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The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has accused WikiLeaks of endangering Americans, helping US rivals and hampering Washington's fight against terror threats by releasing what the anti-secrecy site claimed was a trove of CIA hacking tools.
A CIA spokeswoman would not confirm the authenticity of the materials published a day earlier by WikiLeaks, which said they were leaked from the spy agency's hacking operations.
"Such disclosures not only jeopardise US personnel and operations, but also equip our adversaries with tools and information to do us harm," she said.
Horniak defended the CIA's cyber operations, which the WikiLeaks materials showed focused heavily on breaking into personal electronics using a wide range of malware systems.
She also noted that none of the purported activities were targeted at US citizens. The CIA is prohibited from spying on people inside the country and on Americans abroad.
On Tuesday, WikiLeaks published nearly 9,000 documents it said were leaked from the CIA, in what it described as the largest-ever publication of secret intelligence materials.
The documents showed that CIA hackers can turn a TV into a listening device, bypass popular encryption apps, and possibly control one's car.
The Washington Post said the FBI is preparing "a major mole hunt" to figure out how WikiLeaks obtained the huge portfolio of hacking information, plans and tools.
US justice officials would not confirm the investigation, which would come as the CIA is already enmeshed in a politicised probe into Russia's alleged interference in the US election last year to help President Donald Trump's campaign.
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