White House targets WikiLeaks and LulzSec in cyber-espionage report
The
White House in Washington, DC (Reuters / Yuri Gripas)
RT,
February
21, 2013 17:37
Amid
a growing call for new cybersecurity protections in the United
States, the US government has issued a report that reconfirms
Washington’s interest in shutting down WikiLeaks and other
underground information-sharing organizations.
In
Washington, DC on Wednesday, Attorney General Eric Holderunveiled a
new White House report that
is meant to address further the growing threats malicious hackers are
posing on America’s computer networks and the information stored
therein.
The
presentation, made just days after a security firm released an
in-depth analysis of a covert cyberbattle waged at the US by Chinese
hackers,
is only the latest in a series of actions from the White House being
rolled out to target computer criminals scouring the Web for
privileged information to pilfer and exploit. As with an onslaught of
other recent administrative actions, though, the latest release out
of Washington also serves as yet another example of the White House’s
escalating war on information sharing: In addition to singling out
the dangerous actors abroad that are attempting to uncover state
secrets and private intelligence, the report put out on Wednesday
also points the finger at the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks and
the group LulzSec — a now-defunct offshoot
of the hacktivist movement Anonymous who wreaked havoc on
the Web for a span of several months in 2011.
US
President Barack Obama has made numerous statements in recent months
in which he addresses emerging cyberthreats from foreign competitors,
specifically China, but the report released by the White House on
Wednesday doesn’t stop with states abroad. Within the 141 pages of
the publication, ‘Administration Strategy on Mitigating the Theft
of US Trade Secrets,’ the Obama administration includes portions of
a 2011 report that discusses the dangers posed by alleged hacktivists
groups, including WikiLeaks and LulzSec.
That
sub-report, a product of the Office of the National
Counterintelligence Executive, was put together 16 months ago to warn
Congress of the growing threats facing American companies holding
onto crucial trade secrets and sensitive technologies that could be
harvested from bad actors on the Internet. But in addition to the
Chinese hackers who have managed to make international headlines this
week on the heels of a highly-cited report, the publication warns
that domestic parties could be acting as proxies for foreign
intelligence.
“Cyberspace
provides relatively small-scale actors an opportunity to become
players in economic espionage,” the
report claims in part. “Under-resourced
governments or corporations could build relationships with hackers to
develop customized malware or remote-access exploits to steal
sensitive US economic or technology information, just as certain FIS
have already done.”
“Similarly,
political or social activists may use the tools of economic espionage
against US companies, agencies, or other entities, with disgruntled
insiders leaking information about corporate trade secrets or
critical US technology to ‘hacktivist’ groups like WikiLeaks,” it
continues.
Further
down, the authors of the whitepaper attempt to broadly explain the
hacktivism phenomena, citing WikiLeaks and the Anonymous-offshoot as
examples of hacktivist groups orchestrated to harm the United States.
In
the section ‘Possible Game Changers,’ the report reads:
“Political
or social activists also may use the tools of economic espionage
against US companies, agencies or other entities. The self-styled
whistleblowing group WikiLeaks has already published computer files
provided by corporate insiders indicating allegedly illegal or
unethical behavior at a Swiss bank, a Netherlands-based commodities
company, and an international pharmaceutical trade association.
LulzSec — another hacktivist group — has exfiltrated data from
several businesses that it posted for public viewing on its website.”
Exposing
“allegedly illegal or unethical behavior” seems unworthy
of administrative action on the surface, but when WikiLeaks or other
groups are unearthing damaging facts about the United States, the
White House is ready to respond. While unveiling the report this
week, Mr. Holder said attacks targeting United States entities are
posing a "steadily increasing threat to America's
economy and national security interests.”
The
attorney general’s comments mirror a remark made by Pres. Obama
earlier this month during his annual State of the Union address when
he said, “We cannot look back years from now and wonder why
we did nothing in the face of real threats to our security and our
economy.” Holder’s quip, however, comes at a crucial
moment as it comes the same week that two accused LulzSec members
have hearing in federal court week for matters related to WikiLeaks.
On
Thursday morning, District Judge Loretta Preska told
27-year-old Jeremy
Hammond and
a courtroom full of supporters that she will not be stepping down at
this time from the federal case against the young political activist,
who’s accused by the government of hacking private intelligence
firm Stratforduring
a highly-publicized security
breach in late 2011. Prosecutors say Hammond, an alleged member of
LulzSec, hacked into Stratfor and obtained a trove of personal
information, including personalcorrespondence between
executives and thousands of credit card credentials belonging to
subscribers of a paid service offered by the company. In recent
weeks, though, it’s been discovered that Judge Preska’s husband,
attorney Thomas J. Kavaler, was victimized in that very hack. Mr.
Kavaler’s personal information, including his credit card numbers,
were leaked in the hack attributed to Hammond. Despite this
knowledge, though, Judge Preska said Thursday that she is reserving
judgment in recusing herself from the case.
“The
conflict of interest here is clear cut,” National
Lawyers Guild Executive Director Heidi Boghosian said in a statement
earlier this week. “Judge
Preska is required to avoid the appearance of bias so that, even if
she owned one share of Stratfor stock, she would be obligated to
recuse herself. How can she be impartial when the case directly
affects the man she wakes up to every morning?”
Supporters
of Hammond say any conviction might be grounds for an appeal if Judge
Preska stays on board, but given the current state of affairs —
especially Thursday’s decision — a happy ending for the alleged
hacktivist seems improbable. Moments before Thursday’s hearing
began, attorney Michael Ratner of the Center for Constitutional
Rights told a crowd outside of the courthouse that Mr. Holder’s
report from one day earlier suggests the Obama administration will go
to great lengths to return a guilty verdict against Mr. Hammond and
any other hacktivists.
“Just
yesterday, our wonderful attorney general announced a new policy, a
tougher policy, one in which he said we are going to make truth
tellers — getting them — a priority,” he
said.
According
to Ratner, the latest maneuver out of Washington exemplifies the
Obama administration’s ongoing witch-hunt for political activists
who have engaged in activity critical of the US government.
“They
already killed Aaron Swartz; Jeremy Hammond is facing 39
years-to-life; Bradley Manning, life imprisonment; and Julian
Assange, if they ever get him out of that embassy and into a prison
here, will face the same,” said
Mr. Ratner, who works as an American attorney for the whistleblower
site.
Last
month, 26-year-old Demand Progress founder and Reddit
co-creator Aaron
Swartz was
found dead in his New York City apartment from an apparent suicide.
He was weeks away from standing trial in a controversial court case
regarding his alleged theft of free academic papers published on the
website JSTOR. After his death, Aaron Swartz’ father blamed the
government in part for his loss.
“Aaron
did not commit suicide but was killed by the government,” Robert
Swartz said during
his son’s funeral earlier
this month outside of Chicago, Illinois. “Someone
who made the world a better place was pushed to his death by the
government.”
Interestingly,
all parties mentioned by Mr. Ratner share one common bond in
particular: they’ve all been linked in some regards to the
WikiLeaks website. After his passing, WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange said with little explanation that Swartz had
a relationship with
his organization. As for Hammond, the Stratfor data he is believed to
have compromised was later published by
WikiLeaks, a group which has been in the sights of American
prosecutors since even before the 2010 release of materials
attributed to Army Private first class Bradley Manning — a
25-year-old soldier who has been detained for
roughly 1,000 days now without trial. Assange, an Australian citizen
residing in England, has been inside of London’s Ecuadorian Embassy
for over six months awaiting safe passage to South America.
“What
do they want to do? Put them up against the wall and just shoot the
guys?”
Mr. Ratner asked outside of the courthouse.
On
Friday, Mr. Ratner might very well get his answer. Hector Xavier
Monsegur, a hacker who famously operated on the Web as LulzSec
ringleader “Sabu,”
will be sentenced in federal court for crimes that preceded the
Stratfor hack. But although Sabu’s rap sheet is long and his crimes
arguably heinous, he is expected to be let off easy: according to
court documents, he pleaded guilty back in August 2011 but has had
his sentencing delayed because of his ongoing cooperation with
federal investigators. In fact, FBI agents provided him with the very
computer used by Hammond to upload the hacked Stratfor files just two
months later.
“A
travesty of justice,”
Mr. Ratner said of the ordeal on Thursday, accusing the government of
entrapping other LulzSec members by using Sabu as a confidential
informant. That on its own is being considered enough reason by soon
to shut-down the case against Hammond.
Since
the start of 2013, Washington’s elite have relentlessly rolled out
new attempts at prosecuting and persecuting alleged cybercriminals.
On the day of his State
of the Union address,
Pres. Obama signed an executive
order that
will lay out the framework for a system of information-sharing about
the government and private businesses. One day later, Rep. Mike
Rogers (R-Mich.) and Sen. Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Calif.) reintroduced
the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, or CISPA —
an attempt at formally creating those government-to-business links
through federal legislation. Both lawmakers attempted to have CISPA
be approved by Congress last year, but the bill failed to advance to
the Senate before the end of the session.
In
light of recent events, though, CISPA may have a new fate. This
week’s report on emerging cyberthreats from China has garnered so
much attention that the White House and Justice Department responded
with their new strategies to protect trade secrets and intellectual
property on the Web. Meanwhile, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle
and the president himself are advocating new cybersecurity laws
almost to the same extent of the fear-mongering being spewed at the
same time.
“This
is clearly not a theoretical threat – the recent spike in advanced
cyberattacks against the banks and newspapers makes that crystal
clear: American businesses are under siege,” Rep.
Rogers said when he unveiled his proposal. Rep. Ruppersberger added
that all it will take is one national cyber-emergency and
Congress “will
get all the bills passed we want.”
Until
then, though, it will be the courts that come down on hacktivists —
not Congress. Meanwhile, those making enemies with the White House
say they won't stop. In a letter published by his attorney on
Wednesday, Jeremy Hammond writes, "We
the people demand free and equal access to information and
technology. We demand transparency and accountability from
governments and big corporations, and privacy for the masses from
invasive surveillance networks.
"The
government will never be forgiven. Aaron Swartz will never be
forgotten."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.