BREAKING: WhaleOil hacker revealed & IT'S NOT ME! http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/10417726/The-hacker-revealed …
Whaleoil
hacker revealed
It's
a story of hackers and attack bloggers, privacy and paranoia,
bombshells and duds. It's rapidly become the story of the election.
28
August, 2014
Rawshark,
a self-styled information vigilante, has derailed National's
political campaign with his hack of Whale Oil blogger Cameron
Slater's private communications and now threatens to up- end the
seedier part of corporate public relations.
The
hack has been followed by an orchestrated release of information,
first through Nicky Hager's book Dirty Politics, then Twitter account
@Whaledump, and finally through passing documents to media.
The
late February hack appears to have secured a grab-bag of documents,
emails and message chat logs, opportunistic rather than
comprehensive.
Material
provided to Fairfax Media by Rawshark, totalling 50 megabytes,
includes invoices, corporate pitch documents and hundreds of pages of
Facebook messaging. The information relates to Slater's commercial
and corporate links, chiefly through Slater's long-time friend,
tobacco lobbyist and Facilitate Communications managing director
Carrick Graham.
So
who is Rawshark? The nom de plume is an intentional echo of
Rorschach, the morally uncompromising vigilante in Alan Moore's cult-
classic Watchmen graphic novel.
"I'm
not your run-of-the-mill hacker," Rawshark insisted last week.
"Which means there aren't many like me out there. Which means
that as soon as people understand my motivations, the list of
suspects narrows down to one."
Rawshark's
graduated disclosure of hacked emails - in what appears to be an
orchestrated campaign likely to run at least until the end of this
month - has been accompanied by a series of humorous graphics and
subtle in-jokes. His Twitter account biography includes an encryption
key that resolves to the email address of NZ First leader Winston
Peters, and lists as an address the Ecuadorian embassy in London
where WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been sheltering from
police.
Rawshark
said he was unconcerned by wild speculation over his identity, and
claimed the revelations he helped bring to light were important. "I
don't really mind people thinking I'm a 15 year-old doing it for the
lulz. It's safer that way, and it doesn't make a difference towards
my goal - which is to take down the network," Rawshark said.
Slater,
overseas on an Israeli- government sponsored trip, reiterated his
belief Rawshark had ulterior motives and had broken the law. "There
is no network. And who the hell does he think he is, acting illegally
and playing judge and jury? The fact he talks about the 'network'
suggest a political motivation. So who is the one really playing
dirty politics?"
The
material Rawshark supplied to this paper supports Hager's conclusions
Whale Oil was paid by Facilitate Communications boss Carrick Graham
to run disguised attacks against the rivals of Facilitate clients.
But Slater denied he provided cash for comment.
"I'm
not being paid to write blog posts about people. I've done nothing
wrong or illegal and somehow I'm the enemy and the crook who breached
everyone's privacy is a hero?"
Graham,
a long-term friend of Slater who has attracted controversy for his
work for the tobacco industry, this week refused to discuss "that
particular book". "I don't talk about who I work with, who
my clients are or what I do with them. I run a private company and
that's what it is," he said.
Although
some of the material has been covered in Dirty Politics, significant
chunks refer to matters yet to be reported. Hager concluded a nexus
existed between Slater, Graham and Food and Grocery Council chief
executive Katherine Rich, that was used to surreptitiously attack
opponents of corporate members of the council. New evidence shows:
An
email from Slater in January 2014 in which the blogger wrote
"December hits coin" and invoiced Facilitate Communication
$6555.
A
series of emails the same month from Graham to Slater, headed "Hit"
and sometimes including "KR," including draft posts
savagely critical of council members' commercial rivals or political
opponents. Shortly afterwards Slater posted articles - nearly
identical to Graham's draft - on Whale Oil.
An
unreported email exchange between Graham, Slater and Rich discussing
the political leanings of the Generation Zero climate-change lobby
group, concluding with Graham saying: "That's our job. They're
on the target list."
Countdown,the
subject of more than a dozen critical blog postsin the months
following the hack, was concerned but guarded when approached for
comment. Following a wave of negative publicity earlier this year,
the supermarket giant is now the subject of a Commerce Commission
investigation into its business practices.
Countdown
managing director Dave Chambers said of the hacked emails: "If
these claims are correct this is not only disappointing but very
disturbing given the subsequent impact on our business."
Slater
was combative and denied being influenced by payment in his choice of
article subjects. "I don't write posts for money, I write posts
for personal interest," he said. "You should all get off
the high horse called sanctimony and perhaps mount the lame donkey
called hypocrisy."
Rich
would respond only with written statements: "We do not pay for
media coverage or blogs."
She
confirmed the unreported email was legitimate, but said: "The
conclusions being drawn illustrate the dangers of drawing conclusions
from incomplete information, whether it's gained from eavesdropping
on a private conversation in a pub, intercepting the post, or reading
someone's private emails".
Reporting
this saga has involved considerable paranoia and data- security
measures on both sides. Rawshark, fearing arrest for hacking, insists
on communicating through encrypted emails routed through computers
running the secure Tails operating system.
Slater,
wary of more personal information being hacked and claiming his
mobile phone has been subject to message bombing, preferred talking
through an encrypted phone messaging service.
In
an atmosphere charged by leaks and leapt-to conclusions, it's worth
noting that several tantalising leads provided by Rawshark's hack
have turned out, following investigation, to have benign or comedic
explanation. A Facebook chat about meetings with SkyCity casino's
executive, at first glance sinister, turned out to be about Slater's
failed attempt to solicit advertising while he was editor of the now-
defunct Truth newspaper.
Then
there was the time Slater boasted online of "a request to sell
10 Mig-29s to another country" and hiring an Antonov-124 cargo
plane to ferry the military jets to their end customer.
The
deal appears to have been nothing but a joke. "If I did that
stuff do you think I'd be wasting my time blogging?" Slater
said. "Basically this fool has taken trash-talking pub chat and
thinks it's fact. Too funny."
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