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Irreplaceable-Spark

@irreplaceable-spark / irreplaceable-spark.tumblr.com

"I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine."
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Spies, Lies, And Algorithms: A Conversation With Amy Zegart And Condoleezza Rice

Please join us for a conversation with Amy Zegart as part of her tour with her new book Spies, Lies, and Algorithms: The History and Future of American Intelligence. The conversation will be moderated by Director Condoleezza Rice with an introduction by Michael McFaul. 
“Today we face a critical juncture for American spy agencies, as big as 9/11 — only most people don’t know it,” says Amy B. Zegart, one of the country’s leading experts on intelligence and a professor at Stanford University. “New dangers come from tech, not terrorists. Emerging technologies like AI and social media are weakening the strong and empowering the weak, fundamentally changing dynamics of international conflict. To be blunt: The U.S. is losing its intelligence advantage.” 
To help us better understand these looming threats, Zegart has written Spies, Lies, and Algorithms: The History and Future of American Intelligence (Princeton University Press; February 1, 2022). It’s the first comprehensive book on the past, present, and future of American intelligence—and outlines what’s urgently needed to protect our nation today. The book draws on over thirty years of research (including new research just for this book) and hundreds of interviews with current and former intelligence officials. 
Weak intelligence makes us more vulnerable to attacks on our power grids, water supply, elections, corporate network servers, and nuclear weapons. Helping the American public better understand these evolving threats is crucial.
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Once AGAIN, Obama is being accused of lying, and putting his own political ideology ahead of the nation’s security. Not surprisingly, the whistleblower who appeared on Fox News was a former CIA Agent that served under the Obama administration. Special Agent Joshua Catch says the president is lying out of his *** [emphasis added by me] when he stood before the American people, and said the government was caught completely by surprise when the “JV Team,” otherwise known as ISIS, had gained significantly in both strength and numbers, and were about to overtake parts of Iraq again. The TRUTH, is Obama knew all along, but he didn’t care. What follows, are FOUR examples of President Obama’s lies.

Key phrase “knew but didn’t care.”

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Gutfeld: Who still admires Wikileaks?

So who still admires this stuff? The same people who booed the hacking of Sony or their starlets? It’s that old hypocrisy, the Hollywood left thinks subversion is cool, unless of course their the target. Meanwhile, the media also loves this. Such treasonous appreciation comes from an idiotic view of national –that the CIA is the real evil and that America has no right to protect itself from those who wish to destroy it. “Cause after all, we are evil. With that mentality, the end justifies the means. Why not expose a man’s most private information? But making the CIA vulnerable puts all of us at risk. 

Perhaps it’s time now to redefine what an enemy combatant is in the cyber age. Because wikileaks doesn’t so this to corrupt countries or jihadists, it’s as if their waging cyber warfare only on us. How odd that those who claim to champion rights to privacy now cheer those who assault it. Perhaps it’s time to hack the hackers and the hacker’s backers. How do we do that? 

Our leaders in journalism must admit that cyber attacks are indeed attacks, and not expressions in freedom. The attack on Brennan was an attack on us. And it wasn’t China who did it, but the heroes of modern media. 

May their social security numbers run wild.

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matthewaid

U.S. Has Pulled Intelligence Officers Out of China Following OPM Data Breach

September 30, 20154

CIA pulled officers from Beijing after breach of federal personnel records

Ellen Nakashima and Adam Goldman

Washington Post

September 30, 2015

The CIA pulled a number of officers from the U.S. Embassy in Beijing as a precautionary measure in the wake of the massive cybertheft of the personal data of federal employees, current and former U.S. officials said.

The move is a concrete impact of the breach, one of two major hacks into Office of Personnel Management computers that were disclosed earlier this year. Officials have privately attributed the hacks to the Chinese government.

The theft of documents has been characterized by senior U.S. officials as political espionage intended to identify spies and people who might be recruited as spies or blackmailed to provide useful information.

Because the OPM records contained the background checks of State Department employees, officials privately said the Chinese could have compared those records with the list of embassy personnel. Anybody not on that list could be a CIA officer.

The CIA’s move was meant to safeguard officers whose agency affiliation might be discovered as a result of the hack, said officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter.

The CIA declined to comment.

The disclosure comes as senior defense and intelligence officials on Tuesday tried — not always successfully — to explain to a committee of frustrated lawmakers their policy on deterring foreign governments, such as China, from carrying out cyber-intrusions.

Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr., testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, sought to make a distinction between the OPM hacks and cybertheft of U.S. companies’ secrets to benefit another country’s industry. What happened in OPM case, “as egregious as it was,” Clapper said, was not an attack: “Rather, it would be a form of theft or espionage.”

And, he said, “We, too, practice cyberespionage and . . . we’re not bad at it.” He suggested that the United States would not be wise to seek to punish another country for something its own intelligence services do. “I think it’s a good idea to at least think about the old saw about people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw rocks.”

That drew a sharp response from Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the committee’s chairman. “So it’s okay for them to steal our secrets that are most important because we live in a glass house? That is astounding.”

Clapper protested that he did not say it was a good thing. “I’m just saying that both nations engage in this,” he said, referring to China and the United States.

Several lawmakers were not satisfied with the lack of a punishment for the OPM theft, despite Clapper’s explanation.

“This is a pretty significant issue that is going to impact millions of Americans,” said Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.). “But it seems to me they are not seeing a response right now from us, and therefore we’re going to continue to see bad behavior from the Chinese.”

At another point in the hearing, Deputy Defense Secretary Robert O. Work seemed to stray off-message when he asked what response he would recommend if the Chinese were to carry off another OPM-like cybertheft.

“Sanctions? Retaliation?” asked Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska).

“Could be any of those, Senator. Maybe all of the above,” Work responded.

In fact, largely because of the concerns that Clapper outlined, it is unlikely that the administration would impose sanctions or retaliate overtly for the OPM intrusions.

During the Cold War, Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) noted, a foreign agent who was nabbed trying to steal U.S. secrets would be kicked out of the country if he or she had diplomatic cover or thrown in jail otherwise.

In the OPM breach, he said, “the U.S. government seems uncertain about what a proportioned response would look like.”

The counterintelligence risks of the OPM breach are significant, Clapper said. He noted that the intelligence agencies do not know specifically whose records were taken. But the scale of the compromise — more than 22 million individuals’ records breached — “has very serious implications . . . from the standpoint of the intelligence community and the potential for identifying people” who may be undercover.

“Unfortunately,” he said, “this is a gift that’s going to keep on giving for years.”

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