Firm Involved In Planning Attack On Journalist Glenn Greenwald To Hurt Wikileaks Apologizes; Cuts Ties With HBGary Federal

from the fallout dept

Yesterday we had the news of how HBGary Federal — the firm whose CEO claimed he had “infiltrated” the non-group’s leadership and identified who ran the non-group (which doesn’t actually have “leaders” in the traditional sense) — had been exposed for planning a propaganda attack on Wikileaks at the request of some lawyers working with Bank of America (and, it turns out, recommended by the Justice Department). Part of the strategy was to somehow put a tremendous amount of pressure on Salon writer Glenn Greenwald to stop his support of Wikileaks. Exactly how that was to work was not entirely explained.

However, the Tech Herald, which broke the original story, has now spoken with the CEO of Palantir Technologies, one of the two other companies that HBGary Federal had teamed up with in this proposal. Dr. Alex Karp, who is both the co-founder and CEO of Palantir, seems to be genuinely sorry about the whole ordeal, saying he told his firm to cut all ties with HBGary Federal, and issuing an apology to Greenwald.

“The right to free speech and the right to privacy are critical to a flourishing democracy. From its inception, Palantir Technologies has supported these ideals and demonstrated a commitment to building software that protects privacy and civil liberties. Furthermore, personally and on behalf of the entire company, I want to publicly apologize to progressive organizations in general, and Mr. Greenwald in particular, for any involvement that we may have had in these matters.”

Meanwhile, HBGary Federal apparently remains pretty quiet…

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Companies: hbgary federal, palantir technologies, wikileaks

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Comments on “Firm Involved In Planning Attack On Journalist Glenn Greenwald To Hurt Wikileaks Apologizes; Cuts Ties With HBGary Federal”

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28 Comments
Bruce Ediger (profile) says:

An object lesson in the evils of secrecy

Oops! Sorry for the inadvertent empty post.

Palantir is an object lesson in the evils of secrecy. They got involved with government agencies that cloak themselves in secrecy, justified or not. I think the involvement put Palantir on a slippery slope when it comes to the ethics of their actions. They were clearly willing to do more under the cover of secrecy than they would do without the secrecy.

Secrecy, especially the compartmentalized-knowledge, institutionalized variety favored by the US Government almost inevitably leads to abuses we all later regret.

And just to do a bit of lightening rod action, “palantir” is a word from J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings” books. Essentially, it’s a crystal ball. In the Lord of the Rings, people used them for remote viewing and communications. The idea of a crystal ball is clearly public domain, but is the word “palantir” itself? Perhaps “Palantir Technologies” is a copyright infringer, a.k.a. “pirate”. In which case, it would be no surprise that they’d do regrettably unethical things.

Almost Anonymous (profile) says:

Um, hell no

They were instrumental in helping to prepare a campaign of disinformation and cyberattacks using the Internet and traditional media, and now suddenly they develop a conscience? Give me a f#cking break. I’m so sick of this “we got caught! Quick, apologize!” mentality, but you know what’s even worse? I’m not sure whether or not people are actually accepting the apology, but everyone sure lets this shit blow over fast. Just like the DynCorp pimping fiasco, and hell, as far as I know they didn’t even apologize! It just blew over.

Bah, sorry for the rant, but this shit is just getting out of hand, and we’re letting it pass by with barely a blink. Something’s really wrong.

aldestrawk says:

Aaron Barr retreats

Aaron Barr was scheduled to give a talk at the Security B-sides Conference in San Francisco on Monday. The talk was to be about how the security of companies and government installations is endangered by their employees use of social networks (e.g. Facebook). In that talk he was planning to include his investigation into Anonymous. Although he probably was not going to name any members in the talk he did have a scheduled meeting with the FBI last Monday. The stolen email messages indicate he was going to be presenting his data from his investigation into Anonymous. Given the events that occurred over the weekend, I am sure there was a lot to discuss. Aaron Barr’s talk at the B-sides conference has been canceled. Billy Rios, who wrote the book, “Hacking, The Next Generation”, has replaced his slot but the topic is TBA. I am not making this stuff up. There will be a movie forthcoming.

velox says:

Palantir is GENUINELY sorry??

The apology statement by Dr. Alex Karp also included this (not included in Mike’s quotation):

?I have made clear in no uncertain terms that Palantir Technologies will not be involved in such activities.”

So while Palantir seeks to distance themselves from HBGary, how genuine are they when it was Palantir’s name headlining the Powerpoint slide which described plans to undermine Greenwald

DecentDiscourse (profile) says:

New term proposal: "ABd" or "AB" someone or thing

Unfortunately, I think Aaron Barr’s trouncing was so utterly epic that it requires a new term, a kind of super-form of “pwned.” I propose that the terms “ABd” (pronounced “ABdeed”) and “AB” be defined to mean a digital attack of an overwhelming, all-encompassing, devastating nature compromising multiple professional and personal systems and likely to result in the end of a career (or extended neutralization) and/or the coining of a new term. Examples: “Billy got ABd totally.” “Somebody should AB that company.”

Now, of course there will be a need for another term if it turns out that instead of getting ABd, HBGary Federal actually setup an elaborate honey trap and was expecting this. Slim chance, given the fallout, but stranger things have happened.

DecentDiscourse (profile) says:

New term proposal: "ABd" or "AB" someone or thing

Unfortunately, I think Aaron Barr’s trouncing was so utterly epic that it requires a new term, a kind of super-form of “pwned.” I propose that the terms “ABd” (pronounced “ABdeed”) and “AB” be defined to mean a digital attack of an overwhelming, all-encompassing, devastating nature compromising multiple professional and personal systems and likely to result in the end of a career (or extended neutralization) and/or the coining of a new term. Examples: “Billy got ABd totally.” “Somebody should AB that company.”

Now, of course there will be a need for another term if it turns out that instead of getting ABd, HBGary Federal actually setup an elaborate honey trap and was expecting this. Slim chance, given the fallout, but stranger things have happened.

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