April 28, 2017
1 min read

Vault 7: Scribbles

WikiLeaks publishes the documentation and source code for CIA’s “Scribbles” project, a document-watermarking preprocessing system to embed “Web beacon”-style tags into documents that are likely to be copied by Insiders, Whistleblowers, Journalists or others. The released version (v1.0 RC1) is dated March, 1st 2016 and classified SECRET//ORCON/NOFORN until 2066.

Scribbles is intended for off-line preprocessing of Microsoft Office documents. For reasons of operational security the user guide demands that “[t]he Scribbles executable, parameter files, receipts and log files should not be installed on a target machine, nor left in a location where it might be collected by an adversary.”

According to the documentation, “the Scribbles document watermarking tool has been successfully tested on […] Microsoft Office 2013 (on Windows 8.1 x64), documents from Office versions 97-2016 (Office 95 documents will not work!) [and d]ocuments that are not be locked forms, encrypted, or password-protected”. But this limitation to Microsoft Office documents seems to create problems: “If the targeted end-user opens them up in a different application, such as OpenOffice or LibreOffice, the watermark images and URLs may be visible to the end-user. For this reason, always make sure that the host names and URL components are logically consistent with the original content. If you are concerned that the targeted end-user may open these documents in a non-Microsoft Office application, please take some test documents and evaluate them in the likely application before deploying them.”

Security researches and forensic experts will find more detailed information on how watermarks are applied to documents in the source code, which is included in this publication as a zipped archive.

Leaked Documents

Tim Stigal

Independent and free in every sense Chechen journalist, financial analyst and trader who believes in God and defends the rights and honor of oppressed people.

Previous Story

Vault 7: Weeping Angel

Next Story

Vault 7: Archimedes

Previous Story

Vault 7: Weeping Angel

Next Story

Vault 7: Archimedes

Latest from Blog

Secret Congressional Reports

6,780 reports comprising over 127,000 pages of material on some of the most contentious issues in the nation, from the US relationship with Israel to the financial collapse. Change you can download:

Amazon Atlas

WikiLeaks publishes a “Highly Confidential” internal document from the cloud computing provider Amazon. The document from late 2015 lists the addresses and some operational details of over one hundred data centers spread

Dealmaker: Al Yousef

Today WikiLeaks publishes a secret document from the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) International Court of Arbitration, pertaining to a dispute over commission payment in relation to a $3.6 billion arms deal

Vault 8

Source code and analysis for CIA software projects including those described in the Vault7 series. This publication will enable investigative journalists, forensic experts and the general public to better identify and understand

Vault 7: Protego

WikiLeaks publishes four secret documents from the Protego project of the CIA, along with 37 related documents (proprietary hardware/software manuals from Microchip Technology Inc.). The project was maintained between 2014 and 2015.
Go toTop