THREATS
Uncle Sam wants you. NPR dug into America's campaign of cyber operations focused on disrupting the self-identified Islamic State, or ISIS, in unprecedented detail. Operation Glowing Symphony, as the missions were known, involved hacking into the terror group's propaganda-pumping media operation, which were handled by just 10 core accounts. Neil (last name not disclosed), a marine reservist who helped devise the takeover strategy, recalls pitching the idea: "I felt like I was in It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, when he's doing the mystery investigation for Pepe Silvia. Pictures on the wall and red yarn everywhere and nobody was understanding me."
An eye for an eye. As tensions heat up in the Middle East, particularly between Saudi Arabia and Iran, cyberstrikes have arisen as one of the most appealing courses of action for U.S. President Donald Trump. Reluctant to become further embroiled in the situation, the U.S. is weighing an appropriate, retaliatory response to the destruction of Saudi oil fields, the New York Times reports. The trick lies in responding strongly, so the strike acts as a deterrent, but not so strongly that it provokes an even bigger offensive action.
Rain on the Thames. A vulnerability in a London-based "cloud" management system called OnApp that's used by thousands of cloud-hosting services allows hackers to gain full control of these machines, Vice Motherboard reports. In order to run amok, all a hacker needs to do is rent a single server from one of the providers. The company has released patches but not all customers have applied them.
In the clink. Andrei Tyurin, 36, has pleaded guilty to stealing data on more than 80 million clients of J.P. Morgan and other institutions. Tyurin reaped hundreds of millions of dollars from his hacking exploits, which also targeted Fidelity, E-Trade, and Down Jones.
Has the pee tape been hiding in plain sight the whole time?
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ACCESS GRANTED
Hero or zero? Last week we ran an excerpt from Edward Snowden's new autobiography. This week we're highlighting a blog post by Matthew Green, a cryptography professor at Johns Hopkins University, that assesses the potential impact Snowden's leaks had on the security of the Internet at large. Green concludes that web security has improved greatly since the NSA whistleblower took state spying secrets public—how much one might attribute that progress to Snowden is a matter of debate. "If nothing else, we owe Snowden for helping us to understand how high the stakes might be," Green says.
Edward Snowden recently released his memoirs. In some parts of the Internet, this has rekindled an ancient debate: namely, was it all worth it? Did Snowden's leaks make us better off, or did Snowden just embarass us and set back U.S. security by decades? Most of the arguments are so familiar that they're boring at this point. But no matter how many times I read them, I still feel that there's something important missing.
FORTUNE RECON
Whistleblower Complaint Opens Window Into Secret Government Computer Systems by Deb Riechmann
Facebook's CTO: 'The Criticism Is Warranted.' In Fact, It's the First Thing He Shows to New Hires by Jonathan Vanian
A.I. Security Cameras Are the Latest High-Tech Attempt to Combat Mass Shooters by Bernhard Warner
What Is CrowdStrike, the Company Trump Mentioned During His Ukraine Call? by Natasha Bach
Facebook Takes Down Pro-Trump Pages Run by Ukrainians by Natasha Bach
Top Court Rules Google Doesn't Have to Censor Around the World Because of European Privacy Laws by David Meyer
Google Says It's Cutting Back on Audio Data Collection on Google Home Speakers by Lisa Marie Segarra
To Protect Against Cyber Attacks, Companies Need to Address Data Manipulation. Here's How by Peter J. Beshar and Ari Mahairas
Fidelity Affiliate Joins $3.5 Million Investment in Bitcoin Sleuthing Firm Elementus by David Z. Morris
ONE MORE THING
"Searchable Log of All Communication and Knowledge." When two companies come together, what happens to their respective Slack channels? Well, Slack has a feature that allows these chat rooms to be easily integrated in the event of a merger. This precise situation has caused tremendous angst at the offices of New York Magazine, a publication recently acquired by Vox. "Imagine if Coca-Cola and Pepsi each made all of their internal discussions accessible to the other's workforce at once," writes Brian Feldman for the New York blog Intelligencer.
This is why I conduct all of my meetings in person wearing a mask while using voice-modulating equipment and a Men In Black neuralyzer.
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