Britain's MI6 Opens Its First Website
An anonymous reader wites "Britain's spy agency the Secret Intelligence Service, known popularly as MI6, has opened its first website. While much about the agency is still not public, the website has information on service history and career opportunities for would-be spies. This rare peek at the real group popularized by the James Bond series brought over 3.5 million visits in its first few opening hours on Wednesday."
Their first web site that we know about.
org.slashdot.post.SignatureNotFoundException: ewg
Better than the FBI's or CIA :(
Slow news day?
Best bit of the website has to be the operational careers profiles, http://www.mi6.gov.uk/output/Page74.html
James Bond, 42
"I love women and martinins so the 'SIS' flexible work hours suit me perfectly."
So, is the website run by Q? If so, I must say that I'm a little disappointed that my computer doesn't explode when I click on the page three times.
From the FAQ:
It depends on who is running it really. Being SIS rather than something more computer security oriented (like GCHQ), I'd expect it is possible that they will get hacked. Places like GCHQ and the NSA on the other hand, who deal with information assurance and computer security as part of their role, tend to have far better records on that front. The NSA website has never been hacked, and given their profile you can be sure it isn't from lack of trying.
Jedidiah.
Craft Beer Programming T-shirts
When I was young "nerd" news were read on magazines. We must wait one month, but usually two or three to get some news of an event.
Now anything older than 1 or 2 days seems old news.
If a history is old 5 days after it arrises, may be that history isn't as important as to mention it. After a century of existence MI6 opens a web, and 5 days later isn't it interesting?
Internet is a great site to read news, but makes people very impatient.
My city: Barcelona.
Having given the website a quick look, I'm pretty pleased with how it's turned out. The layout's clear and understandable, it's got a few images but not too many to be especially taxing, and it has some nice features - switching the globe from night to day is cool, and implemented without using Flash, hurrah! On the whole, not bad.
And tomorrow the stock exchange will be the human race
Recently Jennifer Garner did a recruiting commercial for the CIA. When I saw it, my first reaction was, "how do I know you're recruiting for the CIA and not for some other organization posing as the CIA?"
I wonder why they use the domain name mi6.gov.uk when they make such a big deal of their REAL name being SIS, with Mi6 being mostly a movie thing
see http://www.mi6.gov.uk/output/Page50.html
This rare peek at the real group popularized by the James Bond series brought over 3.5 million visits in its first few opening hours on Wednesday.
:)
Sounds to me as if this is a dupe, and its already been slashdotted
Officially: "No comments"
Hackers army
(Courtesy of Bilo and Nano )
For those interested in television that portrays the SIS in a reasonably accurate light, I highly recommend the Sandbagger series. Available on DVD too.
After all it has the World Factbook. Probably the best resource I've ever seen for getting basic information on countries. For every country it has a map, gorgraphic and demographic information, information on the government, the military, communications, etc. If you hear a country mentioned, it's a great place to go to get basic background on that country. One would assume it's fairly accurate as well.
Whilst I can't comment about Ian Fleming being "fired from spy school", which sounds like a good yarn, I do know that Fleming served for some considerable time in the British Intelligence Service during WWII and held (as Bond did) the rank of Commander RN.
Flemings experience of black ops in wartime directly influenced his concept of what an intelligence agent gets up to and his role in thinking up such ops exposed him to the "funny" sort of kit dreamed up by Q in the Bond books.
Another connection with Bond is that Fleming had a considerable reputation as a womaniser.
The language choices are interesting: English, Spanish, Russian, French, Arabic, and Chinese. My guess as to the reasons: English because it's Britain, Spanish because it's spoken by the non-anglophone Americas, Russian because the USSR was the Cold War enemy, French because it was the international language of diplomacy, Arabic because it's the language of the Middle East (the major intelligence interest today), and Chinese because it's the most common language per capita.
Notable omissions are other European languages and Japanese. Arabic is a very notable inclusion.
Those are also the 6 official languages of the United Nations. Maybe that is the reason?