News you may have missed #0195
November 24, 2009 2 Comments
- CIA releases massive collection of Soviet military documents. The CIA has released a massive selection of sensitive Soviet journal articles, translated into English, which it acquired by various means from 1961 to 1984. Most are from the restricted Soviet journal Military Thought.
- Did the CIA attempt to prevent Gagarin’s lunar flight from happening? Interesting question explored by Peter Pesavento in the latest issue of Space Chronicle, a journal of the London-based British Interplanetary Society.
- GCHQ head’s holiday details leaked online. The head of the British government’s ultra-secret listening agency GCHQ is reviewing his security after personal details were put on the internet by a spookbuster. Thankfully, no Speedo photos this time.







News you may have missed #620 (cyberespionage edition)
November 1, 2011 by Ian Allen Leave a comment
GCHQ
►►Canada government ‘warned prior to cyberattack’. Canada’s spy agency, CSIS, warned the government that federal departments were under assault from rogue hackers just weeks before an attack crippled key computers. A newly released intelligence assessment, prepared last November, sounded a security alarm about malicious, targeted emails disguised as legitimate messages —the very kind that shut down networks two months later.
►►GCHQ warns cyber crime reaches ‘disturbing’ levels. Cyber attacks on the British government, the public and industry have reached “disturbing” levels, according to the director of Britain’s biggest intelligence agency. Iain Lobban, who runs the British government’s listening centre, GCHQ, has warned that the “UK’s continued economic wellbeing” is under threat.
►►Japanese parliament hit by cyber-attack. Alleged Chinese hackers were able to snoop upon emails and steal passwords from computers belonging to lawmakers at the Japanese parliament for over a month, according to Japanese daily Asahi Shimbun. The paper claims that computers and servers were infected after a Trojan virus was emailed to a Lower House member in July. The Trojan then allegedly downloaded malware from a server allegedly based in China —allowing remote hackers to secretly spy on email communications and steal usernames and passwords from Japanese lawmakers.
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