''e-jihad''

Published: 7 February 2001 y., Wednesday
Osama bin Laden and other Muslim extremists are posting encrypted, or scrambled, photographs and messages on popular Web sites and using them to plan terrorist activities against the United States and its allies, U.S. officials say. The officials say bin Laden and his associates are using the Internet to conduct what some are calling ''e-jihad,'' or holy war. Bin Laden, a dissident Saudi businessman, has been indicted for the bombing in 1998 of two U.S. embassies in East Africa and is believed to be behind the bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen on Oct. 12. Four alleged bin Laden associates went on trial Monday in New York for the embassy bombings. ''To a greater and greater degree, terrorist groups, including Hezbollah, Hamas and bin Laden's al Qaida group, are using computerized files, e-mail and encryption to support their operations,'' CIA Director George Tenet wrote last March to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The testimony, given at a closed-door hearing, was later made public. Officials and experts say the messages are scrambled using free encryption programs set up by groups that advocate privacy on the Internet. Those same programs also can hide maps and photographs in an existing image on selected Web sites. The e-mails and images can only be decrypted using a ''private key,'' or code, selected by the recipient. Through weeks of interviews with U.S. law-enforcement officials and experts, USA TODAY has learned details of how extremists hide maps and photographs of terrorist targets -- and post instructions for terrorist activities -- in sports chat rooms, on pornographic bulletin boards and other popular Web sites. The officials, who declined to name the sites, say it is extremely difficult to intercept the coded messages.
Šaltinis: usatoday.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Nigeria: ATM is Now a Fraud - Victim

INTERVIEW: Fraud victim describes mistrust of ATMs in Nigeria. more »

Cisco IP Video Technology to Enable Groundbreaking NBC Coverage of Beijing Olympic Games

Cisco announced today it has been selected to provide Internet Protocol (IP) video network infrastructure and video-encoding solutions to NBC during the network's coverage of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Aug. 8-24. more »

Microsoft and NBC Deliver Groundbreaking Online Olympics Viewing Experience

Q&A: Executives from MSN, NBC and Microsoft offer details behind the largest online broadcasting event in history. more »

HP, Intel and Yahoo! Create Global Cloud Computing Research Test Bed

The goal of the initiative is to promote open collaboration among industry, academia and governments by removing the financial and logistical barriers to research in data-intensive, Internet-scale computing. more »

Microsoft Announces Reorganization of Windows and Online Services Business

Platforms & Services Division to Split Into Two Groups and Report to CEO Steve Ballmer. more »

Privacy to the Test – Exploring the Limits of Online Anonymity and Accountability

More can be done to ensure that people can be confident that their privacy will be protected online. more »

Government says card fraud on the rise in U.K.

A UK crime survey shows credit and debit card fraud has reached a record high of £535 million. more »

Cisco Combat Exam Fraud with Global Test Delivery Enhancements

New security measures underscore commitment to protect certification integrity and value. more »

Sparkasse KölnBonn standardizes its branch IT with technology from Wincor Nixdorf

Sparkasse KölnBonn has just concluded a framework agreement with Wincor Nixdorf. The agreement covers more than 500 devices. more »

Aladdin Knowledge Systems Reports Second Quarter 2008 Financial Results

Aladdin Knowledge Systems Ltd. (NASDAQ: ALDN), an information security leader specializing in authentication, software DRM and content security, today announced financial results for the second quarter of fiscal year 2008. more »