PDA

View Full Version : Stop the Presses! Spooks Hacked al-Qaida Online Mag



buglerbilly
02-06-11, 01:48 AM
By Adam Rawnsley June 1, 2011 | 1:56 pm



Just because you’re a paranoid terror wannabe doesn’t mean they aren’t watching you — and hacking your jihadi online fanzine. The Washington Post reports that British intelligence vandalized the debut issue of Inspire magazine after the United States reportedly turned down a similar plan.

Inspire billed itself as “the first magazine issued by al-Qaida in the English language” when it launched in June 2010. It urged lone-wolf terrorists to take up arms with a mixture of new and recycled al-Qaida propaganda. It’s accessibility in English made it a splash in the Western press. With ludicrous articles like “Make a bomb in the kitchen of your mom,” some thought it was a fake.

But among its target audience, it caused a panic. When downloaded from online file-hosting services, the PDF’s first few pages looked just fine. The rest of it, however, was filled with a continuing stream of gibberish characters.

Online jihadis had a mini-freakout. Al-Qaida fanboys spread rumors that Inspire contained a virus. Jihadi forum administrators warned users to steer clear.

The Post reports that the Brits were responsible for turning Inspire into a junior jumble all along. They took up the idea of hacking the magazine while American officials debated similar action, according to the Post. Cyber Command chief Lt. General Keith Alexander argued the mag was a danger to troops and in need of a takedown. The CIA prevailed, arguing that an attack would expose their tradecraft and cut off a source of intelligence info.

Jihadi forums and media have been the subject of all kinds of cyber trickery over the years. Some of it can be directly attributed to governments. The source of other incidents is less clear. American, Saudi and Dutch authorities have set up honeytrap jihadi sites to collect intelligence on potential terrorists.

The Taliban’s website has been hacked and defaced with images of the insurgent group’s most brutal crimes. Elite jihadi forums have been attacked. And the password for a video featuring Osama Bin Laden was tampered with, delaying its release.

As the wrangling among U.S. officials illustrates, messing with jihadi media can be a tricky call. Unless spooks are willing to consistently disrupt the releases, they risk losing an intelligence source in exchange for only a temporary strike.

Alternatively, occasional mischief against jihadis online might actually be beneficial. It could be scaring users just enough to stop them from planning operations, but not enough to push them completely into hiding.

A corrected first issue of Inspire eventually came out, and since then al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula’s production arm has been able to put out four more issues – in addition to issues of its Arabic language Sada al-Malahim — without similar disruptions. Either the Brits have lost interest in messing around with Inspire or concluded it’s too difficult to do on a regular basis.

Image: Inspire

buglerbilly
03-06-11, 07:18 AM
MI6 hackers hit terrorist website with cupcakes

June 3, 2011 - 2:37PM .


The spy who pranked me.

British intelligence has hacked into an al-Qaeda online magazine and replaced bomb-making instructions with a recipe for cupcakes.

The cyber-warfare operation was carried out by MI6 and the GCHQ signals intelligence agency to disrupt the terrorists' attempts to recruit "lone-wolf" agents using a new English-language web publication called Inspire, The Daily Telegraph understands.

When followers tried to download the 67-page colour magazine, instead of instructions on how to "Make a bomb in the Kitchen of your Mom" by "The AQ Chef" they were greeted with garbled computer code.

The code, which had been inserted into the original magazine by the British intelligence hackers, was actually a web page from recipes for The Best Cupcakes in America published by chat show host Ellen DeGeneres.

The web page declares that "the little cupcake is big again" adding: "Self-contained and satisfying, it summons memories of childhood even as it's updated for today's sweet-toothed hipsters."

Included was a recipe for the Mojito Cupcake - "made of white rum cake and draped in vanilla buttercream"- and the Rocky Road Cupcake, which carried the message "warning: sugar rush ahead!"

The original magazine featured instructions on how to make a lethal pipe bomb using sugar, match heads and a miniature light bulb attached to a timer.

The hackers also removed articles by Osama bin Laden, his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri and a piece called "What to expect in Jihad".

British and US intelligence planned separate cyber attacks after learning that the magazine was about to be issued in June last year.

They have both developed a variety of cyber-weapons such as computer viruses, to use against enemy states and terrorists.

A Pentagon operation was blocked by the CIA, which argued that it would disrupt an important source of intelligence, according to a report in America.

The Daily Telegraph understands that the cyber attack was launched from Britain instead.

Al-Qaeda was able to reissue the magazine two weeks later and has gone on to produce four further editions, but one source said British intelligence was continuing to target the magazine because it is viewed as such a powerful propaganda tool.

The magazine is produced by the radical preacher Anwar al-Awlaki, who has lived in Britain and the US, and his associate Samir Khan, from North Carolina. Both men are thought to be in Yemen.

Bruce Reidel, a former CIA analyst, said the magazine was "clearly intended for the aspiring jihadist in the US or UK".

The Daily Telegraph, London

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/technology/security/mi6-hackers-hit-terrorist-website-with-cupcakes-20110603-1fk8l.html#ixzz1OBuIskFX