A Russian state service in-charge of safeguarding Kremlin communications is looking to purchase an array of old-fashioned typewriters to prevent leaks from computer hardware, sources said yesterday.
The throwback to the paper-strewn days of Soviet bureaucracy has reportedly been prompted by the publication of secret documents by anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks and the revelations leaked by former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden.
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The Federal Guard Service, which is also in charge of protecting Russian President Vladimir Putin, is looking to spend just over 486,000 rubles (Rs 9 lakh) to buy a number of electric typewriters.
“This purchase has been planned for more than a year now,” said a source at the service, known by its Russian acronym FSO. The state service was looking to purchase 20 typerwriters because using computers to prepare top-secret documents may no longer be safe.
“After scandals with the distribution of secret documents by WikiLeaks, the exposes by Edward Snowden, reports about Dmitry Medvedev being listened in on during his visit to the G20 summit in London, it has been decided to expand the practice of creating paper documents,” an FSO source was quoted as saying.
Unlike printers, every typewriter has its own individual pattern of type so it is possible to link every document to a machine used to type it. Snowden has been stuck in legal limbo at a Moscow airport for a third week after arriving from Hong Kong on June 23.
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