Difference between revisions of "Project Riverside"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
m (ref)
(external resources)
 
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
The report was based on material from [[Operation Barbatus]], [[Operation Caryatid]], [[Operation Flandria]], [[Operation Gloxinia]], and one other operation whose name is redacted in the published version of the report.<ref>'Private Investigators: The Rogue Element of the Private Investigative Industry and Others Unlawfully Trading in personal Data', Serious Organised Crime Agency, 2008, p.3.</ref>  
 
The report was based on material from [[Operation Barbatus]], [[Operation Caryatid]], [[Operation Flandria]], [[Operation Gloxinia]], and one other operation whose name is redacted in the published version of the report.<ref>'Private Investigators: The Rogue Element of the Private Investigative Industry and Others Unlawfully Trading in personal Data', Serious Organised Crime Agency, 2008, p.3.</ref>  
 +
 +
==External resources==
 +
*[http://brown-moses-hackgate.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/gloxinia-and-flandria-digging-over-dirt.html Gloxinia And Flandria - Digging Over The Dirt], Brown Moses blog, 1 August 2013.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Latest revision as of 17:25, 1 August 2013

Project Riverside was a 2008 report by the Serious Organised Crime Agency into the activities of private investigators.[1]

The report was based on material from Operation Barbatus, Operation Caryatid, Operation Flandria, Operation Gloxinia, and one other operation whose name is redacted in the published version of the report.[2]

External resources

Notes

  1. Tom Harper, The other hacking scandal: Suppressed report reveals that law firms, telecoms giants and insurance companies routinely hire criminals to steal rivals' information, Independent, 22 June 2013.
  2. 'Private Investigators: The Rogue Element of the Private Investigative Industry and Others Unlawfully Trading in personal Data', Serious Organised Crime Agency, 2008, p.3.