News you may have missed #0208
December 7, 2009 Leave a comment
- Georgia denies entry to Russian ‘spies’. Georgia has denied entry to a delegation of Russian scholars from the Russian State Archive and the Center for Caucasian Research at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations. It’s the second time this year that the Georgians have accused Russian researchers of being spies.
- US monitors China’s hiring of foreign journalists. A report by the Open Source Center of the US Directorate of National Intelligence notes that China has been hiring a growing number of foreign reporters to serve as overseas correspondents.
- Audio interview with NSA’s information assurance director. Dickie George, technical director of information assurance at the US National Security Agency, has given a rare audio interview to GovInfo Security. The first part of the interview is available here. The second part will be posted in a few days.













Comment: Did Russian Intelligence Hack Climate-Change Emails?
December 7, 2009 by intelNews 16 Comments
Tomsk, Siberia
By JOSEPH FITSANAKIS* | intelNews.org |
For over a fortnight, the world’s news services have focused on the so-called ‘Climategate’, the hundreds of University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit emails that were hacked from the university’s server and leaked onto the Internet. The stolen emails, some of which date back to 1996, have reignited conspiracy theories about the role of human activity in climate change. But there is surprisingly little discussion about who hacked into the university’s server and stole the personal emails.
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Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference, CIA Center on Climate Change, climate change, climategate, closed cities, computer hacking, Copenhagen (Denmark), cyberespionage, cybersecurity, Denmark, energy resources, FSB, Joseph Fitsanakis, Novosibirsk, Pyaty Pochtovy, Russia, Seversk, Siberia, Tomcity, Tomline, Tomsk, Tomsk Oblast, Tomsk State University, Tomsk-7, UK, United Nations, University of East Anglia (UK), University of East Anglia Climatic Reseach Unit (UK)