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The Courts United States

Ex-CIA Engineer Set To Go On Trial For Vault 7 Leak (wsj.com) 61

An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: Manhattan federal prosecutors are poised to open their case Tuesday in the trial of a former software engineer for the Central Intelligence Agency who is charged with handing over a trove of classified information on the spy agency's hacking operations to WikiLeaks (Warning: source paywalled; alternative source). In 2017, WikiLeaks released more than 8,000 pages of secret materials -- which the antisecrecy organization called "Vault 7" -- detailing the CIA's cyberespionage arsenal, including the agency's playbook for hacking smartphones, computer operating systems, messaging applications and internet-connected televisions. It was one of the largest breaches in the agency's history. Federal prosecutors say the defendant, Joshua Schulte, stole the documents when he worked in a CIA unit that designed the hacking tools.

Mr. Schulte, 31 years old, faces 11 criminal counts, including illegal gathering and transmission of national defense information -- charges that derive from the Espionage Act, a statute that has been applied in other WikiLeaks cases. Some of the charges relate to Mr. Schulte's alleged misconduct and obstruction following his 2017 arrest -- prosecutors say he lied to law enforcement and disobeyed court orders. Mr. Schulte and his lawyers have called the espionage charges vague and overreaching, saying they infringed on constitutional free-speech rights. They have alleged fatal errors in the government's case, objected to the secrecy shrouding the investigation and protested Mr. Schulte's isolated confinement in a Manhattan jail. Opening arguments in the trial are expected as soon as Tuesday, once jury selection is completed.

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Ex-CIA Engineer Set To Go On Trial For Vault 7 Leak

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  • Sometimes we gotta fight bad people. What does something like this do - even the playing field? I don't want an even playing field against ISIS, for example.

    What is the rationale for this kind of treachery?

    • If we're going to have a CIA, they are going to have spying tools.

      There is nothing wrong with spying on our enemies, we should do that (although the CIA is known for their incompetence, so they're probably doing it wrong). The problem is creating enemies to begin with.
      • although the CIA is known for their incompetence, so they're probably doing it wrong

        That's just the pop-culture interpretation of things most people know nothing about. It's akin to that old gem about NASA spending millions to develop a space pen while Russians just used a pencil. Both are examples of total bullshit which the average person believes for no reason other than that others believe it.

        In the real world, the CIA is almost certainly the best intelligence agency on the planet. There are one or two others which can stand toe-to-toe with them in some aspects, but they have a much

    • What is the rationale for this kind of treachery?

      Treachery. Some people support it.

      Even here, read the comments.

    • Many people believe it's unethical for engineers to knowingly design compromised, insecure, or otherwise faulty systems. They regard a secret back-doored system as being in that category. Why is it regarded as unethical? One answer is based on the notion that the government is obligated to ensure that all citizens are secure. By intentionally allowing insecure systems to be in circulation, the government is doing the opposite. Note, a key escrow, as unpopular as it is, wouldn't violate that. It would

  • people playing politics get protected by the system
  • by AxisOfPleasure ( 5902864 ) on Tuesday February 04, 2020 @12:47AM (#59687870)

    Guy goes on his show trial, press makes a fuss, he spends 15 years in jail, writes his memoirs of "being a spy" and makes a fricking mint from book sales. He's released, collects his sales money from his publisher and disappears off to Canada or the Carribean to retire. Just like Peter Wright and the Spycatcher press circus in the 1980s.

  • Nothing exposed was really secret other than the actual software. Did somebody think the CIA wouldn't utilized software exploits on anything and everything? It doesn't strike me as smart to hoard exploits (because anyone can use an exploit) but exposing the actual software they wrote is just stupid. Nothing exposed was being used on millions US citizens (e.g. PRISM) but rather this was the CIA just doing their job. To top it all off, it's not like he didn't know this because he helped them make the damn

    • by c6gunner ( 950153 )

      Nothing exposed was really secret other than the actual software.

      Yeah, other than the software and the strategy, nothing of value was exposed. Just like leaking the D-Day invasion plans to the Nazis was really no big deal.

      • Yeah, other than the software and the strategy, nothing of value was exposed. Just like leaking the D-Day invasion plans to the Nazis was really no big deal.

        What absolute tripe. I never wrote it wasn't of value, I wrote that it wasn't surprising. The only thing this guy did is hurt the CIA. What did he accomplish besides damaging US national security?

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        leaking the D-Day invasion plans to the Nazis

        But in this case, the American public is the Nazis.

  • Sometimes you just gotta shake your head when you see the reality of all of this clearance and background check bullshit when the end result is a difficult, petulant child who storms out of the sandbox with all of the toys in a classic "If I can't play nobody can" move.Yet he obtained a clearance and was hired. How? Why? What does this say about the validity of everything those checks are based on? It says, much like the work of the TSA, that it's all a big circus. When you sign on for work of this type, yo
    • Although one has to wonder about the kiddie pr0n charges ... are they real, or are they manufactured? You want to smear/discredit/ruin someone, that's one of the fastest ways to do so ... and it's not like the CIA doesn't have the capability to stick files on your personal computer. Which, of course, leads to the next question: if those charges were manufactured, was he unstable, or pushed to (over?) the edge by an immoral, the-ends-justify-the-means organization?
      • by BobCov ( 6498174 )
        That's ridiculous. You don't need kiddie porn charges to make what he did stick. No spook is going to traumatize him or herself by handing images of that nature when it would be far far easier to frame with a financial crime. Lots of black ops $$$ in these situations and it would be very easy to target him for a financial crime. Kiddie porn? No, not even remotely plausible.
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      When you sign on for work of this type, you agree to park your ethics at the door.

      Not really. At least not in the past. The DoD and various TLAs have prided themselves on hiring 'patriots'. Which is just an ideologue with a certain set of beliefs and a susceptibility to hold them without question once adopted. And it has come to bite them in the ass numerous times when targeted individuals were persuaded by either foreign psyops or just plain old peer pressure to betray their employer.

      Unstable employee? Maybe. But that's what a lot of true believers appear as to their co-workers. Unless

And it should be the law: If you use the word `paradigm' without knowing what the dictionary says it means, you go to jail. No exceptions. -- David Jones

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