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🇨🇦🕵️ Are You a Target for Chinese Spies on LinkedIn? | Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up
This week on Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up, Neil Bisson — retired CSIS Intelligence Officer and Director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network — examines a series of stories highlighting how national security threats are increasingly intersecting with technology, espionage, foreign interference, accountability, and modern hybrid warfare.
The episode begins in Canada, where the arrival of Chinese-made electric vehicles is reigniting concerns about privacy, data collection, and the national security implications of connected technologies.
From there, Neil takes a deep dive into a rare joint warning issued by CSIS and its Five Eyes partners. The warning alleges that Chinese intelligence services are using professional networking platforms and online job sites to identify and recruit individuals with access to valuable government, military, academic, and technological information. The episode explores how espionage tradecraft has evolved in the digital age, examining real-world cases where seemingly legitimate professional opportunities became the first step in foreign intelligence collection operations.
Next, the episode returns to Ottawa, where a new report from the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency has raised questions about whether CSIS properly reported potentially unlawful activities to the federal government.
Finally, the episode heads to Europe, where investigators are examining a growing number of suspected sabotage operations targeting transportation networks, logistics hubs, and critical infrastructure as part of a broader pattern of modern hybrid warfare.
🌍 This week's key questions
🇨🇳
Chinese Intelligence Recruitment on LinkedIn
🕵️
Espionage in the Digital Age
🚗
Chinese Electric Vehicles & Data Security
⚖️
CSIS Oversight & Accountability
🔥
Sabotage & Hybrid Warfare in Europe
🧠 In this episode
Neil examines how espionage, cyber risk, foreign interference, human source recruitment, connected technologies, oversight mechanisms, and hybrid warfare are increasingly overlapping to create one of the most complex security environments Canada and its allies have faced in decades.
⏱️ Chapters
Time | Segment00:00 | Introduction
01:50 | Welcome & Episode Overview
03:00 | Chinese EVs & National Security Concerns
11:00 | Deep Dive: CSIS & Five Eyes Warn of Chinese Recruitment Operations
18:30 | Real Espionage Cases Behind the Warning
25:00 | How Human Source Recruitment Has Evolved
32:00 | NSIRA Report Raises Oversight Questions for CSIS
36:00 | Sabotage & Hybrid Warfare Across Europe
39:00 | Final Thoughts
39:05 | Outro
📢 Support the Channel
If you value independent intelligence analysis and weekly breakdowns of global threats, consider supporting the podcast:
https://www.buzzsprout.com/2336717/support
👍 Like | 💬 Comment | 🔔 Subscribe
Your support helps grow the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network and helps bring these important national security discussions to a wider audience.
Stay curious, stay informed and stay safe.
Support the show
By NeilSend us Fan Mail
🇨🇦🕵️ Are You a Target for Chinese Spies on LinkedIn? | Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up
This week on Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up, Neil Bisson — retired CSIS Intelligence Officer and Director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network — examines a series of stories highlighting how national security threats are increasingly intersecting with technology, espionage, foreign interference, accountability, and modern hybrid warfare.
The episode begins in Canada, where the arrival of Chinese-made electric vehicles is reigniting concerns about privacy, data collection, and the national security implications of connected technologies.
From there, Neil takes a deep dive into a rare joint warning issued by CSIS and its Five Eyes partners. The warning alleges that Chinese intelligence services are using professional networking platforms and online job sites to identify and recruit individuals with access to valuable government, military, academic, and technological information. The episode explores how espionage tradecraft has evolved in the digital age, examining real-world cases where seemingly legitimate professional opportunities became the first step in foreign intelligence collection operations.
Next, the episode returns to Ottawa, where a new report from the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency has raised questions about whether CSIS properly reported potentially unlawful activities to the federal government.
Finally, the episode heads to Europe, where investigators are examining a growing number of suspected sabotage operations targeting transportation networks, logistics hubs, and critical infrastructure as part of a broader pattern of modern hybrid warfare.
🌍 This week's key questions
🇨🇳
Chinese Intelligence Recruitment on LinkedIn
🕵️
Espionage in the Digital Age
🚗
Chinese Electric Vehicles & Data Security
⚖️
CSIS Oversight & Accountability
🔥
Sabotage & Hybrid Warfare in Europe
🧠 In this episode
Neil examines how espionage, cyber risk, foreign interference, human source recruitment, connected technologies, oversight mechanisms, and hybrid warfare are increasingly overlapping to create one of the most complex security environments Canada and its allies have faced in decades.
⏱️ Chapters
Time | Segment00:00 | Introduction
01:50 | Welcome & Episode Overview
03:00 | Chinese EVs & National Security Concerns
11:00 | Deep Dive: CSIS & Five Eyes Warn of Chinese Recruitment Operations
18:30 | Real Espionage Cases Behind the Warning
25:00 | How Human Source Recruitment Has Evolved
32:00 | NSIRA Report Raises Oversight Questions for CSIS
36:00 | Sabotage & Hybrid Warfare Across Europe
39:00 | Final Thoughts
39:05 | Outro
📢 Support the Channel
If you value independent intelligence analysis and weekly breakdowns of global threats, consider supporting the podcast:
https://www.buzzsprout.com/2336717/support
👍 Like | 💬 Comment | 🔔 Subscribe
Your support helps grow the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network and helps bring these important national security discussions to a wider audience.
Stay curious, stay informed and stay safe.
Support the show