ExpressVPN employees protest against executive's role in Project Raven

VPN on laptop screen
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Workers at ExpressVPN have apparently publicly protested against company following the news that senior executive Daniel Gericke will jointly pay a $1.6 million fine to the US Department of Justice (DoJ) for his involvement in a suspected spying campaign.

Gericke is part of the three former US intelligence operatives that have been charged by the DoJ for their role in Project Raven, which involved the creation of spying tools for the UAE. 

"To find out such news of the people we work closely with everyday through an online article was absolutely distasteful. Why weren't we given a heads up? Isn't transparency and respect our core values?" one employee posted during an internal chat meeting between the management and employees, according to Vice.

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The trio have agreed not to contest the charges and pay the imposed fine, and accept any accompanying sanctions.

Eroded consumer trust

According to reports, ExpressVPN employees asked management several questions about Gericke, his employment history, and how his continued association will affect the company's perception in the cybersecurity industry.

"This episode has eroded consumer's trust in our brand, regardless of the facts. How do we intend to rebuild our reputation?" wrote another employee on the chat board according to Reuters.

Following the public disclosure of Gericke’s role as a mercenary hacker, former NSA whistleblower and privacy advocate Edward Snowden took to Twitter to ask users to stop using the popular VPN service.

Despite receiving flak from all quarters, ExpressVPN continues to stand by its Chief Information Office (CIO) and has issued a statement in his support, adding that while they “value Daniel’s expertise and how it has helped us to protect customers, we do not condone Project Raven.”

In addition to several other employees asking questions about the implications of DoJ’s action against Gericke on ExpressVPN’s balance sheet, there were several who were trying to wrap their heads around the company’s acquisition by security firm Kape, earlier this month.

Via Vice 

Mayank Sharma

With almost two decades of writing and reporting on Linux, Mayank Sharma would like everyone to think he’s TechRadar Pro’s expert on the topic. Of course, he’s just as interested in other computing topics, particularly cybersecurity, cloud, containers, and coding.