Friday, March 30, 2012

U.S. Ambassador: I've Been Hacked By Russian Journalists




Michael McFaul, the U.S. ambassador to Russia, took to Twitter Thursday night to accuse Russian media organization NTV of hacking his cell phone and email account.

McFaul was about to meet with a Russian human rights activist in Moscow on Thursday evening when NTV reporters confronted him, according to The Telegraph. McFaul's schedule had not been made public.

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The Telegraph report suggested that NTV engages in "Kremlin-linked smear campaigns" against human rights activists and opposition political parties.


In McFaul's first tweet about the incident, he wondered how NTV figured out where he'd be:

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Soon afterward, he presupposed that reporters found a way to read his emails and listen in on his phone conversations:






After McFaul's accusations, reporter Jace Foster offered a possible explanation: the Russian consulate keeps close tabs on the ambassador and releases his schedule to the media.




However, when questioned by a follower, Foster suggested that the U.S. State Department publishes his schedule, a claim that McFaul refuted.




McFaul and Foster engaged in a back-and-forth dialogue, wherein Foster assured McFaul that she didn't have access to his calls or email -- but Foster doesn't work for NTV. Eventually, McFaul tweeted that he was considering making his schedule public because he is "always happy to interact with press." Later, McFaul called NTV's actions "wild" in a TV interview held in the Russian language.


McFaul became the U.S. ambassador to Russia in December of last year. He was formerly an academic and an advisor to President Obama. He's the first ambassador to Russia who hasn't been a career diplomat in nearly three decades.


Do you think McFaul was hacked, or are his allegations ungrounded? Sound off in the comments below.


Image courtesy of iStockphoto, Savushkin


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

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