News of the World Investigation Expanded to 9/11 Victims
DMandPenfold writes "Police are questioning whether a change in News International's email retention policy was part of an effort to conceal widespread phone hacking by the News of the World, a scandal which is threatening Rupert Murdoch's planned takeover of BSkyB. The trawl for emails and the questioning of changes in News International's email retention policy has important implications for IT security and corporate governance professionals, and is likely to see organizations examining their own policies and reminding their staff on acceptable usage and best practice for email."
It'd be pretty sad if the lesson people take from the News Corp fiasco is: man, their IT staff should've really been more on the ball about making sure no evidence of the crimes they committed was accidentally retained.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
...Because we all know the best solution to morally bankrupt business practices is to make sure there is no paper trail, analog or digital.
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
And a lot of it too. Everyone can smell it and the revelations are only in their infancy. I always thought Murdoch was a blight on the news industry and a poster child for the evils of media consolidation but this scandal shocks even me. This is mafia-level shit.
I don't know how many years on this Earth I got left. I'm going to get real weird with it. - Frank Reynolds
Can we finish locking the News of the World staff in their headquarters and burning it to the ground, along with anybody found to have aided or abetted them(given that their contacts with the Met and right up to the PM are well known, this probably includes a few people in addition to their shady PIs...) and get on to an important matter:
Why are phones, particularly the VM box that is more or less an automatic part of today's cell phone, so damn vulnerable? The Telcoes seem to have no trouble tracking our activities in great detail if those activities are something for which we can be billed, and they also seem eminently willing to cooperate with law enforcement. Why, then, do I have absolutely no way of knowing when, and from where, my VM box was called into, and why would the VM box of a phone that is subject to police investigation be accessible from the outside at all?
I certainly wouldn't mind seeing a bunch of tabloid flacks roasted in their own slime; but if voicemail hacking and phone intercepts by random PIs are that easy, we have a problem that needs to be solved by better security, not just crushing malefactors after the fact...
As the continuing revelations over the NotW practices come to light I have to wonder if they were the only newspaper indulging in this... or just the only one to be caught.
Is anybody checking for unusal data clean-ups among other newspapers?
This may be the case. Like there is not only one rapist, child abuser, murderer, thief and kingpin. But to ME that does not mean that the prosecution of those bastards should stop. It's bad enough the government is far to excessive in their invasion of the private lifes of people who are no criminals because there might (!) be a case somewhere. But a news corporation that invades the privacy of other people just because their completely legal activities might be news is despicable. The only place for such "journalists" is behind bars.
Published: September 1, 2010
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/05/magazine/05hacking-t.html
IN NOVEMBER 2005, three senior aides to Britain’s royal family noticed odd things happening on their mobile phones. Messages they had never listened to were somehow appearing in their mailboxes as if heard and saved. Equally peculiar were stories that began appearing about Prince William in one of the country’s biggest tabloids, News of the World.
As Scotland Yard tracked Goodman and Mulcaire, the two men hacked into Prince Harry’s mobile-phone messages. On April 9, 2006, Goodman produced a follow-up article in News of the World about the apparent distress of Prince Harry’s girlfriend over the matter. Headlined “Chelsy Tears Strip Off Harry!” the piece quoted, verbatim, a voice mail Prince Harry had received from his brother teasing him about his predicament.
The palace was in an uproar, especially when it suspected that the two men were also listening to the voice mail of Prince William, the second in line to the throne
The ones in charge, Rupert Murdoch and Rebekah Brooks, have known about this for years and approved of it. They are the ones who should be charged, not the pianists, i.e. the reporters. They did what they were told to do.
Read more at http://www.observer.com/2010/media/new-york-times-goes-after-murdoch-and-news-world-phone-hacking-scandal
"When The Times reporters asked one veteran News of the World reporter how many people in the offices knew about the hacks, the reporter said “Everyone knew The office cat knew."
and
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/12/world/europe/12hacking.html?_r=1&ref=world
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/11/world/europe/11britain.html?ref=world
The evidence is there, and everywhere, Murdoch and Brooks are scum.
"Technology and Moral Outrage" should be the title of this story
some will blame technology, rather than murdoch thugs
don't believe me? just watch. "the devil made me do it" is the oldest defense in the book. where "the devil" = "backwards lyrics on beatle albums" / "videogames" / "dungeons and dragons" / whatever
anything to avoid personal accountability when it comes to punishment, anything to embrace personal accountability when it comes to reward
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
A person gets caught doing this to a corporation, and 9 times out of 10 they end up in Federal 'Pound Me In The Ass' Prison with a fine so large it'll take years to pay back.
But if a corporation does it to a person...well, maybe they'll get a strongly worded email or something, or an unflattering article in a major newspaper (but not too unflattering, don't want to get sued for defamation or anything!)
...and people wonder why nobody trusts big business or the government anymore...
Or MSNBC for that matter.....
The land line line playbacks had 2-digit codes. A hacker could try all of the them. My cellphone passcode defaulted as my birthdate.
See, I don't buy that. You may want it to be true because it excuses Fox. False equivalence lets one side keep moving the goal post. The other side does it, therefore it's okay if our guys do it.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
It's not just at the NoTW that fingers are now being pointed:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-14112097
(mentions both the Sunday Times and the Sun)
The narrative is wrong here. Journalists are heroes, not villains.
Deleting voicemails off of a murder victims voicemail inbox, that they had hacked, and then leading her family to believe that she was still alive and deleting her voicemails not only makes you a villain, you makes you fucking scum, evil and a blight on the face of the earth. Months ago an ex News of the World Journalist claimed on British TV that this sort of thing was going on, and had been for sometime, he claimed he had done nothing wrong in his quest for the truth and I stated at the time, where do we draw the line? If we allow this to carry on, just where will this end, just how much are they getting away with in this quest for the truth? Well, I guess the News of the World showed us where the line is, I guess they showed us just where it would end. Scum.
The phrase "email retention policies" is double-speak. It should be "email deletion policies".
There is a chance the inverse could happen here and it will be quietly kept downplayed.
The most adamant, in the US, "The devil made them do it and the devil is technology!" new POV tend to gravitate under or near Murdoch. This is like spending years calling people witches for having warts, strange feline familiars of dark coloring and reports of flying around on a broom. Then one day having it discovered you have a black cat, a well saddle attached broom and industrial strength war remover in your bathroom.
They can't attack the "Devil" without attacking themselves through hypocrisy. Those hounding them are after the head of the leadership, not demonization of the "Devil".
by Anonymous Coward: I, for one, welcome the shift from car analogies to pizza analogies. um.. overlords?
News International papers targeted Gordon Brown
Newspapers obtained details from the former prime minister's bank account and legal file and his family's medical records - Thanks to Jeff Jarvis for the story.
I8-D
If Wikileaks had done it.
If Wikileaks was accused of going after Dick Cheney or George W. Bush's email and telephone records there would be overwhelming support for the actions. But News Corp asshats did it so it's a bad thing.
It's actually a bad thing no matter who did it, wikileaks, the FBI, FBS, News International, etc.
You were killed in the collapse of the North Tower, and the only thing you found odd was old voice mail you hadn't heard before?
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
No, no one misses Dan Rather, he didn't try to show anyone the truth about President Bush, he tried to swing the election with forged documents.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killian_documents#Review_panel_established
All tabloid newspapers in the UK are implicated in this hacking scandal; it's only a matter of time before dirt is found on the other tabloids.
No broadcasters are likely to be implicated though, as the broadcaster regulator OFCOM has statutory powers investigate and make broadcasters issue corrections. If any TV news journalist had tried to use evidence gained through hacking or bribery it would quickly have become apparent in any ensuing investigation.
The print press, however, just had the non-statutory Press Complaints Commission. This was run by newspaper editors and when they received a complaint, they'd deal with it by asking the paper in question if they really did it or if the story was really true. Obviously they rarely found against newspapers.
Nick
Nobody is arguing against journalists using subterfuge in public interest cases.The NotW famously caught Jeffrey Archer admitting to perjury which led to his conviction.
That doesn't mean it's OK to hack into the voicemail of the Chancellor of the Exchequer and then run a story about his baby daughter dying of Cystic Fibrosis just because that's what you happen to find.
Nick
I'm sure they'd love to say it's just how tabloid journalism in the UK works but that's not the case. One quick look into Fox News and you find them doing all sorts of questionable things like photo manipulation, wikipedia edits and being in bed with Bush. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fox_News_Channel_controversies
I would guess there is a whole load more we haven't found out about. I believe this guy thrives on this sort of scum. I hope someone has enough balls to stop his bskyb bid and I hope more people start boycotting news international products. Let the old man die knowing his empire is falling all around him.
Odd, that he has not apologized. KIlled paper and wants to get rid of all evidence. Yet, he has not apologized. Worthless POS.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
The way the UK (Tory) government is pussy-footing this issue I would not be surprised when collusion between the Conservative Party and Rupert's gang is going to be uncovered.
"The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
Have you even seen an FNC broadcast? It's talking points and wire reports all day with commentary all night. No 'room' for investigative reports.
The force that blew the Big Bang continues to accelerate.
In journalism, the line is supposed to be where the information no longer serves the public good. Journalists have long crossed the line of legality (ie. publishing Wikileaks details), but there has been the justification that the information was in the public interest. But hacking into the voice mail of a missing girl cannot in any way be presented as furthering the public interest. It's a repugnant form of tom-peepery, with no other purpose than to scoop some lurid details and be the first to press with them.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
Before this story was posted it was already revealed that at least one other paper (The Times - not really a tabloid) has been caught in this.
So it has been brought to light.
Before this story was posted it was already revealed that at least one other paper (The Times - not really a tabloid) has been caught in this.
That would be The Times that is also published by Mr Rupert Murdoch, would it?
Yes... But firstly, they're not considered to be a tabloid, and secondly, the idiot I was replying to was boldly asserting that no other tabloid papers had been implicated.