cloud datacentre servers and networking equipment, enterprise and service provider equipment including servers, Application Delivery Controllers, UTM Gateways WAN Optimization Appliances, routers, and switches.

Appelbaum said that as the new owner of Cavium, Marvell should conduct a serious and transparent technical security investigation into the matter and make the result available to the public.

He said that he wrote to the company, including to their security response email address, and set this forth in extreme detail, but has never heard back from them.

The two other important and yet-unpublished revelations from the Snowden files concern the compromise of foreign government infrastructure by the NSA.

Appelbaum writes in his thesis that the Snowden archive includes largely unpublished internal NSA documents and presentations that discuss targeting and exploiting not only deployed, live interception infrastructure.

The documents also discuss targeting and exploiting suppliers of the hardware and software used to build the infrastructure.

Primarily these documents remain unpublished because the journalists who hold them fear they will be considered disloyal or even that they will be legally punished, he said.

Appelbaum added that targeting lawful interception equipment is a known goal of the NSA.

Unpublished NSA documents specifically list their compromise of the Russian SORM LI infrastructure as an NSA success story of compromising civilian telecommunications infrastructure to spy on targets within reach of the Russian SORM system, he said.

Though Appelbaum did not publish the NSA slides on SORM in his thesis, he reported that they show two Russian officers wearing jackets bearing the slogan, You talk, we listen.

He said it is not unreasonable to assume that parts, if not the entire American lawful interception system, known as CALEA, have been compromised.

In his doctoral thesis, he says key European lawful interception systems have been compromised by NSA and/or GCHQ. Appelbaum said the Snowden archive contained many named target systems, companies, and other countries that had been impacted.

According to Appelbaum, compromise means different things: sometimes it is a matter of technical hacking, others it is a matter of wilful complicity from inside the company by order of some executives after being approached by the NSA.

Woe to those who do not comply immediately, he added.

Some of the most important revelations published from the Snowden archive concerned PRISM, a mass surveillance program which allowed the NSA to access emails, calls, chats, file transfers, web search histories.

The NSA slides claimed that this collection was conducted from the servers of internet giants like Google, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, AOL, Skype, PalTalk and YouTube, but when the existence of this program was exposed by Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill inThe Guardian and by Laura Poitras and Barton Gellmann in TheWashington Post, the internet giants denied any knowledge of the program and denied that they had granted direct access to their servers.

Though PRISM was one of the very first revelations from the Snowden archive, Appelbaum reveals that the PRISM slide deck was not published in full and several pages of the PRISM slide list targets and related surveillance data, and a majority of them appear to be a matter of political surveillance rather than defense against terrorism.

He said one such example of PRISMs targets being a matter of political surveillance rather than anti-terrorism shows a suggestion for targeting the Tibetan Government in Exile through their primary domain name.

In 1950, the Peoples Republic of China took control of Tibet and were met with considerable resistance from the Tibetan people. In 1959, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama left Tibet to seek political asylum in India, and there was a major exodus of Tibetans into the country. The Dalai Lama set up the Tibetan Government in Exile in India and exiled Tibetans have accused China of cruelty and repression for decades.

Appelbaum reveals that the main domain of the Tibetan Government in Exile (tibet.net) is named as an unconventional example that analysts should be aware of as also falling under the purview of PRISM. He explains that the email domain was hosted by Google Mail, a PRISM partner, at the time of the slide deck creation and it is currently hosted by Google Mail as of early 2022. At the time of this writing, it still is.

According to him, tibet.net exemplifies the political reality of accepting aid from the US. The system administrators wanted to be protected from Chinese hacking and surveillance. To fight Chinese surveillance, the technical team opted to host with Google for email and Cloudfare for web hosting. The reason Google appealed to the technical team behind tibet.net was the excellent reputation of Googles security team at that time.

What was unknown at the time of this decision was that Google would, willing or unwillingly, give up the data to the US government in secret, said Appelbaum. Thus in seeking to prevent surveillance by the Chinese government some of the time when the Chinese government successfully hack their servers, they unknowingly accepted aid that ensured their data will be under surveillance all of the time.

As a result, to fight the well-known devil of Chinese surveillance, the Tibetan Government in Exile put itself in the hands of the NSA.

How many important revelations like these do the unpublished documents still contain? It is impossible to say so long as the archive remains unpublished. It is also unclear how many copies of the full archive remain available and who has access to them.

Appelbaum says: There was a discussion among many of the journalists who worked on the archive about opening access to the Snowden archive for academics to discuss, study, and of course to publish. This is a reasonable idea and it should happen, as it is clearly in the public interest.

He said it was a terrible day when The Guardian allowed GCHQ to destroy the copy of the archive in the UK. However, according to Ewen MacAskill for The Atlantic, A copy of the Snowden documents remains locked in an office at The Times, as far as I know.

According to Jacob Appelbaum, The Intercept the media outlet co-founded by Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras to publish the Snowden files is no longer in possession of the documents. I was informed that they destroyed their copy of the archive, Appelbaum told us.

In 2013, the author of this article worked with Glenn Greenwald on the Snowden files regarding Italy, publishing all the documents that Greenwald shared with us in her newspaper at the time, the Italian newsmagazinel'Espresso.

After that journalistic work, we were contacted again to work on additional files, but unfortunately after some preliminary contacts, we never heard fromThe Interceptagain. All of our attempts to work on the files came to nothing, though we never learned what the problem was.

We asked The Intercept whether the publication is still in possession of the Snowden file. A spokesperson replied: The Intercept does not discuss confidential news-gathering materials.

Appelbaum is highly critical of those who destroyed the Snowden files. Even if the privacy violating intercepts are excluded from publication, there is an entire parallel history in that archive, he said.

See the original post here:
New revelations from the Snowden archive surface - ComputerWeekly.com

Readout of NSA Jake Sullivan’s Meeting with CCP Politburo … – US Embassy & Consulates in China

Readout of National Security Advisor Jake Sullivans Meeting with Chinese Communist Party Politburo Member, Director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission, and Foreign Minister Wang Yi

SEPTEMBER 17, 2023

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan met on September 16-17 with Chinese Communist Party Politburo Member, Director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission, and Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Malta. This meeting was part of ongoing efforts to maintain open lines of communication and responsibly manage the relationship. The two sides had candid, substantive, and constructive discussions, building on the engagements between President Biden and President Xi in Bali, Indonesia in November 2022. This meeting follows on recent high-level engagements, including between National Security Advisor Sullivan and Director Wang Yi in May in Vienna as well as meetings between Secretary Blinken, Secretary Yellen, Special Envoy Kerry, Secretary Raimondo, and their counterparts in Beijing over the last several months. The two sides discussed key issues in the U.S.-China bilateral relationship, global and regional security issues, Russias war against Ukraine, and cross-Strait issues, among other topics. The United States noted the importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. The two sides committed to maintain this strategic channel of communication and to pursue additional high-level engagement and consultations in key areas between the United States and the Peoples Republic of China in the coming months.

###

View post:
Readout of NSA Jake Sullivan's Meeting with CCP Politburo ... - US Embassy & Consulates in China