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James Bond Wannabes: The UK’s Spy Office Says Learn to Use a VPN

Like your martinis shaken, not stirred? If you have dreams of joining James Bond in the British foreign intelligence service, MI6, you’d better know how to use a virtual private network. On Friday, the outgoing chief of MI6, Richard Moore, announced a new dark web portal called Silent Courier that MI6 will use to recruit agents online. If you want to use it, make sure you’re familiar with VPNs.

Silent Courier marks MI6’s first attempt to use the dark web for recruitment. The government statement notes that the anonymity of the platform allows «anyone, anywhere in the world with access to sensitive information relating to terrorism or hostile intelligence activity to securely contact the UK and offer their services.»


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The statement goes on to specifically call out «potential new agents in Russia and around the world.»

MI6 will post instructions on how to access the recruitment portal on its verified YouTube channel, and advises those interested to «use trustworthy VPNs and devices not linked to themselves, to mitigate risks which exist in some countries.»

A VPN encrypts your internet traffic and masks your IP address, protecting knowledge of your physical location. So it makes sense that a Russian who’s dreaming of spying against their own country might not want to reveal where they’re located.

Read more: Being James Bond: How 007 Movies Got Me Into Intelligence Work

The US has tried something similar

The statement notes that MI6’s portal is similar to an approach taken by the CIA, which published social-media videos targeting potential Russian spies in 2023.

One such video, released in January 2024, tried to convince Russians who might be dissatisfied with Russia’s war in Ukraine to join the US side as a spy.

According to Reuters, in the video, a fictional employee of Russia’s military intelligence agency is presented as a patriot who loves Russia, but feels betrayed by corruption among the country’s leadership. In the video’s final shot, he is seen reaching out to the CIA from a mobile phone.

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