So
much for “democracy” in France!
France
Warns Media Not To Publish Hacked Macron Emails, Threatens With
Criminal Charges
6
May, 2017
After
9 gigabytes of Macron-linked documents and emails were released on
an anonymous
pastebin website on
Friday afternoon in what Macron's
campaign said was a "massive and coordinated" hacking
attack,
France - fearing a similar response to what happened with Hillary
Clinton after 35,000 John Podesta emails were released one month
before the US presidential election - cracked down on the
distribution of the files, warning on Saturday it would be a
"criminal offense" to republish the data, and warning the
French media not
to publish content
from any of the hacked emails "to prevent the outcome of the
vote being influenced."
Quoted
by Reuters,
the French election commission said in a statement that "on the
eve of the most important election for our institutions, the
commission calls on everyone present on internet sites and social
networks, primarily the media, but also all citizens, to show
responsibility and not to pass on this content, so as not to distort
the sincerity of the ballot." Following a rushed meeting on
Saturday morning, the commission which supervises the electoral
process, said that the data been "fraudulently obtained and
could be mixed with false information." It is unclear, however,
how it hopes to enforce any punitive claims, especially when much of
the initial document distribution appears to have taken place
offshore.
Domestically,
in a similar reaction to the US media's response to the Podesta
emails, French
TV news channels chose not to mention the hack, although the
left-leading Liberation prominently featured the news on its website.
Liberation author Cedric Mathiot wrote that the leak, and its timing,
"wants
to create chaos"
adding that the information was distributed in an "unethical
method."
On
Friday night, as news of what has been hashtagged as @MacronLeaks on
twitter spread, Florian Philippot, deputy leader of the National
Front, tweeted "Will Macronleaks teach us something that
investigative journalism has deliberately kept silent?" In a
tweeted response, Macron spokesman Sylvain Fort called Philippot's
tweet "vile".
In
another parallel to the Clinton leaks, Macron's En Marche! party said
the leaked documents dealt with "the normal operations of a
campaign and included some information on campaign accounts." It
said the hackers had mixed false documents with authentic ones to
"sow doubt and disinformation."
But
in the biggest parallel to the Clinton hacking, few have touched upon
the actual contents of the documents, which some say confirm prior
allegations of illicit financial dealings and offshore accounts, and
instead merely sought to attack the messenger. Indeed, as journalist
Kim Zetter noted overnight, "Telling journos to not report on
hacked emails misses point that nearly all important leaks occur
because someone broke law or a contract" and then followed up
with the following rhetorical question, flipping the situation by 180
degrees: "If GRU, intending to assault dem., hacks Trump &
publishes emails showing his direct connection to Russia, should
journos report on those."
As
reported on Friday evening, WikiLeaks tweeted that the leak contained
"many tens of thousands" of emails, photos and attachments
dated up to April 24, but it noted that it had come "too late"
to affect the election results. In a follow up tweet, the
controversial whistleblowing organization posted a tweet sharing the
location of all #MacronLeaks archives which are "now available
as uncensorable magnet links http://archive.is/aULcm"
Since
there has been no suggestion WikiLeaks is responsible for this hack,
speculation about the source of the hack has grown, with Russia once
again emerging as the "usual suspect."
Cited
by Reuters, Vitali Kremez, director of research with New York-based
cyber intelligence firm Flashpoint, said his review indicates that
APT 28, a group tied to the GRU, the Russian military intelligence
directorate, was behind the leak. He cited similarities with U.S.
election hacks that have been previously attributed to that group.
Kremez also said that APT28 last month registered decoy internet
addresses to mimic the name of En Marche, which it likely used send
tainted emails to hack into the campaign’s computers. Those domains
include onedrive-en-marche.fr and mail-en-marche.fr.
"If indeed driven by Moscow, this leak appears to be a significant escalation over the previous Russian operations aimed at the U.S. presidential election, expanding the approach and scope of effort from simple espionage efforts towards more direct attempts to sway the outcome," Kremez said.
We
expect the Kremlin to deny all allegations shortly.
Ben Nimmo, a UK-based security researcher with the Digital Forensic Research Lab of the Atlantic Council think tank, said initial analysis indicated that a group of U.S. far-right online activists were behind early efforts to spread the documents via social media. They were later picked up and promoted by core social media supporters of Le Pen in France, Nimmo said.
The leaks emerged on 4chan, a discussion forum popular with far right activists in the United States. An anonymous poster provided links to the documents on Pastebin, saying, "This was passed on to me today so now I am giving it to you, the people."
The hashtag #MacronLeaks was then spread by Jack Posobiec, a pro-Trump activist whose Twitter profile identifies him as Washington D.C. bureau chief of the far-right activist site Rebel TV, according to Nimmo and other analysts tracking the election. Contacted by Reuters, Posobiec said he had simply reposted what he saw on 4chan.
“You have a hashtag drive that started with the alt-right in the United States that has been picked up by some of Le Pen’s most dedicated and aggressive followers online,” Nimmo told Reuters.
Sunday's
election, whose result is expected in just over 24 hours, is seen as
"the most important in France for decades, with two
diametrically opposed views of Europe and the country's place in the
world at stake." Tune in then to find out if Wikileaks is
correct, and the #MacronLeaks is nothing more than a tempest in a
teapot, unable to chisel away at Macron's lead over Le Pen which the
latest polls calculate to be as much as 25 points.
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