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posted by janrinok on Friday October 23 2015, @08:51AM   Printer-friendly
from the if-it's-valuable-encrypt-it dept.

A desktop computer and hard drive stolen from the University of Washington Center for Human Rights stored sensitive details of human rights violations in El Salvador and a lawsuit against the Central Intelligence Agency:

Sometime between October 15-18, the office of Dr. Angelina Godoy, Director of the University of Washington Center for Human Rights, was broken into by unknown parties. Her desktop computer was stolen, as well as a hard drive containing about 90% of the information relating to our research in El Salvador. While we have backups of this information, what worries us most is not what we have lost but what someone else may have gained: the files include sensitive details of personal testimonies and pending investigations.

This could, of course, be an act of common crime. But we are concerned because it is also possible this was an act of retaliation for our work. There are a few elements that make this an unusual incident. First, there was no sign of forcible entry; the office was searched but its contents were treated carefully and the door was locked upon exit, characteristics which do not fit the pattern of opportunistic campus theft. Prof. Godoy's office was the only one targeted, although it is located midway down a hallway of offices, all containing computers. The hard drive has no real resale value, so there seems no reason to take it unless the intention was to extract information. Lastly, the timing of this incident—in the wake of the recent publicity around our freedom of information lawsuit against the CIA regarding information on a suspected perpetrator of grave human rights violations in El Salvador—invites doubt as to potential motives.

We have contacted colleagues in El Salvador, many of whom have emphasized parallels between this incident and attacks Salvadoran human rights organizations have experienced in recent years. While we cannot rule out the possibility of this having been an incident of common crime, we are deeply concerned that this breach of information security may increase the vulnerability of Salvadoran human rights defenders with whom we work.

Reported at KPLU and KUOW.


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  • (Score: 2) by Alfred on Friday October 23 2015, @01:28PM

    by Alfred (4006) on Friday October 23 2015, @01:28PM (#253586) Journal
    Except for the fact that the CIA would never do any thing like this...
    </sarcasm>

    otherwise I totally agree. I read about a guy who was hacking his own hard drive and found that there were three different ARM processors on the board. In my unsubstantiated opinion, the chances that at least one has compromised firmware from the factory is high. Not to mention the possibility of backdoors that could be built into the silicon. There is no trust in computing.

    /foil_hat
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