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Showing posts with label #hackergate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #hackergate. Show all posts
Friday, August 5, 2011
Newscorps SMELLY practices in graphics
Labels:
#hackergate,
Newscorp
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
In 2004, Mark Zuckerberg Broke Into A Facebook User's Private Email Account
In 2004, Mark Zuckerberg Broke Into A Facebook User's Private Email Account
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/how-mark-zuckerberg-hacked-into-the-harvard-crimson-2010-3#ixzz1TKEoEHsY
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/how-mark-zuckerberg-hacked-into-the-harvard-crimson-2010-3#ixzz1TKEoEHsY
Labels:
#hackergate,
Facebook
Friday, July 22, 2011
Mary Tuma : When One Man Owns Too Much
The News Corp. scandal:
A case against media consolidation
What happens when one man owns too much?By Mary Tuma / The Rag Blog / July 21, 2011
Before a UK parliamentary hearing (and in between being attacked by a cream pie) earlier this week, media mogul Rupert Murdoch -- under investigation for allegations that his recently shuttered British tabloidNews of the World hacked into the phones of some 4,000 individuals and bribed police for information -- stunningly absolved himself of any responsibility in the alleged illegal actions of his company.
When MP (Member of Parliament) Jim Sheridan asked Murdoch if he was ultimately responsible for the “whole fiasco,” Murdoch replied, “No,” shifting blame to those he employed and trusted. “The News of the World is less than one percent of our company. I employ 53,000 people around the world,” Murdoch retorted in defense.
Whether or not Mr. Murdoch is telling the truth, his argument -- that as a head of a media conglomerate it is unreasonable to assume -- due to the sheer size of the operation -- that he was aware of actions, however illegal or abhorrent, within the company he owns -- should trouble the public almost as much as the scandal itself.
MOre excellent stuff @this link from the Rag Blog.
Labels:
#hackergate,
corporate lies,
Newscorp
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Round up of #hackergate, Newscorp links

abcnews.go.com
Justice Department is preparing to launch a preliminary investigation into whether News of the World officials engaged in a systemic conspiracy to pay bribes to British
The cyber battle continues . . .

www.rawstory.com
Online protest group "Anonymous" said Monday night it had obtained a large cache of emails from the servers of News International, the News Corp. subsidiary which oversees global media baron Rupert Murdoch's British newspapers.
Kevin Zeese We are now pushing them to go further as there is evidence of phone tapping in the U.S. A former Fox News producer, Dan Cooper, wrote about Roger Ailes of Fox knowing about an interview he had done about Fox before the story was published. The producer reported Ailes threatening his agent to drop Cooper as a client or never get any business. See also, "Has Roger Ailes Hacked American Phones for Fox News?,"http://www.thenation.com/b
Tigana Too "Rupert Murdoch and Harper conspiring together to destroy canadian media", http://webcache.googleuser
Labels:
#hackergate,
Canada,
complicit media,
corruption,
FBI,
Newscorp,
United States
Is Burson Marstellar representing Murdoch, Brooks .. who do ya think?
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Labels:
#hackergate,
media,
media spin,
United Kingdom,
United States
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Piers Morgan on Rupertgate: 'Murdoch victim of a 'witch hunt
Posted: 19 Jul 2011 06:00 AM PDT

Former New York Post reporter Vicky Ward, who is a personal friend of Murdoch's, joined Morgan.
"Piers, I just got a call an hour ago, and Rupert wanted to tell me personally that, you know, he's not okay," Ward reported. "Ever since he met with Milly Dowler, the murdered girl's parents, he hasn't felt the same. His voice has been cracking, people around him are very concerned, his children are very concerned. This is a man who is more devastated than he has ever been in his entire 80 years, and you know, he is appalled at what's gone on on his watch, and I think he's as anxious to get to the bottom of it as we all are."
"I just cannot accept -- although there is this huge witch hunt going on to bring him down personally -- I don't accept that he himself would be party to illegal activity," Morgan asserted.
"I completely agree with you, Piers," Ward replied.
"He became a friend to me when I was at The New York Post, he would stop by my office and talk to me. He wanted to know what tomorrow's headlines were. He would not in any way want to interfere with a story. This is a man who cares so much about his legacy. He once said to me, 'All I want is for my kids to be decent people.'"
"I wouldn't want this to become a kind of valedictory, he's perfect kind of segment," Morgan said finally.
"The one thing about Rupert is that -- yes, he can be ruthless, but actually we can just talk about this, he's ruthless, but also entrepreneurial. He built an empire, often at great personal risk. But tomorrow I expect to see a very, very sincerely contrite person [when he appears before parliament]," Ward concluded.
The CNN host was drawn into the News Corp. phone hacking scandal when Liberal Democrat MP Adrian Sanders called for Morgan to be questioned.
The following entry from Morgan's diary had made Sanders suspicious:
"Apparently if you don't change the standard security code that every phone comes with, then anyone can call your number and, if you don't answer, tap in the standard four digit code to hear all your messages... I'll change mine just in case, but it makes me wonder how many public figures and celebrities are aware of this little trick."
UPDATE: John Amato
Digby wrote up some transcript of Gordon's post from Newstalgia where Piers Morgan makes an arse out of himself:
CNN hasn't had to face the chin music of hiring Morgan in the first place after he was part of News of The World hierarchy and has been beating his chest in defense of Murdoch--nonstop.Morgan: I have a lot of sympathy for the people at the top because I don't think they had a clue what was going on. And I think it's one of those situations where until you know exactly what the scale of the problem is it's very hard to deal with it.But what I do find stomach churning was your mate Hugh Grant on here the other day.A guy who has used the media. This is my problem with all the phone hacking victims. They've all used the media over the years to feather their nests, buy their houses flog their movies, sell out their concerts and now they're squealing like little pigs ove them edia and I just think it's perspective time again.He's right about the mainstream media being perfectly happy to run with scandals, but I think he's rather purposefully missing the point. Hacking into celebrities' answering machines is criminal. Hacking into crime victims' answering machines is just sick. And turning it all into a backscratching exercise with the police is a threat to a free and democratic society. Yes, the Ghadaffi lovers story exposed in Wikileaks was not really a matter of national interest. But "big juicy scandals" of the tabloid variety are hardly the main thrust of Wikileaks. And as far as I know, Wikileaks hasn't been blackmailing politicians with threats to expose their dirty personal laundry if they refuse to play ball. (It's possible, but I haven't heard of it.)
The Guardian is leading the charge on phone hacking. They believe it's wrong for any newspaper to publish material that has been gained unlawfully and yet the Guardian was the newspaper that published Wikileaks, which is openly an illegal form of material that's been acquired illegally that was very dangerous to many parts of the security services and the armed forces. They knew that and willfully published it and their arguments is well it was all in the public interst. Really? Colonel Ghadaffi's lovers? Which is one of the Wilileaks revelations? That's in the public interest?
There is no difference. It is sanctimonious, hypocritical bilge by the Guardian by the BBC -- sorry, they've piled in too -- by stars like Hugh Grant. The BBC, in my experience when I was a newspaper editory, you break a big juicy story, a big old scandal, and then what would happen is the Guardian and BBC the next day would say, "there are disgusting revelations in the Daily Mirror or news of the World so repellant that we are now going to talk about them for the next 20 minutes" and in the case of the Guardian we are going to run 17 pages.
You can't have your cake and eat it. If the BBC and the Guardian feel so strongly about this pruriant form of journalism then they should never cover it again.
Piers Morgan is a prick. And sooner or later CNN is going to have to deal with this. At the very least the celebrities who are his bread and butter should ask themselves if it's worth whoring themselves out to someone who clearly has no respect for them whatsoever. He apparently thinks that if you use the media to sell something you've completely given up your rights
Labels:
#hackergate,
Newscorp
Monday, July 18, 2011
Former Fox News Producer Claims The Network's "Brain Room" Led To Hacking Read more: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/07/18/former-fox-news-producer-claimed-networks-brain-room-led-to-phone-hacking/#ixzz1SVwtkUsV
http://www.businessinsider.com/former-fox-news-producer-claims-the-networks-brain-room-led-to-hacking-2011-7?utm_source=twbutton&utm_medium=social&utm_term=&utm_content=&utm_campaign=thewire-contributor
Stephen C. Webster, The Raw Story
Read more: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/07/18/former-fox-news-producer-claimed-networks-brain-room-led-to-phone-hacking/#ixzz1SVyJnuyq
Stephen C. Webster, The Raw Story
A former producer with Fox News claimed in a lengthy essay gaining new traction this week that the conservative television station has a "Brain Room" in its New York headquarters, which enables employees to view private telephone records with ease.
Though published years ago, the allegations have returned to relevance in the wake of the phone hacking scandals that have rocked News Corporation to its very core, threatening to topple one of the world's largest and most powerful media conglomerates.
According to former Fox News executive Dan Cooper, whose gripes with his former employer run quite deep, Fox News chief Roger Ailes allegedly had him design the so-called "Brain Room" to facilitate counter-intelligence efforts and other "black ops."
In a lengthy 2008 diatribe said to have doubled as a book pitch, Cooper claimed his own phone records had been hacked by Fox News employees, who he says used them to pinpoint him as a source used by David Brock, who founded liberal watchdog group Media Matters.
"Ailes knew I had given Brock the interview," he wrote. "Certainly Brock didn't tell him. Of course. Fox News had gotten Brock's telephone records from the phone company, and my phone number was on the list. Deep in the bowels of 1211 Avenue of the Americas, News Corporation's New York headquarters, was what Roger called the Brain Room. Most people thought it was simply the research department of Fox News. But unlike virtually everybody else, because I had to design and build the Brain Room, I knew it also housed a counterintelligence and black ops office. So accessing phone records was easy pie."
That wasn't the last time word of Ailes's "Brain Room" surfaced: in a recent piece for Rolling Stone, journalist Tim Dickenson discusses Cooper's allegations too, focusing on the man Ailes allegedly picked to run the secretive office.
"Befitting his siege mentality, Ailes also housed his newsroom in a bunker," Dickenson wrote. "Reporters and producers at Fox News work in a vast, windowless expanse below street level, a gloomy space lined with video-editing suites along one wall and an endless cube farm along the other. In a separate facility on the same subterranean floor, Ailes created an in-house research unit—known at Fox News as the 'brain room'—that requires special security clearance to gain access.
'The brain room is where Willie Horton comes from,' says Cooper, who helped design its specs. 'It’s where the evil resides.'
"If that sounds paranoid, consider the man Ailes brought in to run the brain room: Scott Ehrlich, a top lieutenant from his political-consulting firm. Ehrlich—referred to by some as "Baby Rush"—had taken over the lead on Big Tobacco’s campaign to crush health care reform when Ailes signed on with CNBC."
While none of these claims have been substantiated, they seem increasingly plausible given the widening coverup of Murdoch's British hacking scandals, which have grown from the desk of just one allegedly "rogue" journalist to topple some of Murdoch's top deputies, including the former publisher of The Wall Street Journal and the chief of News International, which oversees News Corp.'s British newspapers.
Cooper's phone records as well would not be the first time Fox News or U.S. News Corp. employees have been accused of hacking. According to The New York Times, a New Jersey company called Floorgraphics accused News Corp. in 2009 of hacking into their password-protected computer systems to obtain proprietary information, then allegedly spreading "false, misleading, and malicious information" about the firm, causing them to lose important contracts.
News Corp.'s response to the scandal was to buy Floorgraphics outright, after offering a $29.5 million settlement.
Cases like Floorgraphics' are hardly unique: in recent years, the Times noted, News Corp. has paid over $655 million in settlements and hush money to keep allegations of anti-competitive and illegal behavior under the rug.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Justice have launched their own investigations into whether News Corp. participated in the hacking of 9/11 victims or U.S. officials.
This post originally appeared at The Raw Story.
Read more: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/07/18/former-fox-news-producer-claimed-networks-brain-room-led-to-phone-hacking/#ixzz1SVyJnuyq
Labels:
#hackergate,
Newscorp
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