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- A Century of Spies
Intelligence in the Twentieth Century Resource Type: Book This book is a history of intelligence services around the world. It includes information on nuclear espionage, and the newest technologies.
- Encyclopedia of American Spy Films
Resource Type: Book
- The Mackenzie Institute
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- The NSA's Spying Operation on Mexico
Systematic Eavesdropping on the Government Resource Type: Article Published: 2013 The American NSA has been systematically eavesdropping on the Mexican government for years. Three major programs constitute a massive espionage operation against Mexico.
- Software Meant to Fight Crime Is Used to Spy on Dissidents
Resource Type: Article Published: 2012 Morgan Marquis-Boire works as a Google engineer and Bill Marczak is earning a Ph.D. in computer science. But this summer, the two men have been moonlighting as detectives, chasing an elusive surveillance tool from Bahrain across five continents.
- Spooky Business: A New Report on Corporate Espionage Against Non-profits
Sources News Release Resource Type: Article Published: 2013 Giant corporations are employing highly unethical or illegal tools of espionage against nonprofit organizations with near impunity, according to a new report by Essential Information.
- Spy Wars
Espionage and Canada from Gouzenko to Glasnost Resource Type: Book Published: 1990 A survey history of Canad'as "secret" history.
- Stuxnet and the Bomb
Resource Type: Article Published: 2012 Over the past decade, US experts have strenuously warned about the ominous possibility of other nations, rogue states, or even terrorist groups attacking US infrastructure through the Internet. As it happens, however, it is the United States itself that has developed malicious software in secrecy and launched it against another country.
- Stuxnet on the Loose
Security for the One Percent Resource Type: Article Published: 2012 Suspicions that the Stuxnet computer worm was indeed developed by the United States and Israel has once again exposed American exceptionalism. Espionage and sabotage are presented as intolerable criminal transgressions, normally causing our elected officials and military leaders to erupt in fits of righteous indignation. That is, unless the United States is doing the spying and the sabotaging.
- Three Leaks, Three Weeks, and What We've Learned About the US Government's Other Spying Authority: Executive Order 12333
Resource Type: Article Published: 2013 The National Security Agency has been siphoning off data from the links between Yahoo and Google data centers, which include the fiber optic connections between company servers at various points around the world. While the user may have an encrypted connection to the website, the internal data flows were not encrypted and allowed the NSA to obtain millions of records each month, including both metadata and content like audio, video and text.
- The U.S. Government's Secret Plans to Spy for American Corporations
Resource Type: Article Published: 2014 Throughout the last year, the U.S. government has repeatedly insisted that it does not engage in economic and industrial espionage, in an effort to distinguish its own spying from China's infiltrations of Google, Nortel, and other corporate targets. Turns out that isn't true.
- US: Offensive Cyber-Warfare is Illegal... Unless We Do It
Resource Type: Article Published: 2013 The US government declares that cyberwarfare directed against the US would be an act of war -- and, oh, by the way, that it is agressively engaged in cyberwarfare against foreign countries.
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