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Security Communications EU Government Privacy

Has WikiLeaks Morphed Into A Malware Hub? (backchannel.com) 125

Slashdot reader mirandakatz writes: In releasing an unredacted database of emails from the Turkish party AKP, WikiLeaks exposed the public to a collection of malware -- and even after a Bulgarian security expert pointed this out publicly, the organization only removed the select pieces of malware that he identified, leaving well over a thousand malicious files on the site.

That AKP leak also included the addresses and other personal details of millions of Turkish women, not unlike the recent DNC leak, which included the personal data of many private individuals. WikiLeaks says this is all in the name of its "accuracy policy," but the organization seems to be increasingly putting the public at risk.

The article opens with the question, "What the hell happened to WikiLeaks?" then argues that "Once an inspiring effort at transparency, WikiLeaks now seems more driven by personal grudges and reckless releases of information..."
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Has WikiLeaks Morphed Into A Malware Hub?

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  • No. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by quenda ( 644621 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @07:35AM (#52742295)

    Betteridge's law of headlines is an adage that states: "Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no." It is named after Ian Betteridge, a British technology journalist, although the principle is much older.
    Betteridge's law of headlines - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • Can any headline that ends in a question mark be answered by the word no?

      Blah Blah Blah...

    • Any sufficiently retarded headline in indistinguishable from trolling.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 21, 2016 @07:37AM (#52742305)

    Once an inspiring effort at tech news, Slashdot now seems more driven by marketing and reckless government propaganda...

    • "Once an inspiring effort at tech news, Slashdot now seems more driven by marketing and reckless government propaganda"...

      Mod this up +10
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Once an inspiring effort at tech news, Slashdot now seems more driven by marketing and reckless government propaganda...

      Domestic propaganda was re-legalized three years ago [rt.com]. That's a big part of it. The globalists know that trust in the mainstream media, which they have long controlled, is eroding, especially with the youth. Grassroots is the only way to reach a large number of people now.

      Hillary Clinton openly admits that she will take direction from the globalist, secretive Council on Foreign Relations [youtube.com]. David Rockefeller, a chairman of the board of the CFR, openly admits that a world government is the goal. [youtube.com]

      Donald Trump wan [gawker.com]

    • by Anonymous Coward

      People moved to soylentnews [soylentnews.org]?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        People moved to soylentnews [soylentnews.org]?

        Some people moved to pipedot, but not enough. Pipedot.org is okay, if a little slow at times.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Government propaganda is now legal in the US thanks to the lack of a Smith–Mundt Act https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]–Mundt_Act to ensure US government propaganda is for international use only.
      Other nations have vast teams of paid mil, gov staff, AC's and sock puppet accounts.
      British army creates team of Facebook warriors (31 Jan 2015)
      https://www.theguardian.com/uk... [theguardian.com]
    • by Maritz ( 1829006 )
      Government propaganda? LOL. Why don't people seem to feel embarrassed to talk shit any more?
  • Good grief (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 21, 2016 @07:41AM (#52742315)

    I've really been trying to avoid adding to the growing cries of "Slashdot has turned into a dirty mouthpiece for the FBI/NSA/name-your-TLA," but the stream of agenda-laden hit pieces littering up the front page doesn't seem to be slowing. -PCP

    • Re:Good grief (Score:4, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @08:17AM (#52742409) Homepage Journal

      This is the result of those (in)security services leaning on journalists and researchers who work with Wikileaks. By depriving them of the manpower to go through the leaked material and sanitize it, they have left Wikileaks with only two choices: publish or don't publish.

      And now they get to push stories like this, that deflect attention away from the content of the leaks.

  • Yes. (Score:5, Funny)

    by dohzer ( 867770 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @07:46AM (#52742329)

    Yes. Let's shut it down. And ban encryption.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    There are these security agencies that do their best to protect us all from bad things. We are lucky to have them in situations like this.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 21, 2016 @07:58AM (#52742361)

    Which personal grudge does Wikileaks represent?

    Should Wikileaks not release information given to it because it belongs to someone that it opposes?

    If Wikileaks removed malware from email then it would be editing the raw information given to it. Wikileaks's goal is to provide raw information, unlike that of mainstream journalism.

    It's not Wikileaks's role to scan email for viruses or prevent us from getting the raw data given to it.

    Wikileaks doesn't represent any political position aside from the push for the freedom of information. It doesn't choose what information is given to it and information given to it is released once verified to be authentic.

    The question you should be asking is of the people that supply and have the potential to supply information to Wikileaks, what grudges do those people have?

    If they had a grudge against you and sent information to Wikileaks, would it be Wikileaks that has the grudge or the people that send the information?

    • by DRJlaw ( 946416 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @08:26AM (#52742429)

      It's not Wikileaks's role to scan email for viruses...

      Yes, it is. See how easy that was to rebut? Now we could get into reasons why one would argue for either position so that this could actually qualify as a discussion rather than a diatribe. Some reasons for it being Wikileak's role: distributing information that actively attacks the recipient, like a smallpox-ridden blanket, and without even warning the recipient of that fact, is counterproductive and morally dishonest. Damaging your audience under the banner of "raw information" while failing to openly disclose one of the more significant aspects of the information... really?

      Wikileaks's goal is to provide raw information, unlike that of mainstream journalism.

      Well that's a bit of revisionist history [vanityfair.com], isn't it? I mean, first they redacted information, then they stopped. Yet they still redact source information, because, otherwise, you might be able to determine a source, and that would be bad for Wikileaks.

      Wikileak's stated goals vary depending upon the side of Assange's very tiny bed that he woke up on that morning. However, their actions most assuredly represents the personal grudges of Assange himself. Wikileaks does not provide raw information, it provides information curated by Assange for Assange's personal purposes, and you'd do well to remember that.

      • by davmoo ( 63521 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @09:15AM (#52742553)

        Good does come out of Wikileaks. But Assange's primary purpose is to make Assange feel important and keep him in the news.

        • Good does come out of Wikileaks. But Assange's primary purpose is to make Assange feel important and keep him in the news.

          Is that something we care about?

          You could say that about anyone doing good or trying to change the world. Hell, you could say that about Jesus.

          The implication is that "he's not all that great", when in fact he's changed the political landscape a little, and for the better.

          Yeah, right. He's not all that great, let's pick any complicated edifice anywhere and consider it from any one of myriad points of view and we'll come up with at least one thing that paints it in a negative light.

          You weigh the good with th

      • It is of concern to know who received what malware. Is it generic spam or meme forwarding, or targeted social engineering against particular officials?

        Still, they could remove links and replace it with a pointer to a malware db they create, for anyone so interested.

      • by neilo_1701D ( 2765337 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @09:29AM (#52742585)

        It's not Wikileaks's role to scan email for viruses...

        Yes, it is. See how easy that was to rebut?

        That's not a rebuttal; that's taking an opposing position with no argument (or evidence) to back up your position.

        A rebuttal might look like:

        It may not be the job of WikiLeaks to scan emails for malware, but it can be argued that it should be. Their goal is to release information into the hands of people who can do something with it. Those people are mostly journalists with limited computer security knowledge, compared to, say, most of us here on Slashdot, and it is in the best interests of WikiLeaks to ensure that we can trust the information coming from them.

        Although Wikileaks tries to release information as raw as possible, they do have a legitimate reason to alter it; namely the protection of sources and protection of people not directly targeted by the leak. Since they are already altering the information to protect sources, it is surely no great ethical stretch to protect recipients as well.

        See? No only did I rebut his position, I acknowledged his arguments and demonstrated that they actually supported my case better than his case.

      • They also effectively redact (or more properly edit) by not releasing things at all.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 21, 2016 @07:58AM (#52742363)

    I really don't care.

    Wikileaks is the only place around that still fights against corporations and governments. No one else does, and its always going to be lined up and screwed with to try and stop this from happening.

  • by Chas ( 5144 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @08:04AM (#52742387) Homepage Journal

    Basically Wikileaks has nobody there who is competent enough to actually implement a security framework for the site.

    So, as a result, it basically becomes a dumping ground for all this crap.

    Thus, when examples are pointed out to them, all they can do is nix the examples.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I don't suppose you've considered the possibility that there's real value in being able to review an unredacted email database from the perspective of "given the malware specimens noted in these archives, here's a possible list of other parties who may have already had access to this data weeks/months/years ago." -PCP

    • by Slayer ( 6656 )

      Basically Wikileaks has nobody there who is competent enough to actually implement a security framework for the site.

      So, as a result, it basically becomes a dumping ground for all this crap.

      Thus, when examples are pointed out to them, all they can do is nix the examples.

      Wikileaks has withstood countless efforts to get their site offline, sometime by dedicated groups and/or state sponsored actors. You may remember how all hell broke loose with cablegate, including DDOS [arbornetworks.com] and Senator Lieberman's call to Amazon [techdirt.com]. Calling Wikileaks incompetent at security is completely ridiculous.

      I bet that the whole thing went down like this: author of this backchannel article wanted to rag on Wikileaks for their dissemination of personal details, and wanted to bring up email #117 [cloudfront.net] as prime examp

    • Basically Wikileaks has nobody there who is competent enough to actually implement a security framework for the site.

      Quick question: When you say that there is no security framework on the wikileaks site, what are you referring to?

  • by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @08:16AM (#52742403)

    "Once an inspiring effort at transparency, WikiLeaks now seems more driven by personal grudges and reckless releases of information..."

    Wikileaks was always about embarrassing people.

    • You can't publish what hasn't been leaked. And what's a better motivation for a hacker than a personal grudge?

  • AKP is awfully close to APK.

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @08:28AM (#52742437) Journal

    When they leak shit about people you don't like: "...an inspiring effort at transparency..."

    When they leak shit about people you support: "...driven by personal grudges and reckless releases of information..."

    • They're equally hated by everyone, which means they are obviously on the right track and doing something good.

  • So easy to corrupt (Score:3, Insightful)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Sunday August 21, 2016 @09:18AM (#52742561) Journal

    It's been a long while since Wikileaks was a scruffy little band of freedom fighters. Unfortunately, they've become an outfit used by oligarchs, intelligence services and dictators to settle scores, gain advantage and destroy enemies. And this happened partially because Julian Assange understandably developed something of a martyrdom complex while he was hiding from rape charges and allowed his self-regard to run out of control and is now easily manipulated. It's all pretty predictable if you look at the dramatic arc of the story.

    Wikileaks changed the world, and changed along with it, trivializing their mission and becoming what they were trying to defeat. They've been co-opted and are now they're a joke that posts online polls of the US presidential race. They've become Breitbart. They've become Gawker without the accountability. They're just another organization of online trolls.

    https://twitter.com/wikileaks/... [twitter.com]

  • Please tell me which kind of general public will download and open any kind of leaked information from Wikileaks, and then I'll worry.

    On second thoughts, if that happened, it would mean that the public had started going to the source of the news to build their own opinions. So a couple of viruses would be a small price to pay for such a positive development.

  • Come on guys - Wikileaks seems to have morphed into just another media outlet for Putin and his cronies. Are you guys so blind to not understand that everybody seems only to blame America and it's allies for all the bad in the world? This is no longer political hacktivism - Wikileaks actively supports the agenda of foreign governments. This is supposed to make the world a better place? Thanks - but no thanks.
  • The best thing about wikileaks is that normal people don't read it. Normal people read news headlines, from generic news sources, which eventually have resources to filter out the REAL news from leak websites. I expect those to do some sort of filtering. Now why you have to go and blame wikileaks from something they state, from the very start, they want to do on purpose... Snowden is definitely a good example of a guy who wanted stuff outted cleanlu, filtered out and redacted where it effectively didn't hel
  • By reading the information about turkish women, para medics had thought I had slipped into a coma. I'm cured!
  • Turkey? Look no further than the DNC for anyone trying to destroy Wikileaks reputation. Julian Assange basically just took a big dump on Hillary Clinton's front door and set it on fire. Suddenly Wikileaks suddenly becomes a malware hub right afterward. What a strange coincidence.

  • The article opens with the question, "What the hell happened to WikiLeaks?" then argues that "Once an inspiring effort at transparency, WikiLeaks now seems more driven by personal grudges and reckless releases of information..."

    So, you're saying they turned into Anonymous?

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