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Wikileaks' Vault 7 CIA document release

discoii March 08, 2017 at 01:19 12800 views 47 comments
Wikileaks released Vault 7, a trove of CIA documents detailing their cyberwarfare arsenal, including revealing the ability for them to assassinate anyone driving a smart car (of which basically all newer models are), transform your smart TV into a surveillance post, among thousands of other goodie goods.

Four arguments against Wikileaks from liberals today:

1) They lost our precious Hillary the election so we will boycott them.

Counter: They did that by pointing out that the DNC deliberately tampered with Bernie Sanders' election chances. Do you not like accurate news? If no, then you have no basis to criticize Fox, Breitbart, Drudge et al for anything. If yes, suck it up, we all should make decisions based on reasons and good data.

2) They are an instrument of Russian state media.

Counter: Wikileaks has had 100% publication accuracy and always has, even before the alleged association with the Russian government. They have released documents implicating both Democrats and Republicans since almost a decade ago. Do you not like accurate news?

3) We already knew about most of the leaks.
Counter: No you didn't, unless you worked in the CIA -- and even then, you still probably didn't.

4) We have nothing to hide, so why is this relevant?
Counter: Let me put it to you in a way you can understand. Trump has the ability to blow up your car at will and no one will know who did it. And that's just one tool he has, among multiple thousand. Even if you trusted Obama with these tools (which, by the way, were developed under the Obama presidency), do you really trust Trump to be responsible?

You can say "oh, get off your high horse!" to which we respond "how about you hop on?"

Comments (47)

Moliere March 08, 2017 at 01:24 #59687
Maaan.... liberals in the U.S. are worthless. Which is basically just a rah-rah, yeah, but hey -- rah-rah yeah. ;)

I know who I'd vote for -- but it's basically based upon who I have a larger chance, relatively speaking, of guilt-tripping into doing what I think is better, if not best.

Shawn March 08, 2017 at 01:29 #59690
So, what's your point here?

I mean, it's kind of obvious. The only safe place is cyberspace or a house in the middle of nowhere; but, even using TOR and other such methods flags you for further surveillance.

It's really a no win situation.
discoii March 08, 2017 at 01:42 #59694
Reply to Question Well, maybe a first step is to know how they get into your devices and then force them to either stop doing it or defund them entirely. In the leaks, it says the CIA had to do a bunch of mental gymnastics to get around some regulations -- which effectively compromised their organization's ability to act covertly, which ultimately led to these leaks.

So what we should be doing is adding a whole bunch of forced mental gymnastics clauses to make them just not do any of this.
Shawn March 08, 2017 at 01:52 #59696
Reply to discoii

If it's for the sake of national security, and always will be, then there will always be ways around civil rights, even more so post-Patriot Act.
discoii March 08, 2017 at 01:53 #59697
Reply to Question Well, guess we should all give up then.
Metaphysician Undercover March 08, 2017 at 01:56 #59698
Quoting discoii
Wikileaks has had 100% publication accuracy and always has,


What does this mean?
Shawn March 08, 2017 at 01:56 #59699
Quoting discoii
Well, guess we should all give up then.


Give up on what exactly? I never trusted the government, but I'm a nobody and never will be. Besides, there's so much information out there, that there's no way to sift through it all by any human means. Unless, you become a target for whatever reason.

Journalists have pretty safe protection still, though.

You can use plenty of operating systems that are hardened and secure to a reasonable degree along with some pretty sophisticated anonymizing techniques.
discoii March 08, 2017 at 01:58 #59700
Reply to Metaphysician Undercover It means that the claims they make about things in the world correspond to their factual being in the world 100% of the time, at least as far as claims about factual things in the world can be considered accurate if there is direct evidence that verifies that their claim about the fact in the world is true.

It does not mean that their textual description of the world is necessarily accurate to 100% to how it is in the world -- since there is still information entropy.
discoii March 08, 2017 at 02:00 #59701
Reply to Question Give up on trying to pressure the government to not do this? That's all I'm saying here.

Since there are intelligence agencies, politicians, public advocacy groups that are vying for power, and one source of power is political legitimacy, then trying to get certain intelligence agencies to comply with the law involves playing all the players against one another.
Shawn March 08, 2017 at 02:05 #59702
Reply to discoii

Yeah; but, it's been going on for/since the start of the cold war.

It's been pretty good so far?
discoii March 08, 2017 at 02:07 #59703
Reply to Question Technologically, yeah, it's been great for intelligence agencies.

But as far as defense of our civil liberties goes, yeah and during that whole time it would have been much worse if there weren't people doing anything about it.
Pneumenon March 08, 2017 at 09:37 #59761
Quoting discoii
In the leaks, it says the CIA had to do a bunch of mental gymnastics to get around some regulations -- which effectively compromised their organization's ability to act covertly, which ultimately led to these leaks.

So what we should be doing is adding a whole bunch of forced mental gymnastics clauses to make them just not do any of this.


Bingo. The value of adding regulations is not that the intelligence agencies will follow them (they won't), but that it gives us an excuse to bust them when they start getting too big for their britches. One of the few cases where bureaucratic bloat is useful.
Wayfarer March 08, 2017 at 11:14 #59776
I can't see anything good about it, exposing corruption is one thing, but simply publishing all this stuff because it's secret is something else altogether.
Harry Hindu March 08, 2017 at 12:22 #59784
Quoting discoii
2) They are an instrument of Russian state media.

Counter: Wikileaks has had 100% publication accuracy and always has, even before the alleged association with the Russian government. They have released documents implicating both Democrats and Republicans since almost a decade ago. Do you not like accurate news?


So then why don't they release a hoard of info on Russia and Putin, or China, or other countries? Why focus on the US? Maybe because Assange knows that he will be assassinated if he were to do so, kind of like how environmentalist whacks don't go to China to spout their propaganda for fear of being jailed or eliminated. It's all right to talk dirty about the country that embodies free speech, but fail to be consistent when talking dirty about other countries that aren't, and have just as much skeletons in the closet as anyone else.
discoii March 08, 2017 at 13:34 #59801
Reply to Harry Hindu https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_material_published_by_WikiLeaks

Also, have you considered that Wikileaks is an English speaking organization? A Chinese leak would require a bunch of Chinese <-> English translators to verify it doesn't destroy the entire Chinese government (same thing Wikileaks mostly does with the US).
S March 09, 2017 at 00:36 #59883
Quoting Wayfarer
I can't see anything good about it, exposing corruption is one thing, but simply publishing all this stuff because it's secret is something else altogether.


But it isn't that simple. This stuff comes out as an act of whistleblowing, which is an act of alerting attention to a perceived wrongdoing. The reason given would not simply be because it's secret, but because it's secret and shouldn't be because of x, y and z. One reason has already been suggested, which is that the authority in question can't be trusted to be responsible.
Metaphysician Undercover March 09, 2017 at 01:05 #59885
Quoting Sapientia
This stuff comes out as an act of whistleblowing, which is an act of alerting attention to a perceived wrongdoing.


How is the act of spying, by the CIA, perceived as wrongdoing, isn't that their mandate? Oh I think I understand, when you're a member of the party being spied on, then it's clearly wrongdoing.
Shawn March 09, 2017 at 01:20 #59888
Freedom ain't free.

That entails civil liberties as well.

Hell, you had the director of the FBI coming out today and saying that there's no such thing as absolute privacy in America. I can understand why given how many people hate America for meddling with their affairs, which is something I hope decreases and not increases with these tools the CIA and other agencies use.
Wayfarer March 09, 2017 at 02:56 #59891
Quoting Sapientia
One reason has already been suggested, which is that the authority in question can't be trusted to be responsible


Call me reactionary but I trust Assange a great deal less than the institutions he's exposing - in this case anyway.
Wayfarer March 09, 2017 at 06:55 #59906
Snowden is in Russia. If Assange wasn't holed up in an Embassy he'd be there too, I'm sure. Putin is running rings around the West and they're aiding and abetting him. Trump is too vain to see it because Putin plays him like a fiddle. For that matter, where are all the big leaks out of the Russian spy services? I bet if Wikileaks dared publish a whole bunch of KGB information, Assange would be dead the week after, embassy or no embassy.
tom March 09, 2017 at 08:32 #59918
Quoting discoii
4) We have nothing to hide, so why is this relevant?
Counter: Let me put it to you in a way you can understand. Trump has the ability to blow up your car at will and no one will know who did it. And that's just one tool he has, among multiple thousand. Even if you trusted Obama with these tools (which, by the way, were developed under the Obama presidency), do you really trust Trump to be responsible?


I think you've missed the point of "Vault 7 Part One".

It was these very cyber-attack tools that were used to wire-tap Trump and his transition team during the election and during the transition. It was these very tools that were used to masquerade as Russian hacks, to provide probable-cause to get the FISA warrant to spy on Trump. Furthermore, Obama seduced the security clearance of the wire-taps on Trump and ordered their wide dissemination among the security community - basically facilitating the leaks.

An interesting side issue is that Loretta Lynch made the last (and successful) FISA application hours after meeting with Bill Clinton.

Trump was told of the contents of Vault7 a few days before the dump, hence his famous Twitter tirade against Obama for spying on him. Various conversations that were used to incriminate Flynn took place in Trump Tower. Now Trump knows not only where he was spied on, but how, by whom, and the source of his alleged Russian connections.

There is unquestionably going to be a shit-storm of large proportions over this. It is essentially sedition, if not an actual attempted coup, on behalf of Obama-loyalists in CIA.

The CIA is clearly out of Trump's control, but there are also clearly some members of the CIA, at a lower level, who are on his side.

But even this isn't the main shocking revelation of Vault7, if sedition was not enough. It's that after spending $100Billion developing "Umbrage", the CIA have lost control of it. If you know the right people, you could get a copy!
Wayfarer March 09, 2017 at 09:42 #59926
?
tom March 09, 2017 at 10:45 #59927
Looks like the Germans may prosecute over the CIA hacker base in Frankfurt!
S March 09, 2017 at 11:02 #59929
Quoting Wayfarer
Call me reactionary but I trust Assange a great deal less than the institutions he's exposing - in this case anyway.


Assange doesn't have the ability to assassinate anyone driving a smart car, transform your smart TV into a surveillance post, and thousands of other goodie goods. He has the ability to publish information. The two are hardly analogous.

tom March 09, 2017 at 11:16 #59932
Quoting Sapientia
Assange doesn't have the ability to assassinate anyone driving a smart car, transform your smart TV into a surveillance post, and thousands of other goodie goods. He has the ability to publish information. The two are hardly analogous.


Assange may indeed have much of that ability, as have others.

Recently, the CIA lost control of the majority of its hacking arsenal including malware, viruses, trojans, weaponized "zero day" exploits, malware remote control systems and associated documentation. This extraordinary collection, which amounts to more than several hundred million lines of code, gives its possessor the entire hacking capacity of the CIA. The archive appears to have been circulated among former U.S. government hackers and contractors in an unauthorized manner, one of whom has provided WikiLeaks with portions of the archive.
S March 09, 2017 at 11:20 #59933
Quoting tom
Assange may indeed have much of that ability, as have others.

Recently, the CIA lost control of the majority of its hacking arsenal including malware, viruses, trojans, weaponized "zero day" exploits, malware remote control systems and associated documentation. This extraordinary collection, which amounts to more than several hundred million lines of code, gives its possessor the entire hacking capacity of the CIA. The archive appears to have been circulated among former U.S. government hackers and contractors in an unauthorized manner, one of whom has provided WikiLeaks with portions of the archive.


It's possible, but that's not good enough reason to believe that it's true. We have good enough reason to believe that it's true of the CIA. If someone were to expose Assange (assuming, of course, that there's something there to expose) like he has exposed the CIA, then that'd be good enough reason, but that hasn't happened as far as I'm aware. It would probably be all over the news if it had. I'm not going to lap up some conspiracy theory attempting to turn the tables on Assange - possibly with an agenda.
discoii March 09, 2017 at 11:24 #59934
Reply to tom This isn't new in politics -- I don't think anything here is that revealing insofar as scandals go. Every president has basically used the CIA for political ends since its inception -- whether it be foreign ends or local ends. So, your outrage here might be about 50 years late. Personally, the game doesn't bother me that much if it's used against themselves. I like it when the hydra eats its own heads, so to speak.
Metaphysician Undercover March 09, 2017 at 12:12 #59935
Quoting tom
It was these very cyber-attack tools that were used to wire-tap Trump and his transition team during the election and during the transition. It was these very tools that were used to masquerade as Russian hacks, to provide probable-cause to get the FISA warrant to spy on Trump. Furthermore, Obama seduced the security clearance of the wire-taps on Trump and ordered their wide dissemination among the security community - basically facilitating the leaks.


If there was evidence of Russian hacking, and interfering in the U.S. election, then isn't it the responsibility of the CIA to determine the specifics about this activity? Wire tapping is a standard procedure isn't it? I think your claim that the Russian hacks are fictitious is a little far-fetched.
Wayfarer March 09, 2017 at 21:19 #59988
Quoting Sapientia
Assange doesn't have the ability to assassinate anyone driving a smart car, transform your smart TV into a surveillance post, and thousands of other goodie goods. He has the ability to publish information. The two are hardly analogous.


What I mean is, I don't much trust US government agencies, but I trust Assange's motivations less.

Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
I think your claim that the Russian hacks are fictitious is a little far-fetched.


Only 'a little'?

S March 09, 2017 at 21:44 #59992
Quoting Wayfarer
What I mean is, I don't much trust US government agencies, but I trust Assange's motivations less.


Okay, but this isn't about Assange. It doesn't matter who published the information. What matters is the information itself and its consequences.
Wayfarer March 09, 2017 at 22:21 #59998
Reply to Sapientia If Assange hadn't published it, it wouldn't even be up for discussion. Look, the CIA and NSA and the various US spook agencies, get up to a lot of nefarious activities, but I don't see how simply destroying their confidentiality contributes to overall world order. I don't think the world is a safer or better place for the such activities. It would be a different matter if Wikileaks were publishing evidence of genuine malfeasance, like that well-known case of the gunship assassination of the journalists, but I don't see it here.

And as I said, if Wikileaks published what the Russian or the Chinese secret services get up to, that would be interesting. But that seems never to happen, does it? And do you think that is because those secret services are ethical and conscientious and never pose a threat to human rights?
S March 09, 2017 at 23:04 #60005
Quoting Wayfarer
If Assange hadn't published it, it wouldn't even be up for discussion.


Right or wrong, what's done is done, and can't be undone, unless perhaps you have a time machine.

Quoting Wayfarer
Look, the CIA and NSA and the various US spook agencies, get up to a lot of nefarious activities, but I don't see how simply destroying their confidentiality contributes to overall world order. I don't think the world is a safer or better place for the such activities. It would be a different matter if Wikileaks were publishing evidence of genuine malfeasance, like that well-known case of the gunship assassination of the journalists, but I don't see it here.


No you look, you're shooting the messenger for raising an important concern. Raising an important concern isn't guaranteed to make the world a safer place or a better place according to some notions of what it means for the world to be a better place, but sometimes it's nevertheless the right thing to do. It might cause riots or worse, but it can still be the right thing to do. If your kind of consequentialism rules that out, then that's a problem with your kind of consequentialism.

I don't know why you're mischaracterising this again as simply destroying confidentiality, as if what was done was done for no reason. These secrets haven't been revealed for no reason. It isn't that simple, so you should stop trying to simplify it. You might not agree with the reason, but there is a reason.

I think that you're overlooking the significance. Just because there is as of yet, to my knowledge, no reported incident, like that well-known case of the gunship assassination of the journalists, that doesn't mean that there is nothing to worry about, and that we should have been kept in the dark - perhaps until it is too late. Do you not think that prevention is important?

Your focus on Assange is a red herring. Forget about Assange for a minute. You yourself said that you don't much trust US government agencies!
Wayfarer March 09, 2017 at 23:07 #60006
Quoting Sapientia
but sometimes it's nevertheless the right thing to do.


Sometimes, but I don't think this is the time. Even the internal critics of the US secret services, say this is dangerous disclosure. Assange is not a red herring, any more than the iceberg that sank the Titanic.

I notice nobody here has speculated on why the Russians and Chinese secret services are immune to disclosure on Wikileaks. You think it's because they're basically ethical and upright? Try blowing the whistle on Russian government corruption and you'll end up with concrete shoes.

Quoting Sapientia
These secrets haven't been revealed for no reason.


I think they've been revealed, because they're supposed to be highly secret. I can't see any other reason in this case.
Metaphysician Undercover March 10, 2017 at 01:49 #60016
Quoting Sapientia
I don't know why you're mischaracterising this again as simply destroying confidentiality, as if what was done was done for no reason. These secrets haven't been revealed for no reason. It isn't that simple, so you should stop trying to simplify it. You might not agree with the reason, but there is a reason.


I really haven't seen "the reason" yet, so I can't say whether I agree or disagree. Perhaps we can clarify this reason, so I can make a decision.

Quoting Sapientia
One reason has already been suggested, which is that the authority in question can't be trusted to be responsible.


So the reason is that the CIA is irresponsible. I would say that the leak itself proves a degree of irresponsibility. But it's not clear where that irresponsibility lies. The question is who is responsible for the leaks? Are you sure that Wikileaks isn't revealing the information for other (confidential) reasons, and that they're not actively involved in the leaking? If so, then isn't it Wikileaks who is responsible, or should I say irresponsible?
tom March 10, 2017 at 09:49 #60037
Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
So the reason is that the CIA is irresponsible. I would say that the leak itself proves a degree of irresponsibility.


You're not joking!

"An historic act of devastating incompetence!"

Assange confirms the entire CIA cyber weapons arsenal is available on the black market.

S March 10, 2017 at 10:30 #60041
Quoting Wayfarer
Sometimes, but I don't think this is the time. Even the internal critics of the US secret services, say this is dangerous disclosure.


There are mixed views. And dangerous disclosure can be compatible with the right thing to do. The danger aspect needn't be what determines the rightness or wrongness of the act.

Quoting Wayfarer
Assange is not a red herring, any more than the iceberg that sank the Titanic.


He's certainly related, like with the iceberg, but to divert attention towards the iceberg and away from the hole in the ship would be a problem, and that's my point.

The analogy with the iceberg isn't very accurate. It's more like a situation where, unbeknownst to the passengers, but known to the higher ups, the Titanic is sailing through dangerous waters, and there's a whistleblower who blows the whistle. You then concentrate on criticising the whistleblower for doing what he did, even though you admit that the higher ups cannot be trusted with the task of ensuring that the ship gets to its destination with all the responsibilities that that implies.

Quoting Wayfarer
I notice nobody here has speculated on why the Russians and Chinese secret services are immune to disclosure on Wikileaks. You think it's because they're basically ethical and upright? Try blowing the whistle on Russian government corruption and you'll end up with concrete shoes.


Perhaps because that's not really the topic of discussion. The topic is about the secrets that have been exposed about American organisations.

I can think of at least two acceptable reasons out of a number of possible reasons, and you've mentioned one yourself. One reason would be that they haven't been able to do so, and the other reason would be that they think that the danger to their life is too great.

Quoting Wayfarer
I think they've been revealed, because they're supposed to be highly secret. I can't see any other reason in this case.


Others can, so I think that that's more to do with your sight than what is or isn't there. And it's odd that your talk seems to conflict with your sight. You say that you don't much trust US government agencies, yet you say that you don't see a reason. You just need to connect the dots, I think. If there is a significant lack of trust of the authorities in question, then what does that tell us? These revelations are relevant with regards to this lack of trust. They give us more reason to act. They reinforce this point, and it is the authorities themselves who are ultimately responsible, not those who expose what they're doing.
Wayfarer March 10, 2017 at 10:49 #60044
Quoting Wayfarer
I notice nobody here has speculated on why the Russians and Chinese secret services are immune to disclosure on Wikileaks.


Quoting Sapientia
Perhaps because that's not really the topic of discussion.


Convenient, isn't it.
S March 10, 2017 at 10:57 #60048
Quoting Wayfarer
Convenient, isn't it.


Ha! This is a free, public online forum. There's nothing stopping anyone from talking about that when that's the topic of discussion. I'm just pointing out that, strictly speaking, that is not the topic of this discussion.

Quoting Wayfarer
I trust them a damn sight more than the current White House.


But, again, this is just another comparative statement which doesn't get to the issue. Like saying that Stalin was better than Hitler or something. That doesn't get to what people take issue with about Stalin. It's a distraction.
Metaphysician Undercover March 10, 2017 at 12:54 #60076
Quoting Sapientia
The analogy with the iceberg isn't very accurate. It's more like a situation where, unbeknownst to the passengers, but known to the higher ups, the Titanic is sailing through dangerous waters, and there's a whistleblower who blows the whistle. You then concentrate on criticising the whistleblower for doing what he did, even though you admit that the higher ups cannot be trusted with the task of ensuring that the ship gets to its destination with all the responsibilities that that implies.


You haven't considered the possibility that the whistle blower has created the "dangerous waters" which is being reported, just like the fireman who lights fires to give himself work. If the problem here is that the information has been leaked, then the guilty party is the one which takes the information. Dealing in stolen goods is just as much a crime as stealing, because of complicity. Your approach is like trying to pin the blame for a robbery on the victim, saying that the victim's goods weren't properly secured.

So you need to consider the possibility that the whistle blower has created the "dangerous waters" with the intent of reporting it, either to make oneself look good by foreseeing a problem, or to make the other look bad, for sailing in dangerous water.
S March 10, 2017 at 13:44 #60090
Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
You haven't considered the possibility that the whistle blower has created the "dangerous waters" which is being reported, just like the fireman who lights fires to give himself work. If the problem here is that the information has been leaked, then the guilty party is the one which takes the information. Dealing in stolen goods is just as much a crime as stealing, because of complicity. Your approach is like trying to pin the blame for a robbery on the victim, saying that the victim's goods weren't properly secured.

So you need to consider the possibility that the whistle blower has created the "dangerous waters" with the intent of reporting it, either to make oneself look good by foreseeing a problem, or to make the other look bad, for sailing in dangerous water.


In the analogy, the dangerous waters are the cyber warfare arsenal under the control of the CIA referred to in the opening post. Dangerous waters are a problem regardless of whether or not the passengers are aware, so if reporting it is a problem, it is [i]an additional[/I] problem.

But how is the reporting a problem? It is a problem for the CIA, but some would question whether they should have done what they did in the first place, and will think that it is a good thing that we have found out. It's a bit like letting a friend know that their partner has been cheating on them. It wasn't the whistleblower that did the cheating. The partner shouldn't have cheated in the first place.

Even if Assange himself created the cyber warfare arsenal, the CIA took ownership of it for potential use. They are complicit: they maintained ownership and control over this arsenal, and they did so secretly. That's what many people see as a problem - especially given other factors, such as Trump. Assange does not have ownership or control over this arsenal, as far as I'm aware, and I doubt that his intention was to do something which would lead to himself being implicated.

I don't buy this conspiracy theory about Assange being some kind of Russian spy or a crazed narcissist, but I accept the possibility that he might have had bad intentions and that he might have had some part in what has transpired. But whether his intentions were good or bad is ultimately beside the point for me, and likewise if he no longer has the role he used to on account of being a whistleblower, which entails a renouncement and condemnation.
Metaphysician Undercover March 10, 2017 at 14:12 #60092
Quoting Sapientia
In the analogy, the dangerous waters are the cyber warfare arsenal under the control of the CIA referred to in the opening post. Dangerous waters are a problem regardless of whether or not the passengers are aware, so if reporting it is a problem, it is an additional problem.


Well I don't think you can prevent governments from having a "warfare arsenal". That's just a matter of fact that we must live with, and they claim that the arsenal is justified as defence. There are weapons all over the world. I believe that the special problem here is that releasing the information, is itself the danger, because it puts the arsenal in the hands of others. The information is the weapon. So releasing this information is analogous to releasing the information of how to make a nuclear bomb, along with the necessary elements to do such.

Quoting Sapientia
But how is it a problem? It is a problem for the CIA, but some would question whether they should have done what they did in the first place, and will think that it is a good thing that we have found out. It's a bit like letting a friend know that their partner has been cheating on them. It wasn't the whistleblower that did the cheating. The partner shouldn't have cheated in the first place.


How can you say that it wasn't the whistle blower who did the cheating, in this case? If the whistle blower paid for the leaked information, then the whistle blower caused the leak.

Quoting Sapientia
Even if Assange himself created the cyber warfare arsenal, the CIA took ownership of it for potential use. They are complicit, and they maintain ownership and control. That's what many people see as a problem. Assange does not have ownership or control over this arsenal, as far as I'm aware, and I doubt that his intention was to do something which would lead to himself being implicated.


The CIA amassed the arsenal, where they got the individual parts, I don't know. But we can look at it as part of the government's warfare arsenal. The CIA is a federal government agency. You might argue that it is a crime for the government to own weapons, but what good would this argument do? You might argue that the CIA is incompetent and should have weapons, but what good would that do? Clearly if they got these weapons they're not completely incompetent. Where they've demonstrated incompetence is in keeping these weapons. But the crime is to steal those weapons and pass them around. We cannot really argue that having the weapons is a crime, unless you're prepared to argue that it's a crime for governments to have weapons. Perhaps, you're prepared to argue that this particular type of weapon should not be possessed, as they do with WMD.
S March 10, 2017 at 20:46 #60137
Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
Well I don't think you can prevent governments from having a "warfare arsenal". That's just a matter of fact that we must live with, and they claim that the arsenal is justified as defence. There are weapons all over the world. I believe that the special problem here is that releasing the information, is itself the danger, because it puts the arsenal in the hands of others. The information is the weapon. So releasing this information is analogous to releasing the information of how to make a nuclear bomb, along with the necessary elements to do such.


It's about the scale and covert nature of this cyber warfare arsenal. Think how many people own a smart car, phone or TV. How many of these people are just ordinary citizens and not criminals who warrant the attention of the CIA? That's a game changer. Of course they'll always claim that it's justified as defence. That way there's never any limit, and what many people see as our rights can be gradually eroded to whatever extent they see fit. Unless we push back hard enough. Passivity just normalises what they're doing, and sends them the signal that what they're doing is okay, so perhaps they'll test the waters again, and go even further next time. Where do we draw the line? Or should we just not bother?

Wikileaks has not published any cyber weapons themselves, they've just published documents describing them. I don't accept your claim that releasing this information puts the arsenal in the hands of others or that it's analogous to releasing information on how to build a nuclear bomb. The CIA had already lost the cyber weapons arsenal by the time of the leak. They were already out there. So the leak is not to blame for that. The CIA, on the other hand, is. The leak has, however, vastly increased awareness, which has lead to countermeasures being designed, which can be put to good use.

Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
How can you say that it wasn't the whistle blower who did the cheating, in this case? If the whistle blower paid for the leaked information, then the whistle blower caused the leak.


That's another attempt from you to twist my analogy. The cheating isn't the leak. The leak is akin to the telling, not the cheating. The cheating is having this secret arsenal.

Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
The CIA amassed the arsenal, where they got the individual parts, I don't know. But we can look at it as part of the government's warfare arsenal. The CIA is a federal government agency. You might argue that it is a crime for the government to own weapons, but what good would this argument do? You might argue that the CIA is incompetent and should have weapons, but what good would that do?


I'm obviously not going to make that argument. The debate is about limits. There are limits everywhere you look, even in war, hence the Geneva Conventions.

Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
Clearly if they got these weapons they're not completely incompetent. Where they've demonstrated incompetence is in keeping these weapons.


It's not about incompetence in that respect. It's more about being trustworthy or responsible. And, as the saying goes, with great power comes great responsibility. In this case, the power and the accompanying responsibility is so great that I'm not sure I even want it within their reach.

Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
But the crime is to steal those weapons and pass them around. We cannot really argue that having the weapons is a crime, unless you're prepared to argue that it's a crime for governments to have weapons.


Talk about crime becomes relatively meaningless if the authorities can legitimise the kind of thing that we're talking about or if they can keep it under wraps.

Quoting Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps, you're prepared to argue that this particular type of weapon should not be possessed, as they do with WMD.


I'm certainly willing to consider that argument as opposed to passive acceptance or apologetics. And this is just what we know about, thanks to Wikileaks. Imagine what else they could be up to. Imagination is all we'd have to rely on if it weren't for organisations such as Wikileaks.
tom March 10, 2017 at 21:12 #60142
Quoting Sapientia
It's about the scale and covert nature of this cyber warfare arsenal. Think how many people own a smart car or TV. How many of these people are just ordinary citizens and not criminals who warrant the attention of the CIA?


Actually, you are wrong.

It's about:

Quoting tom
"An historic act of devastating incompetence!"


You can buy the entire CIA cyber-warfare arsenal, that the USA developed at the cost of $100Billion if you have the right connections.


S March 10, 2017 at 21:13 #60143
Reply to tom Oh, well that makes it alright then. :-}

Obviously it's not secret anymore, but it was. And I haven't denied the incompetence. I denied its relevance in relation to what I think is of greater importance.
tom March 10, 2017 at 21:26 #60145
Reply to Sapientia

It was never a secret. The point is that now other states and even private individuals have the ability to crash cars, eavesdrop on the world, and masquerade as the Russians. Thanks CIA for being so stupid.
S March 10, 2017 at 21:30 #60146
Quoting tom
It was never a secret.


Of course it was. That's why we're only just hearing about it now on the news. It was kept secret from the general public who do not have inside knowledge on the CIA or high-end black markets. Nothing was said to the public by the CIA or the president, until they were in effect forced to do so in response to Wikileaks.
Metaphysician Undercover March 10, 2017 at 22:23 #60153
Quoting Sapientia
It's about the scale and covert nature of this cyber warfare arsenal. Think how many people own a smart car or TV. How many of these people are just ordinary citizens and not criminals who warrant the attention of the CIA? That's a game changer.


The CIA has always had the capacity to tap my phone, find out whatever information they want about me, and I'm sure they could have me killed if they wanted. How is this any different? Why do you think it's a game changer? It's just a fact that I live with, that there are people out there with power over me. The best solution is to try and live peacefully, in the eyes of the law.

Quoting Sapientia
Passivity just normalises what they're doing, and sends them the signal that what they're doing is okay, so perhaps they'll test the waters again, and go even further next time. Where do we draw the line? Or should we just not bother?


I think that it's already been normalized long before I came into the world. If you want to stop it, what do you propose, revolution? I see that as a much higher risk than allowing the CIA to proceed with their covert activities.

Quoting Sapientia
The cheating is having this secret arsenal.


How is having the secret arsenal cheating? We know that they have, and use, such technologies, they have been doing so since before I was born. We just hope that they use it for good. We know from past experience that they do not always use it for good, there's a lot of politics involved.

Quoting Sapientia
Talk about crime becomes relatively meaningless if the authorities can legitimise the kind of thing that we're talking about or if they can keep it under wraps.


I think we're talking mainly about international intelligence gathering. If you and I, and the rest of the country, think that this is wrongful activity, and refrain from doing it, how is this going to prevent others from using it against us? You'll never get Geneva type conventions to oppose intelligence gathering because it's seen by too many people as fair activity. Interfering in communications is seen as fair play. If the activities of computers are communications based, then how would you outlaw interfering with your enemy's computers?

Quoting Sapientia
I'm certainly willing to consider that argument as opposed to passive acceptance or apologetics. And this is just what we know about, thanks to Wikileaks. Imagine what else they could be up to. Imagination is all we'd have to rely on if it weren't for organisations such as Wikileaks.


I've been imagining this for all my life, it's nothing new to me. Imagine if there was a God, and God knew every activity you were up to, and everything you said, and to whom, and how to access everything in all the computers, and even how to reprogram those computers to do whatever He decided they should do. Now imagine that your enemies might gain the capacity to tap into God's knowledge, to a degree, and use this information against you. Wouldn't you want to tap into God's knowledge first, and use that information against your enemies? The only way to avoid this is to outlaw enemies. How are we going to do that?