| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
Edward Lucas
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Professional recommendation |
5
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1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016-09-30 | N/A | Writing and research of a book regarding intelligence issues, espionage, and Russian disinformation. | Unknown | View |
| 2014-01-01 | N/A | Publication of the book 'Privacy for Me and Not for Thee'. | N/A | View |
| 2011-01-01 | N/A | Publication of various books, articles, and a video related to hacktivism, Anonymous, Edward Snow... | Various publications (print... | View |
This document is page 329 from a book (likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein, based on the ISBN in the footer), containing a 'Selected Bibliography' of books related to espionage, the CIA, the KGB, and Edward Snowden. It bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was collected as evidence during a congressional investigation. The 'Epstein' mentioned in the text is author Edward Jay Epstein, not the financier Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is the 'Acknowledgments' page from a book (identified by the footer ISBN as likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by journalist Edward Jay Epstein, though the author is not explicitly named in the text). It lists numerous individuals who assisted the author with intelligence, legal, and research issues, including notable figures such as Sidney Blumenthal, Ash Carter, and Bruce Kovner. The page specifically highlights assistance regarding Russian disinformation and retrieving information from 'the dark side of the Internet.' It bears a House Oversight Committee Bates stamp.
This document is page 52 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (likely by Edward Jay Epstein, indicated by the filename 'Epst'), bearing a House Oversight Committee Bates stamp. The text details the history of the Tor network, explaining that it was originally developed by U.S. military research agencies (NRL, DARPA) for intelligence purposes but was released as open source in 2008 to better hide U.S. operatives among general traffic. It highlights the tension between different U.S. agencies, noting that while the State Department funded Tor, the NSA viewed it as an obstacle to tracking targets.
This document is page 242 of a larger work, containing the citations for a chapter titled 'Hacktavist'. The citations refer to articles and books about hacktivism, Anonymous, Edward Snowden, Julian Assange, Silk Road, and the TOR browser, with publication dates ranging from 2011 to 2015. The document makes no direct mention of Jeffrey Epstein or his known associates, and its relevance to the Epstein case is not evident from the page's content alone.
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