list people with homes in Palestinian towns
so that will be _next weeks_ addresses then.
Hacktivists claim to have published leaked data on more than 30,000 Israeli officials, including members of Israel's Mossad secret service agency. The boast by members of Anonymous follows a denial of service attack against the Mossad website (www.mossad.gov.il) over the weekend as part of the ongoing #OpIsrael protest. …
...the Israelis aren't amateurs; they wouldn't put classified material like that on a system connected to the internet; it's most likely stored on a system isolated from the web, if it's even held on computer at all, rather than a tall filing cabinet holding a shitload of index cards (Noclist that, you hapless twerps!). That much is pure common sense, and ever so obvious.
As to "but the claims that they hacked the Mossad site and got a list of Mossad agents is most likely psychological warfare": Bullshit. It's not PsyOps. It's attempts by spotty-faced armchair warriors at bragging. Calling it PsyOps is plainly and simply wrong. PsyOps suggests a team of trick cyclists - ahem, excuse me, Psychiatrists - mapping out how to mentally destabilise an enemy military force in the run up to an invasion. Genuine national military services spend Lord knows how much money on such psychobabble stuff. A small group of spotty-faced teenagers wearing Guy Fawkes masks is not even close to having such resources.
Really, it grips my shit when some excuser comes along and tries to legitimise a bunch of armchair wankers who can't even shave yet.
Flames, because, well, obvious, innit >:-(
Wot 'e said above.
Even the most amateurish security service would not keep a list of agents with addresses and contact details even close to an online source. They also do not keep info on large numbers of agents in a list of all or many of them otherwise you are looking at a blow one blow them all situation, even the boss would not know all of their assets. MI5 might have gone that route in the fifties when half of the staff were Russian agents anyway but unlikely nowadays.
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I don't know.
I would say it does indeed count, its god awful but it counts. Its not very effective as it isn't really anything but a list of what is most likely publicly available information from some poorly secured Israeli CRM or sales database, but it does count. They're playing toward a Palestinian audience which is probably the most paranoid and prone to belief in conspiracy theories of the many various groups with an axe to grind in the middle east. Its not exactly surprising they're like that either given their circumstances.
Its very amateurish, but its still a psychological operation as defined as "induction or reinforcement of foreign attitudes and behavior favorable to U.S. national insert name of nation, group or organization here's objectives." (paraphrased from US Army FM 3.05-30). You're thinking way too narrowly about one aspect of the subject. To anyone who isn't pro-Palestinian, this isn't very credible, whereas I'm sure at least some of the papers in the West Bank, Gaza, Egypt, Lebanon, Syria and Jordan are treating this as more fact than fiction already.
I think Gary Mcinnon might disagree about secret info stored on net facing computers.
but what does he know about it?
A senior military officer at the Pentagon;
"This was not some harmless incident. He did very serious and deliberate damage to military and Nasa computers and left silly and anti-America messages. All the evidence was that someone was staging a very serious attack on US computer systems"
oh yes, quite a bit as it goes.
There is a world of difference to what the USG describe as 'secret' when prosecuting people and an unencrypted list of sources, complete with their real names and addresses.
The idea that such a file would exist in a single compiled, uncompartmentalised form, complete with real names and addresses *on a web server* is laughable.
Kids bragging and talking shite is what this is.
It seems like fun and games until your mobile phone blows up, I'm sure...
@Naughtlyhorse - I've seen it said a few times, from moderately reliable sources (which I would classify either side as) that McInnon deliberately carried out recursive file deletes on Windows and UNIX servers.
However, McInnon's side claim he just tried blank passwords, which is simply not credible as the chances of UNIX and Windows systems belonging to Air Force and NASA (ie: at least four different server builds) all having blank passwords is vanishingly unlikely.
I've also worked with several people who have Asberger's and they all knew the difference between legal and illegal/right and wrong. These were people who had sufficiently severe Asbergers that it was diagnosed before they were in their 40s. They are also of the generation where it wasn't picked up at school.
It always amuses me the way everyone thinks Mossa'ad are awesome... except anyone who actually works in the intelligence business. I guess it's similar to the way CEOs think Accenture and Crapita are great, in the face of all evidence and sane reasoning.
I doubt if they got any actual operatives. Nobody's that stupid. Pretty stupid, yes, but not that stupid.
It always amuses me the way everyone thinks Mossa'ad are awesome... except anyone who actually works in the intelligence business
Hmm. Their main advantage is that they are not terribly encumbered by red tape, and as a consequence rather agile. Put another way, if Wikileaks had ever leaked real internal Mossad documents there would not be a large use of visitor Ferrero Rochers at the Ecuadorian embassy right now..
I can second and triple that. Based on data I got into my fingers and which should never have been disclosed to me. Not by hacking, but by good-old theft by persons who were trusted by the owners to keep them secure.
Only data generated using typewriters will be secure, until they invent something which could be called a concealable mini-camera.
Computers, muhahahahaha. Every second sysadmin dick will pilfer your computer with his USB dongle if you let him close to your machine.
Embassies using freelance sysadmins...you connect the spots of dirt.
Typewriter data was obtained by swapping the ribbon. Especially the electric golfball machines were prone to that, if I recall correctly they used a one-time ribbon for character quality. Very helpful.
Anyone who only has one layer of defence (technology only) should not be in that business, or has been set up to deliberately leak information.
>#OpIsrael is building up to a planned attack on 7 April that aims at "erasing Israel from the internet" in protest >against its treatment of the Palestinian people.
.. that they'll also be erasing Thailand (because of their treatment of the Tamils), erasing China because of their treatment of Tibet, erase Russia because of their treatment of Jews, erase the Uk because of their treatment of whole civilisations during the Empire period, erase the US because of their treatment of minorities like American Indians, blacks, Asians..
Well, you get the idea. Nowt to stupid as blind prejudice from whichever side. That does include the Israelis as well as the Palestinians.
There's a rumor that there is a sign in the CIA gift shop at Langley HQ warning NOC agents not to purchase items with their credit cards.
That they would even have to remind agents indicates they are employing those that aren't the brightest bulbs in the marquee.
even if they did get that information, it is really irresponsible of them to publish it. That makes them targets. if they are folks in the west bank and gaza, they could be informants that help with locating rocket sites.
Or maybe they are just people they are watching.
They will likely be dragged down the street before they can even get to explain. Really a dumb move that may endanger many countless lives.
- Paris, because even she knows innocent people could die from this.