I can’t say I
was more than slightly surprised by the recent publicity around the Commons
Security Committee report. Perhaps the
only mildly surprising thing was that so little attention has been paid in the
past to Russian interference and propaganda. How Putin must chuckle at the lack
of British response when his murder teams attack in the UK. The Litvinenko
killing was particularly poignant as the man lay dying knowing, killed by
Russian agents, his death was inevitable after poisoning with Polonium. He had
ingested the stuff which slowly over days would kill him. Having ingested it
there was nothing to be done. The poisoning of dissident Navalny suggests Putin’s
murderous course continues.
As regards the
lack of investigation into the Brexit referendum there is no mystery. Johnson
knows very well, as did Theresa May, that a fraudulent referendum could hardly
become much more fraudulent if Russian manipulators were at work. Still it
would be embarrassing to see the evidence. Any investigation would suffice to bring
Johnson’s wrath. Since he believes the BBC is biased; he lives in a world of
paranoia. It certainly was very much in Russian interests that the Brexiteers
won as they figure any damage to the west is worthwhile. Apparently Johnson’s
anti BBC propaganda is having an effect in BBC self censorship if nowhere else
Interference in
the Scottish referendum is also unsurprising. Clearly Scottish independence is
very much in Russian interests but then Johnson is making the case stronger now
than ever it was six years ago..
Interference in
the US Presidential election was far larger ( or certainly investigated further
). Trump is the Manchurian candidate and he must have Putin chortling with
glee. It appears trolling in social media was the main impact. The safety of US
election polling machines is at potential risk. In a sense British elections reliant on pencil
and paper are less at risk than online counts. The nonchalance about hacking is
frightening but shared by business and individuals.
Anyone who
takes the slightest interest in modern computing and internet usage ought to
realise by now that the scale of online hacking is immense. I must admit that
for myself the realisation has been slow coming. Simple things like changing
default passwords I manage although it is too much hassle for many. Awareness
has come slowly. At my last job my boss was wonderful at sniffing out scams.
After nearly falling for some at that time I’ve learned to be very cautious.
I should have
learned from simple frauds long before the internet age. It was probably the
early 70’s when I had a visit from two burly ex policemen. They enquired about
the small boat I had bought on hire purchase and then neglected payments. The
fraudulent buyer had a worrying amount of detail about me although I was rather
insulted that he described himself( ie. Me) as a technician. I managed to persuade them it
wasn’t me although not without a bit of difficulty and embarrassment. This was
all long before the expression “identity theft” entered the language. This
experience did serve me well when another investigator contacted me about a car
I had supposedly bought.
As have most
computer users I have learned to be careful. I have suffered from a virus
attack, and it was very irritating, although apparently a hackers “joke”. Some
more serious scams I have spotted. In one recent case not involving computers
I’m still puzzled what the motive was. I was approached by a ( supposed ) legal
firm in New York looking to buy a small quantity of shares I had inherited from
my mother in S&U. They were fraudsters but as they were planning to pay me
money, more than their worth, what was
the motive? I guess it didn’t evolve far enough for the real motive to be
apparent.
I’m similarly
slightly baffled by the Russian attempted hacking of Covid vaccine research. I
can only suppose the intent was to copy but since the intention is to make
vaccines ( if successful ) widely available what is the point. Prestige seems
the only possibility but hardly likely with a copy I would have thought.
Russia as a
state seems none too stable. Putin as an ex Cold Warrior ( ex KGB now FSB ) is
doing his best to return to Cold War attitudes. He regards the freedom of
former Soviet satellites as a tragedy and the faltering democracy in Ukraine as
a big threat. He has surrounded himself with cronies whose wealth he makes very
sure is reliant on himself. He plays the Russian nationalist card at every
opportunity. It interesting that the most power hungry and unscrupulous
politicians talk most about patriotism- Trump is the same.
What’s to be
done. On the individual level be suspicious and cautious. I’m less than happy
at being forced to use “cloud” storage. Beware fake news as in the RT TV
channel. As far as Russia is concerned ( and this goes for China also ) trade
but don’t be naïve. The German natural gas deal with Russia with a monopoly pipeline is simply stupid and
putting a hostage in Russian hands. Under their present leadership these
countries want to enslave us.. Computer security must be taken far more
seriously. The monster losses of data suffered by businesses are extremely worrying.
The recent stiff rise in penalties for data losses may help to ensure proper
security.
I am pleased
that online banks have moved to “two factor” security with codes sent to mobile
phones. Even with all this I recently wasted half a day altering all my personal
information and passwords after an attempted scam. I suppose my attitude that
the time was wasted reflects the common attitude that increasing security is a
bore and I need to stop thinking like that. Internet convenience and speed
should more than compensate.
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