A year in cybersecurity and cybercrime: 2012 review
During the year, we have seen the destruction of SOPA and PIPA but the emergence of CISPA and similar laws around the world, a growing trend in hacks and scams, an explosion in malware, ...
Here, the famous and infamous who probably now wish they'd never hit the send button.
We may never know the extent of the corruption and graft in the United Nations' oil-for-food program, intended to feed Iraqi citizens. But U.S. investigators have charged that billions of dollars were illegally diverted to Saddam Hussein's regime. (Click here for PDF). Estimates are as high as $21 billion, and the United Nations has steadfastly refused to release even its internal audits.
Even though U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has not been directly implicated in the scandal, e-mail messages have sketched an unflattering picture. For instance, the chief executive of IHC Services (a major U.N. contractor) sent e-mails passing on confidential U.N. information to another company. The chairman of IHC, Giandomenico Picco, is a U.N. undersecretary and Annan's personal representative on a U.N. project.
In March 2005, an independent inquiry committee said there wasn't sufficient evidence to show that Annan influenced a multimillion-dollar oil-for-food program contract awarded to the company that employed his son. But e-mails (click here for PDF) that surfaced a few months later cast doubt on that finding. Those messages from executives at Cotecna Inspection, the Swiss firm that employed his son Kojo, described meetings with the U.N. chief in Paris and New York not long before the oil-for-food contract was awarded. Kojo was paid $400,000 for less than two years' worth of work.
Caption by: Andy Smith
Join Discussion