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The whistleblower website Wikileaks has published online a trove of what it claims are thousands of secret CIA files. They detail hacking tools used to evade security on phones, apps and hand held-devices for spying. The Wikileaks cache reveals what it says are tools used by the CIA for hacking, including a system of spywear that targets Samsung televisions which is alleged to have been built with help from Britain's MI5 The leak codenamed "Vault Seven" contains more than eight thousand docume… READ MORE : 🤍 What are the top stories today? Click to watch: 🤍 euronews: the most watched news channel in Europe Subscribe! 🤍 euronews is available in 13 languages: 🤍 In English: Website: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Google+: 🤍 VKontakte: 🤍
The organization claims the documents show how government spies can use cyberspace to spy on people; Benjamin Hall has the story for 'Special Report'
(7 Mar 2017) WikiLeaks published thousands of documents Tuesday described as secret files about CIA hacking tools the government employs to break into users' computers, mobile phones and even smart TVs from companies like Apple, Google, Microsoft and Samsung. The documents describe clandestine methods for bypassing or defeating encryption, antivirus tools and other protective security features intended to keep the private information of citizens and corporations safe from prying eyes. U.S. government employees, including President Donald Trump, use many of the same products and internet services purportedly compromised by the tools. The documents describe CIA efforts - cooperating with friendly foreign governments and the U.S. National Security Agency - to subvert the world's most popular technology platforms, including Apple's iPhones and iPads, Google's Android phones and the Microsoft Windows operating system for desktop computers and laptops. The documents also include discussions about compromising some internet-connected televisions to turn them into listening posts. One document discusses hacking vehicle systems, indicating the CIA's interest in hacking modern cars with sophisticated on-board computers. WikiLeaks has a long track record of releasing top secret government documents, and experts who sifted through the material said it appeared legitimate. It was not immediately clear how WikiLeaks obtained the information, and details in the documents could not immediately be verified. Find out more about AP Archive: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 You can license this story through AP Archive: 🤍
A day after WikiLeaks published documents on the CIA's tools for hacking into personal electronics, Reuters reported that intelligence officials are focused on contractors as the likeliest source of the leak. How is the CIA likely responding to the revelations? Former CIA Director Leon Panetta joins Hari Sreenivasan to discuss the consequences for counterterrorism efforts and more.
The Intercept co-founder Glenn Greenwald discusses Wikileaks recent release of CIA surveillance programs and the investigations into Russia's role in the US election with CNN's Michael Smerconish.
The CIA is saying next to nothing about a massive WikiLeaks dump of thousands of alleged highly-classified documents. But others compare it to the security breaches engineered by Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning. The secret files apparently show how the CIA can hack into common electronic devices. Jeff Pegues reports. Subscribe to the "CBS This Morning" Channel HERE: 🤍 Watch "CBS This Morning" HERE: 🤍 Watch the latest installment of "Note to Self," only on "CBS This Morning," HERE: 🤍 Follow "CBS This Morning" on Instagram HERE: 🤍 Like "CBS This Morning" on Facebook HERE: 🤍 Follow "CBS This Morning" on Twitter HERE: 🤍 Follow "CBS This Morning" on Google+ HERE: 🤍 Get the latest news and best in original reporting from CBS News delivered to your inbox. Subscribe to newsletters HERE: 🤍 Get your news on the go! Download CBS News mobile apps HERE: 🤍 Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream local news live, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! 🤍 - Delivered by Charlie Rose, Norah O’Donnell and Gayle King, "CBS This Morning" offers a thoughtful, substantive and insightful source of news and information to a daily audience of 3 million viewers. The Emmy Award-winning broadcast presents a mix of daily news, coverage of developing stories of national and global significance, and interviews with leading figures in politics, business and entertainment. Check local listings for "CBS This Morning" broadcast times.
Former CIA boss Michael Hayden has said the supposed leak of highly sensitive CIA data by Wikileaks is "incredibly damaging" and has put lives at risk. The website claims the papers give details of a wide range of hacking methods used by the American spy agency, via mobile phones and other gadgets. The CIA has refused to comment. Please subscribe HERE 🤍 World In Pictures 🤍 Big Hitters 🤍 Just Good News 🤍
Subscribe to France 24 now: 🤍 FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 🤍 The sting of the latest WikiLeaks revelations will be felt well beyond the likes of Samsung and WhatsApp. They highlight the uneasy relationship between an internet that's largely shaped in Silicon Valley and US spy agencies. Is Russia a player in the revelations? It's the first big data dump on the watch of a new president who seemed to praise WikiLeaks on the campaign trail. Will people simply shrug off this invasion of privacy as the new normal? Click here for PART TWO. Produced by Charles WENTE, François WIBAUX and Laure FOURQUET. Visit our website: 🤍 Subscribe to our YouTube channel: 🤍 Like us on Facebook: 🤍 Follow us on Twitter: 🤍
WikiLeaks says a former U.S. contractor leaked them the alleged CIA documents they published this week. CBS News justice and homeland security correspondent Jeff Pegues joins CBSN to discuss what that means for the agency. Subscribe to the "CBSN" Channel HERE: 🤍 Watch "CBSN" live HERE: 🤍 Follow "CBSN" on Instagram HERE: 🤍 Like "CBSN" on Facebook HERE: 🤍 Follow "CBSN" on Twitter HERE: 🤍 Get the latest news and best in original reporting from CBS News delivered to your inbox. Subscribe to newsletters HERE: 🤍 Get your news on the go! Download CBS News mobile apps HERE: 🤍 Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream local news live, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! 🤍 - CBSN is the first digital streaming news network that will allow Internet-connected consumers to watch live, anchored news coverage on their connected TV and other devices. At launch, the network is available 24/7 and makes all of the resources of CBS News available directly on digital platforms with live, anchored coverage 15 hours each weekday. CBSN. Always On.
Docs purportedly from CIA's Center for Cyber Intelligence; Benjamin Hall reports from London
The CIA has not confirmed the authenticity of the documents.
Morgan Wright, senior fellow at the Center for Digital Government, explains
Subscribe to France 24 now: 🤍 FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 🤍 The sting of the latest WikiLeaks revelations will be felt well beyond the likes of Samsung and WhatsApp. They highlight the uneasy relationship between an internet that's largely shaped in Silicon Valley and US spy agencies. Is Russia a player in the revelations? It's the first big data dump on the watch of a new president who seemed to praise WikiLeaks on the campaign trail. Will people simply shrug off this invasion of privacy as the new normal? Click here for PART ONE. Produced by Charles WENTE, François WIBAUX and Laure FOURQUET. Visit our website: 🤍 Subscribe to our YouTube channel: 🤍 Like us on Facebook: 🤍 Follow us on Twitter: 🤍
Edward Snowden is making explosive claims about some of the information revealed in the latest Wikileaks hack. 'Still working through the publication, but what 🤍Wikileaks has here is genuinely a big deal. Looks authentic,' wrote Snowden on Twitter Tuesday afternoon. He then added that the program and office names that were revealed in the hack are real and would only be known by an insider. That is when he explained just why this latest hack was such a big deal, writing: 'If you're writing about the CIA/ 🤍Wikileaks story, here's the big deal: first public evidence USG secretly paying to keep US software.' Original Article: 🤍 Original Video: 🤍 Daily Mail Facebook: 🤍 Daily Mail IG: 🤍 Daily Mail Snap: 🤍 Daily Mail Twitter: 🤍 Daily Mail Pinterest: 🤍 Daily Mail Google+: 🤍 Get the free Daily Mail mobile app: 🤍
The evidence points to an intelligence community insider; Catherine Herridge goes in-depth for 'Special Report'
(7 Mar 2017) WikiLeaks published thousands of documents Tuesday described as secret files about CIA hacking tools the government employs to break into users' computers, mobile phones and even smart TVs from companies like Apple, Google, Microsoft and Samsung. The documents describe clandestine methods for bypassing or defeating encryption, antivirus tools and other protective security features intended to keep the private information of citizens and corporations safe from prying eyes. U.S. government employees, including President Donald Trump, use many of the same products and internet services purportedly compromised by the tools. The documents describe CIA efforts - cooperating with friendly foreign governments and the U.S. National Security Agency - to subvert the world's most popular technology platforms, including Apple's iPhones and iPads, Google's Android phones and the Microsoft Windows operating system for desktop computers and laptops. The documents also include discussions about compromising some internet-connected televisions to turn them into listening posts. One document discusses hacking vehicle systems, indicating the CIA's interest in hacking modern cars with sophisticated on-board computers. WikiLeaks has a long track record of releasing top secret government documents, and experts who sifted through the material said it appeared legitimate. It was not immediately clear how WikiLeaks obtained the information, and details in the documents could not immediately be verified. Find out more about AP Archive: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 You can license this story through AP Archive: 🤍
Subscribe to France 24 now: 🤍 FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 🤍 The so-called 'Vault 7' data dump by WikiLeaks - the first part of which was released yesterday - alleges that the CIA built a parallel system of hacking as broadly developed as the NSA. Many tech and household appliances companies such as Samsung, Microsoft and Skype are implicated. Also, we take a look at social media content from around the world on International Women's Day, starting with Donald Trump's online footprint. Visit our website: 🤍 Subscribe to our YouTube channel: 🤍 Like us on Facebook: 🤍 Follow us on Twitter: 🤍
WikiLeaks has released thousands of documents and files dubbed Vault 7 that it says expose how the CIA is capable of hacking smartphones, computer operating systems, automobiles, messenger applications and even internet-connected televisions. Here's a look at how they could work. Photo: Adele Morgan/The Wall Street Journal Subscribe to the WSJ channel here: 🤍 More from the Wall Street Journal: Visit WSJ.com: 🤍 Follow WSJ on Facebook: 🤍 Follow WSJ on Google+: 🤍 Follow WSJ on Twitter: 🤍 Follow WSJ on Instagram: 🤍 Follow WSJ on Pinterest: 🤍 Don’t miss a WSJ video, subscribe here: 🤍 More from the Wall Street Journal: Visit WSJ.com: 🤍 Visit the WSJ Video Center: 🤍 On Facebook: 🤍 On Twitter: 🤍 On Snapchat: 🤍
More on the WikiLeaks story: 🤍 The most important tech news of the day includes WikiLeaks' massive CIA data dump, Tinder's secret service and Instagram's rollout of another Snapchat-inspired feature.
After weeks of hints, Wikileaks has posted a huge amount of documents which it says show hacking tools used by the US central intelligence agency. The CIA's told the BBC "We do not comment on the authenticity or content of purported intelligence documents". Our security correspondent Gordon Correra has begun sifting through them - here's his initial impressions. Please subscribe HERE 🤍 World In Pictures 🤍 Big Hitters 🤍 Just Good News 🤍
More on the WikiLeaks story: 🤍 After the release of thousands of alleged CIA documents by WikiLeaks, tech companies like Apple and Samsung have responded. But how do the WikiLeaks claims differ from what Edward Snowden exposed about the NSA mass surveillance program?
Vault 7 is a leak of hacking tools and techniques used by the CIA for covert surveillance. What are the implications of the techniques being used in our everyday lives? What is the harm if any done to U.S. interests by disclosure of these tools and techniques? Speaker(s): Blair B. Chintella (Moderator), Matt Blaze, Nathan White, Ishan K. Mehta
WikiLeaks claims that it has acquired documents on how the CIA uses cyberweapons to spy on people around the world, including the ability to hack into smart phones and smart TVs. CNN's Brian Todd reports.
Washington, DC - Wikileaks has released thousands of documents it claims come from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The online activist group says the US overseas spy operation has lost control of its hacking arsenal, leaving it in the hands of unauthorised users around the world. Experts who have started to sift through the material say the leak appears to be legitimate. Al Jazeera's Alan Fisher reports. - Subscribe to our channel: 🤍 - Follow us on Twitter: 🤍 - Find us on Facebook: 🤍 - Check our website: 🤍
Tuesday, WikiLeaks published thousands of documents that they say reveal the scope of the CIA's global hacking program. Mike Baker, a former CIA covert operations officer, spoke to CBSN about what these leaks reveal. Subscribe to the "CBSN" Channel HERE: 🤍 Watch "CBSN" live HERE: 🤍 Follow "CBSN" on Instagram HERE: 🤍 Like "CBSN" on Facebook HERE: 🤍 Follow "CBSN" on Twitter HERE: 🤍 Get the latest news and best in original reporting from CBS News delivered to your inbox. Subscribe to newsletters HERE: 🤍 Get your news on the go! Download CBS News mobile apps HERE: 🤍 Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream local news live, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! 🤍 - CBSN is the first digital streaming news network that will allow Internet-connected consumers to watch live, anchored news coverage on their connected TV and other devices. At launch, the network is available 24/7 and makes all of the resources of CBS News available directly on digital platforms with live, anchored coverage 15 hours each weekday. CBSN. Always On.
WIkiLeaks released information that shows the CIA can gain information from most cellphones and even some TVs. Learn more about this story at 🤍newsy.com/67610/ Find more videos like this at 🤍newsy.com Follow Newsy on Facebook: 🤍facebook.com/newsyvideos Follow Newsy on Twitter: 🤍twitter.com/newsyvideos
The leaked documents describe alleged hacking tools used by the CIA to spy on devices like phones and TVs. CNET's security reporter Laura Hautala answers the biggest questions about the WikiLeaks claims.
Details on probe of WikiLeaks' publication of CIA spy tactics, including details alleging the agency can hack smart phones and smart TVs. CNN's Barbara Starr reports.
In a massive dump, Wikileaks has released information about the CIA's secret surveillance tools. The tools allegedly allow the CIA to hack computers, smartphones, message apps, TVs, and other devices. Full episode can be seen at 🤍
More on the WikiLeaks story: 🤍 Top tech companies begin issuing official statements in response to the "Vault 7" documents released by WikiLeaks.
Read more on the Wikileaks story: 🤍 Wikileaks has released thousands of documents detailing how the CIA has been bypassing encryption on messaging apps and using Smart TVs as a listening device.
The hunt for the mole by the FBI is focused on a nondescript building outside Washington, the headquarters of the top secret Center for Cyber Intelligence.
The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) knew about several flaws in software made by Apple, Google and Samsung and others, but did not tell the companies about them because it wanted to use them for spying, anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks says. Read more here: 🤍
WikiLeaks released 8,761 files from the very depths of Langley about hacking tools used by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to break into mobile phones, communication apps and other electronic devices for years. So, what else does WikiLeaks Vault 7 include? For more on the story: 🤍 Subscribe: 🤍 Livestream: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Visit our website: 🤍
Fox News contributor and syndicated columnist on the potential impact and hypocrisy of the WikiLeaks release of CIA hacking methods, 'scandals' of alleged Obama wiretapping and collusion between Trump and Russia with no proof and more
The most important tech news of the day includes the tech industry's responce to the Vault 7 leak on CIA hacking tools, Tinder's secret service for popular people, and Instagram mimicing Snapchat's location stickers.
Subscribe to France 24 now: 🤍 FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7 🤍 INTERNATIONAL PAPERS - Weds. 08.03.17: WikiLeaks publishes the "biggest ever" leak of secret CIA documents, exposing the agency's alleged global covert hacking programme and drawing a lot of attention in the press. Just how vulnerable is your smartphone? Also, papers focus on the risk of famine in several African countries. And Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s wife draws criticism for a message she posted about International Women’s Day. Visit our website: 🤍 Subscribe to our YouTube channel: 🤍 Like us on Facebook: 🤍 Follow us on Twitter: 🤍
From "Climategate" to leaked cables, CNN takes an inside look at WikiLeaks.
Mar.08 A post of more than 8,000 documents by WikiLeaks claims that Central Intelligence Agency hackers have the tools needed to infiltrate technology devices in order to monitor users' conversations and messages. Bloomberg's Adam reports and Simon Smiles, chief investment officer for ultra high net worth at UBS Wealth Management, joins the conversation on "Bloomberg Surveillance."
During a digital news conference on Thursday, Wikileaks' Julian Assange announced that he would give tech companies details of the hacking tools used by the CIA in order to help the companies build safeguards.