Russia has opted to purchase a slew of old-school typewriters in order to protect state secrets, reports Pro-Kremlin newspaper Izvestia.
Although notable in the wake of Wikileaks and Edward Snowden revelations about the
The old school spy purchase is ironic, though, considering the
From a circa 1987 article in the New York Times:
In the mid-1970's, American intelligence officials suspected that the typewriters in the embassy were being bugged.
A 1979 inspection trip yielded nothing, perhaps because the Russians learned in advance about the trip through memos typed on the compromised machines. In 1984, the experts returned, armed with a letter signed by President Reagan that ordered embassy personnel not to initiate any communications with Washington about a pending swap of equipment.
Hours after the team arrived in
Oddly enough, bugged typewriters used a form of bugging called "keystroke logging," which is exactly the same terminology used for a similar "listening" computer software hackers and spies use to read a user's traffic.