Comprehensive network analysis shows Climategate likely to be a leak

This lends cred to WUWT’s previous analysis done by our own Charles the moderator: The CRUtape Letters™, an Alternative Explanation,

Climate-Gate: Leaked

by Lance Levsen, Network Analyst – courtesy of Small Dead Animals

http://www.swfwmd.state.fl.us/conservation/indoors/leak.jpg

Introduction

Some time starting in mid November 2009, ten million teletypes all started their deet-ditta-dot chatter reeling off the following headline: “Hackers broke into the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit….”

I hate that. It annoys me because just like everything else about climate-gate it’s been ‘value-added’; simplified and distilled. The contents of FOIA2009.zip demand more attention to this detail and as someone once heard Professor Jones mutter darkly, “The devil is in the details…so average it out monthly using TMax!”

The details of the files tell a story that FOIA2009.zip was compiled internally and most likely released by an internal source.

The contents of the zip file hold one top-level directory, ./FOIA. Inside that it is broken into two main directories, ./mail and ./documents. Inside ./mail are 1073 text files ordered by date. The files are named in order with increasing but not sequential numbers. Each file holds the body and only the body of an email.

In comparison, ./documents is highly disorganized. MS Word documents, FORTRAN, IDL and other computer code, Adobe Acrobat PDF’s and data are sprinkled in the top directory and through several sub-directories. It’s the kind of thing that makes the co-workers disorganized desk look like the spit and polish of a boot camp floor.

What people are missing entirely is that these emails and files tell a story themselves.

The Emails

Proponents of the hacker meme are saying that s/he broke into East Anglia’s network and took emails. Let’s entertain that idea and see where it goes.

There is no such thing as a private email. Collecting all of the incoming and outgoing email is simple in a mail server. Using: Postfix the configuration is always_bcc=<email address>, here are links on configuring the same for Sendmail, and for Exim. Those are the three main mail servers in use in the Unix environment. Two of them, Sendmail and Exim are or were in use as the external mail gateways and internal mail servers at the University of East Anglia (UEA).

When a mail server receives an email for someone@domain.net, it checks that it is authoritative for that domain. This means that a server for domain.net will not accept email for domain.ca. The mail server will usually then run checks on the email for spam, virus, and run other filters. It will then check to see whether to route the email to another server or to drop the email in a users mailbox on that server. In all examples examined in the released emails, the mail gateway forwarded the emails to another server.

The user then has a mail client that s/he uses to read email. Outlook Express, Eudora, Apple Mail, Outlook, Thunderbird, mutt, pine and many more are all mail clients.

Mail clients use one of two methods of reading email. The first is called POP and that stands for Post Office Protocol. A mail client reading email with POP logs into the mail server, downloads the email to the machine running the mail client and will then delete the original email from the users spool file on the mail server.

The second protocol is called IMAP, Internet Message Access Protocol. IMAP works by accessing the mailboxes on the mail server and doing most of the actions there. Nothing is actually downloaded onto the client machine. Only email that is deleted and purged by the mail client is gone. Either protocol allows the user the opportunity to delete the email completely.

Most email clients are setup for reading emails with POP by default and POP is more popular than IMAP for reading email.

The released emails are a gold mine for a system administrator or network administrator to map. While none of the emails released contained headers, several included replies that contained the headers of the original emails. An experienced administrator can create an accurate map of the email topography to and from the CRU over the time period in question, 1998 thru 2009.

Over the course time, UEA’s systems administrators made several changes to the way email flows through their systems. The users also made changes to the way they accessed and sent email.

The Users

Using a fairly simple grep1 we can see that from the start of the time-frame, 1999, until at least 2005 the CRU unit accessed their email on a server called pop.uea.ac.uk. Each user was assigned a username on that server. From the released emails, we can link username to people as such:

In the previously referenced grep comes some more useful information. For instance, we know that Professor Davies was using QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Light Version 3.0.3 (32) in September of 1999. (ref Email: 0937153268.txt). If you look at the README.txt for that version you can see that it requires a POP account and doesn’t support IMAP.

As mentioned previously, POP deletes email on the server usually after it is downloaded. Modern POP clients do have an option to save the email on the server for some number of days, but Eudora Light 3.0.3 did not. We can say that Professor Davies’ emails were definitely removed from the server as soon as “Send/Recv” was finished.

This revelation leaves only two scenarios for the hacker:

  1. Professor Davies’ email was archived on a server and the hacker was able to crack into it, or
  2. Professor Davies kept all of his email from 1999 and he kept his computer when he was promoted to Pro-Vice Chancellor for Research and Knowledge Transfer in 2004 from his position as Dean of the School of Environmental Sciences.

The latter scenario requires that the hacker would have had to know how to break into Prof. Davies’ computer and would have had to get into that computer to retrieve those early emails. If that were true, then the hacker would have had to get into every other uea.ac.uk computer involved to retrieve the emails on those systems. Given that many mail clients use a binary format for email storage and given the number of machines the hacker would have to break into to collect all of the emails, I find this scenario very improbable.

Which means that the mail servers at uea.ac.uk were configured to collect all incoming and outgoing email into a single account. As that account built up, the administrator would naturally want to archive it off to a file server where it could be saved.

This is a simple evolution. You just run a crontab to start a shell-script that will stop the mail server, move the mail spool file into a file somewhere else, nulls the live spool and restart the mail server. The account would reside on the mail server, the file could be on any server.

Alternatively you could use a procmail recipe to process the email as it comes in, but that may be a bit too much processing power for a very busy account.

This also helps to explain the general order of the ./mail directory. Only a computer would be able to reliably export bodies of email into numbered files in the FOIA archive. As the numbers are in order not just numerically but also by date, the logical reasoning is that a computer program is numbering emails as they are processed for storage. This is extremely easy to do with Perl and the Mail::Box modules.

The Email Servers

I’ve created a Dia diagram2 of the network topography regarding email only as demonstrated in the released emails. Here’s a jpeg of it:

CRU's network for email 	  from 1998 thru 2009.
click to enlarge

The first thing that springs to mind is that the admins did a lot of fiddling of their email servers over the course of ten years. 🙂 The second thing is the anomaly. Right in the middle of 2006-2009 there is a Microsoft Exchange Server. Normally, this wouldn’t be that big of an blip except we’ve already demonstrated that the servers at UEA were keeping a copy of all email in and out of the network. Admins familiar with MS Exchange know that it too is a mail server of sorts.

It is my opinion that the MS Exchange server was working in conjunction with ueams2.uea.ac.uk and I base this opinion on the fact that ueams2.uea.ac.uk appears both before and after the MS Exchange Server. It doesn’t change its IP address nor does it change the type of mail server that is installed on it. There is a minor version update from 4.51 to 4.69. You can see Debian’s changelog between the Exim versions here.

I’ve shown that the emails were collected from the servers rather than from the users accounts and workstations, but I haven’t shown which servers were doing the collection. There are two options, the mail gateway or the departmental mail servers.

As demonstrated above, I believe that the numbers of the filenames correspond to the order that the emails were archived. If so, the numbers that are missing, represent other emails not captured in FOIA2009.zip.

I wrote a short Bash program3 to calculate the variances between the numbering system of the email filenames. The result is staggering, that’s a lot of email outside of what was released. Here’s a graph of the variances in order as well as a graph with the variances numerically sorted . Graph info down below.

Variance from Email Number to the 	  last Email Number
click to enlarge
Variances sorted and plotted
click to enlarge

The first graph is a little hard to read, but that’s mostly because the first variance is 8,805,971. To see a little better, just lop off the first variance and rerun gnuplot. For simplicity, that graph is here. The mean of the variances is 402839.36 so the average amount of emails between each released email is 402,839. While not really applicable, but useful, the standard deviation is 736228.56 and you can visualize that from the second graph.

I realize that variance without reference is useless, in this instance the number of days between emails. Here is a grep of the emails with their dates of origin.

I do not see the administrators copying the email at the departmental level, but rather at the mail gateway level. This is logical for a few reasons:

  • The machine name ueams2.uea.ac.uk implies that there are other departmental mail servers with the names like ueams1.uea.ac.uk, (or even ueams.uea.ac.uk), maybe a ueams3.uea.ac.uk. If true, then you would need to copy email from at least one other server with the same scripts. This duplication of effort is non-elegant.
  • There is a second machine that you have to copy emails from and that is the MS Exchange server so you would need a third set of scripts to create a copy of email. Again, this would be unlike an Administrator.
  • Departmental machines can be outside the purview of Administration staff or allow non-Administrative staff access. This is not where you want to be placing copies of emails for the purposes of Institutional protection.
  • As shown with the email number variances, and if they are representative of the email number as it passed through UEA’s email systems, that’s a lot of emails from a departmental mail server and more like an institutional mail gateway.

So given the assumptions listed above, the hacker would have to have access to the gateway mail server and/or the Administration file server where the emails were archived. This machine would most likely be an Administrative file server. It would not be optimal for an Administrator to clutter up a production server open to the Internet with sensitive archives.

The Documents

The ./FOIA/documents directory is a complete mess. There are documents from Professor Hulme, Professor Briffa, the now famous HARRY_READ_ME.txt, and many others. There seems to be no order at all.

One file in particular, ./FOIA/documents/mkhadcrut is only three lines long and contains:

	  tail +13021 hadcrut-1851-1996.dat | head -n 359352 | ./twistglob > hadcrut.dat

	  # nb. 1994- data is already dateline-aligned

	  cat hadcrut-1994-2001.dat >> hadcrut.dat

Pretty simple stuff, get everything in hadcrut-1851-1996.dat starting at the 13021st line. From that get only the first 359352 lines and run that through a program called twistglob in this directory and dump the results into hadcrut.dat. Then dump all of the information in hadcrut-1994-2001.dat into the bottom of hadcrut.dat.

….Except there isn’t a program called twistglob in the ./FOIA/documents/ directory. Nor is there the resultant hadcrut.dat or the source files hadcrut-1851-1996.dat and hadcrut-1994-2001.dat.

This tells me that the collection of files and directories in ./documents isn’t so much a shared directory on a server, but a dump directory for someone who collected all of these files. The originals would be from shared folders, home directories, desktop machines, workstations, profiles and the like.

Remember the reason that the Freedom of Information requests were denied? In email 1106338806.txt, Jan 21, 2005 Professor Phil Jones states that he will be using IPR (Intellectual Property Rights) to shelter the data from Freedom of Information requests. In email 1219239172.txt, on August 20th 2008, Prof. Jones says “The FOI line we’re all using is this. IPCC is exempt from any countries FOI – the skeptics have been told this. Even though we (MOHC, CRU/UEA) possibly hold relevant info the IPCC is not part our remit (mission statement, aims etc) therefore we don’t have an obligation to pass it on.”

Is that why the data files, the result files and the ‘twistglob’ program aren’t in the ./documents directory? I think this is a likely possibility.

If Prof. Jones and the UEA FOI Officer used IPR and the IPCC to shelter certain things from the FOIA then it makes sense that things are missing from the ./documents directory. Secondly it supports the reason that ./documents is in such disarray is that it was a dump folder. A dump folder explicitly used to collect information for the purpose of release pursuant to a FOI request.

Conclusion

I suggest that it isn’t feasible for the emails in their tightly ordered format to have been kept at the departmental level or on the workstations of the parties. I suggest that the contents of ./documents didn’t originate from a single monolithic share, but from a compendium of various sources.

For the hacker to have collected all of this information s/he would have required extraordinary capabilities. The hacker would have to crack an Administrative file server to get to the emails and crack numerous workstations, desktops, and servers to get the documents. The hacker would have to map the complete UEA network to find out who was at what station and what services that station offered. S/he would have had to develop or implement exploits for each machine and operating system without knowing beforehand whether there was anything good on the machine worth collecting.

The only reasonable explanation for the archive being in this state is that the FOI Officer at the University was practising due diligence. The UEA was collecting data that couldn’t be sheltered and they created FOIA2009.zip.

It is most likely that the FOI Officer at the University put it on an anonymous ftp server or that it resided on a shared folder that many people had access to and some curious individual looked at it.

If as some say, this was a targeted crack, then the cracker would have had to have back-doors and access to every machine at UEA and not just the CRU. It simply isn’t reasonable for the FOI Officer to have kept the collection on a CRU system where CRU people had access, but rather used a UEA system.

Occam’s razor concludes that “the simplest explanation or strategy tends to be the best one”. The simplest explanation in this case is that someone at UEA found it and released it to the wild and the release of FOIA2009.zip wasn’t because of some hacker, but because of a leak from UEA by a person with scruples.

Footnotes

1 See file ./popaccounts.txt

2 See file ./email_topography.dia

3 See file ./email_variance.sh

4 See file ./gnuplotcmds

Notes

Graph Information

Graphs created with gnuplot using a simple command file4 for input. I use a stripped down version of the variants_results_verbose.txt file, it’s the same, just stripped of comment and the filenames.. The second graph is a numerically sorted version, $> sort -n ./variance_results.txt > variance_sorted_numerically.txt.

Assigned Network Numbers for UAE from RIPE.NET

RIPE.NET has assigned 139.222.0.0 – 139.222.255.255,193.62.92.0 – 193.62.92.255, and 193.63.195.0 – 193.63.195.255 to the University of East Anglia for Internet IP addresses.

RIPE.NET Admin contact for the University of East Anglia: Peter Andrews, Msc, Bsc (hons) – Head of Networking at University of East Anglia. (Linked In, Peter isn’t in the UEA directory anymore so I assume he is no longer at UEA.)

RIPE.NET Tech Contact for the University of East Anglia: Andrew Paxton

Current Mail Servers at UEA

A dig for the MX record of uea.ac.uk (email servers responsible for the domain uea.ac.uk) results in the following:

	  $> dig mx uea.ac.uk

	  ; <<>> DiG 9.6.1-P2 <<>> mx uea.ac.uk

	  ;; global options: +cmd

	  ;; Got answer:

	  ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 737

	  ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 2, AUTHORITY: 13, ADDITIONAL: 13

	  ;; QUESTION SECTION:

	  ;uea.ac.uk.			IN	MX

	  ;; ANSWER SECTION:

	  uea.ac.uk.		50935	IN	MX	2 ueamailgate01.uea.ac.uk.

	  uea.ac.uk.		50935	IN	MX	2 ueamailgate02.uea.ac.uk.

The IP addresses for the two UEA email servers are:

ueamailgate01.uea.ac.uk. 28000 IN A 139.222.131.184

ueamailgate02.uea.ac.uk. 28000 IN A 139.222.131.185

Test connections to UEA’s current mailservers:

	  $> telnet ueamailgate01.uea.ac.uk 25

	  Trying 139.222.131.184...

	  Connected to ueamailgate01.uea.ac.uk.

	  Escape character is '^]'.

	  220 ueamailgate01.uea.ac.uk ESMTP Sendmail 8.13.1/8.13.1; Mon, 7 Dec 2009 01:45:42 GMT

	  quit

	  221 2.0.0 ueamailgate01.uea.ac.uk closing connection

	  Connection closed by foreign host.

	  $> telnet ueamailgate02.uea.ac.uk 25

	  Trying 139.222.131.185...

	  Connected to ueamailgate02.uea.ac.uk.

	  Escape character is '^]'.

	  220 ueamailgate02.uea.ac.uk ESMTP Sendmail 8.13.1/8.13.1; Mon, 7 Dec 2009 01:45:49 GMT

	  quit

	  221 2.0.0 ueamailgate02.uea.ac.uk closing connection

About Me

I’ve been a Unix, Windows, OS X and Linux systems and network administrator for 15 years. I’ve compiled, configured, and maintained everything from mail servers to single-signon encrypted authentication systems. I run lines, build machines and tinker with code for fun. You can contact me via: lance@catprint.ca.

Lance Levsen,

December, 2009


Sponsored IT training links:

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256 Comments
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December 7, 2009 11:44 am

I’m getting 28.9 million on Google.

Julian in Wales
December 7, 2009 11:48 am

I agee with Nick, if I nwere the whistleblower I would keep some emails in reserve and then let them out after the culprits had been lying their heads off for a while.

AnonyMoose
December 7, 2009 11:48 am

Carrick – There might be a way to convert the timestamps already in your system. Try: date ‘–date=@0826209667’

Invariant
December 7, 2009 11:48 am

John Galt (11:30:35) :BBC: UK Climate Code May Be Scrapped. According to a report by the BBC, a computer software expert says the source code used by the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia is “below the standard in any commercial software.”
I think it’s an amusing red herring for to scrap the source because it is “below the standard in any commercial software.” Surely this is exactly the mediocre quality kind of source code found in most academic institutions…

Jeremy
December 7, 2009 11:51 am

Dave (11:17:49) : With the EPA announcement about trying to regulate facilities that put out more than 25,000 tons of CO2 per year, I wonder how many people realize what other industries that will affect.
Dave,
It is much more serious than small beer and soda. Energy is FOOD. We get fertilizers by using energy to make nitrogen fertilizers. These increase crop yields enormously – they also allow foods to be grown quickly in climates that natural might not sustain food production due to a short season.
If it gets colder (as it might) and, at the same time, we drive up all the input costs of food production (through taxation) then we are in for a very very rough ride globally. A lot of people will starve. Inflation will be rampant.

ChrisM
December 7, 2009 11:52 am

Sent:
Please remember King Canute was a Dane and he could not stop the tide as you will not stop natural climate change

snopercod
December 7, 2009 11:52 am

Great work, Lance Levsen.

December 7, 2009 11:52 am

Let’s all join together for a moment of prayer, via internet,
to pray that Joe is right.
http://www.accuweather.com/world-bastardi-europe-blog.asp?partner=accuweather

December 7, 2009 11:53 am

You know, one of those graphs looks like a hockey stick….. That clinches it for me. It WAS a leaker. And we have consensus, so it’s time to move on!!!

December 7, 2009 11:56 am

Just when you thought it can’t get any wackier.
http://www.spectator.co.uk/essays/all/5592803/the-cias-global-cooling-files.thtml
There was a consensus back then too!
h/t Ice Cap

crosspatch
December 7, 2009 11:59 am

“The hours will be wrong unless you are in the same time zone as the one in which the times were converted into UNIX epoch time.”
Yes, and I found it interesting that the time zone the users were in (GMT +1:00 for most) is several hours different from the time stamp on the files. It is almost as if the files are being archived in Kiev or something.

David Porter
December 7, 2009 12:10 pm

(10:30:19) : Leif Svalgaard
Your comment that “CO2 also freezes out” I believe is impossible above a temperature of around -120 degree centigrade. “Phil” on a previous and earlier thread went into some detail on this issue which ended, I think, with Steve Goddard, a regular poster here, deciding thereafter not to make any further posts.
If I have this wrong I would appreciate your further comment

Gary Hladik
December 7, 2009 12:13 pm

wws (08:52:37) : “The weekend cover story claiming that “The Russian KGB did this to discredit Copenhagen!!!” was a hoot.”
Didn’t Nixon’s lawyers suggest that a “sinister force” had caused that famous 18-minute tape gap? Perhaps it’s still at large… 🙂
Leif Svalgaard (10:30:19) : “About Vostok: when it is really cold there the CO2 also freezes out…”
I thought we had a whole thread here awhile ago that concluded CO2 can’t freeze naturally on Earth, as it does on Mars.
Or did I just fall for a tongue-in-cheek comment? 🙂

Speed
December 7, 2009 12:14 pm

Lance:
Re: Nick (11:08:45)
Manually selecting the subject e-mails (1073 of them) from a universe of hundreds of thousands (a guess) would have taken a lot of time and effort. Assuming that some sort of automated search was used, do you have any way of looking for words that are common to all the e-mails?

Chris Schoneveld
December 7, 2009 12:15 pm

JustPassing (11:34:22) :
“Am I now seeing right? Google now produces 280,000,000 results for climategate.”
No, you should put climategate between quotes, hence “climategate” and then you “only” get 2,770,000, whilst “climate-gate” has only 510,000 and “climate gate” 534,000

tty
December 7, 2009 12:18 pm

Leif Svalgaard (10:30:19) :
“About Vostok: when it is really cold there the CO2 also freezes out”
No, it doesn’t. It would if the atmosphere was all CO2, but at the low partial pressure CO2 is at, it has to be a lot colder before it starts to freeze out.
It’s the same with H2O, at a partial pressure of one atmosphere it starts condensing at 373 K, but it doesn’t rain everywhere on Earth where the temperature is below 373 K, because the partial pressure of water is always much lower than one atmosphere.

Richard
December 7, 2009 12:20 pm

Leif Svalgaard (09:41:36) :
Third Party (08:52:03) : The atmosphere contains from 4-percent water vapor in the troposphere to 40-percent near the surface.
Get the numbers straight. At 100% relative humidity at 30C [tropics] the concentration of water vapor is 30 gram/cubic meter. Considering that 1 cubic meter of air at the surface weighs 1234 gram, the water concentration can at most be 30/1234 = 2.4%.
Your [or your source’s] numbers are 10-20 times too high.

Maybe so. But water accounts for about 60% of the greenhouse effect, while CO2 accounts for 26%.
What bugs me is the claim of atmospheric scientists that “the science is settled” and they repeat the incantations – fundamental physics, greenhouse gas, black body radiation as though fundamental physics proves or supports the assumptions of their models, or the reconstructions of Mann or Briffa.
More heat, more water vapour, more greenhouse heating, positive feedback – QED. Dangerous run-away warming, near the tipping point. Hang on – what about clouds?
What about the lessons from nature – our climatic history? We have always cooled after warming showing our climatic system is a negative feedback system.

December 7, 2009 12:22 pm

Thank you for this analysis!
I have been sitting fuming here in the UK at all this Russian hacker nonsense – and especially the IPCC rep suggesting the Russians wanted to sabotage Copenhagen – it is laughable.
The ‘Russians’ not so long ago had a Vice Chair of IPCC – Yuri Izrael, a planetary ecologist, who famously said in 2007 that global warming was a load of hype and that natural cycles were driving the system. He then received a friendly visit from Vladimir Putin who reminded him that Russia had signed the Kyoto Protocol (easy to forget, since they refused for many years and their Academy of Sciences agreed with Izrael). ‘Yuri’ he probably said, ‘What does the cause matter. We get billions of dollars for the carbon credits – and I know its hard for you, a climate scientist, to understand – I mean, we get this for the carbon dioxide we might have produced if our economy was functional, and so it makes no difference to carbon emissions….but just go along with me for a moment. Suppose it is warming…wouldn’t it make sense to cool it down with a little geo-engineering? Be a good academician and study it for me. Here’s a few million roubles for your new eco-geology institute.’
Prof Izrael reported his results in the last but one issue of Russian Meteorology and Hydrology (I read the abstracts only) – and he suggests using sulphur dioxide dispersed at high altitude.
I don’t think the Russian government and the FSB would want to sabotage Copenhagen – there’s loads of money for them in the pot. Including for Professor Izrael.
And I agree with the Optimist – the UEA material was compiled not for release to FOI but to get rid of it – it is incriminating, for goodness sake! Furthermore, it strikes at the heart of academic integrity – in black and white : massaging of data to fit their expectations, collusion with other independent data compilers to arrive at the same message, making up data, manipulating data to remove the ‘blip’ (read evidence of a cycle that they cannot explain), pressurising the peer-review process, seeking to avoid FOI requests, not sharing data with critics (aka sceptics – when all scientists should be sceptical!), and then seeking to subvert the FOI by dumping data (and telling others to delete emails!).
An amusing video of a US new presenter calling it East Angila (with a long ee) finally made sense – there are TWO UEAs. There is the one I know (with Tim O’Riordan, respected professor of environmental sciences) and Mike Hulme (former head of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Studies) and the labs I have been invited to and shared my own research groups work on climate related computer simulation (back in 2002). These are real scientists. They uphold the virtues of science – truth, sharing of data and methods, peer-review and welcoming of criticism. Then there is the CRU that exists in a cyber-reality where these virtues have long been forgotten – and which we now know as East Angila.

Robuk
December 7, 2009 12:23 pm

crosspatch (10:48:32) :
” Optimist (10:13:02) : ”
While it seems silly to attempt to guess motivations, your thought occurred to me. If I wanted to make sure something WASN’T found in the course of an FOIA investigation, I might assemble a folder of stuff I wanted deleted in a hurry if I needed to.
That`s exactly my thoughts, like Mann`s censored file, hide the evidence.

lance
December 7, 2009 12:24 pm

Thanks all with regards to the filenames. Sigh….(id10t error; PBK&S, lart stick aisle one, please)
I’ve updated the original post on SmallDeadAnimals.
This new information actually reinforces the point that the emails had to have been copied at the mail gateway and not on the departmental servers. Even with the best of NTP time synchronization, you’re going to have some drift. Secondly, if the emails were CC’ed to a user on the hypothetical ueams.uea.ac.uk mailserver and both machines got the email at the same time, which one would write out the file? If you’re outputting files based on a timestamp, you’re only using one machine.
Given that, there is only one place where one machine handles all of the email.
I agree that FOIA2009.zip could have been ‘found’ somewhere. I would say however, that it’s lower on the probability scale because the FOI Officer can’t just leave these things around.
IMO, for it to have been ‘hacked’ and especially a targeted hack involves way too many variables.
Cheers,
lance

David Porter
December 7, 2009 12:27 pm

Gary Hladik (12:13:01) :
Regarding Leif’s 10:30:19 comment, I don’t think you were the only one to be sent down a blind alley.

December 7, 2009 12:28 pm

It makes me laugh when I see media pieces blaming the evil hackers and complaining about them giving ammunition to the skeptics.
“Roaches blame light switch operator in warehouse food theft scandal”

December 7, 2009 12:28 pm

David Porter (12:10:25) :
Your comment that “CO2 also freezes out” I believe is impossible above a temperature of around -120 degree centigrade.
Gary Hladik (12:13:01) :
I thought we had a whole thread here awhile ago that concluded CO2 can’t freeze naturally on Earth, as it does on Mars.
I missed that thread. Perhaps I was just demonstrating some ignorance on this, not taking into account the low pressure of CO2 [especially at the altitude of Vostok]. One learns something new every day.

Bob H.
December 7, 2009 12:29 pm

Here’s a more-or-less official russian point of view:
http://english.pravda.ru/science/earth/30-11-2009/110832-climategate-0

rbateman
December 7, 2009 12:31 pm

Nick (11:08:45) :
Who would spend that much time reading that much email to compile the collection?
Someone who has been watching over the years.
Someone who is watching every response, looking to see who is going to go quietly and who is not.
The Email/Data Sword of Damocles.

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