In the wake of recent NSA spy scandals, Russia's Federal
Guard Service has decided to revert to using more typewriters and paper
documents,Izvestia reports.
Toward that end, the FSO, which protects Russia's top officials
and Kremlin communications, recently ordered 20 Triumph Adler typewriters, the
newspaper reports.
"After the scandal with the spread of secret documents by
WikiLeaks, the revelations of Edward Snowden, reports of listening to Dmitry
Medvedev during his visit to the G20 summit in London, the practice of creating
paper documents will increase," an unidentified FSO source tells Izvestia.
One key reason for using typewriters is that each creates its
own unique "signature" that can be traced, the newspaper says.
The source notes that many critical groups, including the
defense ministry, emergency situations ministry and the security services, have
never switched over to electronic documents.
"From the point of view of ensuring security, any form of
electronic communication is vulnerable," Nikolai Kovalev, an MP and former
head of the Federal Security Service, the successor to the KGB, tells Izvestia.
"Any information can be taken from computers," he
says. "Of course there are means of protection, but there is no 100%
guarantee they will work. So from the point of view of keeping secrets, the
most primitive method is preferred: a human hand with a pen or a
typewriter."

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