the_syco wrote: » My cynical view is that since Russia gives Snowden protection, it'll only be Western democracy secrets which get released.
Irish Praetorian wrote: » I can't really knock a hacktivist organisation releasing what it believes to be files in the public interest, but it would nice if every so often the target wasn't a Western democracy
ScumLord wrote: » I saw the video were they hacked a car and took over the ability to control the brakes along with other less important things. They ripped apart the car to do it, it wasn't the case they could just link up to it wirelessly and take control of the car, they had to bypass physical controls and make a way of accessing it. It wasn't that simple. I doubt there's anyway to make a wireless connection to the ECU of a car without adding hardware for instance.
Dravokivich wrote: » Hobbyists have been able to hack cars and control them remotely. No need for a conspiracy in regards to it. Car manufacturers came into this kind of tech late and have been caught out by it.
Deleted User wrote: » I look forward to their release of all the files on Britain's dirty war in the Six Counties, and Dublin, and Monaghan.... I especially look forward to reading the names of all journalists in Independent Newspapers who have been in the pay of British Intelligence since 1969. What a glorious, glorious day that would be.
skankkuvhima wrote: » Fuck that's nasty. If it wasn't for wikileaks people would say all of this is the talk of conspiracy nuts.
RobertKK wrote: » ...With smart TVs maybe less so, but one would have had to suspect it.
Irish Praetorian wrote: » I can't really knock a hacktivist organisation releasing what it believes to be files in the public interest, but it would nice if every so often the target wasn't a Western democracy. I mean the laser focus on Hillary Clinton during the election didn't exactly work out so well.
BorneTobyWilde wrote: » How is that even legal? It's an admission of guilty, people have a right to privacy.
jimgoose wrote: » Yes, the NSA are quite open about this. The thinking is something along the lines of Predictive Failure:https://nsa.gov1.info/data/ The cellular location tracking subsystem alone collects five billion datapoints daily and feeds into a 27 TB datastore. The last information I saw was that in total the NSA looks at 1.6% of Internet traffic, or 27 PB.
ceadaoin. wrote: » There has been a theory for years that the death of a journalist was caused by his car being hacked causing it to crash. Confirmed?https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Hastings_(journalist)
Hank Scorpio wrote: » Wrong.https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/03/everyone-is-under-surveillance-now-says-whistleblower-edward-snowden
Hank Scorpio wrote: » Down the rabbit hole we go
BorneTobyWilde wrote: » Impossible to spy on everyone, too much data. What they are going are spying on people they choose to spy on. That's not me, or you .
Hank Scorpio wrote: » It is not new that the CIA hacking tools have been floating around publicly? That's the whole premise of the release. Snowden's stuff focused mostly on information gathering, this release focuses on the actual tools used.
Gatling wrote: » None of this is actually new ,the Samsung TVs has been public knowledge for a few years Samsung was recording videos from the smart TVs that came with built in webcams ,the same for phones , Privacy stopped existing years ago sad but true
Hank Scorpio wrote: » One of the most troubling aspects to this is you were running for public office, the CIA would have essentially a life time supply of info and have you by the balls.