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Global articles on espionage, spying, bugs, and other interesting topics.

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College Faculty Condemn NYPD Spying

NEW YORK (AP) – Brooklyn College faculty have passed a resolution condemning the New York Police Department’s effort to infiltrate Muslim student groups.

The college’s Faculty Council voted unanimously to condemn the practice, part of a broad intelligence-gathering operation that the NYPD has built in the last decade with the help of the Central Intelligence Agency.

The CIA is now investigating whether its agents broke the law by spying on Americans.

The Faculty Council passed the resolution on Sept. 13. College spokesman Jeremy Thompson confirmed the resolution’s passage Monday. He said that college president Karen Gould shared the professors’ concerns.


Iranian Internet users were victim to spying: report

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – About 300,000 Internet users in Iran have been spied on last month by one or several hackers who stole security certificates from a Dutch IT firm, a report presented by the Dutch government said on Monday.

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US scientist admits spying charge

Undated image of Stewart Nozette

Nozette was accused of seeking millions of dollars to sell classified information

A former government scientist charged with attempting to sell technology secrets to Israel has confessed to one count of attempted espionage.

Stewart Nozette is expected to serve a sentence of 13 years in prison after making a plea deal with prosecutors.

He has been in jail since his arrest in 2009 after a sting operation by an undercover FBI agent posing as an Israeli intelligence officer.

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Blogger accuses FBI of spying on Israel

WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 (UPI) — U.S. supporters of Israel and at least one member of Congress were recorded on FBI wiretaps of the Israeli Embassy in Washington, a blogger reported.

In an interview with The New York Times published Tuesday, Richard Silverstein provided a motive for the extraordinary secrecy surrounding the prosecution in a Maryland federal court of Shamai Leibowitz.

Leibowitz, an FBI translator, was sentenced to 20 months in prison last year for leaking classified information to Silverstein, who writes a blog called Tikum Olam, named after a Hebrew phrase that means “repairing the world.”

In his first interview about the case, Silverstein said he received some 200 pages of verbatim records of telephone calls and what seemed to be Israeli Embassy conversations.

In one of the conversations, Israeli officials discussed their concern that they were being monitored.

The U.S. government routinely eavesdrops on some embassies inside the United States but intelligence collection against allies, especially one as close as Israel, is a delicate matter.

Silverstein said Leibowitz gave him the documents because of concern about Israel’s aggressive efforts to influence Congress and fears that Israel might strike nuclear facilities in Iran.


The CIA Is Investigating Its Muslim Spying Program

It’s sure to be a proud day over at the Associated Press. The CIA has launched an internal investigation into whether it broke the law when spying on U.S. Muslims in its close collaboration with the New York City Police Department. The anti-terrorism program was the subject of an 8-month long investigation by the AP, which found that the NYPD “dispatched undercover officers into ethnic communities to monitor daily life and scrutinized more than 250 mosques and Muslim student groups in the years after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.” Today, the CIA’s new director David Petraeus said a CIA adviser at the NYPD wants “to make sure we are doing the right thing.”

Critics of the program, such as police reporter Len Levitt, accused the program of targeting “virtually every level of Muslim life in New York City, from cafes to grammar schools” without always having “specific tips about wrongdoing.” Still, James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, says the privacy of Americans was not violated by the CIA-NYPD partnership. Whether the investigation will lead to anything more than an investigation is an open question. Boing Boing’s Xeni Jardin, for one, isn’t optimistic. “Good to know that the CIA will let us know whether the CIA broke the law.”