An OSINT conducted, a tax payer's buck saved somewhere.
Last week, the mainstream media was abuzz
with the release of the first jihadist e-zine discussing hacking,
information hiding, of course in between the lines of radical
propaganda, whereas no one was providing more information on the exact
nature of the articles, but the SITE institute. So I decided to take a peek at the Technical Mujahid for myself, in order to break through the FUD, or not see the "threat sliced on pieces" by different news sources.
According to the official release, the magazine's download locations seem to be slowly becoming useless, besides the Rapidshare link which seems to be still fully working -- the Internet Haganah reasonably points out that owning a copy of it might get you in trouble in some countries, so don't.
According to the official release, the magazine's download locations seem to be slowly becoming useless, besides the Rapidshare link which seems to be still fully working -- the Internet Haganah reasonably points out that owning a copy of it might get you in trouble in some countries, so don't.
Despite
that I don't speak any Arabic languages, and I pressume neither do you,
the e-zine is rich on visual materials and you can pretty much grasp
the big picture. Namely, that it's practical compared to theoretical
source of information, it's targeting mixed audiences, and it's keeping
it very simple. So I've decided to compile a summary of the key sections
and topics in the articles covered for future references. In one
sentence - its simplicity is not to be feared, but its practicality.
The
release of the magazine is an indication of the ongoing use of the
Internet for mass-education -- economies of scale -- through videos and
visual howto's, but much more advanced information related to
information security could be obtained from public sources. The cellphone triangulation in Iraq, and the demonstration of Hacker Defender are worth mentioning, but overall, concepts such as information warfare or online PSYOPS remain unstructured and abstract ideas to the average jihadist
- for now. Notice the multimedia file used as an example for the
alternate data stream as well and draw up the conclusions on your own.
Don't
exclude the logical possibility of on purposely disinforming the
general public and various intel folks across the world on a relatively
primitive inforwar practices such as using PGP and alternate data
streams.
Here are the articles themselves :
01. Article One - Alternate Data Streams - steganography example given, rootkits - hacker defender covered, examples provided, abomosab.jpg used as an example
02. Article Two - Satellite Communications and the importance of GPS, handheld GPS,
explains triangulation, mentions satellite imagery's power, and
satellite transfer speeds, mentions 1575 and 1227 as carrier frequencies
and Digital Sequence Spread Specturm - DSSS, mentions handheld GPS
receiver, includes photos of 3G data card, laptop. It then discusses a
locked device with a "WARNING" sign on it
03. Article Three - Visual HOWTO on Install VMware
04. Article Four - Article on digital media players, the different formats, subtitles, and the NTSC and PAL systems, recording basics as it looks like
05. Article Five - Introduction to PGP
- Zimmerman is quoted, explanation of the RSA algorithm, recommending
the use of PGP Whole Disk, features warning message that trial versions
of PGP Whole Disk will self-decrypt
And SITE Institute's comments on the propaganda side in the introduction and conclusion :
"For
future issues, the editors urge members of the jihadist Internet
community to submit articles in the field of technology for publishing.
They write: “My kind, technical Mujahid brother, the magnitude of
responsibility which is placed upon you is equal to what you know in the
regard of information. Do not underestimate anything that you know;
perhaps a small article that you write and publish can benefit one
Mujahid in the Cause of Allah or can protect a brother of yours in
Allah. This way you will gain the great reward with the permission of
Allah."
If you perceive the Technical Mujahid magazine as a threat to the national security of any country, old issues of Phrack magazine must be giving you the nightmares.
Have a productive week everyone, and stay informed!