Intel by Proxy; from Wiki:
Bellingcat (stylised as bell¿ngcat) is a Netherlands-based investigative journalism group that specialises in fact-checking and open-source intelligence (OSINT). It was founded by British journalist and former blogger Eliot Higgins in July 2014. Bellingcat publishes the findings of both professional and citizen journalist investigations into war zones, human rights abuses, and the criminal underworld. The site's contributors also publish guides to their techniques, as well as case studies.
Bellingcat began as an investigation into the use of weapons in the Syrian Civil War. Its reports on the War in Donbas (including the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17), the El J
Name
The name derives from the idiom "belling the cat", which comes from a medieval fable about mice who discuss how to make a cat harmless. One suggests hooking a bell around his neck, and all the mice support the idea but none is willing to do it.
History
Eliot Higgins' interest in OSINT began in 2011, when he was arguing in comments of The Guardian and found out that it is possible to verify videos with satellite imagery. In March 2012, he started a blog under the pseudonym "Brown Moses", named after a song by Frank Zappa, through which he published his research into video footage of the Syrian Civil War. He looked at hundreds of short clips on the Internet, localised them, and examined details of the weapons used. As a result, Higgins demonstrated that the Syrian regime was using cluster munitions and chemical weapons. In 2013, Higgins linked the chemical attack in Ghouta (the Ghouta chemical attack) to Bashar al-Assad. (fake news - attack perpetrated by Insurgents, NOT Assad)
Bellingcat's first major investigation, done mainly by volunteers without external funding, was the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 (MH17) in 2014. Their conclusion that Russia was responsible was later confirmed by the Dutch-led international joint investigation team (JIT), which found in a report dated 25 May 2018 that the downing of MH17 was initiated by the Russian military. In other investigations using Google Earth, volunteer investigators working with Bellingcat said that they had discovered the coordinates of an Islamic State training camp, as well as the site where an American journalist was killed.
Kristyan Benedict, an Amnesty International campaign manager, told The New Yorker in 2013 that many organisations had analysts but that Higgins was faster than many established investigation teams.
Higgins launched the Bellingcat platform (in its beta version) on 14 July 2014, raised £50k of private donations in the following month through the crowdfunding platform Kickstarter, and performed additional crowdfunding in 2017. Half of funding comes from grants and donations, the other half from running workshops training people in the art of open-source investigations.
Since 2018 the Bellingcat website is operated by the Dutch Stichting Bellingcat .(tr. Bellingcat Foundation). Bellingcat has received grants from Civitates-EU, Porticus the Brenninkmeijer family philanthropy, Adessium Foundation, National Endowment for Democracy (NED)[The National Endowment for Democracy has been accused by political activists, groups and governments around the world of being an agency for regime change and/or an instrument of US foreign policy following the particular ideologies and interests of the United States government}, PAX for Peace, Open Society Foundation (OSF) [Open Society Foundations (OSF), formerly the Open Society Institute, is a grantmaking network founded and chaired by business magnate George Soros.], the Dutch Postcode Lottery, the Digital News Initiative, Zandstorm CV and Sigrid Rausing Trust. Higgins has said much of the grant money does not directly fund investigations and is used for support services such as document translations and training. The organisation publishes guides on how to analyse data and how to create reports, such as "How to Scrape Interactive Geospatial Data" and "How to Identify Burnt Villages by Satellite Imagery".
Bellingcat received a €500,000 cash prize from the Nationale Postcode Loterij of The Netherlands; it used these funds to open a new office in The Hague in 2019.
The Bellingcat website also lists the in kind support in the form of 'software access and platform resources' from the software firms: Datayo, Hunchly, Maltego, Mapbox, Planet, RiskIQ, Vizlegal.
Higgins told Polygraph.info that grants from the NED and OSF pay for Bellingcat programmes to help journalists and researchers in their investigations. He said that "Most our funding from grants covers stuff that isn't related to investigating anything Russia related."
According to the i newspaper, Bellingcat is notable for its transparency, as Bellingcat investigative reports describe "how they found out the story and which techniques they used".
As of approximately 2019, the organisation had sixteen full-time staff plus Higgins, and at least 60 contributors. Its office was previously located in Leicester; however in 2018, Bellingcat shifted its main office to Amsterdam, in the Netherlands as a result of the impending Brexit and concerns over staff recruitment and mobility. Since 2021, Bellingcat has also had a presence in a new Investigative Commons centre in Berlin, Germany.
As reported in Foreign Policy, one of the unintended consequences of open-source intelligence outlets such as Bellingcat (and others) is that it gives the US intelligence community freedom to discuss Russian intelligence operations publicly without revealing their own sources or methods.
On 8 October 2021, Bellingcat was designated as a "foreign agent" in Russia.
It seems to me that in today's day and age it is all misinformation because it is all 'someone's narrative and the woke garbage they are selling.
ReplyDeleteYes, it is, sad to say. Everyone wants to spin/ influence us with their preferred "grand/ meta narrative". Nobody just wants to provide a news "service" that leaves the 'meta' (contextualization) to the reader. They feel the need to creatively construct what is essentially the "already de-constructed".
ReplyDeleteJulian helped dotard donald bigly by laundering the Russian hacked DNC material and he couldn't even get a pardon? I doubt dotard donald will give Assange a pardon even if he becomes predisent again. He's floating the idea of pardons for the January 6 "political prisoners" if he gets back in office. He could have pardoned them before he left office. But he didn't.
ReplyDeleteSeth Rich "hacked" the DNC data by putting it on a thumb drive directly. Julian Assange is an innocent being thrown to the wolves and made a scapegoat for all the IC/DOD/DNC atrocities that he exposed.
ReplyDeleteHeritage Foundation: Unlike other journalists, Assange was not simply a passive recipient of classified information that was obtained by some would-be government whistleblower. Assange, a self-proclaimed "famous teenage hacker in Australia", has a long history of actively encouraging and recruiting individuals to hack into non-public systems to obtain sensitive classified information, often telling those individuals how to exploit system vulnerabilities and providing those individuals with a list of targets.
ReplyDeleteAssange was not subtle about this, publishing a "Most Wanted Leaks" list on the WikiLeaks website, something no legitimate journalist would do. Unfortunately, many, including Chelsea Manning, responded.
Even the Washington Post, a recipient and publisher of some of Wikileaks material, editorialized that Assange is "not a free-press hero".
According to the Post, "contrary to the norms of journalism… Assange sometimes obtained such records unethically—Including… by trying to help now-former… soldier Manning hack into a classified U.S. computer system".
Rebutting the notion that Wikileaks is a journalist, the Post went on to say: "Unlike real journalists, Wikileaks dumped material into the public domain without any effort independently to verify its factuality or give named individuals an opportunity to comment".
We support a free and open press. We have defended every right under the First Amendment, and will continue to do so. Suppression of speech, in a free society, is wrong. But Assange is not a free-speech hero.
To put it bluntly: Julian Assange deserves to face the full legal consequences of his actions...
Seth Rich wasn't the source of the DNC hacked data. The DNC servers were infiltrated by Russian hackers.
Remember kids, the government keeps all their dark and evil secrets on a server anybody can hack. I mean, we only have two hours and change in this movie before we have to roll credits. It's okay to suspend disbelief to get to the epic car chase scene.
ReplyDeleteIt's awesome when the documents you're looking for are are all marked classified in case you might overlook them.
ReplyDelete