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Video Raises Doubts About Attkisson's Claims of Malicious Hacking

Was former CBS News correspondent Sharyl Attkisson's computer hacked? Earlier claims that it was are being scoffed at by some security experts, after looking at cellphone video she has released intended to demonstrate that an intruder was deleting files. The video, say various commentators, may instead just indicate a stuck or faulty backspace key. It could be that both things are true (a stuck backspace key, as well as malicious intrusion targeting Attkisson for her political reporting), but it would be helpful to know more of the details on which CBS's (unnamed) hired experts concluded that her machine was breached.

11 of 105 comments (clear)

  1. Disappearing files by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    but files disappearing character by character is exactly what happens in movies! Surely it must be the same in real life? Hollywood wouldn't lie to me?!?!

    1. Re:Disappearing files by Travis+Mansbridge · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The real kicker is after she selects a huge block of text which is then, of course, deleted, she goes to quit Word and saves over the previous revision. The only one deleting actual data in the video is her, herself.

  2. Clean out your keyboard! by SternisheFan · · Score: 5, Informative
    FTA: " Peter Theobald, computer forensics investigator with TC Forensics in Syosset N.Y., said that while he would not be "terribly surprised to find out that someone in the government could or would hack her," he also did not think the video proved "anything."

    "If a hacker were to infiltrate her laptop and delete her files there would be better ways to do it, it wouldn't be so obvious to her," Theobald said. "It did not look like a hacker attack to me."

    All of the experts agreed that hackers would more typically use other methods to delete documents from a computer.

    "The way to do it wouldn't be to hold down the delete key," explained Sam Plainfield, of Syntax Technical Computer Forensics in San Francisco, which is what he thinks appears to be happening in the video. Instead, "you wouldn't see a visual indicator that files are deleting, [they are] just gone."

    Brothers-McGrew noted "in our experience if you have the ability to be able to access and submit keystrokes on someone's computer, you generally have system level access where you can just delete or modify the file yourself. The user would not ordinarily see what is going on."

    He added, "If the government were in there they would most likely be doing it without making themselves known."

  3. More than a misunderstanding, it's a fake by StevenMaurer · · Score: 4, Informative
    http://crooksandliars.com/2014...

    Attkisson's 'Hack' In a nutshell, Attkisson claims the government hacked her computers in December, 2012 and she reported it to CBS at the time. She claims a PC and her personal Mac were hacked, and the media has accepted this claim with no skepticism. Mediaite went with the assumption that she shot it in December, 2012.

    But a sharp-eyed commenter over at Media Matters observed that Attkisson's video was shot during the Valerie Harper debut on Dancing With the Stars in September, 2013. Here's what WiscoJoe observes:

    Attkisson shot this video on or sometime after September 16, 2013. The episode of "Dancing with the Stars" that is playing in the background features Valerie Harper dancing a Foxtrot to "Some Kind of Wonderful" and first aired live on the evening of that date.
    According to Attkisson's own timeline her computer was 'hacked' in October 2012, she came forward with this allegation in May 2013, but then waited until September 2013 to take video 'evidence.'

    Has Ms. Attkisson provided an explanation of when this video was taken or why she waited for a year, and until after she went forward with public allegations, to take video documentation of her computer being 'hacked'? Is this the standard of investigative journalism that she was doing while at CBS? If that's the case it may explain why she no longer works there.

    1. Re:More than a misunderstanding, it's a fake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      lots of victims wait until the time is right.

      Right. Then they fake a video as "evidence" that it happened.

      Not to mention that they continue to use a laptop for their work for at least 9 months, despite believing it to be completely controlled by "the man". They don't even bother to start using another computer to store their supposedly incredibly important evidence.

    2. Re:More than a misunderstanding, it's a fake by slowdeath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Per the CBS article:

      "This party also used sophisticated methods to remove all possible indications of unauthorized activity, and alter system times to cause further confusion."

      So if the 'hacker' was so sophisticated as to remove all possible indications of unauthorized activity then how can they possibly conclude there was ANY 'unauthorized' activity? They would have to find some evidence of it (and they say the did not) to state otherwise.

      So I can only conclude the 'forensic analysis team' was spouting pure unadulterated speculation with no basis in fact. Their analysis should really be 'we found nothing to substantiate any hacking occurred' rather than 'the hacking was so sophisticated it left no traces that the system was hacked.

  4. When the video was made is the clincher... by gbcox · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As noted here: http://crooksandliars.com/2014... If you watch the video you'll see Valerie Harper in "Dancing with the Stars" playing in the background. That happened on or after September 16, 2013. "According to Attkisson's own timeline her computer was 'hacked' in October 2012, she came forward with this allegation in May 2013, but then waited until September 2013 to take video 'evidence.'" "We are supposed to believe that Sharyl Attkisson was hacked by the government and just said, "Oops, I'm hacked!" while she went merrily along with no additional examination, security and a nine-month lag between when she originally believed she was hacked and when she shot the video?" This is buffoonery at it's best!

  5. Re:Aww cmon by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just because it's equally plausible that she's a moron, they rule out malice? What kind of razor is that?

    Double edged?

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  6. Personal grooming belongs in the bathroom folks. by BlacKSacrificE · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We had a laptop come across the bench once that had been "raped by malware" according to the booking agent. Programs opening themselves, unpredictable behaviour everywhere. Before I had even powered the thing I noticed the enter key was sitting a poofteenth lower than the rest of the keys. Pulled the keyboard and found a fingernail clipping wedged under the lifter. Needless to say none of the reported problems were evident when I loaded it to OS. Why the BIOS did not pick up a stuck key I will never know, but hey, it was an easy $70.

    This is what she gets for doing bodywork in front of the machine.

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  7. Re:Stop giving her attention by SQL+Error · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think a technical debunking of her claims of being hacked is ideal Slashdot material.

    We don't have enough information yet. to properly analyse those claims. What I've seen written so far has been sensationalised and technically incoherent. That's reason enough to dismiss it, but not reason enough to consider it proven false.

  8. Re:lol only noobs get hacked by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I do not know how stupid you have to be, but I do know there are a lot of these people out there.

    I used to get infected computers all the time, ask them what kind of anti virus they run and get told they don't need them because they don't have a virus. I don't know how many people say they turned it off because it kept quarantining some file they downloaded to help them get movies or music or programs. They all swear the guy in the chat room knows what he was talking about. I even had one moron attempt to sue me in small claims court because a program I installed kept deleting his files. Of course it was an antivirus and the files were ones he downloaded from some p2p network. I replaced several components and a case on a computer that took a flight from a second story window because it kept freezing and locking up. After the owner picked it up and took it home, he called angrily complaining that he just paid me $500 and it does the same damn thing. I stopped over and found the problem to be a bad cord on his mouse- $20 dollars later, his old system would have been just fine still.

    I don't think you would believe how many of those people exist out there.