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Google Sends State-Sponsored Hack Warnings To Journalists and Professors (ibtimes.co.uk) 69

An anonymous reader shares an IBTimes report: Numerous journalists and professors are taking to social media to report that they have received an alarming message regarding state-sponsored hacking when accessing their Gmail or other sites that use their Google account. Journalists who received the warning include Nobel Prize-winning economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, New York magazine's Jonathan Chait, Politico's Julia Ioffe, GQ's special correspondent Keith Olbermann, Vox's Ezra Klein, Yahoo News' Garance Franke-Ruta, and one of President Barack Obama's former speechwriters, Jon Lovett. The warning says, "Google may have detected government-backed attackers trying to steal your password." These warnings are being sent by Google since 2012 but Twitter has erupted with a flurry of people in the media and academic community receiving this in the past 24 hours.
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Google Sends State-Sponsored Hack Warnings To Journalists and Professors

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  • Phase 3. (Score:2, Interesting)

    After hacking the DNC and hacking voting machines to win Putin buddy Trump the election, they are now moving against the people who might have the interest or power to report on the background on what is happening in the USA in these very troubled times.

    I guess they are trying to dig up dirt to blackmail people.

    Don't underestimate the power of Russian Intelligence Services. Numerous reports cite Russian hackers are the best in the world and their very president is a former KGB agent.

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Thursday November 24, 2016 @10:35AM (#53354587) Journal

    "Besides the NSA, CIA, FBI, and confederate agent operatives embedded in same for both major parties, that is."

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday November 24, 2016 @10:37AM (#53354597)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      You think people who re-post news on a social news site refer to themselves as "writers" I think you might be confusing us with professional journalists... also if you want to get pedantic "have been being" is fucking terrible, it should be "Google have been sending these warnings since 2012".

    • These warnings are being sent by Google since 2012

      This form of grammatical error is common among people whose native language is not English, in particular I see it a lot from Germans.

      Odds are that the author writes their native language far better than you do.

      Please learn to write or don't call yourself a writer.

      Where does it say that the anonymous poster called himself a writer? You were clearly able to understand the intent, so your post is just snobbery.

      Now, had you pointed out that a competent English-speaking editor could and should have corrected the error before posting it, well, then you'd have h

    • Your "correction" may be pedantically proper, but results in a very awkward sentence (read it out loud a few times). Active voice reads much more naturally:

      Google has been sending these warnings since 2012 . . .

  • The election showed that blaming "super-advanced" Russia (which by the way in reality does not produce a single PC or a smartphone) for hacking about everyone and everything does not work. People do not believe it. Move on, think of something else.

    Besides, I do not get how Trump could be beneficial for Russia. Trump is smart, while the USA and RF remain natural competitors.
  • Those email addresses could have been scraped off any hack. If I got something like that I would look at the header. It's like "You're in danger of being hacked! Quick, click here!"
  • 1. Two factor authentication, ALWAYS
    2. People should stop using email for anything sensitive that you don't want read by your worst enemy. Use some P2P encrypted chat program or something. One would think Americans, at least, could see the value in something other than damned emails for sensitive communication.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re 'Two factor authentication, ALWAYS" Two factor authentication is not holding as expected.
      "Google warns journalists and professors: Your account is under attack" (11/24/2016)
      http://arstechnica.com/securit... [arstechnica.com]
      "Some of the people who received the warning reported their accounts were protected by two-factor authentication... "

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