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Shifting Fire
Shifting Fire: Information Effects in Counterinsurgency and Stability Operations

A report by the Cambridge Security Programme, The SecDev Group and the Information in Warfare Group, Centre for Strategic Leadership, US Army War College. Download from The US Army War College

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CitizenLab NewsFeed
· Gaza conflict mirrored online
· Internet censorship and the revolt of the masses
·  Thais block 'anti-royal' websites
·  UK's database plan condemned by Europe
· India Sleepwalks To Total Surveillance

OpenNet NewsFeed

Breaching Trust: An analysis of surveillance and security practices on China’s TOM-Skype platform

Our investigation reveals troubling security and privacy breaches affecting TOM-Skype—the Chinese version of the popular voice and text chat software Skype. It also raises troubling questions regarding how these practices are related to the Government of China’s censorship and surveillance policies.

The questionable security practices of TOM-Online led to the disclosure of millions of records containing personal information regarding mobile phone accounts, SMS messages, and the usage of TOM-Skype. However, this disclosure also confirms that TOM-Skype is censoring and logging text chat messages that contain specific, sensitive keywords and may be engaged in more targeted surveillance.

These findings raise key questions. To what extent do TOM Online and Skype cooperate with the Chinese government in monitoring the communications of activists and dissidents as well as ordinary citizens? On what legal basis is TOM-Skype capturing and logging this volume and detail of personal user data and communication, and who has access to it?

 

Russia-Georgia Cyberwar

Update: 15 August

The engagement is entering a new phase where events in cyberspace are less likely to affect the military and diplomatic endgame. As the conflict on the ground moves to a diplomatic phase the debate among experts continues: were the attacks in cyberspace part of deliberately planned campaign, or did they happen spontaneously, inspired by events?

The cyber aspects of the Russian Georgian conflict may not look like any existing doctrine of information operations or psychological warfare, but they have proven effective at achieving similar outcomes. In this respect, the Georgian-Russian cyberwar may go down as "the $40 dollar a day solution" to computer network-based psychological warfare.

Meanwhile, in cyberspace the engagement continues to expand in scope. Commercial-grade denial of service attacks against Georgian sites have been joined by a new wave of attacks prompted by Russian on-line patriots. Web 2.0 sites are now affected as well as several Ukrainian media sites running stories critical of pro-Russian activities in cyberspace.

Stories the IWM are following include:

Georgian filtering of Russian media sites explained. Inaccurate and inflammatory reports by Russian media sites are apparently behind the decision by major Georgian ISPs to implement limited Internet filtering. The limited filtering of Russian media sites appears to be part of the government's declared state of emergency. At least two Georgian ISPs have implemented limited filtering this week as a "defensive measure" aimed at protecting the population and reducing the potential for panic during a time of national crisis. One of the two ISPs, the Georgian Research and Academic Network (GRENA), connects many of the country's schools. [The IWM's sister project, the OpenNet Initiative continues to monitor the situation.]

Script kiddies and on-line partisans join the campaign against Georgian websites. The Russian "patriotic" hacker site stopgeorgia.ru , for example, provides anyone connected to the Internet with the opportunity to launch denial of service attacks against Georgian websites.

Georgian government websites remain under attack. The website of the President of Georgia remains under heavy denial of service despite being moved to a service provider in the United States.

The information War goes Web 2.0. Global Voices reports that Information attacks have spread to ICQ and social network sites that are being targeted with pro-russian messages.

[Updated] Active route hijacking by Russian hackers, redirecting traffic to Russian telecom operators. If confirmed it would suggest that Russia ISPs are capable of enforcing an information blockage against a “cyber-locked” Georgia. This now appears implausible, IWM has been unable to verify the evidence provided

[Updated] Employment of “military” bot-net to attack critical Georgian government websites and routers. IWM can confirm that commercial bot-nets linked to known “black net” providers (possibly, Russian Business Network) are responsible for the most serous attacks against Georgian government websites that occurred after 8 August.

[Updated] Attacks on Russian media sites. Several leading Russian media sites, including Izvestia and RAI Novosti, were inaccessible on 11 August due to massive denial of service attacks. These attacks continue, and IWM is working with its partners to confirm the probable source and whether they conform to any known bot-net profile

[Updated] Attacks against regional new portals continue. In addition to the previously reported attacks against the Azeri news sites, Day.Az and ANS.Az, several Ukrainian websites (delo.ua and vosvoboda.info) have now been affected by denial of service attacks allegedly by pro-Russian hackers

[updated]Cyber-sniping -Targeting of cell phones in Ossetia. Georgian forces allegedly used EW to strike at targets using cell/sat phones in Ossetia causing casualties among journalists and reporters. Several additional reports are now carrying the same story.

IWM is working on a chronology of the cyberwar, and our technical tests are ongoing . A bulletin and report is forthcoming – so stay tuned!

IWM welcomes guest editorials on these questions or others related to the conflict. Please send your requests to boris at secdev.ca.

Media contacts – please send request to: media-cyberwar at secdev.com


IDF hacks Al Aqsa TV
SecuObs.com: . . . and one other interesting bit of news from yahoo "Palestinians said the Israeli military broke into broadcasts on the Hamas TV channel, Al Aqsa, appealing to Palestinians not to agree to serve as human shields for the militants. The message read, "Israel is acting only against Hamas and has no interest in harming you."


Posted by: gregw on Monday, January 05, 2009 - 05:46 PM
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SANS ISC: Gaza<->Israel Defacements/Hacks
by Rick Wanner (Version: 1): Emails have been trickling into the ISC with information about the ongoing Cyberwar accompanying the Israel and Gaza conflict. Predictibly it started off with defacements, and denial of service attacks, and has escalated to hacks. Information received today indicates that the Cyberwar has extended beyond the Israeli servers that were predominantly the targets of the initial attacks to include websites and servers in Iran as well as high profile Western targets.


Posted by: gregw on Monday, January 05, 2009 - 05:43 PM
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With Gaza conflict, cyberattacks come too
Pro-Palestinian hackers have defaced thousands of sites following attacks in Gaza.

Robert McMillan (IDG News Service) 05/01/2009 08:03:00


Posted by: gregw on Monday, January 05, 2009 - 05:40 PM
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Hackers wage virtual war on Israeli sites
DUABI (AlArabiya.net): As Israel pounded Gaza with live ammunition for the second straight week, hackers waged their own war online, infiltrating Israeli sites and posting videos, photos, and slogans that condemned the aggression.



Posted by: gregw on Monday, January 05, 2009 - 05:37 PM
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Al Jazeera's Ushahidi map of Gaza
Al Jazeera's lab has set up a Ushahidi (which means “testimony” in Swahili) map to monitor the conflict in Gaza. No category for mapping cyberattacks onto the physical contours of the conflict, as yet.


Posted by: gregw on Monday, January 05, 2009 - 11:43 AM
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Gaza: secondary war being fought on the internet
David Byers: As fighting rages in the Gaza Strip an unprecedented 'virtual war' is being joined in cyberspace.


Posted by: gregw on Friday, January 02, 2009 - 09:05 AM
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Israeli domain registration server hacked
Gaza offensive prompts Islamic group Team Evil to 'hijack' Israeli domain names by hacking into registration server, rerouting users of Ynetnews, Bank Discount to hostile webpage. Original sites were not hacked

Niv Lillian
Published: 01.02.09, 14:47 / Israel News


Posted by: gregw on Friday, January 02, 2009 - 09:02 AM
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Hackers Declare Cyber Propaganda War in Gaza Conflict
Newswise — This past weekend more than 300 Israeli Web sites were defaced in a period of 48 hours, said Gary Warner, Director of Research in Computer Forensics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).


Posted by: gregw on Wednesday, December 31, 2008 - 09:17 AM
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Sri Lanka's Information War
: by Brian Calvert, World Politics Review: "..The information war, fought through images and language, is over narrative. The Tamil Tigers want to be seen as liberators; the government wants to paint them as terrorists. In this struggle, over the past few years, the government has gained the upper hand...The government is battling an image of the Tigers as underdogs, led by a leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran, whose message has not changed in 25 years: The Tamil people face eradication by the Sinhalese majority. There is no salvation for them but through armed struggle for Eelam. The Tamil Tigers are that struggle..."First thing," he said, "they are not commandos; they are terrorists."..Not surprisingly, the information war that has emerged from Sri Lanka's 20-year insurgency teaches us as much about the importance of narrative in counterinsurgency as it does about the conflict itself..."


Posted by: gregw on Wednesday, December 31, 2008 - 09:06 AM
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Lockheed, Boeing Take Aim at $11 Billion Cybersecurity Market
Gopal Ratnam Dec. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Lockheed Martin Corp. and Boeing Co., the world’s biggest defense companies, are deploying forces and resources to a new battlefield: cyberspace.


Posted by: gregw on Tuesday, December 30, 2008 - 09:30 AM
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Cyber Espionage Targets Sensitive Data
Kevin G. Coleman: Cyber espionage is a relatively new type of intelligence gathering capability with various strategies, tactics and tools. Cyber espionage is defined as the intentional use of computers or digital communications activities in an effort to gain access to sensitive information about an adversary or competitor for the purpose of gaining an advantage or selling the sensitive information for monetary reward. This widely accepted definition was originally crafted by Spy-Ops in their cyber warfare analysis program back in 2004.


Posted by: gregw on Tuesday, December 30, 2008 - 09:28 AM
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Building Cyber Security Leadership in the Obama Administration
James Jay Carafano and Eric Sayers: The issue of cyber security, cyber competitiveness, and cyber warfare has weighed heavily on the minds of policymakers as the severity and complexity of malicious cyber attacks have intensified over the past decade. These attacks, directed against both the public and private sectors, are the product of a heterogeneous network of state and non-state actors whose actions are motivated by a host of factors. Helping to ensure that the federal government achieves a high level of competency on cyber security issues is an imperative for the next Congress.


Posted by: gregw on Monday, December 29, 2008 - 09:57 AM
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How China’s Internet Police Control Speech on the Internet
RFA Special Commentator: Xiao Qiang

China’s Internet police warn netizens not to spread “harmful information,” expert says.

China’s police authorities spent the three years between 2003 and 2006 completing the massive “Golden Shield Project.” Not only did over 50 percent of China’s policing agencies get on the Internet, there is also an agency called the Public Information Network Security and Monitoring Bureau, which boasts a huge number of technologically advanced and well-equipped network police. These are all the direct products of the Golden Shield Project.


Posted by: gregw on Thursday, December 25, 2008 - 07:25 AM
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China about to complete its online 'Golden Shield' monitoring project
China is about to complete its "Golden Shield" project monitoring the movements, phone conversations and online activities on the whole of its territory, the Chinese-language Liberty Times said in yesterday's edition.


Posted by: gregw on Thursday, December 25, 2008 - 07:23 AM
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Obama administration to form new cyber war doctrine
John Stokes, The Spectator:

... there will have to be extensive discussions with allies and potential enemies and the Obama administration will be seeking to develop a new Cyber Treaty along the lines of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty to codify this new realm of warfare.



Posted by: gregw on Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 07:51 AM
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Bombs and Bandwidth
Bombs and Bandwidth: The Emerging Relationship Between Information Technology and Security

Includes chapters by Rafal Rohozinski and Ronald J. Deibert, and is available from Amazon.com.

Poll
Who is responsible for ordering the cyberwar against Georgia

The Russian Government (MOD/FSB)
Russian hackers working on behalf of the FSB
Russian hackers working on their own
Script Kiddies and other rabble
What cyberwar? its just a riot in cyberspace


[ Results | Polls ]


Votes: 177
Comments: 0


Past Articles
Monday, December 22
·U.S. not ready for cyber attack (0)
Wednesday, December 17
·Building Cyber Security Leadership for the 21st Century (0)
· Recent Rise in Sunni–Shi'ite Tension (Part I): Sunni – Shi'ite Hacker War on the Internet (0)
Monday, December 15
·A new report says cyberwar isn't science fiction. (0)
·Joseph Nye: Modern society faces growing cyber-terror threat (0)
 Older Articles



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