US, Italy Had ‘Aggressively Monitored’ Muslims In Italy, WikiLeaks Cables Say: Report

Italy's Muslim populationhas been reportedly aggressively monitored, WikiLeaks cables dated from 2005 reveal. The documents were classified by then-U.S. Ambassador to Italy Ronald Spogli.The documents were based on a private informal lunch at the U.S. ambassadors residence and also involved the then-Italian Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu and Italy's Chief ofPolice Giovanni De Gennaro.

According to the documents, in the years before 2005, about 200 Muslims were expelled fromItaly on suspicion of extremism, Sputnik News reported. Pisanu was reportedly quoted in the document as saying that Italy's Muslim community was different from that in France and other European countries because they were much smaller, more diffuse and mostly economic migrants in the former.

"Muslims comprise approximately two percent ofthe [Italian] population. The majority are moderates; only five percent ofMuslims inItaly attend mosque; and many are itinerant workers The Italian Government closely monitors this community and expels those who preach violence," according to the cable dated Sept. 26, 2005.

The government was, however, concerned about at least three percent of Muslims, whom it deemed "prone to extremism," according to WikiLeaks cables.

Still, there will always be some prone toextremism, butthe minister estimated these counted forno more thanthree percent ofthe community inItaly. The [Muslim] advisory council was designed toreach outto the other 97 percent. The three percent were aggressively monitored mosques, schools, bakeries, butcher shops, meeting places," according to a document fromDec. 7, 2005,Sputnik News reported.

"This meant that perhaps 2,000 had been identified and put underwatch."

The report comes at a time when Islamophobia in Europe is on the rise, following deadly attacks in Paris that killed 17 people.

The U.S. had also been conducting a "Muslim Outreach" program inItaly led byMilan's Consulate General. The mission of the program was utilizing a combination ofour U.S. Speakers and Exchange programs together withEmbassy resources topromote our agenda,"a 2007 cable read,accordingto Sputnik News.

The U.S. has also been reportedly conducting such programs across other European countries.

" the two overarching goals ofU.S. engagement withEurope's Muslims: countering the widespread conviction that the U.S. is somehow at war withIslam, and initiating a constructive dialogue aboutMuslim integration inEuropean societies aimed atsharing America's best practices withregard toproviding equal opportunity todisadvantaged, racially distinct minorities," a 2007 document quoted Farah Pandith,U.S. senior advisor tothe assistant secretary ofstate forEuropean and Eurasian affairs, assaying, Sputnik News reported.

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US, Italy Had 'Aggressively Monitored' Muslims In Italy, WikiLeaks Cables Say: Report

Wikileaks 2012, NSA 2013, NTIA Mishaps & Global Cyber Crime 2014: U.S. Exceptionalism over IG 2015?

The internet has become almost part of our daily involvement and reality is that it affects every facet of our modern lives. We are increasingly becoming dependent on the Internet, for which reason its availability, functionality, safety, stability and security are now of great and continuing concern to all of us and most importantly to US Congress, who so far has maintained stewardship over these key functions.

As the internet gets new updates, services apps and new technologies, so is the increased threats to the very resource we would like to use and trust. Several issues have become evident and have hit the headlines and drawn us to concerns we must boldly address. In my previous article, "From Wikileaks of 2012 to Snowden's NSA Leaks of 2013: Implications for Global Internet Governance, I covered the trending issue that came to the fore, that whilst Wiki leaks was about US diplomatic cables, the Edward Snowden disclosure of classified NSA information to private media organizations such as the UK Guardian newspaper has had graver implications for global Internet privacy. The NSA leak presented the United States of America as a country that practically spies on everybody in a most indiscriminate manner, including its own allies.

In an interview with CIO East Africa, I gave the African continent's perspective as to why the "The AUCC debate on Cyber Security needs to involve all stakeholders" concerning the NSA issue and that "African governments are still a long way in accepting such technologies as open data African governments can prepare proper legislations and strategize on how to handle private data in a manner that is not intrusive to rights of its citizens. The backlash of the NSA revelations wouldn't be a good experience for any government". Therefore "this emphasizes that internet governance should be a matter that is handled by many stakeholders to avoid giving the governments a monopoly of leadership in policy development"

From a private sector perspective , I wrote a piece on the reality of Emerging Cyber-Security Threats and Implications for the Private Sector, including a case for New gTLDs & Security where I highlighted that "cyber-warfare will be conducted against computers and network resources owned and operated by the private sector who own the utilities, financial corporations, and a lot of intellectual property." As such "The cost of Internet Security protection is bound to sky-rocket in the coming years." As "Private sector organizations that have their information resources compromised as a result of cyber-security attacks will not only suffer huge financial losses, and loss of business good-will, but their stock value could be affected and plummet and suffer degradation of overall market value. Investors stand the risk of losing their money invested in such companies." A case and point that soon exasperated was when Target, a US National Retailer was attacked by hackers who gained access to as many as 40 million credit and debit cards used by customers of Target during the height of the holiday shopping season.

Only at the end of 2014, did we come across deafening noise on the famous Sony Pictures Entertainment cyber hack, as it also took interest of the US political scene. Here there was a release of confidential data belonging to Sony Pictures Entertainment, the hackers who also called themselves the "Guardians of Peace" or "GOP" demanded the cancellation of the planned release of the film "The Interview", a comedy about a plot to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. The US leadership saw it as un-American to recoil to such threat and also an attack on free speech.

As a result of such global cyber crime matters, President Obama Obama signed an order to protect consumers from identity theft by strengthening security features in credit cards and the terminals that process them and also plans to announce legislation that would shield companies from lawsuits for sharing computer threat data with the government in an effort to prevent cyberattacks.

Most recently ICANN the internet gatekeeper announced that it was "investigating a recent intrusion into our systems. We believe a "spear phishing" attack was initiated in late November 2014. It involved email messages that were crafted to appear to come from our own domain being sent to members of our staff. The attack resulted in the compromise of the email credentials of several ICANN staff members". Whilst, this goes to show that no one is safe from these targeted attacks. ICANN's mission is tied to being the gatekeeper over the availability, functionality, safety, stability and security of the global internet, which directly impact Cyber Security. ICANN itself is embroiled in a bid to sever its ties with the US government; therefore, aside from the mainstream accountability concerns, governance of the cyber security has and will form a major part of discussions on designing a new model to oversight ICANN. From the statements and activities, the US congress is not keen to let this separation happen soon, with the budgetary interventions, the IANA transition may just be but a dream.

From an individual perspective, a recent case was reported by Addis Fortune Newspaper where "The Court passed a guilty verdict against Yonas, a member of the Ethiopian diaspora from Germany, and sentenced him to two years in prison (although reversal was made afterwards by a higher court to a 6 months only imprisonment by suspension, based on lack of reasonable prove on aggravating circumstances to delete data from the computer of the victim) and a 5,000-Br fine for the cyber crime he was said to have committed against his business partner lady Akiko Seyoum". This is among the rare cases of prosecution for cyber crime, and a signal that Africa is becoming aware of the need to mitigate the increase of cyber crime and money laundering schemes.

In conclusion, the need to protect the global internet from such implications above as to its availability, functionality, safety, stability and security and using it also as a diplomacy tool to ensure the same, would definitely give a justification by a wide margin to the US status quo over the internet. Whilst, the US would not allow itself to be liable as exemplified during the global financial crisis of 2009 and the 1930, for blowing out its house of cards over its American Exceptionalism, a concept that has its roots from the principle of a country organized around an ideology that includes a set of dogmas about the nature of a good society, especially the one that tied it to a future mission of bringing liberty and democracy to the world.

Therefore, expect nothing less but 2015 to be a year of American Excepionalism over Internet Governance!

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Wikileaks 2012, NSA 2013, NTIA Mishaps & Global Cyber Crime 2014: U.S. Exceptionalism over IG 2015?

WikiLeaks: not perfect, but more important than ever for free speech

We apparently want our heroes to be mild mannered and non-combative. Photograph: FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA/EPA

The secret CIA files appeared just before Christmas. One detailed how CIA operatives could maintain cover, using fake IDs, when travelling through foreign airports. Israels Ben Gurion airport was said to be one of the hardest to trick.

The other document, from 2009, was an assessment of the CIAs assassination program. It raised doubts about the effectiveness of the program in reducing terrorism. Likewise with Israels killing of Palestinians.

In Afghanistan, the CIA discovered that murdering Taliban leaders could radicalise the militants, allowing even more extreme actors to enter the battlefield. The Obama administration ignored this advice and unleashed targeted killings in the country. Unsurprisingly, the insurgency is thriving.

These vital insights into the war on terror were released by WikiLeaks and received extensive global coverage.

Since 2010, when WikiLeaks released Collateral Murder, showing American forces killing Iraqi civilians, there have been multiple covert and public attempts to silence the organisation. Julian Assange has now been stuck in Londons Ecuadorian embassy for two and a half years fighting an extradition order from Sweden over allegations of sexual misconduct. There is an ongoing US grand jury examining the organisations role in publishing war and State Department cables. On Christmas Eve, WikiLeaks revealed that Google had turned over the Gmail account and metadata of a WikiLeaks employee in response to a US federal warrant.

The organisations ability to stay afloat and continue to source and release insightful documents among all this is remarkable.

There is some good news: Visa and MasterCard are being sued for refusing to allow funds to flow to WikiLeaks, and Assanges lawyers are confident that the current impasse with Sweden will be resolved (although the irregularities over the case are deeply disturbing).

But the reality remains that the public image of Assange has taken a beating after years of legal fights, the botched Australian WikiLeaks political party and constant smears by journalists and politicians. We apparently want our heroes to be mild mannered and non-combative. We supposedly need them to be polite and not uncover countless, dirty abuses by western forces. We clearly dont forgive them for not being perfect. Or perhaps we have a limit to how many war crimes we want to hear about with nobody facing justice? Thats hardly WikiLeaks fault. The group has made mistakes, and will make many more, but as a supporter since its 2006 inception, Im struck by its resilience.

WikiLeaks has been warning against the dangers of mass surveillance for years. The 2014 Assange book, When Google Met WikiLeaks, features an insightful essay on the dangers of Googles desire to lead American interventionist foreign policy. The book gained headlines across the world. In the month of its release, the organisation offered new documents on German company FinFisher selling its spying equipment to repressive regimes.

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WikiLeaks: not perfect, but more important than ever for free speech

‘Traitor’ Swiss banker Rudolf Elmer gave tax files to Wikileaks

A Swiss banker accused of revealing details of tax-dodging clients on WikiLeaks is a traitor who should be sentenced to three and a half years in prison, prosecutors said.

Rudolf Elmer, formerly employed by Julius Baer Group Ltd as chief operating officer of a Cayman Islands unit, calls himself a whistleblower, thus dressing himself in a cloak of legitimacy, prosecutor Peter Giger said in closing arguments.

He is a pure traitor who fought the bank again and again under the pretence of humanitarian ideas.

Elmer, 59, is accused of violating the countrys financial secrecy laws in what he says was an effort to raise awareness of the use of Swiss bank accounts for illegal activity including tax evasion.

He also allegedly offered bank data to the German government and fabricated a letter to German chancellor Angela Merkel from the Swiss bank, advising her to close an account she never had. Countries including the US, the UK and Germany have used testimony from former Swiss bankers or stolen client data to pursue offshore tax dodgers.

While such cases are not uncommon in Switzerland, where for almost a century the principle of bank secrecy has been enforced by laws that carry prison terms for offenders, Elmers trial has attracted more attention than most.

Thats partly because the bank data transfer involved a website that has drawn the ire of the US and other governments around the world for publishing confidential documents under an avowed commitment to increased transparency.

The trial resumed for the first time since Elmer collapsed at the opening on December 10, forcing the court to postpone the proceedings. His lawyer, Ganden Tethong, said he is still not well but he seemed in better condition.

Elmers lawyer asked the court to clear him of all charges, saying the statute of limitations had run out on one count. She also argued Swiss law doesnt apply because the alleged offences didnt occur in Switzerland and because he wasnt actually employed by the bank at the time. The state should cover his legal costs and compensate him for time already served and the loss of business while he was detained, Tethong said.

The prosecution argued that in addition to a prison sentence, Elmer should be banned from working as a banker and should cover the cost of the trial. The court said it would deliver its decision on January 19.

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‘Traitor’ Swiss banker Rudolf Elmer gave tax files to Wikileaks

Comodo Internet Security defends threatening FinFish | Wikileaks – Video


Comodo Internet Security defends threatening FinFish | Wikileaks
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By: Comodo Desktop

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Comodo Internet Security defends threatening FinFish | Wikileaks - Video

NSA targeted WikiLeaks, Pirate Bay, say leaked documents

The latest revelations suggest that the US and UK singled out certain Web sites for surveillance, according to a report from The Intercept, which published classified documents.

The National Security Agency and the UK's Government Communications Headquarters targeted WikiLeaks and Pirate Bay -- and ultimately users of those sites as well, according to leaked files.

Examining a series of classified documents leaked by whistle-blower Edward Snowden, news site The Intercept reported on Tuesday that the NSA wanted to deem WikiLeaks a "malicious foreign actor." Such a designation would have subjected the site to extensive surveillance without the use of "defeats," an NSA action that aims to prevent US citizens from getting snared in the surveillance.

The UK's GCHQ went a step further by collecting the IP addresses of visitors to WikiLeaks along with the search terms they used to get to the site, according to a 2012 PowerPoint presentation. The presentation didn't reveal how extensive this monitoring was or if it's still active. But The Intercept referred to a surveillance tool X-Keyscore . Used by both the NSA and called GCHQ, X-Keyscore allows "an analyst to learn the IP addresses of every person who visits any Web site the analyst specifies."

The information documented in the leaked files also shows Pirate Bay and its users on the NSA's potential hit list. The agency considered using its surveillance to target the popular file-sharing site as a "malicious" foreign server, "even if there is a possibility that U.S. persons could be using it as well," The Intercept said.

Finally, one NSA exchange seemed to minimize the impact of snagging a US citizen in surveillance. A comment by the NSA's Office of General Counsel and the oversight and compliance office of its Threat Operations Center said that the discovery that an American has been selected for surveillance must be mentioned in a quarterly report, "but it's nothing to worry about."

In response to the leaked documents, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange released the following statement:

WikiLeaks strongly condemns the reckless and unlawful behavior of the National Security Agency. We call on the Obama administration to appoint a Special Prosecutor to investigate the extent of the NSA's criminal activity against the media including WikiLeaks and its extended network.

News that the NSA planned these operations at the level of its Office of the General Counsel is especially troubling. No less concerning are revelations that the US government deployed "elements of state power" to pressure European nations into abusing their own legal systems; and that the British spy agency GCHQ is engaged in extensive hostile monitoring of a popular publisher's website and its readers.

The NSA and its UK accomplices show no respect for the rule of law. But there is a cost to conducting illicit actions against a media organization. We have already filed criminal cases against the FBI and US military in multiple European jurisdictions. The FBI's paid informant, who attempted to sell information about me and my staff to the FBI, was imprisoned earlier this year.

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NSA targeted WikiLeaks, Pirate Bay, say leaked documents

NSA targeted WikiLeaks, Pirate Bay, leaked documents show

The latest revelations suggest that the US and UK singled out certain Web sites for surveillance, according to a report from The Intercept, which published classified documents.

The National Security Agency and the UK's Government Communications Headquarters targeted WikiLeaks and Pirate Bay -- and ultimately users of those sites as well, according to leaked files.

Examining a series of classified documents leaked by whistle-blower Edward Snowden, news site The Intercept reported on Tuesday that the NSA wanted to deem WikiLeaks a "malicious foreign actor." Such a designation would have subjected the site to extensive surveillance without the use of "defeats," an NSA action that aims to prevent US citizens from getting snared in the surveillance.

The UK's GCHQ went a step further by collecting the IP addresses of visitors to WikiLeaks along with the search terms they used to get to the site, according to a 2012 PowerPoint presentation. The presentation didn't reveal how extensive this monitoring was or if it's still active. But The Intercept referred to a surveillance tool X-Keyscore . Used by both the NSA and called GCHQ, X-Keyscore allows "an analyst to learn the IP addresses of every person who visits any Web site the analyst specifies."

The information documented in the leaked files also shows Pirate Bay and its users on the NSA's potential hit list. The agency considered using its surveillance to target the popular file-sharing site as a "malicious" foreign server, "even if there is a possibility that U.S. persons could be using it as well," The Intercept said.

Finally, one NSA exchange seemed to minimize the impact of snagging a US citizen in surveillance. A comment by the NSA's Office of General Counsel and the oversight and compliance office of its Threat Operations Center said that the discovery that an American has been selected for surveillance must be mentioned in a quarterly report, "but it's nothing to worry about."

In response to the leaked documents, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange released the following statement:

WikiLeaks strongly condemns the reckless and unlawful behavior of the National Security Agency. We call on the Obama administration to appoint a Special Prosecutor to investigate the extent of the NSA's criminal activity against the media including WikiLeaks and its extended network.

News that the NSA planned these operations at the level of its Office of the General Counsel is especially troubling. No less concerning are revelations that the US government deployed "elements of state power" to pressure European nations into abusing their own legal systems; and that the British spy agency GCHQ is engaged in extensive hostile monitoring of a popular publisher's website and its readers.

The NSA and its UK accomplices show no respect for the rule of law. But there is a cost to conducting illicit actions against a media organization. We have already filed criminal cases against the FBI and US military in multiple European jurisdictions. The FBI's paid informant, who attempted to sell information about me and my staff to the FBI, was imprisoned earlier this year.

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NSA targeted WikiLeaks, Pirate Bay, leaked documents show

WikiLeaks Tweets Hebdo Cartoons, Blames ‘Jewish Pro-Censorship Lobby’ for Legitimizing Attacks

In the wake of the tributes to Charlie Hebdo, WikiLeaks went off on leaders of the Western world for applying a double standard to the attacks.

WikiLeaks, whose founder, Julian Assange, has been holed up in the Ecuadorean embassy since 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden, accused President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron of only promoting free speech when it was politically expedient. The instrumentalization of Charlie Hebdo: Some defend freedom of speech all the time, they tweeted. Others only when they can use it to spy, drone, more.

They also accused the politically-correct lobby for legitimizing the attacks against Charlie Hebdo, which left 12 dead. The notion that offending religious groups is unlawful contributes to a climate where those without legal connections make their own police, they added.

The tweets began yesterday and continued into today:

That said, Wikileaks released a statement from Assange tweeting his support of Charlie Hebdo, honoring them in the way they probably wanted to be remembered:

And as they promised, they tweeted them out, with English captions to capture the full spectrum of offensiveness. Weve included some of them:

[WikiLeaks] [Image via Wikileaks]

>> Follow Tina Nguyen (@Tina_Nguyen) on Twitter

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WikiLeaks Tweets Hebdo Cartoons, Blames ‘Jewish Pro-Censorship Lobby’ for Legitimizing Attacks

NSA, GCHQ spied on WikiLeaks, says Julian Assange

"The NSA and its UK accomplices show no respect for the rule of law": Julian Assange. Photo: AFP

Britain's intelligence-gathering agency spied on people who contacted WikiLeaks, the whistleblowing website's founder Julian Assange claims.

Assange says new documents reveal the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) was engaged in "hostile monitoring" of the publisher's website.

Information from national security whistleblower Edward Snowden detailed the spying efforts against WikiLeaks undertaken by GCHQ and the US National Security Agency (NSA), he said.

A document dated 2012 revealed GCHQ spied on WikiLeaks and its readers, said Assange, who has been living at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London since the summer of 2012 for fear of being extradited to the US.

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"WikiLeaks strongly condemns the reckless and unlawful behaviour of the National Security Agency," Assange said. "We call on the Obama administration to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the extent of the NSA's criminal activity against the media including WikiLeaks and its extended network.

"News that the NSA planned these operations at the level of its Office of the General Counsel is especially troubling. No less concerning are revelations that the US government deployed 'elements of state power' to pressure European nations into abusing their own legal systems, and that the British spy agency GCHQ is engaged in extensive hostile monitoring of a popular publisher's website and its readers.

"The NSA and its UK accomplices show no respect for the rule of law."

WikiLeaks said it was surprised at the "sweeping" scale of the monitoring as well as the "blatant" way information was gathered.

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NSA, GCHQ spied on WikiLeaks, says Julian Assange