Difference between revisions of "Dark Side of the Kremlin"

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==The Documents==
 
==The Documents==
 
"175 gigabytes of compressed data consisting of hundreds of thousands of hacked emails, other messages and files from Russian [[politicians]], [[journalists]], [[oligarchs]], [[priests|religious]] and social figures, as well as nationalists/separatists/[[terrorists]] operating in [[Ukraine]]." '''The files are [https://ddosecretspzwfy7.onion.to/data/asia/#russia posted here]''', available using either the [[magnet]] or [[torrent]] protocols.
 
"175 gigabytes of compressed data consisting of hundreds of thousands of hacked emails, other messages and files from Russian [[politicians]], [[journalists]], [[oligarchs]], [[priests|religious]] and social figures, as well as nationalists/separatists/[[terrorists]] operating in [[Ukraine]]." '''The files are [https://ddosecretspzwfy7.onion.to/data/asia/#russia posted here]''', available using either the [[magnet]] or [[torrent]] protocols.
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===Search interface===
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The webpage at https://search.bivol.bg/kremlin/ appears to be a searchable interface to the documents.
  
 
==Official narrative==
 
==Official narrative==

Revision as of 15:56, 2 February 2019

Event.png Dark Side of the Kremlin(leak) Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Dark Side of the Kremlin.png
Date25 January 2019
ParticipantsDDoSecrets
Websitehttps://ddosecretspzwfy7.onion.to/data/asia/#russia
DescriptionA leak of 175GB of Russian documents

The Dark Side of the Kremlin is the name given to a large leak of Russian documents.[1] They were posted to the Internet Archive, but were quickly taken down for having breached guidelines.[2]

The Documents

"175 gigabytes of compressed data consisting of hundreds of thousands of hacked emails, other messages and files from Russian politicians, journalists, oligarchs, religious and social figures, as well as nationalists/separatists/terrorists operating in Ukraine." The files are posted here, available using either the magnet or torrent protocols.

Search interface

The webpage at https://search.bivol.bg/kremlin/ appears to be a searchable interface to the documents.

Official narrative

Emma Best, a co-founder of Distributed Denial of Secrets is quoted as saying that the Russian documents and emails “show how the Russian power system is interconnected, and documents influence operations in real time—from those separatists/terrorists backed by Russia to those in the Orthodox and business worlds.”[3]

Reporting

Scott Shane reported on the leak for the New York Times, opining that the size of the documents (around 175 GB uncompressed) is so large that suggested that they may have been copied over a LAN (i.e. a computer on the internal network) rather than over the Internet.[4]

Timing

The leak occurred about 10 weeks after the documents from the Integrity Initiative were leaked.

 

Known Participant

All 1 of the participants already have pages here:

Participant
DDoSecrets
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References