- Vault 7 - Wikipedia
Vault 7 is a series of documents that WikiLeaks began to publish on 7 March 2017, detailing the activities and capabilities of the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to perform electronic surveillance and cyber warfare
- Vault 7: CIA Hacking Tools Revealed - WikiLeaks
Today, Tuesday 7 March 2017, WikiLeaks begins its new series of leaks on the U S Central Intelligence Agency Code-named "Vault 7" by WikiLeaks, it is the largest ever publication of confidential documents on the agency
- Inside the Vault: CIA’s Cyber Arsenal, the WikiLeaks . . . - LinkedIn
In March 2017, WikiLeaks published “Vault 7”, a trove of CIA documents that dramatically exposed the agency’s cyber-warfare toolkit The leak – described as “the largest ever publication
- WikiLeaks claims to reveal CIA cyber espionage methods
WikiLeaks claimed that the trove of CIA information it had obtained, which it called Vault 7, included “several hundred million lines of code”, including many of the agency’s cyber weapons
- Former CIA engineer who sent Vault 7 secrets to Wikileaks sentenced . . .
The bulk of the sentence imposed on Joshua Schulte, 35, in Manhattan federal court came for an embarrassing public release of a trove of CIA secrets by WikiLeaks in 2017 He has been jailed
- Joshua Schulte, largest leaker of CIA material in history, sentenced to . . .
Schulte, 35, handed WikiLeaks a trove of CIA cyber espionage tools known as Vault 7, in what federal prosecutors called "some of the most heinous, brazen violations of the Espionage Act in American history "
- Ex-CIA hacker who leaked secrets to WikiLeaks sentenced to 40 years
A man convicted of carrying out one of the most damaging data breaches in the CIA's history — the public disclosure of secret hacking tools — was sentenced to 40 years in federal prison
- WikiLeaks - Wikipedia
In 2014, FBI and CIA officials lobbied the White House to designate Wikileaks as an "information broker" to allow for more investigative tools against it and according to former officials "potentially paving the way" for its prosecution
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