Friday, August 17, 2007

WIKIPEDIA EDITED BY CIA COMPUTERS



According to a CIA spokesperson, the US Intelligence agency is editing Wikipedia pages in order to save Americans lives. Between June 29 2004 and July 30 2007, Wikipedia pages have been edited 297 times by some individual(s) using computers that belong to the CIA network.

Among the pages that were edited by the CIA individual(s), we find The 2003 invasion of Iraq (modified on 2004-11-09 15:57:47), William Colby (modified on 2005-06-23 22:45:00, 2005-06-24 16:32:11, 2005-06-24 16:34:19 and 2006-06-20 18:32:45), The Iraq Intelligence Commission (modified on 2005-06-30 21:27:22), The Central Intelligence Agency (modified on 2005-07-18 17:54:46), The United States Intelligence Community (modified on 2005-08-15 15:05:43), Ahmed Chalabi (modified on 2005-12-09 18:13:04), Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (modified on 2005-12-15 16:38:49), The National Counter Terrorism Center (modified on 2005-12-22 16:24:26), The National Security Council (modified on 2005-12-27 13:42:09 and 2005-12-27 13:44:14), Porter J. Goss (modified on 2006-01-25 00:08:00 and 2006-01-25 00:10:10), George Tenet (modified on 2006-02-10 10:36:53), Kyle Foggo (modified on 2006-05-08 17:00:42), Encryption (modified on 2006-10-27 16:41:05), The list of Yale University student organizations (modified on 2007-01-23 23:54:42), China and Weapons of Mass Destruction (modified on 2007-02-05 17:27:24), and The Director of National Intelligence (modified on 2007-04-24 20:07:24).

On May 8 2006, I wrote an article in which I discussed the resignation of CIA former Director Porter Goss.

"Goss 19-month tenure was marked by low morale at the agency, turf battles with the director of national intelligence, and a fair number of scandals.
"Soon after his nomination, Goss appointed Michael Kostiw as executive director. Then, someone leaked embarrassing information about Kostiw's past. Kostiw had been forced to leave the CIA 20 years earlier. Two officers resigned in protest.
"Goss picked Kyle Foggo to replace Kostiw. The CIA's inspector general is examining whether Foggo arranged for any contracts to be granted to companies associated with Brent R. Wilkes.

"Wilkes is a contractor who had connections to Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham. The Congressman has been sentenced to eight years in prison for corruption. Wilkes and Foggo are long-time friends. The agency confirmed that Foggo and Wilkes attended private poker games (also attended by a fair number of prostitutes) at a Washington hotel.

Upon hearing Goss's announcement, Foggo announced his resignation. On the same day this article was published in OhmyNews, someone, using a CIA computer (IP 198.81.129.194) edited the Wikipedia page of Kyle Foggo. The following innocent statement was added by the CIA user.

"He [Kyle Dustin "Dusty" Foggo] resigned from the CIA on May 8, 2006, stating that a new director should be able to choose his own deputies."

On July 26, Ohmynews alleged that Wikipedia may have been infiltrated by Intelligence Agencies. The story attracted more than 50,000 readers in just three days, was highly debated on the Web, and translated in several languages.

On August14, Wired reported that Griffith had completed a new software utility known as the "Wikipedia Scanner". The software is capable of tracking millions of Wikipedia article edits back to their originating IP addresses. Thus, it is now straightforward to identify any corporations or organisation editing article on the world famous Free Encyclopedia.

Using Griffith’s software, I could identify 297 edits that can be track back to the following IP’s: 198.81.129.193, 198.81.129.194, 198.81.129.186, and 198.81.129.34. All IP’s 198.81.129.(0 to 255) belong to the CIA computer Network.
"I cannot confirm that the traffic came from agency computers," a CIA spokesperson stated. "I'd like in any case to underscore a far larger and more significant point that no one should doubt or forget: The CIA has a vital mission in protecting the United States, and the focus of this agency is there, on that decisive work."
"Technically, we don't know whether it came from an agent of that company, however, we do know that edit came from someone with access to their network," Griffith wrote on the Wikipedia Scanner site.
"We really value transparency and the scanner really takes this to another level. The Wikipedia Scanner may prevent an organisation from editing articles that they're really not supposed to," a Wikipedia spokesperson said.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nice job.

"Technically, we don't know whether it came from an agent of that company, however, we do know that edit came from someone with access to their network,"

Cleaning lady?

Anonymous said...

I have long believed that the CIA is simply a cover for international organized crime connected directly to security agencies around the world. It is dedicated to expanding its criminal empire and routinely engages in drug trafficking, money laundering, extortion, blackmail, assassinations and, most infamously, false flag operations such as the one masterminded on 9-11 (probably with the Mossad's help, among others). It long ago ceased to have any national security interests in the cold war, instead preferring to use its internal contacts and surveillance to penetrate, infiltrate and eventually subvert legitimate businesses and illegal ones as well, ostensibly to serve as "front organizations" but eventually becoming part of the world wide web of clandestine money-making operations. There was, of course, no intelligence failure on 9-11 or before the Iraq invasion; both interconnected operations were intended to consolidate the Empire. The CIA represents the internal rot and corruption now at the center of Amwerican imperialism.