Newsweek Website Attacked After Report On Trump, Cuban Embargo (talkingpointsmemo.com) 342
After Newsweek published a report titled "How Donald Trump's Company Violated The United States Embargo Against Cuba," the site found itself on the receiving end of a "massive" denial-of-service attack that managed to shut down the site for several hours. TPM reports: Editor-In-Chief Jim Impoco noted that the attack came as the story earned national attention. "Last night we were on the receiving end of what our IT chief called a 'massive' DoS (denial of service) attack," Impoco wrote in an email to TPM. "The site was down most of last evening, at a time when Kurt Eichenwald's story detailing how Donald Trump's company broke the law by violating the U.S. trade embargo against Cuba was being covered extensively by prominent cable news programs. Our IT team is still investigating the hack." Later Friday afternoon, Impoco emailed TPM that in an initial investigation, the "main" IP addresses linked to the attack were found to be Russian. It should be noted that it is possible to fake an IP address. "As with any DDoS attack, there are lots of IP addresses, but the main ones are Russian, though that in itself does not prove anything," he wrote. "We are still investigating." Eichenwald tweeted Friday morning: "News: The reason ppl couldnt read #TrumpInCuba piece late yesterday is that hackers launched a major attack on Newsweek after it was posted."
Putin has Trump's back... (Score:2, Funny)
It's a bromance.
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It could very well be. From TPM [talkingpointsmemo.com]: "As with any DDoS attack, there are lots of IP addresses, but the main ones are Russian, though that in itself does not prove anything," he wrote. "We are still investigating."
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DDoS is not the way a nation state conducts counter-propaganda. It makes no sense strategically since Russia has far more effective resources in RT and various online outlets from which to publish much more impactful hits. It also makes no sense tactically since the sudden absence of some information only highlights the existence of that information.
This points to non-state actors, and unwise ones. It might have been some Trump fans. But it also could have been some other individual or group that Newsweek h
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DDoS is not the way a nation state conducts counter-propaganda.
You seem to be laboring under the misapprehension that thugs are smart.
Re:Putin has Trump's back... (Score:5, Insightful)
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In other words, he's better then your average politician. And far better then Hillary. Who of course is not only petty, vain, with lots of money but has decades of lying through her teeth and massive international fuckups that were either created by her, or created under her watch that have directly impacted large parts of the world.
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He called her "Miss Piggy" and "Miss Housekeeping", both sexist and racist. He clearly was not referring to her contractual obligation.
Or 100 other stories they ran this week (Score:3)
It's also *very* possible that the attack has absolutely nothing to do with that particular story. The site an probably a hundred stories or more just in the past week alone. So far I've heard zero evidence that the attack has anything at all with that particular story or any story about any political jerkoff.
In mainstream. A few days after Julian Assange sto (Score:3)
I have no doubt this story got the most attention in the mainstream press. The attack was also a few days after a Julian Assange story, for example, and Clinton/DNC stories (we know hackers have an interest in the DNC.) Might some hacker respond to a Julian Assange story? Maybe. There's simply no evidence at all as to what the hacker's motive was.
potential backfire (Score:5, Insightful)
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What if Putin is counting on that to make sure Hillary wins?
ooooooooh
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What is amusing is that Trump is getting finance from Russian banks because others don't trust him. Another thing that is more depressing than amusing is that Trump does not see Putin for what he is or just doesn't care.
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So, if we get WAAAY deep into conspiracy theory, perhaps Clinton faked the email security ineptitude to give her plausible denial, and her IT folks have control of many Russian computers (or are spoofing IP addresses) to perform a DDoS that makes it look like the Russians support Trump.
I don't know that even an electric monk would believe that Clinton's staff faked email security ineptitude, though.
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The more that Americans perceive that Russia thinks that electing Trump will be good for Russia, the more likely Americans might also think that electing Trump might not be so good for America.
That was my thought also, but in the context of a false-flag operation arranged by the Dems to bring further discredit down upon The Donald. You'd think that seeing him constantly step on his own dick would be enough to convince people not to vote for him, but there are lots of voters who still imagine his presidency would be good for them. And they're the same kinds of people who still carry the old Cold War grudge and have a hate on for them Russkies. I wouldn't put it past Democratic strategists to take
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Discovery is an issues and junk or fake data been offered as a honeypot is a risk.
US sites and all access is well tracked by the NSA, GCHQ with in the US and at all international access to US networks.
Data flow in or out, or access to a site would be discovered by the NSA, methods understood and protective methods worked on.
Most nations just use their gene
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Indeed, but from various leaks it appears the NSA at least can't find their arse with both elbows so while they have stuff on a disk somewhere what are they going to do with it? They couldn't even spot the "Arab Spring" happening until they saw it on Fox.
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Tempora shows the day to day totality of tracking everything even on a more limited UK budget. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
The ability to reconcile any data movements domestic origins would be trivial over days or longer.
The long term view seems to be to track the skill set of any other nations ability to enter a US/UK network and note the tools used and any live searches done in such events.
Why anyone with access would use a da
The nature of the Trump-fans is pretty obvious (Score:5, Insightful)
They are authoritarian followers, that fight anybody that disagrees with them with violence. They are irrational and dangerous. They are unable to find a middle-ground with others. This is the same type of people that are responsible for countless mass-murders throughout history and have establishes countless totalitarian states. These people are the enemy of anybody not in their camp. And they destroy nations.
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Sounds familiar. :D
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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Dogs will do that.
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A Kia that I own with a Trump sticker in Baltimore got vandalized to the tune of $2500 in July.?
I am doubly sorry to hear that.
Re:The nature of the Trump-fans is pretty obvious (Score:4, Insightful)
Eventually I installed cameras and caught the motherfuckers, who got fined and harassed by the cops...
Your troll would have come across as more credible if you had managed to avoid the temptation to feed your ego with that embellishment. Harassed you say, golly.
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Re: The nature of the Trump-fans is pretty obvious (Score:3)
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Re:The nature of the Trump-fans is pretty obvious (Score:4, Insightful)
The really gold standard of stupidity is that some Trump supporters think that there is a sizeable population of 1%-ers who are quaking in their boots at the thought of a Trump presidency.
These dumbfucks actually think that Trump will bring about change that will be against the desires of the wealthy.
Re:The nature of the Trump-fans is pretty obvious (Score:4, Insightful)
Trump, the best president that money can buy. The best. 100 percent.
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How's Trump's underage rape trial going?
Re:The nature of the Trump-fans is pretty obvious (Score:4, Insightful)
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I'm voting for candidate A, because A claims to be able to fix the country! Candidate B also claims to be able to fix the country but you can't trust liars from that party.
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Independent here, not a "Trump fan".
You're describing Hillary's followers here.
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Because authoritarians follow charismatic leaders...
Just saying repeating what someone else says doesn't make it true, no matter where you claim your loyalties lie (or in this case loyalties you disclaim).
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Charisma has everything to do with it, and policy nothing to do with it. An authoritarian leader can contradict himself on policy and his followers won't care.
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Authoritarian leaders are not the least consistent about policy. That's why scholars have had so much trouble characterizing fascism as an ideology, because it's not an ideology. It's a disease of ideology; it's politics rotting from the head down, like a fish.
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Just like Hillary then.
Indeed: fascism and socialism are actual, working policies, they are the propagandistic use of a particular set of grievances and empty promises. And, again, those overlap strongly with Hillary's promises.
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Actually, they are almost identical in their nature: they are both fiercely anti-capitalist, they both advocate a supposedly temporary period of totalitarian government in order to achieve their goals, and they both promise to take from the rich and give to the poor. They mainly differ in some details, such as their beliefs about race, religion, and nationhood. In practice, they both lead to poverty, violence, oppression, police states, and econom
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He's a scumbag that should not be trusted near taxpayers money. You don't have to play the "lesser of too evils" game.
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Indeed, it doesn't.
Well, you can vote for Johnson.
But between Hillary and Trump, Trump is the lesser of two evils. Why? For the simple reason that he is so politically inept and powerless that he can't get anything done. Hillary, on the other hand, is a skilled politician who would wreck this country if she managed to implement only a fracti
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I thought I was being very explicit that there is not much point making that comparison. It's about choosing someone suitable and not the lesser evil.
Yes, yes, women wrecking the joint and all that - even though I think she is slime unfit for office aren't you going a bit far beyond ridiculous with the "wreck this country" li
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It has always been true of the left and progressives; and, of course, the left and progressives have always denied it too and are fooling themselves into believing that the authoritarian policies they are advocating are not, in fact, authoritarian.
There are plenty of books; von Mises "Socialism" is a good start.
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You don't seem to understand. It's bad to say Islam causes terrorism because not all Muslims are terrorists. It's good to say all Trump supporters are authoritarian, fascist bootlickers because some Trump supporters are authoritarian, fascist bootlickers.
Also, it's not a double standard when your ideology is actually the one favored by the universe itself, possessed and composed of only truth and fact. For the Trump supporters out there, that means the modern American Progressive movement is based entire
The Effect (Score:2)
*HURK*
Sorry, sorry, i don't think i can finish that thought. And now i need to go get some brain bleach.
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Logs or it didn't happen?
Correlation? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Did Newsweek publish any other stories that day (or that week)?
No, the only thing that Newsweek published all week was a story about Trump. Not many people know this, but Newsweek is down to 1 employee who is both the journalist and webmaster.
Is there a definite correlation between that publishing of that story and the DDOS?
There is definitely a correlation between the two. They happened on the same day. That's a correlation. You could even say that Newsweek gets hit by DOS attacks any day they post a piece by Kurt Eichenwald about Trump breaking the Cuban embargo.
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Good point. It could have been Brad or Angelina's minions. Or they did a story on Justin Bieber's new girlfriend and all the Beliebers couldn't handle it.
I mean, it could have been anybody.
I for one am shocked (Score:5, Funny)
... just shocked that Trump supporters don't believe in the 1st Amendment right to free speech. I truly thought they had the Bill of Rights tattooed on their thighs.
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We get the government we deserve (Score:5, Funny)
In before the first post saying that a DDOS attack is actually free speech.
Meanwhile, the orange tweaker-in-chief is up at 3am rage-posting about some chick that wouldn't sleep with him 15 years ago.
http://www.salon.com/2016/09/3... [salon.com]
I think God's just fucking with us now.
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Maybe the Matrix is close to needed a reboot.
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The citizens get the democracy they deserve.
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If four or five years ago you'd been in a creative writing class and written a story detailing this election and Trump's role in it, it would have been panned as "ridiculous", "unrealistic", "pure nuttery" and "impossible"....but here we are.
If you'd written about a presidential candidate who bragged about being able to shoot people in the middle of the street with without losing a single voter, the teacher would have told you that the scene was childishly unbelievable in the extreme.
If you'd written that t
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I'm thinking maybe I've got a new sig...you don't mind do you?
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I can improve on it: "Anyone can grow up to be president, and you don't even have to grow up to do it."
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"Mommy, I want to grow up to be president!"
"Don't say that, now go wash your mouth out with soap!"
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Trump's a D-Bag, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
There's no need for that. Trump's already shit stain and everyone knows it. There's no need to jump to conclusions and tie him to something that he may not be associated. Because if it turns out that he's NOT associated, this will just be conspiracy theorist and Trump pariah bait.
Re: Trump's a D-Bag, but... (Score:2)
Also there are fanatics on both sides. An action attacking negative news on the public figure doesn't mean it was carried out by the opposing team.
There is a good chance a fanatical supporter was involved, but it doesn't eliminate the leadership or a sympathetic friend either.
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Have you actually seen the candidates? Looked at them, considered their backgrounds, seen their flaws, without comparing them to each other? Compare them to some of the more solid citizens you know, not another psycho power-mongering politician. I have and I wouldn't hire either of them to clean my septic system, much less for the office of president of the US.
I think it is exceptionally safe to say that any of their "supporters" are in fact "fanatics." They would have to be in order to generate the sus
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I think it is exceptionally safe to say that any of their "supporters" are in fact "fanatics." They would have to be in order to generate the suspension of disbelief and maniacal myopia necessary to support either of them. Their flaws are like something straight out of bad fiction, and yet here they are, the first runner up and the winner of the most "powerful job on the planet."
Hillary is a run-of-the-mill politician. Far from the worst by any stretch of the imagination of someone who actually understand politics. Trump is a run-of-the-mill attention-whoring media animal. Also far fro the worst of the genre.
Meanwhiile, your shrill denunciations are pretty extreme.
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Hillary is a run-of-the-mill politician. Far from the worst by any stretch of the imagination...
Wait, no, there is something truly exceptional about Hillary Clinton: she is a woman. As such, she is on the brink of making history. I also think she has a decent shot at turning in a better than average performance as chief executive. I suspect we will see a considerably more assertive stance re Russian adventurism, for one thing. If not then I suppose I would hope for a quick segue to the next impending historical event, a hispanic CiC.
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The average "I don't follow politics or world events but I love reality TV!" voters are going to be voting in force.
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There is a good chance a fanatical supporter was involved, but it doesn't eliminate the leadership or a sympathetic friend either.
In fact, given that "the main IP addresses linked to the attack were found to be Russian", the sympathetic friend theory looks like the winner. However, if the Trump campaign fails to denounce it, then by implication it condones it, and is therefore complicit.
That said, the strategy is idiotic. I could not imagine any more effective way to get the story trending, as it deserves.
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There's a lot of this happening in Russia. Anyone anywhere displeases Putin and there's a hack or DDOS soon after. So it's likely either Trump fans are learning from the Putin fans, or else the Putin jugend are involved.
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why are we strongly insinuating causality?
Because of the temporal correlation. Surprised I should need to explain that to you, or did you feign ignorance.
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why are we strongly insinuating causality?
Because of the temporal correlation. Actually, suspecting rather than insinuating.
There's no need for that.
There is a need for that, it is a healthy process of investigation. From the article: "the main IP addresses linked to the attack were found to be Russian." Again, this is just correlation, but it certainly does present the appearance of Russian meddling in American politics in favor of Donald Trump. If so, it amounts to state-sponsored cyber-terrorism. Better to err on the side more public scrutiny rather than less.
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who knows what is going on (Score:2)
Alternatively, Newsweek may have simply screwed up their servers and decided that blaming it on "Russian hackers" was going to give their story more credence. Or Hillary or her supporters may have engineered such attacks, for the same reason. You can't believe anything these people say.
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Nice website you got there. Shame if something should "happen" to it.
Who cares? (Score:2)
Seriously, who cares? The embargo has more holes than a slice of Swiss cheese. Any American who wanted to go to Cuba just had to go via another country, and they've worked out a scheme with Cuba to prevent it from ever showing up on your passport [ibtimes.com]:
But that’s not the only way. For decades, despite the embargo, some Americans have been visiting Cuba by way of indirect flights through countries such as Canada, Mexico and the Bahamas. These trips require less paperwork and can cost less than half the official option. An official, state-approved trip from the U.S. can cost between $4,000 and $5,000 for a week. A package including a resort stay and round-trip flights through Canada or another country will cost about $1,290 (or $1,500 Canadian), according to Krytiuk.
Typically, American travelers book flights to Cuba through a Canadian city or Caribbean hubs such as Nassau, Bahamas, or Cancún, Mexico. From there, every traveler going to Cuba is issued a tourist card for the passport. Upon arrival, Cuban customs agents remove one half of the card, and take the other half upon departure -- leaving no official record of the visit in a traveler’s passport.
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Seriously, who cares?
Not you, apparently. But law abiding people do.
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Regardless, what you claim has nothing to do with Trump. He is accused of doing business with Cuba through a front company. There is no question but that such activity would be highly illegal.
Trump and thugs (Score:2)
Imagine what he'd be able to accomplish as commander in chief.
IMHO the embargo was unconstitutional. (Score:2)
IMHO the Cuban Embargo was an unconstitutional usurpation of power by the Federal Government.
Think about it: Telling US citizens that they can't go to some place the government doesn't like because they're forbidden to spend US currency there (or spend other "hard" currency they bought with US currency), and going there requires spending money? Shades of the Iron Curtain and Catch-22. (If the US government wants to forbid such a thing and have even a chance of finding a Constitutional authorization, they
DDoS counter-measure? (Score:2)
Given that DDoS attacks seem to be becoming more accessible, what counter measures are there and can anything in the design of the Internet Protocol be modified, in a non-breaking way, to reduce the risk?
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Re:Donnie poo pays Russian hackers (Score:4, Funny)
This -1 score was brought you today by the letter E... and by paid Russian trolls http://www.businessinsider.com... [businessinsider.com]
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