All posts tagged: spies

Germany plans to give spies vast new powers in rollback of postwar restraints – POLITICO

Germany plans to give spies vast new powers in rollback of postwar restraints – POLITICO

“We want to continue working closely with the Americans,” Marc Henrichmann, the chairman of a special committee in Germany’s Bundestag that oversees the country’s intelligence services, told POLITICO. “But if a [U.S.] president, whoever that may be, decides in the future to go it alone without the Europeans … then we must be able to stand on our own two feet.” German leaders believe the need is especially urgent in their country, where the foreign intelligence service, or BND, is far more legally constrained than intelligence agencies elsewhere. Those restraints stem from intentional protections put in place after World War II to prevent a repeat of the abuses perpetrated by the Nazi spy apparatus. But those restraints have had the side effect of making Germany particularly dependent on the U.S. for intelligence gathering, and this is now seen as a potential danger. “The intelligence business is one where the question always arises: What do you offer me, what do I offer you?” Henrichmann said. “And of course, if Germany is only a taker, the risk is …

Suspected China spies detained in France

Suspected China spies detained in France

What began as internet outages in a small French village has escalated into an alleged international espionage operation. Authorities have arrested four individuals, including two Chinese nationals, on suspicion of spying on sensitive military data on behalf of Beijing. The arrests followed the discovery of a satellite dish at a rented property in southwest France, an installation neighbors say had been disrupting local internet service. The case emerges amid a rising number of alleged espionage activities targeting China across Europe. August Hakansson reports. Keywords for this article Source link

The Download: spying on the spies, and promising climate tech

The Download: spying on the spies, and promising climate tech

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Meet the man hunting the spies in your smartphone In April 2025, Ronald Deibert left all electronic devices at home in Toronto and boarded a plane. When he landed in Illinois, he bought a new laptop and iPhone. He wanted to reduce the risk of having his personal devices confiscated, because he knew his work made him a prime target for surveillance. “I’m traveling under the assumption that I am being watched, right down to exactly where I am at any moment,” Deibert says.  Deibert directs the Citizen Lab, a research center he founded in 2001 to serve as “counterintelligence for civil society.” Housed at the University of Toronto, it’s one of the few institutions that investigate cyberthreats exclusively in the public interest, and in doing so, it has exposed some of the most egregious digital abuses of the past two decades. For many years, Deibert and his colleagues have held up the …

The House | Spies Have Been Hidden In Embassies For Years. But For How Much Longer?

The House | Spies Have Been Hidden In Embassies For Years. But For How Much Longer?

6 min read2 hr Spies have operated under diplomatic cover in foreign cities for decades. What does the future hold for this legal peculiarity? Ben Gartside reports On a cold Tuesday in 2018, a group of a dozen well-wishers stood in Notting Hill, peering across the streets and waving to a group of people boarding a minibus. The supporters had come to bid farewell to 80 people leaving the UK at short notice. They did not have time to say a formal goodbye, only to stand outside the Russian embassy and see them off as they headed to a government plane in minibuses donning diplomatic plates. Of those leaving, only 23 were required to do so. They were spies operating under diplomatic cover, deported from the UK in response to the state-sponsored assassination attempt on Sergei Skripal. For all the focus on deep cover spies, FSB assassination squads and sleeper cells, the majority of spies operate in a hybrid existence, under roles like “cultural attaché”, often without the knowledge of many of their …

Russian general accuses UK spies of New Year’s Eve ‘terror attack’ that killed 27 | World | News

Russian general accuses UK spies of New Year’s Eve ‘terror attack’ that killed 27 | World | News

A Russian general has accused Britain of being behind a strike on “civilians” at a New Year party in Putin-occupied Kherson region. The death toll rose from 24 to to 27 including “two children” at a cafe and hotel in resort Khorly, but Ukraine has adamantly denied being behind the reported drone strike. The massacre – in which at least one occupation police chief was killed – is being used by Moscow as a pretext for an expected massive imminent attack on Ukraine. Russia is also seizing on a hotly disrupted “Ukrainian drone strike on a Putin palace” as a reason to disrupt Donald Trump-led peace talks, and escalate attacks on Kyiv. The frenzy deepened today as Kremlin commander Maj-Gen Apti Alaudinov directly blamed Britain and unnamed European states for the Khorly carnage which Moscow has labelled a “terrorist attack”. He gave no evidence for the accusation which came as Russia thrashes around to find reasons to continue the war rather than engage in peace moves. “The strike carried out against civilians celebrating the New …

The Download: spying on the spies, and promising climate tech

Meet the man hunting the spies in your smartphone

In April 2025, Ronald Deibert left all electronic devices at home in Toronto and boarded a plane. When he landed in Illinois, he took a taxi to a mall and headed directly to the Apple Store to purchase a new laptop and iPhone. He’d wanted to keep the risk of having his personal devices confiscated to a minimum, because he knew his work made him a prime target for surveillance. “I’m traveling under the assumption that I am being watched, right down to exactly where I am at any moment,” Deibert says. Deibert directs the Citizen Lab, a research center he founded in 2001 to serve as “counterintelligence for civil society.” Housed at the University of Toronto, the lab operates independently of governments or corporate interests, relying instead on research grants and private philanthropy for financial support. It’s one of the few institutions that investigate cyberthreats exclusively in the public interest, and in doing so, it has exposed some of the most egregious digital abuses of the past two decades. For many years, Deibert and …