News you may have missed #418
August 25, 2010 1 Comment
- US military pays for intel widely available online. Experts say that the vast majority of the ‘intelligence’ needed by the United States is freely available on the Internet. But that has not stopped a company called Military Periscope from selling its subscription services to the US government, on things such as updates on foreign militaries, peacekeeping missions, weapons databases and terrorist organizations “via monthly CD-ROM delivery”.
- Son of Russian spies could return to US for school. Tim Foley, the elder son of Donald Howard Heathfield and Tracey Lee Ann Foley, the two deported US residents who were living a double life as Russian spies, may be trying to return to study in the United States, but his younger brother plans to stay in Moscow.
- German spy chief notes cyberattack surge. Cyberattacks against German corporate and government computers have been on the rise since 2005, according to Heinz Fromm, Director of Germany’s Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution. He said the attacks “come mainly from Asia, often from China”, and that often “state agencies are involved”.













News you may have missed #428 (history edition)
September 9, 2010 by intelNews Leave a comment
Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with 0 Simon Wiesenthal worked for Mossad claims book, 0 UK spies did 'very bad things' in Cold War says Le Carre, 0 US government study of Soviet-era spy services released, assassinations, black operations, Cold War, covert operations, declassification, Germany, history, informants, Israel, John le Carré, Mossad, News, news you may have missed, Operation DAMOCLES, Simon Wiesenthal, spycraft, Tom Segev, United States, US Office of Criminal Investigations, USSR