Latest WikiLeaks release shows how the CIA 'disguise its hacking attacks as Russian or Chinese activity'
Latest WikiLeaks release shows how the CIA uses computer
code to hide the origins of its hacking attacks and 'disguise them as Russian
or Chinese activity'
WikiLeaks published 676 source code files today which it
claimed are from CIA
It says the CIA disguised its own hacking attacks to make
it appear those responsible were Russian, Chinese, Iranian or North Korean
By MAIL ONLINE REPORTER PUBLISHED: 07:02 EDT, 31 March
2017 | UPDATED: 14:17 EDT, 31 March 2017
WikiLeaks has published hundreds more files today which
it claims show the CIA went to great lengths to disguise its own hacking
attacks and point the finger at Russia, China, North Korea and Iran.
The 676 files released today are part of WikiLeaks' Vault
7 tranche of files and they claim to give an insight into the CIA's Marble
software, which can forensically disguise viruses, trojans and hacking attacks.
WikiLeaks says the source code suggests Marble has test
examples in Chinese, Russian, Korean, Arabic and Farsi (the Iranian language).
It says: 'This would permit a forensic attribution double
game, for example by pretending that the spoken language of the malware creator
was not American English, but Chinese.'
This could lead forensic investigators into wrongly
concluding that CIA hacks were carried out by the Kremlin, the Chinese government,
Iran, North Korea or Arabic-speaking terror groups such as ISIS.
WikiLeaks, whose founder Julian Assange remains holed up
in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, said Vault 7 was the most comprehensive
release of US spying files ever made public.
Earlier this month WikiLeaks published thousands of
documents claiming to reveal top CIA hacking secrets, including the agency's
ability to infiltrate encrypted apps, break into smart TVs and phones and
program self-driving cars.
It also claims the CIA can bypass the encryption of
Whatsapp, Signal, Telegram, Wiebo, Confide and Cloakman by hacking the smart
phones the applications run on.
Wikileaks dumped information claiming proof of CIA
hacking.
The CIA was also looking at hacking the vehicle control
systems used in modern cars and trucks, WikiLeaks claims.
Wikileaks said the release of confidential documents on
the agency already eclipses the total number of pages published over the first
three years of the Edward Snowden NSA leaks.
Experts who've started to sift through the material said
it appeared legitimate - and that the release was almost certain to shake the
CIA.
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