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DUKAS_127390622_EYE
NSO became the company whose software can spy on the world
Yahya Assiri a Saudi Arabian human rights activist and former member of the Royal Saudi Air Force who was targeted by NSO spyware.
The Pegasus project has raised new concerns about the Israeli firm, which is a world leader in the niche surveillance market. In 2019, when NSO Group was facing intense scrutiny, new investors in the Israeli surveillance company were on a PR offensive to reassure human rights groups.
In an exchange of public letters in 2019, they told Amnesty International and other activists that they would do “whatever is necessary” to ensure NSO’s weapons-grade software would only be used to fight crime and terrorism. But the claim, it now appears, was hollow.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_113073584_EYE
Ex-jihadi turned M16 agent Aimen Dean
Ex-jihadi turned M16 agent Aimen Dean pictured at The Fisheries, Hackney, London, UK.
Aimen Dean is hosting the 2nd series of the “Conflicted Podcast” together with Thomas Small.
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_127390631_EYE
NSO became the company whose software can spy on the world
Yahya Assiri a Saudi Arabian human rights activist and former member of the Royal Saudi Air Force who was targeted by NSO spyware.
The Pegasus project has raised new concerns about the Israeli firm, which is a world leader in the niche surveillance market. In 2019, when NSO Group was facing intense scrutiny, new investors in the Israeli surveillance company were on a PR offensive to reassure human rights groups.
In an exchange of public letters in 2019, they told Amnesty International and other activists that they would do Òwhatever is necessaryÓ to ensure NSOÕs weapons-grade software would only be used to fight crime and terrorism. But the claim, it now appears, was hollow.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_113073579_EYE
Ex-jihadi turned M16 agent Aimen Dean
Ex-jihadi turned M16 agent Aimen Dean pictured at The Fisheries, Hackney, London, UK.
Aimen Dean is hosting the 2nd series of the “Conflicted Podcast” together with Thomas Small.
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_113073585_EYE
Ex-jihadi turned M16 agent Aimen Dean
Ex-jihadi turned M16 agent Aimen Dean pictured at The Fisheries, Hackney, London, UK.
Aimen Dean is hosting the 2nd series of the “Conflicted Podcast” together with Thomas Small.
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_105422647_EYE
Top Secret: Thatcher's hotline among gadgets from GCHQ on display in Science Museum exhibition.
An encryption key allowing the Queen to make private phone calls and a mock-up of a Soviet spies’ nest in suburban London are among exhibits at the latest Science Museum show.
Visitors to Top Secret: From Ciphers To Cybersecurity, which opens on July 10, will see Churchill’s “Secraphone” and the first hotline-in-a-briefcase used by Margaret Thatcher in the Eighties.
Dozens of objects, many being shown in public for the first time, have been lent by the GCHQ surveillance agency, but the exhibition does not include the most modern telecoms and eavesdropping equipment still deemed too sensitive to leave its Cheltenham base.
The items displayed represent “10 or 15 per cent” of spy gadgets kept at GCHQ’s museum inside its headquarters, which can be viewed only by those with top secret clearance.
The rarest piece in the show is the filing cabinet-sized 5-UCO, a machine considered so secret that curators believed all versions had been destroyed. It was used to encrypt “the most secret of all messages” wired to embassies in the Second World War and Korean War, using an “automated one-time pad system” connected to a teleprinter. TOP SECRET: FROM CIPHERS TO CYBER SECURITY Science Museum new exhibition
© Evening Standard / eyevine
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© Evening Standard / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10013216_007
NEWS - Die Wittwe Marina Litwinenko spricht zu den Medien
Alexander Litvinenko Inquiry results. Alexander Litvinenko's wife, Marina, speaks at The Royal Courts of Justice for the results of the inquiry about her husband death in 2006. Russia's President Vladimir Putin “probably” approved the London murder of former spy Alexander Litvinenko, a landmark inquiry report concluded today 21/01/16.
The findings by inquiry chairman Sir Robert Owen immediately caused a furious row between London and Moscow.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01583794
(c) Dukas -
DUK10013216_004
NEWS - Die Wittwe Marina Litwinenko spricht zu den Medien
Alexander Litvinenko Inquiry results. Alexander Litvinenko's wife, Marina, speaks at The Royal Courts of Justice for the results of the inquiry about her husband death in 2006. Russia's President Vladimir Putin “probably” approved the London murder of former spy Alexander Litvinenko, a landmark inquiry report concluded today 21/01/16.
The findings by inquiry chairman Sir Robert Owen immediately caused a furious row between London and Moscow.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01583792
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037689_003
STUDIO - Karel Koecher
Karel Koecher photographed at the home he shares with his wife Hana on the outskirts of Prague. He is an Ex KGB sleeper agent (he lived in NYC and Washington working for the CIA during the Cold War all the while feeding information and secrets to the Russians till he was caught in 1986, imprisoned and then later exchanged for an American the Russians were holding.) NOTE: this image is a collect photo from his own archive showing him in the USA before his spying was uncovered. Koecher in front of the White House in 1966. (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01695483
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10037689_002
STUDIO - Karel Koecher
Karel Koecher photographed at the home he shares with his wife Hana on the outskirts of Prague. He is an Ex KGB sleeper agent (he lived in NYC and Washington working for the CIA during the Cold War all the while feeding information and secrets to the Russians till he was caught in 1986, imprisoned and then later exchanged for an American the Russians were holding.) (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01695481
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUKAS_127390635_EYE
NSO became the company whose software can spy on the world
Yahya Assiri a Saudi Arabian human rights activist and former member of the Royal Saudi Air Force who was targeted by NSO spyware.
The Pegasus project has raised new concerns about the Israeli firm, which is a world leader in the niche surveillance market. In 2019, when NSO Group was facing intense scrutiny, new investors in the Israeli surveillance company were on a PR offensive to reassure human rights groups.
In an exchange of public letters in 2019, they told Amnesty International and other activists that they would do “whatever is necessary” to ensure NSO’s weapons-grade software would only be used to fight crime and terrorism. But the claim, it now appears, was hollow.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127390639_EYE
NSO became the company whose software can spy on the world
Yahya Assiri a Saudi Arabian human rights activist and former member of the Royal Saudi Air Force who was targeted by NSO spyware.
The Pegasus project has raised new concerns about the Israeli firm, which is a world leader in the niche surveillance market. In 2019, when NSO Group was facing intense scrutiny, new investors in the Israeli surveillance company were on a PR offensive to reassure human rights groups.
In an exchange of public letters in 2019, they told Amnesty International and other activists that they would do “whatever is necessary” to ensure NSO’s weapons-grade software would only be used to fight crime and terrorism. But the claim, it now appears, was hollow.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127390636_EYE
NSO became the company whose software can spy on the world
Yahya Assiri a Saudi Arabian human rights activist and former member of the Royal Saudi Air Force who was targeted by NSO spyware.
The Pegasus project has raised new concerns about the Israeli firm, which is a world leader in the niche surveillance market. In 2019, when NSO Group was facing intense scrutiny, new investors in the Israeli surveillance company were on a PR offensive to reassure human rights groups.
In an exchange of public letters in 2019, they told Amnesty International and other activists that they would do “whatever is necessary” to ensure NSO’s weapons-grade software would only be used to fight crime and terrorism. But the claim, it now appears, was hollow.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_126083821_EYE
Robert and Michael Rosenberg / Meeropol
Robert Meeropol (green shirt) and Michael Meeropol (blue shirt) are the sons of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg who were executed by the US government as Soviet spies in 1953.
© Webb Chappell / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_118415070_EYE
Experience: my brother spied on me for the Stasi . I was strip-searched at the border. To be betrayed by a family member touches you deeply.
Peter Keup: ÔI spent 10 months in prison, some of it in solitary confinement.Õ
I was three years old when they built the Berlin Wall; my brother Ulrich was seven. My father was a communist, but by the time I was 16 my mother had convinced him that the family should apply for an exit visa from East Germany. The government refused and everything changed for the worse Ð we were treated as if we had betrayed the cause. I was kicked out of school. I couldnÕt do the job I wanted to do. I wasnÕt even allowed to do the sport I liked, which was track and field, because I was banned from my club.
Ulrich and I were never close. He started drinking at an early age. He had his first child at 21 and moved in with his girlfriend. I started ballroom dancing, because it was a competitive activity where clubs were private and not run by the authorities. I danced with my younger sister, Uta, and in 1981 we came third in the East German championships. We were told that we could represent the German Democratic Republic (GDR) internationally Ð if we first withdrew our exit visa request. We refused, so they stopped us from dancing. That was when I decided to escape. I was 22, but felt like I was living in a grave.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_118415067_EYE
Experience: my brother spied on me for the Stasi . I was strip-searched at the border. To be betrayed by a family member touches you deeply.
Peter Keup: ÔI spent 10 months in prison, some of it in solitary confinement.Õ
I was three years old when they built the Berlin Wall; my brother Ulrich was seven. My father was a communist, but by the time I was 16 my mother had convinced him that the family should apply for an exit visa from East Germany. The government refused and everything changed for the worse Ð we were treated as if we had betrayed the cause. I was kicked out of school. I couldnÕt do the job I wanted to do. I wasnÕt even allowed to do the sport I liked, which was track and field, because I was banned from my club.
Ulrich and I were never close. He started drinking at an early age. He had his first child at 21 and moved in with his girlfriend. I started ballroom dancing, because it was a competitive activity where clubs were private and not run by the authorities. I danced with my younger sister, Uta, and in 1981 we came third in the East German championships. We were told that we could represent the German Democratic Republic (GDR) internationally Ð if we first withdrew our exit visa request. We refused, so they stopped us from dancing. That was when I decided to escape. I was 22, but felt like I was living in a grave.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_113073581_EYE
Ex-jihadi turned M16 agent Aimen Dean
Ex-jihadi turned M16 agent Aimen Dean pictured at The Fisheries, Hackney, London, UK.
Aimen Dean is hosting the 2nd series of the “Conflicted Podcast” together with Thomas Small.
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_105422646_EYE
Top Secret: Thatcher's hotline among gadgets from GCHQ on display in Science Museum exhibition.
An encryption key allowing the Queen to make private phone calls and a mock-up of a Soviet spies’ nest in suburban London are among exhibits at the latest Science Museum show.
Visitors to Top Secret: From Ciphers To Cybersecurity, which opens on July 10, will see Churchill’s “Secraphone” and the first hotline-in-a-briefcase used by Margaret Thatcher in the Eighties.
Dozens of objects, many being shown in public for the first time, have been lent by the GCHQ surveillance agency, but the exhibition does not include the most modern telecoms and eavesdropping equipment still deemed too sensitive to leave its Cheltenham base.
The items displayed represent “10 or 15 per cent” of spy gadgets kept at GCHQ’s museum inside its headquarters, which can be viewed only by those with top secret clearance.
The rarest piece in the show is the filing cabinet-sized 5-UCO, a machine considered so secret that curators believed all versions had been destroyed. It was used to encrypt “the most secret of all messages” wired to embassies in the Second World War and Korean War, using an “automated one-time pad system” connected to a teleprinter. TOP SECRET: FROM CIPHERS TO CYBER SECURITY Science Museum new exhibition ... Secret phones
© Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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© Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_105422520_EYE
Top Secret: Thatcher's hotline among gadgets from GCHQ on display in Science Museum exhibition.
An encryption key allowing the Queen to make private phone calls and a mock-up of a Soviet spies’ nest in suburban London are among exhibits at the latest Science Museum show.
Visitors to Top Secret: From Ciphers To Cybersecurity, which opens on July 10, will see Churchill’s “Secraphone” and the first hotline-in-a-briefcase used by Margaret Thatcher in the Eighties.
Dozens of objects, many being shown in public for the first time, have been lent by the GCHQ surveillance agency, but the exhibition does not include the most modern telecoms and eavesdropping equipment still deemed too sensitive to leave its Cheltenham base.
The items displayed represent “10 or 15 per cent” of spy gadgets kept at GCHQ’s museum inside its headquarters, which can be viewed only by those with top secret clearance.
The rarest piece in the show is the filing cabinet-sized 5-UCO, a machine considered so secret that curators believed all versions had been destroyed. It was used to encrypt “the most secret of all messages” wired to embassies in the Second World War and Korean War, using an “automated one-time pad system” connected to a teleprinter. TOP SECRET: FROM CIPHERS TO CYBER SECURITY Science Museum new exhibition ... The Krogers Russian Spy house in London
© Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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© Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_105422652_EYE
Top Secret: Thatcher's hotline among gadgets from GCHQ on display in Science Museum exhibition.
An encryption key allowing the Queen to make private phone calls and a mock-up of a Soviet spies’ nest in suburban London are among exhibits at the latest Science Museum show.
Visitors to Top Secret: From Ciphers To Cybersecurity, which opens on July 10, will see Churchill’s “Secraphone” and the first hotline-in-a-briefcase used by Margaret Thatcher in the Eighties.
Dozens of objects, many being shown in public for the first time, have been lent by the GCHQ surveillance agency, but the exhibition does not include the most modern telecoms and eavesdropping equipment still deemed too sensitive to leave its Cheltenham base.
The items displayed represent “10 or 15 per cent” of spy gadgets kept at GCHQ’s museum inside its headquarters, which can be viewed only by those with top secret clearance.
The rarest piece in the show is the filing cabinet-sized 5-UCO, a machine considered so secret that curators believed all versions had been destroyed. It was used to encrypt “the most secret of all messages” wired to embassies in the Second World War and Korean War, using an “automated one-time pad system” connected to a teleprinter. TOP SECRET: FROM CIPHERS TO CYBER SECURITY Science Museum new exhibition ...microdot reader contained in a talcum powder tin
© Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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© Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10013216_009
NEWS - Die Wittwe Marina Litwinenko spricht zu den Medien
Alexander Litvinenko Inquiry results. Alexander Litvinenko's wife, Marina, speaks at The Royal Courts of Justice for the results of the inquiry about her husband death in 2006. Russia's President Vladimir Putin “probably” approved the London murder of former spy Alexander Litvinenko, a landmark inquiry report concluded today 21/01/16.
The findings by inquiry chairman Sir Robert Owen immediately caused a furious row between London and Moscow.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01583787
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037689_005
STUDIO - Karel Koecher
Karel Koecher photographed at the home he shares with his wife Hana on the outskirts of Prague. He is an Ex KGB sleeper agent (he lived in NYC and Washington working for the CIA during the Cold War all the while feeding information and secrets to the Russians till he was caught in 1986, imprisoned and then later exchanged for an American the Russians were holding.) (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01695471
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10037689_010
STUDIO - Karel Koecher
Karel Koecher photographed at the home he shares with his wife Hana on the outskirts of Prague. He is an Ex KGB sleeper agent (he lived in NYC and Washington working for the CIA during the Cold War all the while feeding information and secrets to the Russians till he was caught in 1986, imprisoned and then later exchanged for an American the Russians were holding.) (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01695480
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10037689_004
STUDIO - Karel Koecher
Karel Koecher photographed at the home he shares with his wife Hana on the outskirts of Prague. He is an Ex KGB sleeper agent (he lived in NYC and Washington working for the CIA during the Cold War all the while feeding information and secrets to the Russians till he was caught in 1986, imprisoned and then later exchanged for an American the Russians were holding.) (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01695485
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10037689_001
STUDIO - Karel Koecher
Karel Koecher photographed at the home he shares with his wife Hana on the outskirts of Prague. He is an Ex KGB sleeper agent (he lived in NYC and Washington working for the CIA during the Cold War all the while feeding information and secrets to the Russians till he was caught in 1986, imprisoned and then later exchanged for an American the Russians were holding.) (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01695476
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10037689_006
STUDIO - Karel Koecher
Karel Koecher photographed at the home he shares with his wife Hana on the outskirts of Prague. He is an Ex KGB sleeper agent (he lived in NYC and Washington working for the CIA during the Cold War all the while feeding information and secrets to the Russians till he was caught in 1986, imprisoned and then later exchanged for an American the Russians were holding.) NOTE: this image is a collect photo from his own archive showing him in the USA before his spying was uncovered. (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01695484
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUKAS_52586413_EYE
I risked my life spying on Abu Hamza, now I could lose my council home
Reda Hassaine, a former MI5 undercover agent who has helped bring extremists and terrorists to justice and has a Fatwa threatening him, is now under scrutiny by Islington Council for not living in his flat for more than a month after neighbours complained.
© Glenn copus / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_52586371_EYE
I risked my life spying on Abu Hamza, now I could lose my council home
Reda Hassaine, a former MI5 undercover agent who has helped bring extremists and terrorists to justice and has a Fatwa threatening him, is now under scrutiny by Islington Council for not living in his flat for more than a month after neighbours complained.
© Glenn copus / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE