US Intelligence Leaks, SwaaS, and OpenAI bug bounty - April 8th - 14th - This Week in Security
US Intelligence Leaks
- What type of security and access control protocols were in place that allowed a 21-year old to access this information?
- What role do popular messaging platforms play in facilitating the spread of sensitive information and what are their repronsibilities?
SwaaS: Swatting as a service
- Maintain privacy: Limit the amount of personal information shared online, such as your address, phone number, and daily routines. This can help reduce the chances of being targeted for a swatting attack.
- Use strong, unique passwords: Ensuring that your online accounts have strong, unique passwords can prevent unauthorized access to your personal information. In addition, enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) wherever possible to further secure your accounts.
- Be cautious with caller ID: Remember that caller ID can be easily spoofed, and do not assume that a call from a seemingly legitimate number is genuine. Verify the identity of the caller before providing any sensitive information.
- Educate friends and family: Share information about swatting and its dangers with your friends and family. Encourage them to be vigilant and cautious when sharing personal information online.
- Notify local law enforcement: If you believe you are at risk of being targeted for a swatting attack, inform your local police department. They may be able to take preventive measures or be more prepared to respond appropriately if an incident occurs.
OpenAI bug bounty program
- ddavisf5Ret. Employee
There's a whole bunch of stuff to unwrap in the first two parts of this article. At the end of 2019 the US Commerce Department blacklisted NSO Group, and in December 2019 levied sanctions against the Chinese Academy of Military Medical Sciences for their assistance to the Chinese government in the development of brain-control weaponry. For the US Commerce Department blacklist to be important, you need to know that a commerce department blacklist is a prohibition (among other things) of doing business in the country. NSO Group spyware had been sold to United States police agencies and they were using it in conjunction with a foreign military (Iran and China) that had owned that **bleep** really hard. One thing NSO Group spyware cannot do is place accurate or realistic voice calls containing your voice or my voice. The voice modelling alone to do that and target a person is a major privacy event that would need public legislation, and it isn't feasible with the current complete lack of a public face of this for local police to have access to specific individual's voice model data, so it wasn't done by them. It is cyberwarfare and is completely a military event. This was followed March 27th, 2023 by an executive order from President Joe Biden prohibiting the use of commercial spyware by United States government agencies that poses a threat to national security.
We're not safe, and it's not cool to ignore the little fiddly technical **bleep** that we see all the time (some of us more than others), because there's quantum entanglement gear that is combined with the brain-measurement gear put forward by the CIA in their sanctions against the Chinese Academy of Military Medical Sciences.
This cyberwarfare from the visible tip of the NSO Group and "AI" voice calls iceberg down to the obvious quantum physics nature (deniable in every way) of the cyberwarfare gear needs to be taken into account by all of us, and proper communication channels opened with the FBI or military intelligence (the Director of National Intelligence is a good place to go or your state's military department). We exist because they are safe, and that's it.