In January of 2012, Anonymous broke into the mail server of the Syrian Ministry of Presidential Affairs and gave whistleblowing-site Wikileaks 2.4 million formerly regime-eyes-only emails. By Feb. 7, the owner of the
[email protected] address was known, and Assad began receiving threatening emails. He closed the presidential account the same day, according to Information Week.
Ironically, Assad did appear to have knowledge of security procedure, at least in the way he treated his email account. he deleted his mail after reading and never attached his name or initials to any email he sent from
[email protected]. But in other ways, he and his wife were woefully out of touch.
After the missives leaked to the Guardian, blog Foreign Policy reported that "Asma is apparently an Internet shopaholic, buying enough luxury items to stock a Tom Wolfe novel: Necklaces of amethyst, diamond, and onyx; a Ming Luce vase; and roughly $15,000 worth of candlesticks, tables, and chandeliers" -- all while the country was falling apart around her.
Assad, meanwhile, "made light of reforms he had promised in an attempt to defuse the crisis, referring to 'rubbish laws of parties, elections, media'" and at one point forwarded to an aide "a link to YouTube footage of a crude re-enactment of the siege of Homs using toys and biscuits," the Guardian reports.
At the beginning of the Syrian crackdowns, Shamri was running the Internet's first Arab-language information network, and he also moonlighted as an opposition blogger.
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