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rC3 preroll music
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Herald: As we said the years before, the
force merged to main. Andy is commonly
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known in our scene. His current talk "CIA
vs. WikiLeaks: intimidation, surveillance,
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and other tactics observed and
experienced". In this talk Andy aims to
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report and show us a collection of his
observations, physical, visual and other
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evidences of the last year incidents that
strongly indicate the context of US
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Central Intelligence Agency and
potentially other entities of the US
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government acting against WikiLeaks and
surrounding persons and organizations.
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Please welcome, with a very warm digital
applause, Andy.
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Andy: OK, I have no idea how a digital
applause works here, but thanks for it
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anyhow. At the beginning, I want to make
and I have to make a few disclaimers, so
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that you know which perspective you're
getting here. I'm working as a data
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journalist for quite a while around the
topics of surveillance, signal
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intelligence, data security. I'm running
this funny buggedplanet, even started that
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buggedplanet.info before Snowden came with
all his documents. But I did work a while
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with his documents. However, this talk is
a bit different as I'm not talking about
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things that I learned, studied or
whatever, but I experienced myself. I'm
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describing events here where I was
targeted. So, I might not be the most
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neutral person in this scenario, but I'm
trying to be technically as accurate as
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possible anyhow. So forgive me if I'm a
bit grumpy about these people. That's just
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because of their perspective. Secondly,
while I've also and the CCC, of course,
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has been addressing human rights issues in
the digital age for a long time, we, and I
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personally, co-founded EDRI, the European
Digital Rights Initiative, to ensure the
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enforcement of human rights in the digital
environment. However, what happened here
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is slightly beyond digital rights. It goes
into real life. And while I'm a German
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citizen, and I know roughly what kind of
laws have been violated here, in respect
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to the German environment, I absolutely
would welcome people who help me analyze
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and understand it from the perspective of
the universal human rights, because there
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is similar cases with people living in
other jurisdictions and so on. Second
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slide of disclaimers, sorry that it's so
much, so I'm addressing with this talk
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activities against people surrounding and
have been and/or surrounding Julian and/or
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WikiLeaks and/or other members of
WikiLeaks. Whatever I describe here, I
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have personally observed and experienced
it. So it is for sure very incomplete.
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It's at best a fragment of what's gone on.
But you will, in case you haven't heard
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about it yet, that Pompeo made some very
clear statements when he was head of CIA.
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It's pretty clear where to attribute these
things. And lastly, there is, of course,
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other persons mentioned. But I'm keeping
them out here for all kinds of reasons.
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But there will be the time when we will
hear more reports and other perspective of
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this particular situation. So, here's my
little overview. I want to get you an idea
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how to get into such a mess. Just in case,
you know, you want it. The context and the
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timeline, a bit of psychology as it's
important because at some point you not
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only get paranoid, you have this drive
to... no this can't be true. Right? You
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have this cognitive dissonance drive
inside of you that you would like to stay
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sane. The new normal of "IT-incidents".
We're all used to that, covert vs. overt.
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What I mean with the term intimidation
surveillance, physical events and their
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impact about the elephant in the room, the
problem of the missing socks. And at the
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end, a little bit of questions. Am I
infectious, how to get out of this mess?
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Maybe also. So, how to get into such a
beautiful mess? Wait, it's not beautiful.
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Well, there are some ideas we share in the
hacker community usually, and even it's
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not far from there to get into the
journalist community. Information should
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be free. Free flow of information is a bit
of a requirement for world peace. And we
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had this and I personally also had this
type of self conception, self
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understanding consciousness. Twenty years
already when WikiLeaks started around
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2006. So this is not that I was jumping or
anybody in the scene was jumping onto
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something that didn't exist until then.
But WikiLeaks turned out to be an
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extremely good concept as a democracy
test. If governments cannot deal with full
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transparency, well, that tells you a lot
about them. But, of course, that is
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similar to jumping to the last point,
similar to working in journalism. When you
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expose things in journalism be it
corruption, be it hypocrisy of
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politicians, be it blunt lies or whatever.
It's not always about making friends. It's
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yes, partly making friends, and partly
pissing people off. That happens. However,
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in this particular environment that Julian
inspired to create. There's some
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cultural, even misunderstandings. For
example, the word conspiracy. For us in
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Europe, I think many of us indeed German
hacker scene are inspired by Robert and
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Wilton's way of saying, oh, a conspiracy
is like the world is full of them and we
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should join the best of them. But in the
American context, the word conspiracy is a
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legal term, unfortunately. And when you
are with American citizens in a room and
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talk about conspiracies, they often get
very nervous. And it's kind of a complete
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different attitude. Because it's like the
U.S. term to define people who belong to a
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group like, organized criminals or
organized, you know, this T word, this
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other type of entities. And of course,
that's absolutely not what we want to get
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into involved here. But sometimes, we
mistakenly are misunderstandingly joke
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about conspiracies and people listening to
this get it completely wrong. And I fear
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that is also what happened and how me and
others got into such a mess. So at the
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end, of course, in journalism and that's
similar to dealing with data from a
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hackers perspective is about supporting
media with data and information and so on.
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So here is a bit of a timeline to give you
a time frame. I'm now after I was a bit
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long for about two decades a CCC
spokesperson and board member blah blah
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blah, I moved to the board of the Wau
Holland Foundation. Wau Holland Foundation
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collects actually money for WikiLeaks
under the aspect of Wau's idea of
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supporting Freedom of Information since
2010 or so. I joint a little later.
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However, when WikiLeaks started to publish
the Afghanistan, the Iraq war logs and
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diplomatic cables that already triggered
legal investigations, and of course, the
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arrest of then still Bradley, now Chelsea
Manning, later. So there was always, it
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was always clear, more or less right from
the beginning, that there's legal trouble
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on the way, that there's a secret grand
jury and that the Americans didn't really
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appreciate their war crimes to be exposed
and the diplomatic cables to be in the
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Internet, to be understood and readable
for all of us and the media worldwide and
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so on. Of course, when people come
together and gather in any project, you
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have human beings, you have, they have
characters, they have mistakes. They do
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things that are not always great. So I'm
not trying to say here that everything was
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always great and it was only the CIA
messing it up. No, humans make mistakes
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and these mistakes in such an environment,
of course, get exploited, get amplified
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and so on. In 2007, WikiLeaks started
publishing some CIA documents and a whole
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series of it, the so-called 'Vault 7'
documents. And those documents describe
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technology, exploit programs from the CIA.
You probably, most of you will know them.
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If not, you can now look them up. And
these included tools that allowed the CIA
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to pretend to be someone else, including
coming from another country, speaking
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another language, be from Russia, in
Russia be from Iran and Farsi and so on.
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And Pompeo, who was at that moment still
head of the CIA, got very upset. And there's
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two references from this, one from April
2017, and another is from February 2018.
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In his first public speech as a CIA
director in 13 of April 2017, he made a
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speech at a conference working in
Washington and he said things like
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WikiLeaks walks like a hostile
intelligence service and talks like an
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intelligence service. And called WikiLeaks
a non-state hostile intelligence service.
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So for those of you who know a little bit
about information science, there's this
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idea of data is actually something you can
technically measure. Information is data
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in a context and intelligence is
information processed to a level where you
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can make decisions based on it. So being a
public intelligence service, I would say
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from that perspective is like an honorable
term. However, the way Pompeo emphasized
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it, I think was slightly not that
honorable. He was more comparing it to,
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you know, other state actors and evil
forces and so on, because the US
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understanding of intelligence service far
away from entities... sorry, I need a
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water... Is far away from entities just
collecting information, but as you know,
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they also mess up with other people's life
and so on. However, a year later, in
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February 2018, he even upgraded this type
of statement. The Zeit, German newspaper,
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reported about what he said at the Munich
Security Conference Intelligence
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Roundtable, and he said, a really nasty
sentence like that. Most of his time he's
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dealing with the non-state actors. And
that's like al-Qaida, Islamic State,
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WikiLeaks or Hezbollah. Like what a list.
So I have no idea what he has. What turned
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him into comparing these kind of things? I
mean, Hezbollah, I could say we in Berlin,
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we know they provide actually yummy
halloumi and some things. But yes, they
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are money launderers and are a suspected
terrorist in some areas or whatever, or
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have been declared terrorist. But their
hummus is really good, I can say. However,
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the point I'm trying to come to. So Pompeo
got very upset. He made all this
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comparison and he seems to have allocated
resources to deal with WikiLeaks and
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everybody jumping around. And it's no
surprise that as Wau Holland Foundation
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finances selected activities of specific
publications there, that we also got in
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the focus with us collecting donations
and, you know, talking with the guys and
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financing some projects. So before I'm
coming to very concrete events, I want to
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get one second into psychology. So, of
course, when things happen to you, from
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the intelligence perspective, they always
come with what's called plausible
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deniability. When there's a guy standing
in front of the door watching, you know,
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if you come in and out, it's not just
someone watching your door. It's someone
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reading the newspaper or repairing some
electrical pipes or some water pipe or
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whatever. I mean, that's always a good
reason for him to be there that has
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nothing to do with what he's doing and
that's a basic principle. Plausible
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deniability, how intelligence agencies act
in the so-called field. So meaning in your
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home or on the street, following you or
whatever. So over time, of course, if you
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have too much of this, you're seeing these
patterns, and that's probably mainly
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called paranoia. So you get like, you
know, suspicious of everything that
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happens that might be very legitimate, but
you get like the feeling that something is
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wrong and so on. And that can be, we could
also instead of paranoia, call it
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situational awareness at some points,
because if it really happens, it has
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nothing to do with your mind getting
crazy. It's just an accurate observation
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of patterns that happen around of you. But
you might know that and your two friends
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who experience the same might know that
your girlfriend, your partner, the normal
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people you deal with, they might all not
understand this and think that you're
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driving nuts. And this driving nuts is, of
course, an element that you always have to
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be self-critical, because on the one hand
side, you might indeed see too much things
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happening that do not really happen. And
on the other hand side, there's also the
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human drive that we don't want these CIA
guys to be in our life. We want everything
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to be fine. And to some extent, maybe
that's even healthy to not see the
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monsters all the time. But if they are
really there and you start denying them
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while they sit in front of you, that's
also not so helpful. So I found myself in
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this kind of weird environment where all
these kind of thoughts come up all the
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time. And I'm starting with the most
harmless stuff. So Internet attacks or
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well Internet incidents. I would... IT-
incidents, I called it here. Due to the
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pure volume of it, I will put this into a
separate presentation one day or report
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and in the next days or weeks or months.
And you can all have fun with it. But here
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is just some basic pattern. So devices you
use as communication terminals or
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communication devices, they always have
issues when you start to do encrypted
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stuff, and it's always when you do it with
specific people. So that's hm... Then,
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mobile phones with data service. At some
point, all of them have start to have
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issues. Very high volume of used data,
apps disappear if you use them at all. I
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stopped using them at all. High battery
usage. When you did nothing with your
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phone over hours and you were wondering
what's going on. OK, yes, we have buried
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their bags. We put them somewhere else.
But still, it's a little weird when your
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battery is empty half day. On LTE when I
configured my phone to be on LTE only it
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worked mainly fine. Next to that, I
couldn't make normal phone calls, but when
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I had to do the normal mode, it got
downgraded to 3G and there my encrypted
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connections started to have problems. On
my fixed lines, my VPNs when I tried to
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build up a VPN shows me certificate errors
and problems. And then of course you deal
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with journalists, which I'm doing with my
colleagues all the time. And they are not
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technical experts. They all have their
Macs and so on. So they have funny issues
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with their PGP keys not working anymore,
with their PGP setup not working anymore.
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Yes, it's also because it's open source
software, but there's also something going
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on. But this is kind of the world we all
know and we got used to it. You know, this
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is like, OK, IT doesn't work. Secure
connections break, well, happens all the
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time. From about mid 2017 when I still
regularly, like once or twice a month was
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flying over to see Julian in the embassy,
I realized that there was something
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changing with my treatment at the border.
That's of course, that's yeah, that's
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purely UK border police uncles. And they
like started to ask funny questions like
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"Do you live in the UK?", "What's your
occupation?", "How long do you stay?",
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"What do you do in the UK?". Before then
there was maybe one question, but not
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three or four of them. And the most
important was that I realized that he did
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not even listen to my answers. Sometimes
he started the first question after I
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answered the third, and it was feeling
like in a limbo, like with a machine who
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would randomly ask me things. But I then
realized he was just waiting for the green
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light on the screens to let me go. And
that green light probably meant that the
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team outside was ready to pick me up and
that's what happened. So I get into the UK
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and have people follow me like the whole
fucking day, not only on the way to the
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embassy, from the embassy back and so on.
I once spotted one of those persons like
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sitting at the street level on the other
side watching the whole time I was in an
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office, ground level. And because I had a
bit of experience with that in continental
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Europe, like in Germany, if you realized
these guys just go after you and you put
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your camera on your table or start even to
make photos of them, they're very quickly
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gone because they don't want to be
relocated, they don't like to be exposed
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and so on. But the British behaved in this
time, this scenario completely different.
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So he was like getting like, you know,
very aggressively body language, try
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spotting, looking back and so on. So that
was a little weird. That same day at three
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o'clock in the night when my friends drove
me to the place where I was sleeping in a
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one way street, there was still a car
following us, even in the one way street.
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So actually he had to turn back and so on.
That was no more covert surveillance. That
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was already at the edge to intimidation.
And then over the next months, I started
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to have new favorites, but not only in
England, also in other countries that I
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would see homeless looking like people on
the street level sitting there begging or
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leaning to some buildings. And at some
point I had to realize that the cheap
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plastic bags that they were wearing were
just a cover for cameras that were
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actually with Zoom and digital getting
into my direction. And so that felt a
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little, um. And so the idea of this
measures meant, if you look at their
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manuals, which you'll find somehow in the
Internet, is that the difference between
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discovered surveillance, which is to find
out where you are and to open
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surveillance, which I call intimidation
surveillance. The idea is you create in
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the person in this case and yeah, for me,
a state of distress. So you like
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constantly having this, like, you know,
looking around and you obviously have the
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idea that something is going on and they
let you know. They want to let you know
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and that's a little weird. So in April
2018, exiting in March 2018, I brought one
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of my Cryptophones, in this case a desk
phone based on a SIP phone called Snom 870
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back to our workshop here to repair. The
display had been exposed to heat and got a
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little melted. It's not so super high
quality LCD display, so I wanted just to
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replace the display. So I opened the thing
and I found actually a bug and that bug
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turned out to be a very sophisticated
thing. So there was a battery pack, there
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was a shielded thing. Behind that shielded
thing there was a module that had been
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soldered into. It was based on an FPGA,
some hardware crypto element. 16 GB of
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flash ROM. It was completely passive. So I
wouldn't have found it in any sweep
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because it just recorded whatever I talked
on that encrypted phone and would be
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triggered by high frequency to send out
the recorded stuff, encrypted in a signal.
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And you see here a URL to find more
pictures online. To give you an idea this
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is the thing I found. This is how it
looked like at the beginning. The phone
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itself has to PCB's one for the keyboards
and one for the connectors, processing and
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so on. This was the modified version of
the keyboard PCB with this battery pack
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in blue, the shielded module. And here
you get an idea of what was in there.
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That's pretty high tech. We did, of
course, look into what exactly do we have
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here, when were this chips produced, what
does it do and so on. But it's pretty
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obvious that this is like for those who
have read the Snowden documents intensely,
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it's what's called special collection
service. Inside there, there's a group
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called a target access operations TAO, and
they work together with a thing called
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PAG, the Physical Access Group because
someone and that was the thing, it was not
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only built into this phone, that phone had
been, of course, in a locked room. And I
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had to ask myself, OK, what happened here?
Here you see how they grabbed the audio
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with a glued mini PCB from the other main
controller into their little technology.
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And here you see a comparison picture, to
the right you see the original PCB
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keyboard, which has almost nothing on it.
And to the left, you see the modified
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version. A friend of mine made a bit of a
diagram and yeah, I'll just leave it for
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you. You can review it later. I'll upload
these PDF slides, of course. So here's
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some aspects of what was going through my
head over the time. Of course, the first
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question was: How long was this there? No
idea. Could be years. Um, the components
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we identified were produced around, oh no,
not earlier than April 2013. So if you
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remember, Snowden came with his revelation
mid of 2013 roughly. And I've been working
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for the Spiegel with others on the Snowden
documents next to that phone and
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coordinating a lot of it in the year 2013.
So in theory, it could be even related to
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that. Who knows. The dimensions such as
Kadian nonmetric origin, the antenna
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would, you know, work in the range of 800
MHz. So you find a mentioning of a PDF
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that tells you something about these
groups. But I did talk to some people who
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do professional sweeping, meaning, looking
for audio bugs and so on in devices and
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rooms. And they told me from the
experience of the Cold War until today,
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the operation to bring something into a
room, into a device, that's quite an
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effort because you need to secure, you
need to ensure you don't get caught and so
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on. And so what you normally do is,
because technology can fail, is you do not
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install one bug, you install at least two.
And the Cold War people told me, from the
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elder generation, that the relationship
was one to eight, so that because
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technology failed a lot back then.
However, that made me, of course, think,
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OK, what else could there be? You know,
what can I do to find the rest and so on.
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Does it even make sense? Can I secure all
the rooms that I use to work here and
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there in such a way that I could be sure.
And of course, I can't be. So this was the
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first hard confrontation with my own
cognitive dissonance, because all that
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surveillance theater where I said, OK,
Julian has some trouble, I don't think I
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had something to do with it. And when I
traveled to England, OK, they follow me,
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you know, you get used to that kind of
things, but like something you can have in
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your hand and that's outside of IT
incidents. That means that all your
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encrypted communications have been
listened to. Well, that feels shitty. So
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that's what I call a hot confrontation
with my own cognitive dissonance. The next
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thing I want to talk about is very recent.
It's about one and a half months old now.
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When here in Berlin, um, I went out
actually very early in the morning to get
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some stuff from a grocery in a time of
pandemic when no one is in the shop at
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seven or something in the morning. I come
back half an hour later and the key to my
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apartment door does not fit in the
cylinder anymore. That felt a bit shitty.
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Um, it was not a normal cylinder. It was a
so-called stealth cylinder. You might want
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to look in the Internet what it is. It's a
Swiss company, it's doing nice keys that
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you cannot photograph and copy because it
has inner elements with a sophisticated
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mechanical, a way of opening. I did,
however, when I bumped into my door and
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had to first I called my locksmith dude or
my friend from the lock picking industry,
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I could say, who had advised me to buy
that cylinder. I talked with my lawyer and
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we agreed it's a good idea to call the
police, to put it on the other list of
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things they had collected until then. I
then realized that I had been followed
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that morning, but I didn't take any
attention to it because I was just
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walking, you know in half-automatic mode to the
grocery and there was a couple talking
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such a bullshit. They will probably listen
to this talk and will remember the dialog.
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It was just not making any sense, but I
was too polite to point it out. And they
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were very closely. So it was not about
where I was going. It was about that I was
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not at home. So they ensured that in the
time frame that I was there, the other
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guys could operate and so on. Yeah, that
is an ongoing investigation. But I can
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tell you, this is the next incident where
like cognitive dissonance and the illusion
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you want to give this of, you know, I'm
not important in this game. Yeah. This
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guy is following me here and there. And this
feels kind of different. This is no more
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nice. Um, here's a little bit to get the
idea of the cylinder. You cannot really
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see the object that was inserted. But at
the end, we didn't get it out. For
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forensic reasons. We had to drill. Police
went through the apartment and so on.
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Yeah. Another interesting day you can
have. Um, so here's some aspects that I
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asked myself. Um, so was it even my
cylinder that I couldn't open? Maybe they
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could not lockpick the original stealth cylinder
I had. They had to open it in a violent way.
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They were in the apartment to whatever put
another bug in there. Um, but as they
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couldn't replace it with the original
cylinder as they had destroyed it, like
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they put another one in. And that's why my
key wasn't fitting. It's an option. Next
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option: Was it maybe a trap to make me
replace the broken cylinder with a cheaper
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one with a more simple one that they could
open then afterwards, when I was gone. The
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next option, or maybe was it not about the
door at all? Was it maybe just to freak me
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out? Um, of course it feels not so great
if you can't open your own apartment door
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and so on. And the first question was, of
course: How much time did I spend that day
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with, you know, with the police, drilling
open the door with all that kind of
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things? It more or less cost me a day. And
what maybe happened to my machines,
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meaning my computers, my other things,
maybe? Where was my attention not in that
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time frame? Because it could be, was a
pure distraction thing. It would freak him
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out a little bit. And while he's freaking
out, we do other things in his office or
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whatever, I can't rule it out. And then of
course, I mean, the police sent me some
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funny questions. I'm still working on
that, like, yeah, should I name Pompeo as
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a suspect? Not sure, but maybe I should.
Discussing it with my lawyer and so on.
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And also is it maybe related to the date?
This was the 3rd of November, just in case
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to have it said the 3rd of November is the
election day, or was the election day in
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the United States. And there were some
accusation that had something to do with
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the election some years ago. Um, so
however, the next event, incident number
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three, has to do with something that
happened in between, because on Monday,
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the day before they messed up with my
door, I had shipped some documents to
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Spain, I realized then. That was legal
documents that required me and a friend
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going to the Spanish embassy. We gave
power of attorney and so on because we are
-
also accusing this company, UC Global,
which I talked about last year, which was
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the company running the surveillance or
the protections/surveliance at the
-
beginning on behalf of the Ecuadorians in
that embassy and later turned out to be
-
working, for (inaudible)'s company or at
least having a site arrangement there,
-
which is still subject to an ongoing
lawsuit. And we participate in that
-
lawsuit because not only Julian was spied
on, everybody was spied on, who was
-
visiting him and so on. So I had shipped
documents on that Monday, almost six
-
o'clock on the local post office here by
DHL Express. I put that documents in a
-
sealed bag, that's like a bag was a serial
number and so on. That went together with
-
the describing list what's inside the bag
into a white envelope that again, I sealed
-
with, you know, seal tape. Then I gave
that to the post office. But they insisted
-
that it gets in a DHL Express back. That's
what you get for the 70 Euro to be
-
arriving within two days. So, yeah, the
stuff arrived on Wednesday, but all opened
-
and the Spanish lawyers freaked completely
out. They were very sure that this was a
-
meddling. You would see that it was sliced
open and so on. Yes. You see this funny
-
duct tape here called Zoll. But why would
the German customs open a document
-
shipment within Europe? That just not
makes a lot of sense. It's still on the
-
way to be checked. In theory, they could
do that. But also this incident has some
-
aspects. It's a breach of attorney client
privilege. That's why the Spanish lawyers
-
insisted as we bring this to a criminal
complaint. They did on their end right
-
when they received it and they made those
photos. So was German customs even
-
involved or was just their duct tape used
by some funny people. Why when I emailed
-
all this to my lawyer with the picture
sent to one, why did he not receive the
-
email until he realized on Monday that it
somehow ended in his trash? He also
-
freaked out. And then I talked with DHL of
course, I made a big fuss there and they
-
were like, no, we cannot tell you on which
legal grounds the shipment was opened. We
-
cannot tell you who did it. But if you
have an inquiry, why don't you send it to
-
the customs? So without giving me even
which customs entity it would be or
-
whatever. And again, of course, this is
kind of an interesting story, but I have
-
normally other priorities in my life. So
I'm asking myself, oh gosh, how many days
-
shall I waste here with finding out who
opened the fucking shipment. But, you
-
know, this is, again, the state of
distress. This is, again, the effort. And
-
it's, again, a reminder. We are after you.
We check your things. We don't like
-
your're suing the CIA, a suspected company
and so on and so on. So coming to a bit of
-
a conclusion of this talk, as we also want
to have time for questions and so on. I
-
want to talk about three aspects. The one
is the elephant in the room and the
-
problem of the missing socks. So at some
point, I don't want to say that I have
-
been completely not in a state of
distress. And so I don't know how this
-
affects my sanity and those people
surrounding me. So your cognitive systems
-
get kind of otherwise triggered and you
start to see these things everywhere. And
-
when then you wash some socks and it turns
out there's a sock missing. The other
-
person in my life was like, OK, CIA.
However, I did suspect the bed sheets and we
-
found one of the socks in a bed sheet. So
when you know, the problem is socks get in
-
the drum sometimes, Hanging, then you wash
something different then like a bed sheet
-
and a bed sheet is an excellent place to
hide things that have been in the drum.
-
Get into the bed sheet and you just try it
with it and you don't even realize it and
-
so on.. So while I'm a complete, I for
entertainment reasons and also for, you
-
know, you need to relax your brain in such
a situation once in a while, I'm totally
-
OK to say the CIA is responsible for
everything, including the missing socks,
-
but I suspect the bed sheet first and
realize that yes, this is a joke and this
-
is escapism and it helps you maybe to stay
sane for a little moment. But in the long
-
term, I don't know. So and that's the I
don't know part is the other two slides
-
that are coming now. So what should I do?
And I should invite some friends and
-
declare my office here like a laboratory
for surveillance. Yeah, it has been
-
before. I looked at one technology, but
this case is surveillance technology,
-
looking at me and my friends. So it's
slightly different. And it's maybe also
-
important to not get into some kind of
auto response mode when things happen.
-
Because I was thinking also, what the
fuck? Why are they doing all these things?
-
It cost them money. It costs them effort.
Is it to freak me out? Is it that they
-
think that like like like I'm seriously in
such an evil mode organization that, you
-
know, they will escalate things and I will
start to throw bombs at the U.S. Embassy
-
or I don't know. I have no idea what their
idea is, but I just try to stay like slow
-
motion and think about it. The next aspect
is how ever do I infect other people? And
-
now I'm not talking about my paranoia or
my situational awareness, as I would call
-
it, which, of course, at some point it's
ongoing and it's no more sometimes. But
-
when I talk with normal people, with other
journalist, with people I deal with for
-
normal things, and they visit me and we do
whatever kind of social things, like
-
normal things, like having food. And
afterwards, the way they call me a day
-
later and say, oh, finally my phone
started rebooting twice yesterday and
-
these kind of things so that you think,
OK, it's not my paranoia that is
-
infectious. It's actually they obviously
want to not only know what kind of people
-
I'm dealing with and look into their
technology, they also want to freak them
-
out. So this is not cool. And it also
means that the type of ignorance you could
-
normally apply and say, well, ignorance is
a bliss. Come on, let's have have a nice
-
day and forget about all this. That's kind
of limited. That's no more an option. Um,
-
and also while I've been dealing with that
type of stress and that type of thing for
-
a while now, and I can say, yeah, well,
that's how it is. And, um, it doesn't mean
-
that everybody dealing with you can do
that. There's people that are seriously
-
freaked out by such a situation and it
creates fear, it creates anger, stress and
-
so on. So that's not cool. So, um, my last
slide that ends up with a question to you
-
guys is how to get out of this mess. So,
you know, option one, I managed to get
-
proper authorities to make the CIA stop
acting illegal. OK, I heard the laughing.
-
I know this is ridiculous, but, you know,
it would be so beautiful. Justice
-
prevails. The German authorities, the
European ones pick it up. I finally
-
managed to escalate it to the
Generalbundesanwaltschaft. And I do not
-
have to talk with the German intelligence
services as I'm not sure they would be
-
helpful in this game. And they make the
stop, the CIA stop acting illegal and
-
against me and the other person
surrounding beautiful dream. But OK, not
-
very realistic. Maybe option two, Pompeo
realizes Jesus loves WikiLeaks and
-
whatever shall become true will become
true. He reads it on the Bible. Pompeo
-
seems to me if you look at his Twitter
account, reasonable believe in Jesus
-
Christ and all that thing. So he realizes
it's all wrongdoing against Julian,
-
WikiLeaks and all the people targeted in
that context and stops it. I know. OK,
-
shit happens. What? But if that's
realistic, I don't know. You tell me. And
-
the third option. I don't know. Maybe you
have some ideas. And that's my question to
-
you at the audience and that's the end of
my prepared part of the talk.
-
Herald: And with these words. Thank you,
Andy, for the brilliant talk. In the
-
meantime, I received some messages. A
third option would be to have a great
-
vinyard, vinyard. Sorry, I personally
Andy: Yes, yes it's completely right. I
-
considered actually maybe I should do
something with goats, become a farmer or,
-
you know, yeah, there's these options. But
I thought before I give it up and find my
-
way on the countryside, I outsource the
problem to the community and see what they
-
think.
Herald: In the meantime, I think there is
-
plenty of time for a great white wine, but
to our questions, we have indeed plenty of
-
questions. The first question would be: How
would you compare the surveillance of the
-
CIA or other to surveillance of the DDR?
So for the Deutsche Demokratische
-
Republik.
Andy: Well, I'm born in Hamburg in West
-
Germany. I lived in East Germany when the
government was already falling into
-
pieces. It was technically still there. So
I'm not the best person to compare it. But
-
I did talk with a person I know who worked
for the foreign intelligence services
-
because there was, you know I simplified
here, of course, the incidents a little
-
bit. There was one scene when later I went
into my kitchen that day when my door lock
-
got tampered with and I found a blue
plastic glove and I don't have blue
-
plastic gloves. And I asked my locksmith
guy, he was like, no, it's not for me. And
-
the police had black ones. So I thought,
what the fuck? Maybe the guys have been
-
inside the apartment, which I didn't
thought earlier because of a second look
-
and the police checked and so on. Um, and
then I talked to discuss it with this
-
person I know. He's a quite friendly man,
was working in the foreign intelligence of
-
that country. And so and he was like, you
know, you have to look at it from a cost
-
effectiveness point of view, like that
piece of plastic costs you ten cents,
-
nothing, and it freaks you out three
months. So see how much how cost effective
-
it is. And I mean, that's a good aspect.
That's a good point. And so I think that
-
the East German Stasi, the guys, the East
intelligence guys, they also they knew
-
very well the difference. And they had
both instruments in there, you know, in
-
their program to either do covert
surveillance really like not let you know.
-
And the department for "we let him know
and see how he reacts" or "we let him know
-
because he's ongoing doing things that we
want him to, you know, stop it and get
-
intimidated". And so on, and get scared
maybe or his wife gets scared or this kind
-
of thing. So I think it is comparable.
Herald: Cool. Well, not cool. Speaking of
-
covert versus overt civilians.
As you now know, does it still
-
bother you emotionally?
Andy: Um, well, what bothers me sometimes
-
is, you know, it's also it has a sometimes
it's nice to be alone and it's sometimes
-
nice to not think about the CIA guys being
in the apartment next door or in my case,
-
an apartment under me or in the
surrounding environments. Um, but thinking
-
about normal things like playing a puzzle
or seeing some funny spy movies. Oh,
-
that's almost relaxing. No, seriously, at
some point it sucks a little bit. I get my
-
kind of deal with it. But I mean, this
20/20 era has of course, complicated or
-
has made it almost impossible to travel.
So normally I escape my intensity of my
-
work situation with travels. Maybe I can
do that this year. So it feels a little
-
more intense and annoys a little bit.
And I would like to get these guys out of
-
my life and do something useful with their
life or whatever.
-
Herald: Now, the next question, he or she
or the person or creature probably missed
-
it: Do you dissemble all your devices on a
regular basis?
-
Andy: No, I usually do just regular and
seal them. In this case, the seal had
-
an issue with with the heat as well. So,
and I was lousy on checking it. I have to
-
say so. Yes, that's something. I mean, if
you have one office, you can do that. I
-
tend to work on different continents even,
and that turned out to be a bit of an
-
issue. So, yes, you need to have safes
everywhere and seals and duh, duh, duh,
-
duh. But even then, you know, Pompeo
seems to have justified or have given
-
orders to do these things no matter the
costs. And my expectation to have like a
-
"private" or "secure" encrypted channel so
is very limited for a while, watching that
-
effort. The encryption of the cryptophone
obviously was good. Otherwise they
-
wouldn't have had the effort to, you know,
build something in. But at the end of the
-
day, for me, it has the same impact. It's
like, well, you know, it's a phone, it's a
-
piece of device, it's in a room. The room
has windows. We've seen what they've done
-
with the embassy windows and so on. So
it's like, yeah, security. What a nice
-
idea, but it doesn't really exist.
Herald: Yeah. Do you try giving a few
-
coins to the homeless looking people to do
either some reverse intimidation or good
-
deed if they are not CIA?
Andy: Yeah, that's, I mean, I had this one
-
particular situation where I was waiting
for someone on kind of a shopping street,
-
and I just said something is wrong with
the guy. But when I saw the camera and saw
-
and he also rushed away. So, no, I didn't
give them the money. The second
-
scenario... No, but it's a good idea. Um,
the thing is, what I started to do is to
-
always have a camera with me. That turns
out for me to be important, to be able to
-
document things. And also most of them,
except the British, don't like it when
-
they are being photographed. And you
either, they, it's very interesting
-
because normal people do realize when they
are being photographed. But these guys are
-
either pretending, no, I don't see that
you photograph me. You know, they look a
-
little bit with too much energy away from
it or they are seriously disturbed and go
-
away.
Herald: So the best solution would be to
-
have the boldest, biggest, largest camera
always in hand.
-
Andy: Yeah, let me say it like this. I
mean, I've not been a fan of surveillance
-
technology and for sure not of CCTV for a
long part of my life. But I start to like
-
the idea of CCTV at some places in my own
environment. I'm sorry to say that, but
-
there's compromises you can make like
surveil feet, you know, other parts you
-
don't always need the faces. If you need
the faces , yeah there's options.
-
Herald: And still, analog photography is a
great thing. But that's my personal
-
opinion. Um. You maybe you want to, you
can talk, maybe you cannot talk about: Do
-
you use other counter measurements you
want to talk about or can talk about?
-
Andy: You know, I obviously don't want to
talk about it. But I mean, I've been, um.
-
But I was wondering myself how, um, why I
had this rather intense things going on. I
-
mean, I was wondering, is it the time
frame? Is it me as a person? It might have
-
to do with actually being in this funny
scene? Of course, I've learned. I mean, I
-
know lock picking persons, I've always had
an eye on having good locks based on their
-
advice, and understanding how easy it
would be otherwise. And using encryption
-
was also not always about, like, hiding
something. It was just good practice of
-
having privacy and operational security.
So for me, that was very normal for many
-
years to do that. And maybe, you know,
compared to other persons, that made me
-
more interesting. I don't know. I'll find
out one day. But I think it's a good idea
-
for everybody involved to think about
these three aspects: physical security,
-
encryption, and also what kind of ways do
you have to realize if something is being
-
tampered with.
Herald: Yeah -
-
Andy: And that's not necessarily
monitoring. I mean, monitoring can help,
-
but on the other hand side, yeah, with
monitoring systems, they can also deal
-
with.
Herald: Like physical checksums(?), kind
-
of. Our next question: Do you ask the
police at the border if everything is
-
prepared now?
Andy: You know, the British border,
-
probably that's a reference to, I don't
travel to the UK anymore. I decided, you
-
know, after they dealt with Julian there,
I don't like that place anymore. I never
-
felt so well there. And actually, maybe I
forgot to mention that, after this kind of
-
treatment at the border started I also
started avoiding sleeping in the UK. So I
-
made day trips sometimes, in order to get
the last plane out of the country. I was
-
flying to Zürich first, because it was a
late flight to Zürich and then the next
-
morning to Berlin. I felt in Zürich better
at the bar of a shitty hotel than in
-
London Central City with, yeah, this
special relationship, as it's called,
-
between the intelligence of the UK and
those of the US.
-
Herald: I see. Speaking of sleeping, or in
this case concerning your apartment, the
-
question would be: Would some home
surveillance system bring some relief, for
-
example?
Andy: Well, that's like, that's like
-
exchanging the devil with the other dude,
right? I mean, no, I'm not really a fan of
-
that. But yes, of course, I had to at the
end of the day, at least check with my
-
door and so on, what I can do to detect
and record things and so on. But it's not
-
a pleasure. It's not like, I don't know. I
mean, yes, you end up doing that kind of
-
shit. But that's not how life on planet
Earth should be.
-
Herald: Yeah, yeah. It's, it's a kind of a
trade off, for what return. And yeah -
-
Andy: I mean, the thing is, I mean, look,
I'm a German citizen. What I'm doing is
-
constitutionally protected. I live in the
governmental district of Berlin. It's
-
fairly safe here. But, you know, I have
friends in other places, other situations,
-
their life is completely different there,
and that is more what worries me. That I'm
-
in a relatively cool position, secure
position. That's why I can talk about
-
these things. But I have friends who have
a more severe situation and they are not
-
sure they should talk about it, to not
escalate things. And that's a very tricky
-
choice to make, maybe.
Herald: Yes, indeed. Um, that brings us to
-
another question. And I think this is a
perfect point to mention that. Can we do -
-
What can we do to support you in getting
out of this mess? And what can we do in
-
general for this?
Andy: While I really appreciate the
-
question, I don't have a good answer. But
I think, yes, I would like to discuss more
-
with people about what can be done. I
mean, for the moment, I'm dealing with
-
police, with lawyers, the Spiegel guys I'm
working with, they also find some ways
-
maybe to address it. Um, but it seems like
at least if it comes to Julian's
-
situation, things are, yeah, badly
escalated and it's all a bit interrelated.
-
So I don't have a good answer at this
moment, but I think it's a good idea to
-
discuss it more and also maybe identifying
other people who are in some kind of a
-
risk situation because these things
happened. And so maybe, hopefully was able
-
to show it's not that difficult to get
into such a mess. It's - it happens.
-
Herald: Yeah, and speaking of discussing,
you mentioned earlier, there is a Big Blue
-
Button to discuss any further. You will
find it in the 2D area, in the 2D world in
-
the Whistleblower Wiki. Is that right?
Andy: Yes. In the tent, actually, I was
-
told. In the tent is the URL to the Big
Blue Button or somehow it's interlinked
-
there.
Herald: So again, please go out, explore
-
the 2D world. And of course, the
whistleblower tent. We still have some
-
minutes left. How do you do mentally? Did
you use any method to keep your head clean
-
or clear and, did you freak out?
Andy: Yeah, that's a good question. Um. I
-
drink too much vodka, but I try to keep
it with good quality. Um, let me say it
-
like this. The real trouble is maybe that
while in this scene here, people have a
-
rough understanding of this type of things
already. Um, I also liked to have, to be
-
around with people who have nothing to do
with IT, with security, with all these
-
kind of things. So-called normal people.
Sometimes it's refreshing to be with them,
-
but their ability to understand this mess
is a little bit limited. So it's, I think
-
others judge better how I'm doing
mentally. I'm trying to keep my head up
-
and finding a good way out. But if anyone
has a good idea, I am really all for
-
listening and see what's possible.
Herald: In this case. I can can come back
-
to the vineyard and it's pretty relaxing
to have work in the late autumn.
-
Andy: All right. Even during a pandemic.
OK, you just find a way there. Yeah.
-
Herald: It's outside and it's a lot of
distance between the people. I think this
-
will work. So the last question: Red or
white wine?
-
Andy: Red, red wine.
Herald: Red.
-
Andy: Yeah, definitely. And I mean, thanks
for all this. Just to point out, please,
-
we also have to work on to getting Julian
out there and others who are in this mess
-
who can't even talk about it. I really
appreciate the opportunity to talk to you
-
guys, but it's also about the others. And
let us get Julian out here, please. Out
-
that shit there.
Herald: With these great words, Andy,
-
thanks for your time. Thanks for being
here at the remote chaos. As mentioned, we
-
still have the opportunity to ask you some
questions in the whistleblower tent. And
-
with this, have a nice evening. Try to
relax and see you latest - next time.
-
Andy: Goodbye.
-
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-
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