Report: Russia and China Crack Encrypted Snowden Files
New submitter garyisabusyguy writes with word that, according to London's Sunday Times, "Russia and China have cracked the top-secret cache of files stolen by the fugitive US whistleblower Edward Snowden, forcing MI6 to pull agents out of live operations in hostile countries, according to senior officials in Downing Street, the Home Office and the security services," and suggests this non-paywalled Reuters version, too. "MI6 has decided that it is too dangerous to operate in Russia or China," writes the submitter. "This removes intelligence capabilities that have existed throughout the Cold War, and which may have helped to prevent a 'hot' nuclear war. Have the actions of Snowden, and, apparently, the use of weak encryption, made the world less safe?"
I will withhold my judgement on this until they release verifiable proof. It seems like their even disclosing the fact they know if the Russians and Chinese had access would be considered a state secret.
"GET / HTTP/1.0" 200 51230 "-" "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; Setec Astronomy)"
First (as stated in the summary): "Have the actions of Snowden, and, apparently, the use of weak encryption, made the world less safe?"
Second (not asked, but as important as the first): Was it worth it? Did the revelations made the world a better after the revelations?
IMO yes, it was worth it. Having secret programs authorised by secret laws and secret alliances to reduce or remove the privacy of the population as a whole for some geopolitical goal is not something that should happen in democratic countries.
The better question is why we're letting these agencies get away with scapegoating Snowden, just because they try to blame everything on him? It's not like they're free of any cu;pability for their actions just because some guy blew the whistle on them.
Without confirmation, this is just as likely to be a false flag attempt to charge Snowden with something serious as it is to be an actual news story.
The first question that comes to my mind is, "Has anything actually been cracked?" Maybe this is all just some kind of release to make Snowden looked bad. All I know is that spying is all about lying. All I know is that I'm an American who feels compelled to be an Anonymous Coward when talking about things like this... in America, and wondering if that makes any real difference. All I know is that they, ultimately, will die just as I will die. All I know is all they know, when you reduce it down. The spy is in me, and try as I might... I cannot decipher my own secret.
As politicos (and Google execs) repeat far too frequently, I'm sure there's nothing that sensitive there, is there? Were MI6 and CIA, etc., heaven forbid doing something bad? Golly, I hope not. We don't need encryption if we all obey the law, right?
http://www.salon.com/2013/11/0...
Blaming the whistleblower for revealing shady operations as an excuse for why those shady operations are no longer effective seems like an arsonist running a second by second commentary on the flaming building they set alight, all while asking for more matches and gasoline. I want to believe people are better than this, but this sort of "news" has been seen too often of late, I think.
Here's the outcome of Mr Snowden's "whistleblowing":
- American IT companies are losing billions because foreign customers are scared
- Intelligence networks are fucked
- Nothing whatsoever has changed in the way government agencies spy on US citizens
The guy should send his resume to Al Qaeda.
You missed a few:
- a semblance of transparency for US citizens in what their government is doing
- cessation of some of the programmes
- the overthrow of several dictatorships in the middle east
but hey, you keep worrying about the profits of some rich folk who hate you, that's really important
Oh yeah, and your last point was wrong
Even if there are never any charges, the bad (Snowden) PR of the news story itself is enough motivation for them to manufacture an issue (if they think they can get away with it). No one ever actually charged Assange with rape, did they?
Too bad strong encryption wasn't available to him -- was whatever "weak encryption" he used known to the NSA as being vulnerable?
The only people I am afraid of are the western bankers who faced with a declining empire because of their lawlessness, refuse to except their loss of power and wealth and decide if they can't continue to have all of this wealth and power and all od the lawlessnes and mischief you read about in the free news on the internet.
They will destroy it.
Those are the people you should be afraid of.
Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
Look, they've had a couple years to figure out that if Russia and China have a shit pile of encrypted files, that they are going be busy trying to crack them. So if they haven't substituted out their people (operatives in spooky talk) in the last 2 years, the people running the circus are a bunch of fucking clowns. If they didn't have alternate plans with different networks, they are incompetent. Those files only show what those agencies were doing historically at this point. Because if they are still current, the U.S. is really in trouble. The next thing you know they'll be run by creationists who don't believe in science and evolution. Or they know how to capitalize on a really arcane book of myths to keep the people occupied.
-- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
Or maybe the clinical stupidity of the US Government mandating backdoors in cryptography (either officially or covertly) has just been clearly illustrated. But then it would be absolutely impossible for anyone but friendly forces of the US Government to exploit such a thing, right?
GCHQ and the UK have been crying wolf about encryption for years. Now after all their bleating about how they can't crack encryption, they're claiming the Russians and Chinese have done it, but they couldn't?
Bullshit.
Bullshit.
Bullshit.
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
- American IT companies are losing billions because foreign customers are scared
Those poor companies! They will make a few billions less after getting truckloads of money from the government to introduce backdoors in their supposed secure products. Maybe next time those companies choose to protect the privacy of their customers...
- Intelligence networks are fucked
They will be rebuilt, however, spying on citizens may be reduces somewhat.
- Nothing whatsoever has changed in the way government agencies spy on US citizens
Except that the people now now about this and can take more precautions against being spied on.
Assuming this Sunday Times story is accurate, what idiot spymaster kept the real identities of active agents on a 'computer' that apparently any random IT techie had access to. I wonder if the media is trying to distract attention from that massive OPM hack.
Second OPM Hack Revealed: Even Worse Than The First
What I find difficult to believe:
1. Russia or China would make it known they cracked anything.
2. Western intelligence would make it known they know what Russia and China were able to do.
3. Articles which read like propaganda, provide no details and cite no specific sources.
So, Russia and China just happened to crack these files at the very same time?
Further, the files Snowden took from the NSA (U.S.) exposed MI6 (UK) agents in Russia?!?
I wonder what terribly embarrassing thing was about to be published in the UK that MI6 doesn't want people paying attention to?
I see a lot of that foreign spying as just as wrong as the domestic spying. Nations such as Germany are hosting our troops within their own borders, and we repay them with what? Spying on their internal as well as foreign affairs? We are really shitty guests when you get down to it.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
If the thing is a lie, it could come from any of the agencies that issue lies.
How did they crack files he never took to Russia, because he feared they could beat him to get him to reveal the password? Flaw #1.
Snowden files only cover Britain now? Even the claim doesn't make sense. If they had cracked Snowden files why wouldn't the US, and other 5 eyes agencies be removing their people? Flaw #2.
Even a cursory glance says this is a lie.
... you're assuming Snowden had access to more than "need to know," and that he was far down the chain of command and somewhat removed from the atmosphere of responsibility and duty.
That doesn't sound plausible.
Oh, wait.
Manning, Pfc.
Walks in with a Lady Gaga disk and walks out with the goods.
nm
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
Secret agents in Russia didn't prevent a nuclear war. That's ridiculous! The decision to attack or not attack was a political decision, made by politicians in the public performance of their roles. What, we think a spy dropped something in a politician's drink to make them feel more friendly to their enemies on the day they were set to deliver the "blow them up" command? Sheesh.
Stanislav Petrov prevented a nuclear war once. And he was not a secret agent.
https://firstlook.org/theinter...
Ian Ameline
It was all snowden's work along!
He stole the data for the sole purpose of giving to Russia and China!
He's an evil communist traitor that needs to be put on an electric chair!
The recent breach by China are just purely coincidental!
Also there's no way that Russia would the resource and know how to obtain such data, and they had to rely on a lone consultant instead of their mighty KGB/FSB !
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
In 2013, Reuters reported that documents released by Edward Snowden indicated that the NSA had paid RSA Security $10 million to make Dual_EC_DRBG the default in their encryption software, and raised further concerns that the algorithm might contain a backdoor for the NSA.
/. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
It smells of domestic propaganda when the US has upcoming elections.
I'm not sure it has anything to do with the elections, but it sure has a putrid smell of wanting to justify condemning Snowden as a traitor, pointing to "evidence" that he did harm.
Which, coming from organizations that have been proven to lie to us by the same Snowden doesn't seem all that credible without anything to back it up except their word. I know just how much value I put on their word.
It's also rather unclear how they can say that the intel came from Snowden, and not, say, someone hacking into a system, or a real mole turning info over. How could they possibly know the source, given that the intel likely is duplicated in hundreds of places?