K.S. Rajan (6
March 2012)
"STRATFOR"
My apologies for not posting in time this extremely interesting
article about the information leakage at STRAFOR.
From last Monday's FT, FYI,
David
February 27, 2012 2:19 pm
WikiLeaks releases 5m intelligence emails
By Maija Palmer, technology correspondent
WikiLeaks, the whistleblowing website, has started publishing
more than 5m emails it claims to have obtained from a US
political risk consultancy that has been described as the
“shadow CIA”.
The emails could expose sources and intelligence gathered by
Texas-based Stratfor, whose clients include a number of large
corporations including BT, BAE Systems, Apple, Microsoft,
Coca-Cola and Google.
Stratfor’s computer systems were attacked just before Christmas
by members of Anonymous, the loose-knit group of politically
motivated hackers. The attack exposed credit card numbers and
personal data. Members of Anonymous also claimed they had emails
from about 100 employees, which they would publish.
Stratfor confirmed that a number of emails had been stolen in
the December attack and described the action as “a deplorable,
unfortunate – and illegal – breach of privacy”.
“Some of the emails may be forged or altered to include
inaccuracies; some may be authentic. We will not validate
either. Nor will we explain the thinking that went into them.
Having had our property stolen, we will not be victimised twice
by submitting to questioning about them,” said the company.
“This is another attempt to silence and intimidate the company,
and one we reject.”
The first 200 emails, released on Monday, appeared to shed light
on the internal workings of Stratfor, including a complex
network of informants and covert payments. Stratfor’s biggest
customers were oil companies and government agencies, according
to documents published by WikiLeaks.
The emails also showed that Stratfor, which describes itself as
a company providing geopolitical analysis, had been hired to
provide information on activists and campaigners. The company
appeared to have been hired by Dow Chemical to provide
information on campaigners related to the Bhopal accident and by
Coca-Cola to get details of PETA activists around the time of
the Vancouver Olympics.
WikiLeaks said it also had found more than 4,000 emails
mentioning Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder.
“The material contains privileged information about the US
government’s attacks against Julian Assange and WikiLeaks and
Stratfor’s own attempts to subvert WikiLeaks,” wrote the
WikiLeaks website.
The Financial Times has not been able to independently verify
the authenticity of the emails.
Australian-born Mr Assange is under house arrest in the UK as he
appeals against an extradition order to Sweden, where he is
accused of sexual crimes.
Since the release of 251,000 US diplomatic cables in late 2010,
WikiLeaks has been embroiled in clashes with financial services
firms and politicians. Payment firms including MasterCard, Visa
and PayPal in December stopped processing donations to
WikiLeaks, which has become a problem for the site’s financing.
WikiLeaks said it was working with two dozen media organisations
worldwide, including L’Espresso and La Repubblica newspapers in
Italy, Rolling Stone and Russia Reporter, to analyse and publish
the new emails.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2012.