WikiLeaks CIA files: Spy agency looked at ways to hack and control cars to carry out assassinations
The agency allegedly also used devices to hack smartphones and turn brainy TVs into covert microphones
- Aatif Sulleyman
- Tuesday seven March two thousand seventeen Legal:47 GMT
The Independent Tech
WikiLeaks has alleged that the CIA looked into vehicle interference methods that could potentially enable it to assassinate people without detection.
According to the whistle-blowing organisation, the CIA explored the tactic in October 2014.
It hasn’t included any more details about the alleged practice.
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WikiLeaks included the claim in its release announcing ‘Vault 7’, a thick batch of documents, which Julian Assange claims to account for the CIA’s “entire hacking capacity”.
“As of October two thousand fourteen the CIA was also looking at infecting the vehicle control systems used by modern cars and trucks,” reads a passage in the release.
“The purpose of such control is not specified, but it would permit the CIA to engage in almost undetectable assassinations.”
The six fattest spying secrets exposed by WikiLeaks’ CIA files
The CIA has also been accused of using malware and hacking devices to turn TVs into covert microphones and remotely break into smartphones.
WikiLeaks describes Vault seven as “the largest intelligence publication in history” and says that the initial batch of 8,761 files is just the very first in a series of releases.