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News
By Lucian Constantin
June 16, 2014 03:46 PM ET
IDG News Service - A hacker exploited publicly known vulnerabilities to install malware on network-attached storage systems manufactured by Synology and used their computing power to generate Dogecoins, a type of cryptocurrency.
The operation took place during the first months of the year and is likely the most profitable of its kind to date, earning the attacker over US$600,000 according to a recent analysis by researchers from Dell SecureWorks.
Using CPUs and GPUs to solve cryptographic problems as part of cryptocurrency systems is an activity referred to as mining. Those who perform it -- typically using their own systems -- are automatically rewarded by the system with units or subunits of that respective currency.
At the beginning of February reports started appearing online from users complaining about sluggish performance and high CPU usage on their Synology NAS systems, which have a Linux-based operating system called DiskStation Manager (DSM) developed by the Taiwan-based manufacturer.
The problems were tracked to an unauthorized application running on affected systems from a directory called PWNED that turned out to be a custom version of a cryptocurrency mining program called CPUMiner specifically compiled for Synology's DSM OS, the Dell SecureWorks researchers said Friday in a blog post.
An analysis of the rogue program showed that it had been configured to mine Dogecoin, a peer-to-peer cryptocurrency similar to Bitcoin that was launched in December 2013.
The Dell SecureWorks researchers identified two electronic wallet addresses associated with the rogue mining activity and determined that their owner had mined over 500 million Dogecoins, worth about $620,000, mostly during January and February.
Read this article:
Hacked Synology NAS systems used in big-profit cryptocurrency mining scheme
Lucian Constantin | June 17, 2014
A hacker exploited publicly known vulnerabilities to install malware on network-attached storage systems manufactured by Synology and used their computing power to generate Dogecoins, a type of cryptocurrency.
A hacker exploited publicly known vulnerabilities to install malware on network-attached storage systems manufactured by Synology and used their computing power to generate Dogecoins, a type of cryptocurrency.
The operation took place during the first months of the year and is likely the most profitable of its kind to date, earning the attacker over US$600,000 according to a recent analysis by researchers from Dell SecureWorks.
Using CPUs and GPUs to solve cryptographic problems as part of cryptocurrency systems is an activity referred to as mining. Those who perform it -- typically using their own systems -- are automatically rewarded by the system with units or subunits of that respective currency.
At the beginning of February reports started appearing online from users complaining about sluggish performance and high CPU usage on their Synology NAS systems, which have a Linux-based operating system called DiskStation Manager (DSM) developed by the Taiwan-based manufacturer.
The problems were tracked to an unauthorized application running on affected systems from a directory called PWNED that turned out to be a custom version of a cryptocurrency mining program called CPUMiner specifically compiled for Synology's DSM OS, the Dell SecureWorks researchers said Friday in a blog post.
An analysis of the rogue program showed that it had been configured to mine Dogecoin, a peer-to-peer cryptocurrency similar to Bitcoin that was launched in December 2013.
The Dell SecureWorks researchers identified two electronic wallet addresses associated with the rogue mining activity and determined that their owner had mined over 500 million Dogecoins, worth about $620,000, mostly during January and February.
"To date, this incident is the single most profitable, illegitimate mining operation," the researchers said. "This conclusion is based in part on prior investigations and research done by the Counter Threat Unit, as well as further searching of the Internet."
Excerpt from:
Hacked Synology NAS systems used in high-profit cryptocurrency mining operation
Weather Underground Scion's Play Is Digital Thriller By Ed Rampell
Published June 10, 2014.
Zayd Dohrns ripped-from-the-headlines Muckrakers is a drama about transparency in the digital age that asks: When does disclosure of the public and personal become too much openness?
The one-act play was inspired in part by Julian Assange and WikiLeaks exposure of Chelsea Mannings Iraq and Afghan war revelations. Assanges alleged sex scandal also informed the plays storyline.
Muckrakers has more twists and turns than a windy seaside road, as renowned British Internet free speech activist Stephen (Darren Keefe) spends the night with anarchistic blogger Mira (Erica Bitton) after a New York speech. All hell breaks loose as the WikiLeaker-type character is out-WikiLeaked in this thought-provoking piece, which is currently having its West Coast premiere.
The playwrights family has an intimate connection to electronic surveillance. In the 1970s, Zayd Dohrns mother Bernardine Dohrn was on the FBIs 10 Most Wanted list along with his father, Bill Ayers, she belonged to the Weather Underground, a group of New Left militants who carried out armed struggle against Washington.
In 2008, they were the so-called domestic terrorists who vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin accused Barack Obama of palling around with. Zayd Dohrn was born in 1977, and then grew up, underground in New York. The dramatist is also a playwriting and screenwriting professor at Northwestern University.
Dohrn, who is arguably the son of a first family of Americas far left, works with a stage outlet that has a lofty lefty lineage, as well as an exalted dramatic pedigree and Jewish roots. Muckrakers is being presented in L.A. by the Harold Clurman Laboratory Theater Company at the Art of Acting Studio, the West Coast branch of Manhattans Stella Adler Studio of Acting.
Dohrn is tall, lean, casually dressed, friendly. During a candid conversation at a Westwood hotel, the playwright opened up about being Jewish, whistleblowers, playwriting, Sarah Palin, Deep Throat, and growing up Dohrn.
Ed Rampell: In what way are you Jewish?
Continue reading here:
Zayd Dohrn's 'Muckrakers' Is Ripped From His Radical Royalty Bloodline
By Faith Karimi, CNN
updated 12:07 PM EDT, Sun June 15, 2014
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
(CNN) -- A U.S. soldier imprisoned for leaking documents to WikiLeaks broke her silence in a fiery editorial accusing the United States of lying about Iraq.
Chelsea Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison in 2013 for leaking 750,000 pages of classified documents to the anti-secrecy group.
At the time, Manning went by the first name Bradley, but later announced the desire to live as a woman and be known as Chelsea.
Manning has stayed out of the limelight since the conviction, which spared the former intelligence analyst from the most serious charge of aiding the enemy.
But she was back Saturday, with an opinion piece titled 'The Fog Machine of War" in The New York Times. In it, she accuses the U.S. media of looking the other way when chaos and corruption reigned in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"As Iraq erupts in civil war and America again contemplates intervention, that unfinished business should give new urgency to the question of how the United States military controlled the media coverage of its long involvement there and in Afghanistan," Manning wrote.
"I believe that the current limits on press freedom and excessive government secrecy make it impossible for Americans to grasp fully what is happening in the wars we finance."
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Chelsea Manning breaks silence, accuses U.S. of lying on ...
Chelsea Manning broke her silence on Sunday for the first time since being sentenced to 35 years in prison for leaking classified documents to WikiLeaks.
The former military intelligence analyst was convicted in August 2013 after giving the anti-secrecy website hundreds of thousands of classified U.S. military and diplomatic videos, accounts and documents. Until now, she has stayed relatively quiet about her situation.
In an opinion piece in the New York Times on Sunday, Manning went after the U.S. military and media for hiding information from the American people. Manning, formerly known as Bradley, accused the military of manipulating media coverage surrounding the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan and attacked the limitations placed on journalists' ability to cover wars.
Read Manning's entire opinion piece here.
Manning said she is speaking out because the same "concerns" which led her to leak the documents in 2010 have still "not been resolved."
"I believe that the current limits on press freedom and excessive government secrecy make it impossible for Americans to grasp fully what is happening in the wars we finance," she wrote.
Manning focused on media coverage of the 2010 elections in Iraq, and said that journalists greatly misrepresented the reality of the political situation. She wrote that while working as an analyst in Iraq, she became very aware of the major differences between the American media reports and the military and diplomatic reports she was reading. The information given to the public was "flooded with foggy speculation and simplifications," Manning noted.
"I was shocked by our militarys complicity in the corruption of that election," she wrote. "Yet these deeply troubling details flew under the American medias radar."
See the rest here:
Chelsea Manning Speaks Out, Accuses U.S. Of Manipulating ...
The disgraced former soldier convicted of leaking classified documents to WikiLeaks warned, in a lengthy article penned from prison, that the current unrest in Iraq is the result a deeply flawed media strategy undertaken by the U.S. government and accused the White House of continuing to lie about political developments in the war-torn country.
In a New York Times editorial published Sunday, Chelsea Manning, the transgender ex-intelligence analyst who passed on a trove of sensitive state secrets for public dissemination, criticized the way the U.S. has controlled the media coverage of its involvement in Iraq, blaming the White House for willfully distorting the complicated, and now violent, reality on the ground.
I believe that the current limits on press freedom and excessive government secrecy make it impossible for Americans to grasp fully what is happening in the wars we finance, wrote Chelsea Manning, who was known as Bradley before announcing her gender transition and changing her name to Chelsea last August.
Manning alleged that the U.S. government bombarded media outlets during the March 2010 elections in Iraq with success stories complete with upbeat anecdotes and optimistic photographs while, in fact, there was a far more complicated reality on the ground.
Military and diplomatic reports coming across my desk detailed a brutal crackdown against political dissidents by the Iraqi Ministry of Interior and federal police, on behalf of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki. Detainees were often tortured, or even killed, wrote Manning, who went on to detail orders she received while stationed in the country to investigate anti-Iraqi print shops she said he found to have no ties to terrorism.
I was shocked by our militarys complicity in the corruption of that election. Yet these deeply troubling details flew under the American medias radar, Manning, who worked as an intelligence analyst in Iraq in 2009 and 2010, wrote.
Manning, who was sentenced to 35 years in prison last August for six Espionage Act violations and 14 other offenses for leaking more than 700,000 secret military and U.S. State Department documents, blamed the lapse on the militarys selection process for embedding journalists.
In all of Iraq, which contained 31 million people and 117,000 United States troops, no more than a dozen American journalists were covering military operations, Manning wrote, claiming that the discrepancy was not a coincidence.
The process of limiting press access to a conflict begins when a reporter applies for embed status. All reporters are carefully vetted by military public affairs officials. This system is far from unbiased. Unsurprisingly, reporters who have established relationships with the military are more likely to be granted access, she wrote.
Less well known is that journalists whom military contractors rate as likely to produce favorable coverage, based on their past reporting, also get preference, she added. This outsourced favorability rating assigned to each applicant is used to screen out those judged likely to produce critical coverage.
Excerpt from:
Chelsea Manning blames renewed violence in Iraq on U.S ...
TIME U.S. Military
Chelsea Manning, the former military intelligence analyst who is serving a 35-year prison sentence for leaking classified information in 2010, has broken her silence to rail against a lack of military transparency in a New York Times editorial.
In the article, Manning calls for a new government body to oversee embedded journalists press credentials and for a quicker declassification of the militarys Significant Activity Reports, which detail the facts of attacks and casualties and could aid reporters coverage of the conflict.
I believe that the current limits on press freedom and excessive government secrecy make it impossible for Americans to grasp fully what is happening in the wars we finance, Manning writes.
The soldier formerly known as Bradley Manning was arrested in 2010 on several charges, including aiding the enemy, after leaking reams of intelligence to Wikileaks earlier that year. The day after she was sentenced to 35 years in prison, Manning whom many consider a traitor to her country came out as a transgender woman and announced she would live her life as Chelsea Manning.
Manning points to journalists coverage of the March 2010 elections in Iraq, which suggested that United States military operations had succeeded in establishing democracy, though on-the-ground reports she had access to revealed a crackdown against political dissidents in the country during that time.
Manning was also appalled by the disparity between daily media coverage of the war back home and the daily military intelligence reports she read during her time as an analyst.
How could top-level decision makers say that the American public, or even Congress, supported the conflict when they didnt have half the story?
She writes that the system of approving and embedding reporters is deeply flawed and makes it difficult for journalists to report the news accurately. Manning claims the military has a history of granting access to reporters it thinks will write favorable coverage. Policies in place allow for immediate termination of reporters access, which Manning alleges was has been used as punishment for critical coverage, like when Michael Hastings was denied access following his reporting on Gen. Stanley A. McChrystals critical comments on the Obama administration.
Improving media access to this crucial aspect of our national life where America has committed the men and women of its armed services would be a powerful step toward re-establishing trust between voters and officials, she writes.
Go here to read the rest:
Chelsea Manning Writes Op-Ed Criticizing Military Secrecy ...
FORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan., June 16 (UPI) --Chelsea Manning accused the U.S. of consistently lying about the war in Iraq and slammed the process of embedding journalists in military units in the New York Times on Sunday.
Manning, who has been mostly silent since being convicted and sentenced to 35 years in prison for releasing classified materials to WikiLeaks, said that in light of the recent surge of violence in Iraq it is time to question "how the United States military controlled the media coverage of its long involvement there and in Afghanistan."
"I believe that the current limits on press freedom and excessive government secrecy make it impossible for Americans to grasp fully what is happening in the wars we finance," she wrote in the op-ed, titled "The Fog Machine of War."
Manning cited failures in press freedom when reports described the 2010 Iraq elections as a success -- a milestone that signified the creation a free and democratic system. Contrary to these reports, Manning wrote that at the time, military and diplomatic reports said political dissidents of Prime Minister Nouri Kamal al-Maliki were detained, tortured and killed by the federal police.
She says she was previously ordered to investigate people the federal police said were printing "anti-Iraqi literature." Upon finding these individuals were not affiliated with terrorists, she forwarded the information to a commanding officer who told her to continue assisting the federal police in tracking down more "anti-Iraqi" printers.
The fact that this was never reported by western media, Manning said, shows a lack of press freedom regarding military operations. During her deployment she says she never saw more than 12 embedded journalists in Iraq because the military controls the process.
Less well known is that journalists whom military contractors rate as likely to produce 'favorable' coverage, based on their past reporting, also get preference. This outsourced 'favorability' rating assigned to each applicant is used to screen out those judged likely to produce critical coverage.
Manning said military public affairs officers could strip a journalist of embed status if they report something the military does not like.
Freedom of the press in the U.S. did see a significant decline in 2013. Reporters Without Borders released a report in February that showed the U.S. had dropped from the 32nd to the 46th spot in a list of countries ranked by press freedom. Manning's conviction contributed to the drop in ranking.
"Opinion polls indicate that Americans' confidence in their elected representatives is at a record low. Improving media access to this crucial aspect of our national life -- where America has committed the men and women of its armed services -- would be a powerful step toward re-establishing trust between voters and officials," Manning concluded.
View original post here:
Chelsea Manning advocates for expanded press freedom - UPI.com
TIME U.S. Military
Chelsea Manning, the former military intelligence analyst who is serving a 35-year prison sentence for leaking classified information in 2010, has broken her silence to rail against a lack of military transparency in a New York Times editorial.
In the article, Manning calls for a new government body to oversee embedded journalists press credentials and for a quicker declassification of the militarys Significant Activity Reports, which detail the facts of attacks and casualties and could aid reporters coverage of the conflict.
I believe that the current limits on press freedom and excessive government secrecy make it impossible for Americans to grasp fully what is happening in the wars we finance, Manning writes.
The soldier formerly known as Bradley Manning was arrested in 2010 on several charges, including aiding the enemy, after leaking reams of intelligence to Wikileaks earlier that year. The day after she was sentenced to 35 years in prison, Manning whom many consider a traitor to her country came out as a transgender woman and announced she would live her life as Chelsea Manning.
Manning points to journalists coverage of the March 2010 elections in Iraq, which suggested that United States military operations had succeeded in establishing democracy, though on-the-ground reports she had access to revealed a crackdown against political dissidents in the country during that time.
Manning was also appalled by the disparity between daily media coverage of the war back home and the daily military intelligence reports she read during her time as an analyst.
How could top-level decision makers say that the American public, or even Congress, supported the conflict when they didnt have half the story?
She writes that the system of approving and embedding reporters is deeply flawed and makes it difficult for journalists to report the news accurately. Manning claims the military has a history of granting access to reporters it thinks will write favorable coverage. Policies in place allow for immediate termination of reporters access, which Manning alleges was has been used as punishment for critical coverage, like when Michael Hastings was denied access following his reporting on Gen. Stanley A. McChrystals critical comments on the Obama administration.
Improving media access to this crucial aspect of our national life where America has committed the men and women of its armed services would be a powerful step toward re-establishing trust between voters and officials, she writes.
See the article here:
Chelsea Manning Breaks Her Silence