The FBI is ramping up its efforts to find out who leaked information about the Stuxnet worm used to attack Iranian nuclear facilities in 2010, and that has reignited debate over whether the Obama administration's aggressive pursuit of those who leak classified information is trampling privacy rights.
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced a criminal probe last June, shortly after a lengthy article by The New York Times' chief Washington correspondent, David Sanger, reported that anonymous, high-level sources in the Obama administration had told him that the U.S. and Israeli governments had used the Stuxnet worm to attack centrifuges at Iran's Natanz nuclear plant.
[ Also on InfoWorld: Google provides a smorgasbord of your data for the government's snooping eyes. | Prevent corporate data leaks with Roger Grimes' "Data Loss Prevention Deep Dive" PDF expert guide, only from InfoWorld. | Stay up to date on the latest security developments with InfoWorld's Security Central newsletter. ]
But the intensity of that probe has increased in recent weeks, the Washington Post reported. Jody Westby, CEO of Global Cyber Risk and a consultant on privacy, said that is a good thing.
"The Times' report on Stuxnet was shocking because of the quotes being attributed to officials from what had to be high levels of government," she said. "It was clear the article was revealing information that was surely classified. The people who provided this information have put us at risk. The DoJ (Department of Justice) inquiry is appropriate."
But Glenn Greenwald, writing in The Guardian this past Sunday, argued that one of the last remaining ways for citizens to hold the government accountable for misconduct is through unauthorized leaks. "That is why the Obama administration is waging an unprecedented war against it -- a war that continually escalates -- and it is why it is so threatening," he wrote.
"Virtually every significant revelation of the bad acts of the U.S. government over the last decade [came from leaks,]" he said, including the Bush administration's use of waterboarding and the National Security Agency's (NSA) eavesdropping on Americans without the warrants required by the criminal law.
"Silencing government sources is the key to disabling investigative journalism and a free press," Greenwald wrote.
He and a number of others contend it is those who expose misconduct who are punished, instead of those guilty of the misconduct itself. Their most recent example is former CIA officer John Kiriakou, who was recently sentenced to 30 months in prison, in connection with CIA policies on waterboarding because he spoke publicly about it, while none of those who actually did it were sanctioned or punished.







