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Cyber attacks increasingly penetrating Israel’s politics

Israeli researchers fear that cyberwar in the form of fake social media accounts or even attacks on the vote count could plague the upcoming election year.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during the Cyber Week conference at Tel Aviv University, Israel, June 20, 2018. REUTERS/Ammar Awad - RC15B2CE7200
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Israel is a global cyber power. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has boasted more than once that Israel is involved in almost 20% of cyber business in the world, either directly or indirectly, with partial involvement of Israeli cyber companies. Israel’s sophisticated, upgraded intelligence systems constitute an inexhaustible source of experienced, creative, professional and brilliant manpower that has transformed the Israeli cyber industry into the twin of Israel’s successful hi-tech industry. The Start-up Nation is also the Cyber Nation. However, it turns out that all these achievements are accompanied by worries and troubles.

Israeli tech experts and internet activists Noam Rotem and Yuval Adam released on Nov. 6 an investigative report uncovering an extensive cyber network that they described as “a large bot project, [Prime Minister] Benjamin Netanyahu’s fan club,” that operated on the Twitter network. The two experts also wrote that soon they will uncover additional, similar networks, only larger and more extensively branched. The techies said that they brought the data that they’d accumulated to Twitter, which then removed the hundreds of phony accounts from the network and closed them.

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