abonnement Unibet Coolblue
  maandag 13 januari 2014 @ 18:05:21 #1
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135444812
quote:
quote:
On June 5, 2013, the Guardian broke the first story in what would become a flood of revelations regarding the extent and nature of the NSA’s surveillance programs. Facing an uproar over the threat such programs posed to privacy, the Obama administration scrambled to defend them as legal and essential to U.S. national security and counterterrorism. Two weeks after the first leaks by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden were published, President Obama defended the NSA surveillance programs during a visit to Berlin, saying: “We know of at least 50 threats that have been averted because of this information not just in the United States, but, in some cases, threats here in Germany. So lives have been saved.” Gen. Keith Alexander, the director of the NSA, testified before Congress that: “the information gathered from these programs provided the U.S. government with critical leads to help prevent over 50 potential terrorist events in more than 20 countries around the world.” Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, said on the House floor in July that “54 times [the NSA programs] stopped and thwarted terrorist attacks both here and in Europe – saving real lives.”

However, our review of the government’s claims about the role that NSA “bulk” surveillance of phone and email communications records has had in keeping the United States safe from terrorism shows that these claims are overblown and even misleading. An in-depth analysis of 225 individuals recruited by al-Qaeda or a like-minded group or inspired by al-Qaeda’s ideology, and charged in the United States with an act of terrorism since 9/11, demonstrates that traditional investigative methods, such as the use of informants, tips from local communities, and targeted intelligence operations, provided the initial impetus for investigations in the majority of cases, while the contribution of NSA’s bulk surveillance programs to these cases was minimal. Indeed, the controversial bulk collection of American telephone metadata, which includes the telephone numbers that originate and receive calls, as well as the time and date of those calls but not their content, under Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act, appears to have played an identifiable role in initiating, at most, 1.8 percent of these cases. NSA programs involving the surveillance of non-U.S. persons outside of the United States under Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act played a role in 4.4 percent of the terrorism cases we examined, and NSA surveillance under an unidentified authority played a role in 1.3 percent of the cases we examined.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 14 januari 2014 @ 10:52:24 #2
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135471583
quote:
Kamer wil opheldering over apparatuur VS

Het Amerikaanse ministerie van Defensie heeft eigen apparatuur om satelliet-informatie op te vangen in het Friese Burum. Die apparatuur is, op afstand of op locatie, alleen toegankelijk voor Amerikaanse staatsburgers met speciale toegang. Dat blijkt uit onderzoek van Nieuwsuur.

Grote Oor


It Greate Ear noemen omwonenden het terrein met tientallen schotels: Het Grote Oor. Op het satellietstation in Burum is onder andere de Nationale Sigint Organisatie (NSO) gevestigd. De NSO valt onder het ministerie van Defensie en vergaart inlichtingen uit telecommunicatie voor de MIVD en de AIVD. De andere helft van het terrein in Burum is van het internationale bedrijf Inmarsat. Op dit commerciële deel van het satellietgrondstation staat de apparatuur van de Amerikaanse Defensie.


Contracten


Nieuwsuur heeft meerdere contracten gevonden tussen het Amerikaanse ministerie van Defensie en de Amerikaanse bedrijven Viasat en Northrop. Via de contracten wordt opdracht gegeven voor upgrades van software voor de eigen apparatuur in Burum. Een woordvoerder van het Amerikaanse ministerie bevestigt dit.

"Het ministerie van Defensie heeft zijn eigen satellietgrondstation-apparatuur geïnstalleerd op het Nederlandse grondstation om zo aan te kunnen sluiten op een satelliet die landt in Burum. Het Amerikaanse leger betaalt huur, zogeheten telehousing, om onze apparatuur in Burum te kunnen plaatsen en om satellietservice te ontvangen."

Missies

De Amerikanen gebruiken de apparatuur bijvoorbeeld om voor het monitoren van de eigen troepen tijdens missies. Defensiedeskundige Ko Colijn: "Als de Amerikanen in Irak of Afghanistan iets doen, dan willen ze precies weten wie waar zit. En dat is informatie die in de hoofdkwartieren in de VS bekend moet zijn. Dat kan niet rechtstreeks gecommuniceerd, dat gaat weer via die satellieten, dus logistiek is dit vrij belangrijk."

Belangrijke schakel

Burum blijkt inderdaad een belangrijke schakel in het Amerikaanse militaire netwerk te zijn. In een document op de website van de Amerikaanse overheidsdienst GSA staat: "Het United States Government Network van Inmarsat verschilt van commerciële netwerken in ontwerp, gebruik en gebruikers. Het netwerk wordt exclusief beheerd door één Amerikaans bedrijf en enkel bediend door Amerikaanse staatsburgers met een speciale clearance. USGN-grondstations bevinden zich in Hawaï en Nederland."

Geen antwoorden

Via welk bedrijf de satellietdiensten in Burum precies verlopen is onduidelijk. Het Amerikaanse ministerie van Defensie en Inmarsat weigeren daar op in te gaan. "Het is ons beleid niet in te gaan op vragen over specifieke klanten, of dit nu commerciële partijen zijn of overheidsorganisaties. Maar ik kan bevestigen dat we diensten bieden aan vele overheden ter wereld en dat we werken binnen de juridische en regelstellende kaders van ieder land waar we actief zijn", aldus de verklaring van Inmarsat.

Een woordvoerder van het Nederlandse ministerie van Defensie wil niet ingaan op vragen over de Amerikaanse apparatuur in Burum. "Er staat geen Amerikaanse overheidsapparatuur op het Defensie grondstation. Inmarsat is een commercieel bedrijf op het gebied van satellietcommunicatie. Het is niet aan Defensie om vragen te beantwoorden over wat er gebeurt op bedrijventerreinen in Nederland."

Spioneren

PvdA, SP, D66, GroenLinks, de ChristenUnie, de Partij van de Dieren en 50PLUS willen van minister Hennis-Plasschaert van Defensie weten wat de Amerikanen precies doen met de apparatuur in Burum. Van Raak (SP): "We moeten weten wat daar gebeurt. Het lijkt er in eerste instantie op dat het gebruikt wordt voor militaire inlichtingen, maar dat weet je dus niet. We hebben de afgelopen tijd gezien dat de Amerikanen elke mogelijkheid aangrijpen om te spioneren en ik wil wel van de Nederlandse regering, met name van minister Hennis weten wat de Amerikanen uitspoken en wat onze betrokkenheid daarbij is."

Veiligheidsverantwoordelijkheid

Ko Colijn: "Als de overheid werkelijk greep wil hebben op wat andere landen hier doen en in het vitale en hele delicate veiligheidssegment, dan zou de overheid dat precies in kaart moeten brengen. Maar ik denk dat de overheid dat niet meer doet en ik denk dat wij in dat opzicht ook wel allang niet meer soeverein zijn. Wij delen onze veiligheidsverantwoordelijkheid helemaal met andere landen."
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 14 januari 2014 @ 11:58:31 #3
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135473254

SPOILER
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Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_135504179
quote:
'VS wil geen antispionagepact sluiten met Duitsland'

De onderhandelingen tussen de VS en Duitsland over een 'antispionagepact' zijn vastgelopen. De Amerikanen weigeren om aan te geven in welke periode bondskanselier Merkel werd afgeluisterd. Ook wil de VS niet garanderen dat zij in de toekomst niet wederom Duitse politici zullen aftappen.

Dat melden anonieme bronnen van de Duitse geheime dienst BND aan de Süddeutsche Zeitung. De BND voert momenteel in opdracht van de Duitse regering onderhandelingen met de VS waarbij Duitsland aanstuurt op het beperken van de wederzijdse spionage. De onderhandelingen zouden echter in het slop zijn geraakt met frustratie bij Duitse politici tot gevolg.

Een belangrijk struikelpunt zou zijn dat de Verenigde Staten weigert aan te geven in welke periode het mobieltje van bondskanselier Angela Merkel werd afgeluisterd. Vorig jaar oktober werd op basis van documenten van klokkenluider Edward Snowden bekend dat de Amerikaanse inlichtingendienst NSA Merkel heeft afgeluisterd. De onthulling gaf een schokgolf in politiek Duitsland en zette de relatie met de VS onder spanning.

Naast de weigering om meer informatie te geven over het aftappen van Merkel zou de VS tijdens de onderhandelingen ook hebben aangegeven dat zij niet willen uitsluiten dat Amerikaanse inlichtingendiensten in de toekomst wederom Duitse politici zullen aftappen. Ook zouden de Amerikanen weigeren om Duitse overheidsmedewerkers toe te laten tot de ambassade van Berlijn om daar een afluisterpost te inspecteren. Volgens Duitsland is de afluisterpost in strijd met de Weense conventie waarin de regels voor het diplomatieke verkeer zijn vastgelegd.

Een woordvoerder van de Duitse regering heeft aangeven dat de onderhandelingen alsnog doorgezet zullen worden en mogelijk binnen drie maanden tot resultaat zullen leiden. Het hoofd van de BND zou echter hebben aangegeven dat hij het huidige voorstel voor een 'antispionagepact' tussen de twee landen weigert te tekenen.
De arrogantie van de Amerikanen.
pi_135504404
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 14 januari 2014 23:30 schreef Arthur_Spooner het volgende:

[..]

De arrogantie van de Amerikanen.
Arrogantie? Misdadig eerder. Lekker voor de internationale betrekkingen tussen deze 2 grote landen.
Laat maar lekker escaleren.
'Je gaat het pas zien als je het doorhebt'
'Ieder nadeel heb zijn voordeel'
We zullen je nooit, nooit vergeten
1947-2016
pi_135504879
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 14 januari 2014 23:34 schreef Red_85 het volgende:

[..]

Arrogantie? Misdadig eerder. Lekker voor de internationale betrekkingen tussen deze 2 grote landen.
Laat maar lekker escaleren.
Precies, komt dat handelsverdrag er ook niet.
  donderdag 16 januari 2014 @ 14:59:03 #7
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135561373
quote:
quote:
When President Barack Obama delivers his speech on alleged surveillance reforms on Friday, he will not be suggesting measures that will truly prevent future abuse of surveillance powers. He will be advocating for reforms that could prevent another whistleblower like NSA contractor Edward Snowden.
quote:
The New York Times described Obamas strategy for responding to disclosures from Snowden as trying to straddle a difficult line that will placate civil liberties advocates without a backlash from national security agencies. In other words, he does not think much of anything needs to be done at all but he wants civil liberties advocates to stop nipping at his heels.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 16 januari 2014 @ 17:08:04 #8
38496 Perrin
Toekomst. Made in Europe.
pi_135566930
Vóór het internet dacht men dat de oorzaak van domheid een gebrek aan toegang tot informatie was. Inmiddels weten we beter.
  donderdag 16 januari 2014 @ 22:37:38 #9
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135584046
quote:
quote:
De Amerikaanse afluisterdienst NSA onderschepte in april 2011 gemiddeld 194 miljoen sms'jes per dag, van willekeurige burgers over de hele wereld. Dat hebben The Guardian en Channel 4 News onthuld.

Sms-berichten zijn volgens een document van de NSA 'een goudmijn die kan worden uitgebuit'. In een reactie aan The Guardian houdt de dienst het erop dat de spionage alleen gericht was tegen 'gerechtvaardigde buitenlandse doelwitten'. Uit de informatie waar de krant zich op baseert, valt echter op te maken dat de dienst op zijn minst heeft geïnventariseerd wat de mogelijkheden zijn van dit soort grootschalige onderscheppingen.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 17 januari 2014 @ 17:14:03 #10
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135609127
YourAnonNews twitterde op vrijdag 17-01-2014 om 16:57:43 In a few minutes, President Obama is going to piss off basically everybody. Here is why: http://t.co/su4NmyyBKm reageer retweet
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 17 januari 2014 @ 17:23:05 #11
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135609433
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  † In Memoriam † vrijdag 17 januari 2014 @ 17:39:34 #12
4036 crew  Cynix ®
Verzuurde hork
pi_135609989
Obama is een meningloze stroman van de NSA, daar heb je toch niet echt vertrouwen in hopelijk? :?
Vertel het me en ik zal het vergeten. Laat het me zien en ik zal het onthouden. Laat het me ervaren en ik zal het me eigen maken.
De toekomst hangt af van wat je nu aan het doen bent.
pi_135610091
"gerechtvaardigde buitenlandse doelwitten", en dan 194 miljoen smsjes per dag? Hoeveel miljoen mensen hebben we het dan over? Allemaal doelwitten? Zoveel Terroristen? Een wonder dat de aarde al niet al 40x vergaan is.
  † In Memoriam † zaterdag 18 januari 2014 @ 11:50:22 #14
4036 crew  Cynix ®
Verzuurde hork
pi_135636268
Vertel het me en ik zal het vergeten. Laat het me zien en ik zal het onthouden. Laat het me ervaren en ik zal het me eigen maken.
De toekomst hangt af van wat je nu aan het doen bent.
pi_135636696
Wat ik niet snap is waarom alleen metadata van telefoongesprekken wordt bewaard en niet de inhoud van de gesprekken zelf? Die inhoud is toch waar je nog het meeste aan hebt? Als je toch bezig bent met verzamelen, doe dat dan er ook bij voor een volledig beeld...
  zaterdag 18 januari 2014 @ 13:56:32 #16
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135639451
quote:
NSA leaks prompted major Canadian eavesdropping review: declassified memo

OTTAWA – The massive intelligence leak by former U.S. spy contractor Edward Snowden prompted Canada’s secret eavesdropping agency to review its policies on sharing information with the Americans and other key partners, a newly declassified memo reveals.

The three-page note from Communications Security Establishment Canada chief John Forster says the unprecedented breach also sparked a CSEC examination of its practices for protecting the privacy of Canadians.

The undated memo to national security adviser Stephen Rigby — obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act — was prepared some time in mid-2013, after Snowden’s leaks began making global headlines.

The memo, originally classified top secret, says CSEC set about assessing the potential damage to Canadian signals intelligence collection capabilities, as well as asking its partners for confirmation on what data Snowden took from the U.S. National Security Agency.

The highly sensitive material showed the NSA had quietly obtained access to a broad spectrum of emails, chat logs and other information from major Internet companies, as well as data about a huge volume of telephone calls.

CSEC, the NSA’s Canadian counterpart, monitors foreign computer, satellite, radio and telephone traffic for information of intelligence interest.

With a staff of more than 2,000 — including skilled mathematicians, linguists and computer specialists — CSEC is a key player in the so-called Five Eyes community comprising Canada, the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

“In collaboration with domestic and international partners, CSEC is undertaking an organization-wide operation to assess the impacts of these unlawful disclosures of classified information,” says the memo, portions of which remain secret.

“Due to the unauthorized disclosures CSEC has developed an ongoing damage assessment, initiated external and internal communications strategies and introduced preventative measures to mitigate the potential of future damage.”

A section on Forster’s initial assessment of the damage is blacked out.

In addition to liaising with its Five Eyes partners, the spy agency briefed a committee of deputy ministers on the fallout and arranged a series of bilateral meetings with the Privy Council Office (where Rigby works), Foreign Affairs, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and the RCMP.

The Ottawa-based CSEC held two briefings for staff members, along with specialized sessions, and took steps to “remind them of security protocols and provide guidance and support where appropriate,” the memo says.

“CSEC is also reviewing internal policies related to information sharing with the Five Eyes as well as the protection of the privacy of Canadians to ensure that they are appropriate and clear.”

CSEC spokeswoman Lauri Sullivan said Friday the agency “continues to review its policies, processes and procedures to ensure they are effective, and to ensure that CSE is taking the appropriate steps to protect information and the privacy of Canadians.”

The CSEC memo’s release came as U.S. President Barack Obama announced changes Friday to NSA practices with the aim of reassuring Americans their civil liberties will not be trampled.

At the time of the Forster memo, there had been no direct mention of CSEC in any of the stories spawned by Snowden’s cache of documents.

However, material later disclosed by the whistleblower indicated that Canada helped the United States and Britain spy on participants at the London G20 summit in 2009. Other documents suggested CSEC once monitored Brazil’s department of mines and energy.

Articles based on Snowden’s material continue to appear in the media.

Forster told Rigby the electronic spy agency — so low-profile it is still unknown to many Canadians — was exploring ways to better inform the public about what it does, including its efforts to prevent terrorism and cyber-attacks.

CSEC has since posted new information on its website about how the agency functions.

“CSEC will also keep employees informed as its damage assessment and forensic work unfold,” the memo says.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  † In Memoriam † zaterdag 18 januari 2014 @ 17:13:38 #17
4036 crew  Cynix ®
Verzuurde hork
pi_135645442
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 18 januari 2014 12:10 schreef gebrokenglas het volgende:
Wat ik niet snap is waarom alleen metadata van telefoongesprekken wordt bewaard en niet de inhoud van de gesprekken zelf? Die inhoud is toch waar je nog het meeste aan hebt? Als je toch bezig bent met verzamelen, doe dat dan er ook bij voor een volledig beeld...
Ik neem aan dat de volledige inhoud gewoon bewaard wordt.
Vertel het me en ik zal het vergeten. Laat het me zien en ik zal het onthouden. Laat het me ervaren en ik zal het me eigen maken.
De toekomst hangt af van wat je nu aan het doen bent.
  zaterdag 18 januari 2014 @ 18:46:55 #18
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135648193
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 20 januari 2014 @ 13:36:47 #19
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135716063
quote:
quote:
The UK and US governments hate the journalism that we're doing," he told VICE at his home near Rio de Janeiro, regarding Miranda's 11-hour detention and questioning by authorities at an airport in London in July. He was held under an anti-terror law, which was "a way of saying look at what it is we can do to people who defy us if we choose."

In that injustice, however, Greenwald found a silver lining. "At the time that it happened, I was angry, I felt helpless, I was furious they would target someone peripheral to these events, instead of me or Laura or the other journalists with whom we've been working," he said. "But at the same time I found it incredibly emboldening. They showed their true face to the world, or to me, about how abusive they are when it comes to the exercise of their power. And that made me know just how compelling it was to continue to bring transparency to what it is that they're doing. And it showed how they can't be trusted to exercise power without transparency and accountability."
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 21 januari 2014 @ 22:02:45 #20
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135779472
quote:
Human Rights Watch annual report 2014 criticises NSA mass surveillance

States with poor human rights records may use spying scandal as excuse to clamp down on internet freedom, report warns
NSA: Human Rights Watch criticises Obama's surveillance reforms - video
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 22 januari 2014 @ 14:04:07 #21
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135800530
quote:
US withholding Fisa court orders on NSA bulk collection of Americans' data

Justice Department refuses to turn over 'certain other' documents in ACLU lawsuit meant to shed light on surveillance practices

The Justice Department is withholding documents related to the bulk collection of Americans’ data from a transparency lawsuit launched by the American Civil Liberties Union.

US attorney Preet Bharara of the southern district of New York informed the ACLU in a Friday letter that the government would not turn over “certain other” records from a secret surveillance court, which are being “withheld in full” from a Freedom of Information Act suit the civil liberties group filed to shed light on bulk surveillance activities performed under the Patriot Act.

The decision to keep some of the records secret, in the thick of Edward Snowden’s revelations, has raised suspicions within the ACLU that the government continues to hide bulk surveillance activities from the public, despite US president Barack Obama’s Friday concession that controversial National Security Agency programs have “never been subject to vigorous public debate”.

The ACLU lawsuit, like others filed by civil liberties groups, has resulted in a trove of documents from the so-called Fisa court detailing the scope, authorizations and, in some cases, violations surrounding NSA surveillance ostensibly occurring under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. The director of national intelligence now posts the released documents to a Tumblr page, usually without revealing that the disclosures were spurred by lawsuits.

The latest such disclosure happened Friday with the release of 24 documents, mostly detailing Fisa court reauthorizations of the bulk phone records collection first reported by the Guardian thanks to leaks from whistleblower Snowden.

Among the information disclosed in the documents, which date back to 2006 – the first year in which the program received authorization from the Fisa court at all – is the footnoted stipulation that the court “understands that NSA expects it will continue to provide, on average, approximately 3 telephone numbers per day to the FBI”.

If true – the footnote only appears in pre-2009 court reauthorizations – the estimate suggests the NSA has given the FBI approximately 13,203 phone numbers based on the 12-year-old domestic bulk phone data program.

In his letter, written on the day Obama gave a long-awaited speech on surveillance that pledged additional transparency, Bhahara said that Friday’s release will be the last disclosure under the terms of the ACLU’s lawsuit.

“As discussed by telephone this morning, the government in fact has processed all of the remaining FISC Orders responsive to the FOIA request in this case that relate to bulk collection, regardless of whether the order contains any additions and/or adjustments to the implementation procedures, minimization procedures, and/or reporting requirements set out in other FISC orders,” the US attorney wrote.

“The government cannot specify the total number of documents withheld in full from this final set of responsive documents because the number itself is classified."

Alexander Abdo, an ACLU attorney, noted that the government’s bulk surveillance disclosures have yet to include, among other efforts, a reported CIA program to collect international money transfers in bulk, revealed in November by the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times.

“It appears that the government is concealing the existence of other bulk collection programs under the Patriot Act, such as the CIA’s reported collection of our financial records,” Abdo said.

“In other words, on the same day that President Obama recognized the need for a vigorous debate about bulk collection, the government appears to be hiding the ball. We can't have the public debate that President Obama wants without the facts that his agencies are hiding.”

Abdo said that the scope of the ACLU’s disclosure lawsuit only concerned surveillance efforts under Section 215 of the Patriot Act and that surveillance authorizations containing individualized suspicion were already excluded.

The NSA conducts other bulk data collection under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, an update to that law in 2008, and under a three-decade-old executive order known as 12333, all of which are outside the terms of the ACLU’s lawsuit.

Bharara's office routed a request for comment back through the Justice Department, which declined to elaborate on the 17 January letter.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 22 januari 2014 @ 14:10:47 #22
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135800776
quote:
Independent commission to investigate future of internet after NSA revelations

Two-year inquiry headed by Swedish foreign minister, set up by Chatham House and CIGI thinktanks, is announced at Davos

A major independent commission headed by the Swedish foreign minister, Carl Bildt, was launched on Wednesday to investigate the future of the internet in the wake of the Edward Snowden revelations.

The two-year inquiry, announced at the World Economic Forum at Davos, will be wide-ranging but focus primarily on state censorship of the internet as well as the issues of privacy and surveillance raised by the Snowden leaks about America's NSA and Britain's GCHQ spy agencies.

The investigation, which will conducted by a 25-member panel of politicians, academics, former intelligence officials and others from around the world, is an acknowledgement of the concerns about freedom raised by the debate.

Bildt, the former Swedish prime minister, said: "The rapid evolution of the net has been made possible by the open and flexible model by which it has evolved and been governed. But increasingly this is coming under attack.

"And this is happening as issues of net freedom, net security and net surveillance are increasingly debated. Net freedom is as fundamental as freedom of information and freedom of speech in our societies."

The Obama administration on Friday announced the initial findings of a White House-organised review of the NSA. There are also inquiries by the US Congress and by the European parliament, but this is the first major independent one.

The inquiry has been set up by Britain's foreign affairs thinktank Chatham House and by the Center for International Governance and Innovation (CIGI), which is partly funded by the Canadian government.

In a joint statement, Chatham House and the CIGI said the current internet regime was under threat. "This threat to a free, open and universal internet comes from two principal sources. First, a number of authoritarian states are waging a campaign to exert greater state control over critical internet resources."

The statement does not name the countries but it is aimed mainly at China and Iran, both of whom are censoring the internet.

The other big issue, according to Chatham House and the CIGI, is the revelations from Snowden.

"Second, revelations about the nature and extent of online surveillance have led to a loss of trust."

Robin Niblett, director of Chatham House, said: "The issue of internet governance is set to become one of the most pressing global policy issues of our time."

The intention of the inquiry is to hold public consultations around the world. About half a dozen meetings are planned, at a cost of about £150,000 each.

Among those on the panel are: Joseph Nye, former dean of the Kennedy school of governance at Harvard; Sir David Omand, former head of GCHQ; Michael Chertoff, former secretary of the US homeland security department and co-author of the Patriot Act that expanded NSA surveillance powers; the MEP Marietje Schaake, who has been a leading advocate of internet freedom; Latha Reddy, former deputy national security adviser of India; and Patricia Lewis, research director in the international security department at Chatham House, who said: "Internet governance is too important to be left just to governments."

Asked about the lack of debate in the UK so far compared with the US and elsewhere in Europe and around the world, Lewis said: "People in Britain are more concerned than we realise. They have clearly agreed at some level to exchange data for goods and services but they did not agree for that data to be given to the government and security services.

"This is a debate we sorely need."

Gordon Smith, who is to be deputy chair of the commission, said: "For many people, internet governance sounds technical and esoteric but the reality is that the issues are 'high politics' and of consequence to all users of the internet, present and future."
quote:
The Global Commission on Internet Governance

The Global Commission on Internet Governance was established in January 2014, to articulate and advance a strategic vision for the future of Internet governance. With work commencing in May 2014, the two-year project will conduct and support independent research on Internet-related dimensions of global public policy, culminating in an official commission report.

Chaired by Carl Bildt, the commission will inform concrete policy recommendations for the future of Internet governance, by providing a framework both for coordination among advanced industrial democracies and for addressing the interests and values of states that are uncertain about the future of multi-stakeholder governance. Key issues to be addressed by the commission include governance legitimacy and regulation, innovation, online rights and systemic risk.

Launched by two independent global think tanks, The Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) and Chatham House, the Global Commission on Internet Governance will help educate the wider public on the most effective ways to promote Internet access, while simultaneously championing the principles of freedom of expression and the free flow of ideas over the Internet.


[ Bericht 14% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 22-01-2014 17:48:39 ]
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 23 januari 2014 @ 22:01:52 #23
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135871321
quote:
quote:
The forthcoming report of the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, the arm's-length body established by the Congress to investigate NSA spying, has leaked, with details appearing in The New York Times and The Washington Post.

From its pages, we learn that the board views the NSA's metadata collection program -- which was revealed by Edward Snowden -- as illegal, without "a viable legal foundation under Section 215, implicates constitutional concerns under the First and Fourth Amendments, raises serious threats to privacy and civil liberties as a policy matter, and has shown only limited value…As a result, the board recommends that the government end the program."

The report goes farther than the President's Review Group on Intelligence and Communications Technologies (whose recommendations Obama ignored) and even farther than the policies announced by the President himself.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_135878441
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 18 januari 2014 12:10 schreef gebrokenglas het volgende:
Wat ik niet snap is waarom alleen metadata van telefoongesprekken wordt bewaard en niet de inhoud van de gesprekken zelf? Die inhoud is toch waar je nog het meeste aan hebt? Als je toch bezig bent met verzamelen, doe dat dan er ook bij voor een volledig beeld...
Ik denk dat NSA de metadata vergaart voor analyse. De telecom-providers daarentegen bewaren de inhoud.
  vrijdag 24 januari 2014 @ 14:39:37 #25
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135893400
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_135896316
quote:
Ook gewoon onderbreken voor die kneus van een Bieber... USA :')!
"Whatever the mind of man can conceive and believe, it can achieve" Napoleon Hill
  vrijdag 24 januari 2014 @ 21:44:31 #27
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135909994
quote:
quote:
The Resolution To Renounce The National Security Agencys Surveillance Program, which reportedly passed by an overwhelming majority during the party's annual winter meeting Friday, calls for an investigation into the NSAs dragnet surveillance program and for the creation of a committee to make "specific recommendations for legal and regulatory reform to end unconstitutional surveillance."
quote:
quote:
In a jarring break from the George W. Bush era, the Republican National Committee voted Friday to adopt a resolution demanding an investigation into the National Security Agencys spy programs.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 25 januari 2014 @ 00:02:36 #28
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135916588
quote:
quote:
At the end of December 2013, journalists working for the German newspaper Der Spiegel published information about a top-secret arm of the NSA, called the Tailored Access Operations division. TAO does highly targeted surveillance, a world apart from the indiscriminate, mass surveillance that happens under other NSA and FBI programs. One of the more alarming things we learned in the TAO story is that the NSA intercepts computers ordered online and installs malware on them, before sending them on to their final destination.

Could this be what happened to Shepard's computer, ordered on Amazon and delivered to Alexandria, instead of to Seattle? Could Amazon have made a mistake in notifying Shepard about this extra journey, which was likely meant to stay a secret? If this really is an example of the TAO laptop-interception program in action, does this mean that companies like Amazon are made aware of the government's intention to "look after" consumer products ordered by their customers? Or did Shepard receive this weird notice only after some sort of glitch in the NSA's surveillance matrix?

If this indeed is evidence of the NSA intercepting a laptop to install spyware on it, it's yet more proof that, even when the spying is highly targeted and precise, the NSA isn't necessarily using its powers to only go after terrorists or dangerous criminals. Shepard is neither a criminal nor a terrorist. She's a developer, an activist, and a free speech supporter.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_135918888
quote:
10s.gif Op vrijdag 24 januari 2014 15:56 schreef venomsnake het volgende:

[..]

Ook gewoon onderbreken voor die kneus van een Bieber... USA :')!
Ped0-vrouwen bestaan ook...
  zondag 26 januari 2014 @ 13:36:24 #30
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135958916
quote:
quote:
Voorafgaand aan de uitzending van het interview vanavond deed de zender een verklaring uitgaan waarin Snowden wordt geciteerd en is een fragment uit het interview gepubliceerd. Daarin zegt Snowden dat als een bedrijf als Siemens informatie zou hebben waarbij de Verenigde Staten baat zouden hebben - maar die niks met nationale veiligheid te maken heeft - de NSA die informatie toch zou gebruiken. ARD geeft verder geen details en het is onduidelijk wat de NSA precies met zulke informatie zou doen. Eerder gaf de NSA volgens ARD juist aan geen bedrijven te bespioneren.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_135964297
Niemand kijkt ergens meer van op als het op [de praktijken van] de NSA aankomt.
Dat geleuter over terrorisme wordt inmiddels ook door iedereen terzijde gelegd.
  zondag 26 januari 2014 @ 15:46:01 #32
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_135964575
quote:
7s.gif Op zondag 26 januari 2014 13:36 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]


[..]

Sorry, maar hebben journalisten geen enkel benul waar ze over schrijven

http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECHELON

Echt, doe fucking research

quote:
Op 5 juli 2000 besloot het Europees Parlement tot het opzetten van een tijdelijke commissie om onderzoek naar ECHELON te doen. De reden hiervoor was een rapport getiteld Interception capabilities 2000, waarin melding werd gemaakt van het gebruik van de door het ECHELON-netwerk vergaarde inlichtingen voor commerciële doeleinden van de bij het UKUSA aangesloten landen. Zo zou in 1994 het Franse bedrijf Thomson-CSF een contract in Brazilië ter waarde van 1,3 miljard dollar zijn misgelopen ten gunste van het Amerikaanse Raytheon als gevolg van onderschepte commerciële informatie die aan Raytheon zou zijn doorgespeeld. In datzelfde jaar zou Airbus een contract van 6 miljard dollar in Saoedi-Arabië zijn misgelopen ten gunste van de Amerikaanse bedrijven Boeing en McDonnell Douglas, doordat via ECHELON alle onderhandelingen tussen Airbus en Saoedi-Arabië waren afgeluisterd en de informatie werd doorgespeeld aan de beide Amerikaanse bedrijven.
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
  zondag 26 januari 2014 @ 22:37:51 #33
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_135986052
Engeland:

quote:
quote:
Officials are planning to review the historic D-notice system, which warns the media not to publish intelligence that might damage security, in the wake of the Guardian's stories about mass surveillance by the security services based on leaks from the US whistleblower Edward Snowden.

Sources said Jon Thompson, the permanent secretary of the Ministry of Defence, was setting up an inquiry into the future of the committee, raising fears that the voluntary censorship system also known as the DA-notice could be made compulsory.

The committee is supposed to be consulted when news organisations are considering publishing material relating to secret intelligence or the military. It is staffed by senior civil servants and media representatives, who give advice on the publication of sensitive stories.

The MoD declined to say why the future of the committee was being considered, but minutes of its latest meeting say: "The events of the last few months had undoubtedly raised questions in some minds about the system's future usefulness."
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 27 januari 2014 @ 22:33:23 #34
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136030421
quote:
quote:
The National Security Agency and its UK counterpart GCHQ have been developing capabilities to take advantage of "leaky" smartphone apps, such as the wildly popular Angry Birds game, that transmit users' private information across the internet, according to top secret documents.

The data pouring onto communication networks from the new generation of iPhone and Android apps ranges from phone model and screen size to personal details such as age, gender and location. Some apps, the documents state, can share users' most sensitive information such as sexual orientation – and one app recorded in the material even sends specific sexual preferences such as whether or not the user may be a swinger.

Many smartphone owners will be unaware of the full extent this information is being shared across the internet, and even the most sophisticated would be unlikely to realise that all of it is available for the spy agencies to collect.

Dozens of classified documents, provided to the Guardian by whistleblower Edward Snowden and reported in partnership with the New York Times and ProPublica, detail the NSA and GCHQ efforts to piggyback on this commercial data collection for their own purposes.

Scooping up information the apps are sending about their users allows the agencies to collect large quantities of mobile phone data from their existing mass surveillance tools – such as cable taps, or from international mobile networks – rather than solely from hacking into individual mobile handsets.

Exploiting phone information and location is a high-priority effort for the intelligence agencies, as terrorists and other intelligence targets make substantial use of phones in planning and carrying out their activities, for example by using phones as triggering devices in conflict zones. The NSA has cumulatively spent more than $1bn in its phone targeting efforts.

The disclosures also reveal how much the shift towards smartphone browsing could benefit spy agencies' collection efforts.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 28 januari 2014 @ 01:27:06 #35
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136038166
quote:
quote:
British intelligence officials can infiltrate the very cables that transfer information across the internet as well as monitor users in real time on sites like Facebook without the company's consent, according to documents leaked by Edward Snowden.

The internal documents reveal that British analysts gave instruction to members of the National Security Agency in 2012, showing them how to spy on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube in real time and collect the computer addresses of billions of the sites’ uploaders.

The leaked documents are from a GCHQ publication titled ‘Psychology: A New Kind of SIGDEV’ (Signals Development). Published by NBC News on Monday, the papers detail a program dubbed ‘Squeaky Dolphin,’ which was developed for analysts working in “broad real-time monitoring of online activity.”

Sources told NBC that the British have proven their ability to both directly monitor the world’s web traffic cable and use a third party to view the data stream and extract information from it.

Representatives from the companies in question said they have not provided any data to the government of the United Kingdom under this program, either voluntarily or involuntarily. One person who wished to remain anonymous said that Google, the company that owns YouTube, was “shocked” to discover the UK may have been “grabbing” data for years.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 28 januari 2014 @ 16:34:00 #36
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136056754
quote:
NASA and Britain’s GCHQ Mapping “Political Alignments” of Millions of Smartphone Users Worldwide.

New information made public by Edward Snowden reveals that the governments of the United States and United Kingdom are trawling data from cellphone “apps” to accumulate dossiers on the “political alignments” of millions of smartphone users worldwide.

According to a 2012 internal UK Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) document, the National Security Agency (NSA) and GCHQ have been accumulating and storing hundreds of millions of user “cookies” —the digital footprints left on a cellphone or computer each time a user visits a web site—in order to accumulate detailed personal information about users’ private lives.

This confirms that the main purpose of the programs is not to protect the population from “terrorism,” but to facilitate the state repression of working class opposition to widening social inequality and social counterrevolution. The programs do not primarily target “terrorists,” but workers, intellectuals, and students.

The collection of data regarding the “political alignment” of cellphone users also suggests that the governments of the US and UK are keeping lists of those whose “political alignments” are of concern to the government. Previous revelations have shown how the NSA and GCHQ “flag” certain “suspects” for additional surveillance: the most recent revelation indicates that suspects are “flagged” at least in part based on their “political alignment.”

The legal rationale behind this process points to a growing movement to criminalize political thought in the US and UK.

If, as the revelations indicate, determining a user’s “political alignment” is a primary goal of this program, then it is also likely a factor in determining whether the government has a “reasonable, articulable suspicion” that the user is a “terrorist suspect.” If this is the case, the web sites a user visits may raise the government’s level of suspicion that the user is engaged in criminal activity, and may thereby provide the government with the pseudo-legal pretext required to unlock the content of all his or her phone calls, emails, text messages, etc.

Such a rationale would amount to a flagrant violation of both the First and Fourth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Not only does the Fourth Amendment protect against “unreasonable searches and seizures,” but the First Amendment also proscribes the government from monitoring individuals based on their political beliefs. The elimination of such a fundamental democratic right would be a dangerous step towards the imposition of a police state dictatorship.

The new report also details the depth of the mobile-app spying operation.

A 2009 “brute-force” analysis test performed by the NSA and GCHQ of what the New York Times describes as a “tiny sliver of their cellphone databases” revealed that in one month, the NSA collected cellphone data of 8,615,650 cellphone users. Data from the GCHQ test revealed that in three months, the British had spied on 24,760,289 users. Expanded to a full year, this data shows that in 2009, the NSA collected data from over 103,000,000 users, while GCHQ collected data from over 99,000,000 users: and this coming from only a “tiny sliver” of a month’s data!

“They are gathered in bulk, and are currently our single largest type of events,” one leaked document reads.

The program—referred to in one NSA document as “Golden Nugget!”—also allows the governments to receive a log of users’ Google Maps application use. Such information allows the intelligence apparatus to track the exact whereabouts of surveillance victims worldwide. One chart from an internal NSA slideshow asks: “Where was my target when they did this?” and “Where is my target going?”

An NSA report from 2007 bragged that so much geo-data could be gathered that the intelligence agencies would “be able to clone Google’s database” of all searches for directions made via Google Maps.

“It effectively means that anyone using Google Maps on a smartphone is working in support of a GCHQ system,” a 2008 GCHQ report noted.

Additional presentation material leaked by Snowden shows that in 2010 the NSA explained that its “perfect scenario” was to “target uploading photo to a social media site taken with a mobile device.” The same slide asks, “What can we get?” The answer, according to the same presentation, includes the photographs of the user, buddy lists, emails, phone contacts, and “a host of other social networking data as well as location.”

The agencies also use information provided by mobile apps to paint a clear picture of the victim’s current location, sexual orientation, marital status, income, ethnicity, education level, and number of children.

GCHQ has an internal code-name system for grading their ability to snoop on a particular cellphone user. The codes are based on the television show “The Smurfs.” If the agencies can tap the phone’s microphone to listen to conversations, the codename “Nosey Smurf” is employed. If the agencies can track the precise location of the user as he or she moves, the codename “Tracker Smurf” is used. The ability to track a phone that is powered off is named “Dreamy Smurf,” and the ability to hide the spy software is coded “Paranoid Smurf.”

That the intelligence agencies have cheekily nicknamed codes in an Orwellian surveillance program after animated characters from a children’s show is a telling indication of the contempt with which the ruling class views the democratic rights of the population of the world.

Additionally, the agencies have been tracking and storing data from a series of cellphone game applications, including the popular “Angry Birds” game, which has been downloaded over 1.7 billion times.

The tracking of data from online games like “Angry Birds” further reveals that these programs are not intended to protect the population from “terrorism.” It would be indefensible for the NSA and GCHQ to explain that they suspected to glean information about looming Al Qaeda plots from a mindless cellphone game.

Yet this is precisely how the NSA has attempted to justify these programs.

“The communications of people who are not valid foreign intelligence targets are not of interest to the National Security Agency,” an agency spokeswoman said. “Any implication that NSA’s foreign intelligence collection is focused on the smartphone or social media communications of everyday Americans is not true. Moreover, NSA does not profile everyday Americans as it carries out its foreign intelligence mission.”

In an added indication of its anti-democratic character, the US government is therefore employing the technique of the “Big Lie” by denying what has just been proven true.

In reality, the revelations have further exposed President Barack Obama’s January 17 speech as a celebration of lies.

The president told the nation that the spying programs do “not involve the NSA examining the phone records of ordinary Americans.” He also said that the US “is not abusing authorities to listen to your private phone calls or read your emails,” and that “the United States is not spying on ordinary people who don’t threaten our national security.”

He added in reference to the “folks” at the NSA that “nothing I have learned [about the programs] indicated that our intelligence community has sought to violate the law or is cavalier about the civil liberties of their fellow citizens.”

But the evidence is mounting that the governments of the US and UK are compiling information regarding the “political alignments” of hundreds of millions across the globe. All those responsible for carrying out such a facially anti-democratic campaign—including President Obama, David Cameron, their aides, and the leaders of the security apparatus—must face criminal charges and immediate removal from office.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 28 januari 2014 @ 16:35:52 #37
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136056837
quote:
quote:
We've mentioned in the past that, for all the focus on the NSA lately, the FBI may be equally, if not more, worrisome for its willingness to collect tons of data on everyone and use it. Back in August, it became pretty clear that the FBI had compromised the Tor Browser Bundle, and had effectively taken over Freedom Hosting -- a popular hosting provider for dark web tor sites -- in order to push out malware that identified Tor users. A month later, it was confirmed that it was the FBI behind the effort, which led to the closing of Freedom Hosting.

Now there are new reports, suggesting that along with Freedom Hosting, the FBI was able to get the full database of emails on TorMail, a popular tor-based email service that used Freedom Hosting and was shut down at the same time Freedom Hosting went down. The reports point to a new lawsuit, in which the FBI was able to get a search warrant to search TorMail using its own copy of the database -- which it clearly had obtained at an earlier date. This basically means that the FBI has a pretty easy time searching all those emails if it needs to:

. The tactic suggests the FBI is adapting to the age of big-data with an NSA-style collect-everything approach, gathering information into a virtual lock box, and leaving it there until it can obtain specific authority to tap it later. There’s no indication that the FBI searched the trove for incriminating evidence before getting a warrant. But now that it has a copy of TorMail’s servers, the bureau can execute endless search warrants on a mail service that once boasted of being immune to spying.

This again highlights one of the problems of the "collect it all" approach. Rather than merely targeting a specific individual or group, the FBI now has all of those emails sitting in a database. Even if it's getting a warrant to search, it's now searching its own database, rather than having to go out to get the information from others who might challenge the requests.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 28 januari 2014 @ 23:06:14 #38
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136076892
quote:
quote:
GCHQ's mass surveillance spying programmes are probably illegal and have been signed off by ministers in breach of human rights and surveillance laws, according to a hard-hitting legal opinion that has been provided to MPs.

The advice warns that Britain's principal surveillance law is too vague and is almost certainly being interpreted to allow the agency to conduct surveillance that flouts privacy safeguards set out in the European convention on human rights (ECHR).

The inadequacies, it says, have created a situation where GCHQ staff are potentially able to rely "on the gaps in the current statutory framework to commit serious crime with impunity".

At its most extreme, the advice raises issues about the possible vulnerability of staff at GCHQ if it could be proved that intelligence used for US drone strikes against "non-combatants" had been passed on or supplied by the British before being used in a missile attack.

"An individual involved in passing that information is likely to be an accessory to murder. It is well arguable, on a variety of different bases, that the government is obliged to take reasonable steps to investigate that possibility," the advice says.

The opinion suggests the UK should consider publishing a Memorandum of Understanding with any country with which it intends to share intelligence.

This would clarify what the intelligence can be used for under British law, and how the data will be stored and destroyed.

The legal advice has been sent to the 46 members of the all-party parliamentary group on drones, which is chaired by the Labour MP, Tom Watson.
quote:
"We consider the mass interception of external contents and communications data is unlawful. The indiscriminate interception of data, solely by reference to the request of the executive, is a disproportionate interference with the private life of the individuals concerned."

Last June, Snowden leaked thousands of files about the surveillance activities of GCHQ and its US counterpart the NSA.

One of the key revelations focussed on Operation Tempora, a GCHQ programme that harvests vast amounts of information by tapping into the undersea cables that carry internet and phone traffic passing in and out of the UK. GCHQ and Hague, have repeatedly insisted the agency acts in accordance with the law.

Last year Hague told MPs: "It has been suggested GCHQ uses our partnership with the US to get around UK law, obtaining information that they cannot legally obtain in the UK. I wish to be absolutely clear that this accusation is baseless."

However, the legal advice poses awkward new questions about the framework GCHQ operates within, the role of ministers and the legality of transferring bulk data to other spy agencies.

The advice makes clear Ripa does not allow GCHQ to conduct mass surveillance on communications between people in the UK, even if the data has briefly left British shores because the call or email has travelled to an internet server overseas.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 28 januari 2014 @ 23:38:45 #39
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136078368
ECA_Legion twitterde op dinsdag 28-01-2014 om 23:11:43 It's not just you nsa.gov appears to be Down via #Anonymous reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 29 januari 2014 @ 13:34:21 #40
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136091851
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 29 januari 2014 @ 16:06:24 #41
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136097926
quote:
Philips werkte jarenlang intensief samen met NSA-spionnen

Elektronicaconcern Philips heeft jarenlang intensief samengewerkt met de Amerikaanse inlichtingendienst NSA. Philips verkocht beveiligde telefoons aan de Nederlandse overheid, waarvan de versleuteling afkomstig was van de Amerikaanse spionnen en hun Britse collega's (de GCHQ, Government Communications Headquarters).

De telefoons zijn tot een paar jaar geleden door het Nederlandse leger en op ambassades gebruikt. De NSA bevond zich in het hart van het Nederlandse militaire en diplomatieke verkeer. Philips liep in zekere zin aan de leiband van de NSA, zo beschrijft onderzoeksjournalist en Philips-biograaf Marcel Metze in een artikel dat vandaag in De Groene Amsterdammer verschijnt.

Uit archiefonderzoek en gesprekken met voormalige medewerkers van Philips-dochter Ultra Sonore Fabricage Afdeling (USFA), de cryptografische afdeling van het concern, blijkt dat het bedrijf wel met de Amerikanen moest samenwerken. Zonder de NSA-input maakten de Nederlanders geen kans op opdrachten van NAVO-landen.

Encryptiemachines
Dus nam Philips de NSA aan boord, toen het begin jaren tachtig encryptiemachines ging bouwen voor de NAVO en meedong naar een grote order (200 miljoen gulden) voor een nieuw communicatienetwerk voor het Nederlandse leger. Philips leverde in de jaren daarna onder de codenaam Zodiac mobiele verbindingen, telefooncentrales en duizenden digitaal beveiligde telefoons aan het leger. De telefoons waren zeer vernieuwend: ze verhaspelden de woorden meteen tijdens het spreken. Ook het ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken nam de telefoons af.

De NSA leverde een met de GCHQ ontwikkeld versleutelingsprogramma voor de telefoons, Saville, dat ingebakken in drie chips in de apparaten werd ingebouwd. Er waren slechts enkele medewerkers bij Philips die het algoritme kenden.

Overigens zat de NSA-code in alle apparatuur van de NAVO-landen. 'De NSA had die order gewonnen, zij waren gewoon de beste', zegt hoogleraar computerbeveiliging Bart Jacobs van de Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen.
Of de Amerikanen hun kennis misbruikt hebben is niet duidelijk. Betrokken Philips-medewerkers zeggen daarvan niet op de hoogte te zijn. Als de Amerikanen opzettelijk een zwakke plek (een 'achterdeur') in de software zouden hebben ingebouwd, zou dat henzelf ook kwetsbaar hebben gemaakt zegt Jacobs. 'Want zij gebruikten de apparaten zelf ook binnen de NAVO.'

Achterdeurtjes
Uit documenten van Snowden is vorig jaar gebleken dat de NSA graag dergelijke achterdeurtjes inbouwt in commerciële encryptiesoftware. Zo bleek vorig jaar dat de NSA ook een zwakke plek had laten maken in een algoritme van het bedrijf RSA. De commissie die president Obama adviseerde over de NSA pleitte er in december voor dat de dienst zich niet meer bemoeit met encryptiesoftware bij bedrijven. Of de NSA nog steeds apparatuur levert aan NAVO-landen is niet bekend. Jacobs: 'Ik kan me niet voorstellen van niet.'

Philips wil hierop niet inhoudelijk reageren, omdat het archief van de betrokken dochter USFA in 1989 via de verkoop van Holland Signaal is beland bij het Franse Thomson. Ook noemt een woordvoerder delen van het verhaal speculatief. 'Wij zien op grond hiervan geen aanleiding om eigen onderzoek te beginnen.'

Een woordvoerder van het ministerie van Defensie zegt dat het 'niet meer dan logisch is' dat bondgenoten met elkaar kunnen praten. 'Dan is het ook niet raar dat diensten voor encryptie van communicatieapparatuur met bedrijven samenwerken.'
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 29 januari 2014 @ 22:20:31 #42
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136117171
quote:
James Clapper Suggests Journalists Could Be Edward Snowden's 'Accomplices'

NEW YORK -– Director of National Intelligence James Clapper urged former NSA contractor Edward Snowden and his “accomplices” to return leaked documents during a hearing on Wednesday.

"Snowden claims that he’s won and that his mission is accomplished," Clapper said, according to a transcript from the Senate Intelligence Committee hearing, posted by the Washington Post. "If that is so, I call on him and his accomplices to facilitate the return of the remaining stolen documents that have not yet been exposed, to prevent even more damage to U.S. security."

So who, exactly, are Snowden’s “accomplices?”

Guardian national security editor Spencer Ackerman, among others, questioned on Twitter whether Clapper was referring to journalists.

HuffPost put the question to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which didn't rule out that journalists could be considered "accomplices."

The office's public affairs director Shawn Turner said in an email that “director Clapper was referring to anyone who is assisting Snowden to further threaten our national security through the unauthorized disclosure of stolen documents related to lawful foreign intelligence collection programs.”

The suggestion that Snowden is conspiring with journalists, rather than acting as their source, has come up ever since the National Security Agency surveillance story broke last spring.

In June, "Meet the Press" host David Gregory asked journalist Glenn Greenwald about having "aided and abetted" Snowden, language that suggests the reporter was a participant in a crime. Earlier this month, Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) described Greenwald as Snowden's "accomplice."

Members of Congress and government officials have long claimed, both anonymously and in TV interviews, that China and Russia likely obtained the leaked NSA documents and that Snowden may be a spy. Snowden was the eighth person charged under the Espionage Act for leaking information during the Obama administration.

Despite generating headlines, Snowden's critics haven't provided direct evidence to back up such claims. Last week, Snowden told The New Yorker that allegations he's a Russian spy are "absurd."

But Snowden did provide documents last year to Greenwald, and journalists Laura Poitras and Barton Gellman. The ongoing NSA coverage has detailed the extent of U.S. surveillance and sparked a worldwide debate.

The Guardian, where Greenwald previously worked, provided a subset of the documents to The New York Times and ProPublica. Meanwhile, Poitras and Greenwald, who are believed to have the full set, have continued reporting on specific documents with news organizations around the world. On Monday, for instance, Greenwald co-wrote an NBC News story about how the British government could spy on Facebook and YouTube users.

It doesn’t seem possible that all the documents could be returned by Snowden. Snowden has said he gave what he had to journalists in Hong Kong, so he no longer was carrying the documents when he arrived in Russia, where he remains under temporary asylum.

Still, the idea that Snowden might be capable of securing the leaked information has been floated before by a top government official.

Last month, NSA task force head Rick Ledgett told “60 Minutes” that any conversation with Snowden about amnesty could only take place if there were “assurances that the remainder of the data could be secured.”
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 30 januari 2014 @ 17:48:59 #43
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136141451
quote:
quote:
The document was published on an internal NSA site on the first day of the Denmark conference, December 7, 2009, and stated that “analysts here at NSA, as well as our Second Party partners, will continue to provide policymakers with unique, timely, and valuable insights into key countries’ preparations and goals for the conference, as well as the deliberation within countries on climate change policies and negotiation strategies.”
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136143200
Bekijk deze YouTube-video

"Snowden germany interview english" nu alweer weggehaald van youtube. Slechte move van ARD of toch youtube?
  vrijdag 31 januari 2014 @ 12:12:01 #45
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136166198
quote:
quote:
As the NSA leaks have expanded to detail spying activities in other countries, those governments affected have had a variety of reactions. In some cases, legitimately questionable tactics were exposed (potential economic espionage in Brazil, tapping German chancellor Angela Merkel's phone) and the responses were genuinely outraged. In other cases, the outrage was temporary and somewhat muted, suggesting these countries were allowing the NSA to take the heat for their own questionable surveillance programs aimed at their citizens.

When news broke of the NSA acquiring millions of metadata records from French phone companies, the response from the French government seemed like little more than an attempt to shift the focus off its own PRISM-esque collection programs. In response, the ODNI delivered a statement that rebutted the word salad created by an algorithmic translation of the original French article. Plausible deniability via translation tech. The NSA couldn't have asked for a better setup.

But the story swiftly faded into the background. The minimal outrage failed to sustain itself and was soon swept away by the exposure of more NSA documents. One French telco, Orange, has declared its intentions to sue the NSA for tapping its undersea cables, but further reaction from the government has remained almost nonexistent.

That the heat failed to stay on the NSA may prove to be a problem as more details have surfaced suggesting the French government respects its citizens no more than the US government does. Making things a bit messier is the fact that the French intelligence agencies' actions aren't subject to judicial control but rather answer solely to the executive branch (as it were) directly. While our judicial oversight may be more "rubber stamp" than "check and balance," it at least helps prevent agencies from operating completely under the cover of executive decisions.

But the limits, or lack thereof, are nearly identical to those of the NSA. According to its 2006 anti-terrorist law, agencies do not need warrants to access data or perform investigations that fall under the scope of the anti-terrorism legislation. Needless to say, the law has since expanded to cover even more data and content.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 31 januari 2014 @ 12:17:18 #46
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136166317
quote:
quote:
A top secret document retrieved by U.S. whistleblower Edward Snowden and obtained by CBC News shows that Canada's electronic spy agency used information from the free internet service at a major Canadian airport to track the wireless devices of thousands of ordinary airline passengers for days after they left the terminal.

After reviewing the document, one of Canada's foremost authorities on cyber-security says the clandestine operation by the Communications Security Establishment Canada ( CSEC) was almost certainly illegal.

Ronald Deibert told CBC News: "I can't see any circumstance in which this would not be unlawful, under current Canadian law, under our Charter, under CSEC's mandates."

The spy agency is supposed to be collecting primarily foreign intelligence by intercepting overseas phone and internet traffic, and is prohibited by law from targeting Canadians or anyone in Canada without a judicial warrant.

As CSEC chief John Forster recently stated: "I can tell you that we do not target Canadians at home or abroad in our foreign intelligence activities, nor do we target anyone in Canada.

"In fact, it's prohibited by law. Protecting the privacy of Canadians is our most important principle."

But security experts who have been apprised of the document point out the airline passengers in a Canadian airport were clearly in Canada.

CSEC said in a written statement to CBC News that it is "mandated to collect foreign signals intelligence to protect Canada and Canadians. And in order to fulfill that key foreign intelligence role for the country, CSEC is legally authorized to collect and analyze metadata."

Metadata reveals a trove of information including, for example, the location and telephone numbers of all calls a person makes and receives — but not the content of the call, which would legally be considered a private communication and cannot be intercepted without a warrant.

"No Canadian communications were (or are) targeted, collected or used," the agency says.

In the case of the airport tracking operation, the metadata apparently identified travelers' wireless devices, but not the content of calls made or emails sent from them.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 31 januari 2014 @ 12:39:32 #47
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_136166853
quote:
0s.gif Op donderdag 30 januari 2014 18:45 schreef Tamabralski het volgende:
"Snowden germany interview english"
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
  vrijdag 31 januari 2014 @ 14:04:49 #48
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136169488
quote:
Footage released of Guardian editors destroying Snowden hard drives

GCHQ technicians watched as journalists took angle grinders and drills to computers after weeks of tense negotiations
quote:
The bizarre episode in the basement of the Guardian's London HQ was the climax of Downing Street's fraught interactions with the Guardian in the wake of Snowden's leak the biggest in the history of western intelligence. The details are revealed in a new book published next week The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World's Most Wanted Man by the Guardian correspondent Luke Harding. The book describes how the Guardian took the decision to destroy its own Macbooks after the government explicitly threatened the paper with an injunction.
quote:
"It was purely a symbolic act. We knew that. GCHQ knew that. And the government knew that," Johnson said. He added: "It was the most surreal event I have witnessed in British journalism."


[ Bericht 24% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 31-01-2014 14:12:29 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 1 februari 2014 @ 14:18:58 #49
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136205174
quote:
quote:
Once Obama became president, Snowden came to dislike him intensely. He criticised the White House's attempts to ban assault weapons. He was unimpressed by affirmative action. Another topic made him even angrier. The Snowden of 2009 inveighed against government officials who leaked classified information to newspapers – the worst crime conceivable, in Snowden's apoplectic view. In January of that year, the New York Times published a report on a secret Israeli plan to attack Iran. The Times said its story was based on 15 months' worth of interviews with current and former US officials, European and Israeli officials, other experts and international nuclear inspectors.

TheTrueHOOHA's response, published by Ars Technica, is revealing. In a long conversation with another user, he wrote the following messages:

"WTF NYTIMES. Are they TRYING to start a war?"

"They're reporting classified shit"

"moreover, who the fuck are the anonymous sources telling them this? those people should be shot in the balls"

"that shit is classified for a reason"

"it's not because 'oh we hope our citizens don't find out' its because 'this shit won't work if iran knows what we're doing'"

Snowden's anti-leaking invective seems stunningly at odds with his own later behaviour, but he would trace the beginning of his own disillusionment with government spying to this time. "Much of what I saw in Geneva really disillusioned me about how my government functions and what its impact is in the world. I realised that I was part of something that was doing far more harm than good," he later said.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 1 februari 2014 @ 14:56:59 #50
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136206496
quote:
NY Times' Jill Abramson: Obama Crackdown Has Created 'Freeze' On Reporting

New York Times editor Jill Abramson once again condemned the Obama administration's crackdown on leaks, saying that the government's treatment of Edward Snowden has scared potential sources and created a "real freeze" on reporting.

Abramson said at a Columbia University School of Journalism panel Thursday that Snowden has brought into question matters of source protection, media shield laws and had a “profound effect on journalism,” the Wrap reported Friday.

One of the effects, Abramson said, is that The New York Times is forced to “hit the breaks a bit" now that larger issues of national security are involved.

The issue of U.S. government spying and whistleblowers came to a head last June when Edward Snowden first leaked the NSA documents revealing massive government surveillance programs and collection of phone and Internet records. Snowden sought asylum in Russia to escape espionage charges against him in the U.S. and claims he is still facing "significant threats" for his actions.

Snowden's story, and government crackdown on leakers as a whole, is what Abramson says now has other whistleblowers hesitant to come forward, significantly changing the relationship between sources and journalists.

"A real freeze is setting in on what had been to this point, I think, a healthy discourse between sources and journalists," she said. "Journalists are saying, ‘I will go to jail to protect your identity.... These words are now being uttered.”

Also with Abramson at the conference was Janine Gibson, editor-in-chief of the Guardian, the website Snowden leaked documents to that exposed the NSA surveillance. Abramson pointed out that the Obama administration has administered seven leak investigations to date, which is twice that of any other previous administration, according to the Wrap.

"The original, the ordinary way of chilling journalism won’t work," she said. "We’re not any more going to be worried about naming names. It’s going to be about proving that you’re not a co-conspirator."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 1 februari 2014 @ 16:57:19 #51
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136210383
quote:
quote:
We've seen various government officials act in all sorts of bizarre ways after revelations of illegal spying on their own people (and foreigners), but none may be quite as bizarre as the response from the Canadian government, following the release late last night from the CBC (with help from Glenn Greenwald) that they're spying on public WiFi connections. That report had plenty of detail, including an internal presentation from the Canadian electronic spying agency, CSEC. In the Canadian Parliament today, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's parliamentary secretary, Paul Calandra, decided to respond to all of this by by insisting it's all a lie and then flat out insulting both the CBC and Glenn Greenwald.
quote:
If you can't watch the video, here's what he says:

Mr. Speaker, last night the CBC aired a misleading report on Canada's signals intelligence agency, Communications Security Establishment Canada. These documents were stolen by former NSA contractor, Edward Snowden and sold to the CBC by Glenn Greenwald. Canada's signals intelligence agency has been clear that the CBC story is incorrect, yet the CBC went ahead and published it anyway.

Here are the facts: Before the story aired, CSEC made clear that nothing in the stolen documents showed that Canadians' communications were targeted, collected, or used, nor that travellers' movements were tracked.

In addition, CSEC's activities are regularly reviewed by an independent watchdog who has consistently found it has followed the law.

Why is furthering porn-spy Glenn Greenwald's agenda and lining his Brazilian bank account more important than maintaining the public broadcaster's journalistic integrity?
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136342881
quote:
Teruggeven

Wat Snowden heeft meegenomen 'gaat verder' dan de NSA-programma's voor het verzamelen telefoon- en internetdata, aldus directeur van de nationale inlichtingendiensten James Clapper.

"Minder dan tien procent gaat over binnenlandse surveillanceprogramma's." Clapper heeft Snowden en de mensen die hem helpen gevraagd de documenten die nog niet openbaar gemaakt zijn terug te geven.

Geschiedenis

Clapper leek terug te komen op zijn bewering vorige week dat de onthullingen van Snowden 'de grootste diefstal van informatie van inlichtingendiensten in onze geschiedenis is'.

In plaats daarvan zei Clapper dinsdag dat de diefstal van gegevens 'mogelijk de grootste in de geschiedenis is'. Bronnen bij de Amerikaanse regering gaan ervan uit dat Snowden ongeveer 1,7 miljoen documenten heeft gedownload.

http://www.nu.nl/buitenla(...)kken-documenten.html
Wat Snowden heeft gedaan is de grootste diefstal uit de geschiedenis? De Amerikaanse overheid steelt jaarlijks prive informatie van miljarden burgers en miljoenen bedrijven. De diefstal van Snowden VERBLEEKT bij de diefstal van de Amerikanen.
  dinsdag 4 februari 2014 @ 22:01:19 #53
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_136343149
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 21:57 schreef polderturk het volgende:

[..]

Wat Snowden heeft gedaan is de grootste diefstal uit de geschiedenis? De Amerikaanse overheid steelt jaarlijks prive informatie van miljarden burgers en miljoenen bedrijven. De diefstal van Snowden VERBLEEKT bij de diefstal van de Amerikanen.
Heb je het ARD interview bekeken?
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
pi_136343404
quote:
1s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 22:01 schreef Pietverdriet het volgende:

[..]

Heb je het ARD interview bekeken?
Nope. Vertel.
  dinsdag 4 februari 2014 @ 22:07:00 #55
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_136343509
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 22:05 schreef polderturk het volgende:

[..]

Nope. Vertel.
Aanrader, kijken
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
pi_136343692
quote:
1s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 22:07 schreef Pietverdriet het volgende:

[..]

Aanrader, kijken
Ik dacht dat je je reactie had geplaatst omdat je het niet eens was met wat ik geschreven had. Of was je het er wel mee eens?
  dinsdag 4 februari 2014 @ 22:11:03 #57
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_136343740
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 22:10 schreef polderturk het volgende:

[..]

Ik dacht dat je je reactie had geplaatst omdat je het niet eens was met wat ik geschreven had. Of was je het er wel mee eens?
Ik ben een groot fan van snowden
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
pi_136343947
quote:
1s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 22:11 schreef Pietverdriet het volgende:

[..]

Ik ben een groot fan van snowden
Ik ook. Er zouden eigenlijk van die Snowden T-shirts verkocht moeten worden, zoals die Che Gueverra T-shirts. Snowden zou een icoon moeten worden van deze tijd.
  dinsdag 4 februari 2014 @ 23:25:49 #59
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136347975
quote:
quote:
Congressman Mike Rogers, chairman of the House intelligence committee, suggested Greenwald was a “thief” after he worked with news organizations who paid for stories based on the documents.

“For personal gain, he’s now selling his access to information, that’s how they’re terming it … A thief selling stolen material is a thief,” Politico quoted Rogers as saying after a committee hearing on Tuesday. Rogers said his source for the information was “other nations' press services”.

Greenwald said that the claim was foolish, unfounded, and designed to intimidate journalists. “The main value in bandying about theories of prosecuting journalists is the hope that it will bolster the climate of fear for journalism,” he tweeted Tuesday.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136349199
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 23:25 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]


[..]

Wat een hypocrisie. En de NSA is geen dief? De NSA steelt geen informatie van honderden miljoenen mensen?
  dinsdag 4 februari 2014 @ 23:56:38 #61
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136349386
Rondje Scandinavië:

quote:
Read the Snowden Documents From the NSA
Here Uppdrag granskning [Mission: Investigation] the documents leaked by Edwards Snowden and retrieved from Glenn Greenwald that are the basis for the report about Sweden's collaboration with the NSA and the GCHQ.
quote:
In an internal, top-secret document dated 18 April this year, the NSA summarises its relations with Sweden. The document states that since 1954 Sweden has been a part of an intelligence collaboration with what is often called “The Five Eyes”, UKUSA, which refers to the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. This is despite the fact that Sweden was officially neutral, an image that has been maintained outwardly for decades by multiple governments of different political persuasions. The document also states that the UKUSA contract was discontinued in 2004 and replaced with bilateral agreements for signals intelligence and wiretapping. As of 2011, the Swedish FRA provides its American partner with extensive access to data from its cable collection.
quote:
quote:
Countries ranging from France to Finland have started responding to NSA revelations in different ways, ranging from new fiber optic cables to government-backed industrial espionage. By 2015, some European countries will start implementing surveillance programs that go even beyond the NSA — and are explicitly meant to protect not only national security, but also economic interests.

Last week, Europe was rocked by the claim that Sweden has been one of the key allies of NSA in a global surveillance program. Sweden may have tapped into the undersea fiber optic cables running under the Baltic sea to deliver massive amounts of intel about countries across Nordic and Baltic regions. According to Wikileaks, Finland has now committed to building a new fiber optic cable to Germany specifically to prevent Sweden from intercepting data and passing it on to NSA. The project is run by Governia, a state-owned company.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 4 februari 2014 @ 23:58:46 #62
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136349460
quote:
1s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 23:51 schreef polderturk het volgende:

[..]

Wat een hypocrisie. En de NSA is geen dief? De NSA steelt geen informatie van honderden miljoenen mensen?
Nee, dit is propaganda, victim blaming en shooting the messenger. Assange is een autistische verkrachter en Glenn Greenwald is een buitenlandse dief.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136349507
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 23:25 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

[..]

Het klopt voor geen meter wat hij zegt. Wie gestolen waar verhandelt is hooguit een heler, geen dief. En ook in het Engels is een heler geen "thief".
  woensdag 5 februari 2014 @ 12:55:40 #64
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_136359344
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
  woensdag 5 februari 2014 @ 12:59:07 #65
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_136359468
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 4 februari 2014 23:58 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Nee, dit is propaganda, victim blaming en shooting the messenger. Assange is een autistische verkrachter en Glenn Greenwald is een buitenlandse dief.
Spin, een specifieke manier van propaganda.
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
  woensdag 5 februari 2014 @ 13:23:16 #66
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136360335
quote:
quote:
Minister Plasterk van Binnenlandse Zaken en minister Hennis-Plasschaert van Defensie schrijven nu dat Nederland die informatie zelf onderschepte en vervolgens deelde met de NSA. Het kabinet maakt daarmee een flinke draai. In oktober meldde Plasterk nog dat het kabinet zich ervan bewust is dat de NSA telefoongesprekken kan aftappen en dat er met de Amerikanen over de kwestie gesproken werd.

Volgens de ministers betreft het 'uitdrukkelijk data verzameld
in het kader van de wettelijke taakuitoefening'. Het delen van de informatie is volgens Plasterk en Hennis op rechtmatige wijze gebeurd in het kader van terrorismebestrijding en militaire operaties in het buitenland.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 5 februari 2014 @ 13:36:35 #67
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136360809
quote:
quote:
A secret British spy unit created to mount cyber attacks on Britain’s enemies has waged war on the hacktivists of Anonymous and LulzSec, according to documents taken from the National Security Agency by Edward Snowden and obtained by NBC News.

The blunt instrument the spy unit used to target hackers, however, also interrupted the web communications of political dissidents who did not engage in any illegal hacking. It may also have shut down websites with no connection to Anonymous.

According to the documents, a division of Government Communications Headquarters Communications (GCHQ), the British counterpart of the NSA, shut down communications among Anonymous hacktivists by launching a “denial of service” (DDOS) attack – the same technique hackers use to take down bank, retail and government websites – making the British government the first Western government known to have conducted such an attack.

The documents, from a PowerPoint presentation prepared for a 2012 NSA conference called SIGDEV, show that the unit known as the Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group, or JTRIG, boasted of using the DDOS attack – which it dubbed Rolling Thunder -- and other techniques to scare away 80 percent of the users of Anonymous internet chat rooms.

The existence of JTRIG has never been previously disclosed publicly.

The documents also show that JTRIG infiltrated chat rooms known as IRCs and identified individual hackers who had taken confidential information from websites. In one case JTRIG helped send a hacktivist to prison for stealing data from PayPal, and in another it helped identify hacktivists who attacked government websites.

In connection with this report, NBC is publishing documents that Edward Snowden took from the NSA before fleeing the U.S. The documents are being published with minimal redactions.

Intelligence sources familiar with the operation say that the British directed the DDOS attack against IRC chat rooms where they believed criminal hackers were concentrated. Other intelligence sources also noted that in 2011, authorities were alarmed by a rash of attacks on government and corporate websites and were scrambling for means to respond.

“While there must of course be limitations,” said Michael Leiter, the former head of the U.S. government’s National Counterterrorism Center and now an NBC News analyst, “law enforcement and intelligence officials must be able to pursue individuals who are going far beyond speech and into the realm of breaking the law: defacing and stealing private property that happens to be online.”

“No one should be targeted for speech or thoughts, but there is no reason law enforcement officials should unilaterally declare law breakers safe in the online environment,” said Leiter.

But critics charge the British government with overkill, noting that many of the individuals targeted were teenagers, and that the agency’s assault on communications among hacktivists means the agency infringed the free speech of people never charged with any crime.

“Targeting Anonymous and hacktivists amounts to targeting citizens for expressing their political beliefs,” said Gabriella Coleman, an anthropology professor at McGill University and author of an upcoming book about Anonymous. “Some have rallied around the name to engage in digital civil disobedience, but nothing remotely resembling terrorism. The majority of those embrace the idea primarily for ordinary political expression.” Coleman estimated that the number of “Anons” engaged in illegal activity was in the dozens, out of a community of thousands.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136360950
quote:
7s.gif Op woensdag 5 februari 2014 13:23 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

[..]

Alsof het een het ander uitsluit...
Wees gehoorzaam. Alleen samen krijgen we de vrijheid eronder.
  woensdag 5 februari 2014 @ 13:48:01 #69
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136361226
ggreenwald twitterde op woensdag 05-02-2014 om 13:40:01 Is NBC News now one of Snowden's criminal "accomplices"? Are they criminally buying stolen property? Speak up, James Clapper & Mike Rogers. reageer retweet
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 5 februari 2014 @ 14:39:00 #70
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_136363091
quote:
7s.gif Op woensdag 5 februari 2014 13:48 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
ggreenwald twitterde op woensdag 05-02-2014 om 13:40:01 Is NBC News now one of Snowden's criminal "accomplices"? Are they criminally buying stolen property? Speak up, James Clapper & Mike Rogers. reageer retweet
The NYTimes werd nav de publicatie van The Pentagon Papers ook beschuldigd van heling.
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
  donderdag 6 februari 2014 @ 17:00:09 #71
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136406377
quote:
Snowden Still Outwitting U.S. Spies

Sometimes, the three hardest words to say in the English language are: “I don’t know.” For the U.S. intelligence community, those words could be very useful when it comes to Edward Snowden, the NSA-contractor-turned-leaker. Because when it comes to Snowden, the spooks know precious little—despite the over-sized claims made in Congress, allegedly on the spies’ behalf.

Last month, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) completed a classified assessment of the damage caused by Snowden’s breach and began briefing the findings to Congress. The report is now driving a new round of claims by senior U.S. officials and members of Congress about what has been called the worst leak in U.S. history.

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said a week ago that Snowden’s activities have placed the lives of intelligence officers and assets at risk. Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine, said if one were to stack the documents stolen by Snowden it would be three miles high. On Wednesday, Rep. Mac Thornberry, the Texas Republican who is next in line to be the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said the damage done by Snowden “will certainly cost billions to repair.”

But the DIA assessment is based on two important assumptions. First, it assumes that Snowden’s master file includes data from every network he ever scanned. Second, it assumes that this file is already in or will end up in the hands of America’s adversaries. If these assumptions turn out to be true, then the alarm raised in the last week will be warranted. The key word here is “if.”

What the DIA actually knows, according to U.S. officials briefed on its report, is that Snowden fabricated the digital keys—essentially assuming the identity—of multiple senior intelligence officials to gain access to classified intelligence systems well outside of the NSA like the military’s top secret Joint World-Wide Intelligence Communications System. One U.S. intelligence official briefed on the report said the DIA concluded that Snowden visited classified facilities outside the NSA station where he worked in Hawaii while he was downloading the documents he would eventually leak to journalists Glenn Greenwald and Barton Gellman. On Tuesday, Clapper himself estimated that less than 10 percent of the documents Snowden took were from the NSA. The implication was that the other 90 percent were from other spy agencies, and from the American military.

Those findings are important. But they do not necessarily mean the sky is falling. The DIA’s assessment assumed that every classified system Snowden visited was sucked dry of its data and placed in a file. DIA director Gen. Michael Flynn put it this way on Tuesday in testimony before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence: “We assume that Snowden, everything that he touched, we assume that he took, stole.”

The U.S. intelligence official briefed on the report said the DIA was able to retrace the steps Snowden took inside the military’s classified systems to find every site where he rummaged around. “Snowden had a very limited amount of time before he would be detected when he did this, so we assume he zipped up the files and left,” this official said.

Bruce Schneier, a cybersecurity expert and cryptographer who Greenwald has consulted on the Snowden archive, said it was prudent to assume that lest some of Snowden’s documents could wind up in the hands of a foreign government.

The easiest way, he added, would be to go after the journalists who received Snowden’s leaks. “If anybody wants the documents, they go after Greenwald, (Laura Poitras) or Gellman.”

But he also said that this file would likely be encrypted—and that encryption today is powerful enough to be essentially unbreakable. So intelligence services may have the documents without being able to read them.

And those journalists might only have a fraction of what Snowden took. In statements and interviews, Snowden himself has been tight-lipped about any kind of master file that may exist containing everything he took from the U.S. intelligence community. In June, Greenwald told the Daily Beast that he did not know whether or not Snowden had additional documents beyond the ones he gave him. “I believe he does. He was clear he did not want to give to journalists things he did not think should be published.”

Snowden, however, has implied that he does not have control over the files he took. “No intelligence service—not even our own—has the capacity to compromise the secrets I continue to protect,” he wrote in July in a letter to former New Hampshire Republican senator Gordon Humphrey. “While it has not been reported in the media, one of my specializations was to teach our people at DIA how to keep such information from being compromised even in the highest threat counter-intelligence environments (i.e. China). You may rest easy knowing I cannot be coerced into revealing that information, even under torture.”

Some allies of Snowden have speculated that any kind of master file of Snowden documents could only be accessed through a pass code or cryptographic key broken out into pieces controlled by several people in multiple jurisdictions throughout the world. That way. No one government could force a single person to give up access to Snowden’s motherlode.

But these kinds of security measures are not comforting to others. Rep. Mike Rogers, the Republican chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence told two reporters Tuesday that Snowden would be foolish to think he could outsmart Russia’s intelligence agencies.

“If he really believes he has created something the Russian intelligence services can’t get through, then he is more naïve than I think he already is,” Rogers said. “That makes a huge leap of assumption that a guy by the way who has not been quite honest about how he got where he was and what he stole and for what purpose to believe the fact that no one can get to this but me. I don’t believe it.”

In an email to the Daily Beast, Gellman said he was taking many precautions to protect the Snowden archives. “I assume that I am more interesting than I used to be to foreign intelligence services,” he said. “I’m well aware of my responsibility to protect the Snowden archive. The Post and I have taken very considerable measures to secure the material physically and electronically, with the benefit of top-flight expert advice. That’s all I want to say about it.”
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136406498
Poll: plasterk moet eer aan zichzelf houden en wegwezen.
eens
oneens
kwee nie
Tussenstand:

Ook een poll maken? Klik hier
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 11:08:39 #73
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136431614
quote:
IRC network calls for investigations over GCHQ's attack on Anonymous

QuakeNet calls the GCHQ's actions grossly hypocritical...

QuakeNet, one of the oldest IRC networks on the Web, has condemned Britain's GCHQ for their hypocrisy - after it was revealed the agency launched DDoS attacks against IRC servers used by supporters of Anonymous.

The story broke on Wednesday. NBC News reported that the GCHQ's Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group (JTRIG) bragged about using Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks, during an operation called Rolling Thunder. These attacks were part of a campaign targeting supporters of Anonymous, outlined during a 2012 NSA conference called SIGDEV.

During their presentation, JTRIG says they scared away 80 percent of the server's users. In addition, NBC News also reported that JTRIG visited chat rooms on AnonOps (one of the Anonymous IRC servers) and interacted with users, sometimes spreading malware, in order to collect additional intelligence. Such intelligence led to at least one prison sentence, and additional identification of potential suspects.

As I wrote in my previous post, what the GCHQ did was reprehensible. They've broken their own nation's laws, in order to target people gathered in a single location to express themselves and communicate their thoughts. Adding insult to injury, they gave themselves immunity, so no one will be facing any legal problems because of this.

Yet, as of today, anyone in the U.K. (or U.S. for that matter), who encourages, assists with, or conducts a DDoS attack, for any reason, will face up to 10 years in prison and heavy fines. It's complete hypocrisy.

DDoS is disruptive. In addition to recovery and mitigation costs, even if those costs are just personal time lost due to the act, there's collateral damage to consider. When a server is attacked, and it crashes, everything hosted on it goes down too.

In the case of the GCHQ's attack, not only did the Anonymous IRC server go offline, but websites hosted on the same server went offline as well. In addition, the people paying the bills on the server had to pay bandwidth overage fees because of government sanctioned attack. Moreover, the ISPs that provide the connections to the IRC servers themselves were attacked, and faced problems of their own. By going after Anonymous, the GCHQ also attacked groups of innocent people, in what amounts to nothing more than aggravated censorship.
- See more at: http://blogs.csoonline.co(...)sthash.DJIOVZNb.dpuf

Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 15:42:00 #74
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136440179
quote:
Snowden Docs: British Spies Used Sex and 'Dirty Tricks'

British spies have developed “dirty tricks” for use against nations, hackers, terror groups, suspected criminals and arms dealers that include releasing computer viruses, spying on journalists and diplomats, jamming phones and computers, and using sex to lure targets into “honey traps.”

Documents taken from the National Security Agency by Edward Snowden and exclusively obtained by NBC News describe techniques developed by a secret British spy unit called the Joint Threat Research and Intelligence Group (JTRIG) as part of a growing mission to go on offense and attack adversaries ranging from Iran to the hacktivists of Anonymous. According to the documents, which come from presentations prepped in 2010 and 2012 for NSA cyber spy conferences, the agency’s goal was to “destroy, deny, degrade [and] disrupt” enemies by “discrediting” them, planting misinformation and shutting down their communications.

Both PowerPoint presentations describe “Effects” campaigns that are broadly divided into two categories: cyber attacks and propaganda operations. The propaganda campaigns use deception, mass messaging and “pushing stories” via Twitter, Flickr, Facebook and YouTube. JTRIG also uses “false flag” operations, in which British agents carry out online actions that are designed to look like they were performed by one of Britain’s adversaries.

In connection with this report, NBC is publishing documents that Edward Snowden took from the NSA before fleeing the U.S., which can be viewed by clicking here and here. The documents are being published with minimal redactions.

The spy unit’s cyber attack methods include the same “denial of service” or DDOS tactic used by computer hackers to shut down government and corporate websites.

Other documents taken from the NSA by Snowden and previously published by NBC News show that JTRIG, which is part of the NSA’s British counterpart, the cyber spy agency known as GCHQ, used a “denial of service” (DDOS) attack to shut down Internet chat rooms used by members of the hacktivist group known as Anonymous.

Read the first NBC report on JTRIG and the Snowden documents.

Read an earlier exclusive NBC report on the Snowden documents.

Civil libertarians said that in using a DDOS attack against hackers the British government also infringed free speech by individuals not involved in any illegal hacking, and may have blocked other websites with no connection to Anonymous. While GCHQ defends the legality of its actions, critics question whether the agency is too aggressive and its mission too broad.

Eric King, a lawyer who teaches IT law at the London School of Economics and is head of research at Privacy International, a British civil liberties advocacy group, said it was “remarkable” that the British government thought it had the right to hack computers, since none of the U.K.’s intelligence agencies has a “clear lawful authority” to launch their own attacks.

“GCHQ has no clear authority to send a virus or conduct cyber attacks,” said King. “Hacking is one of the most invasive methods of surveillance.” King said British cyber spies had gone on offense with “no legal safeguards” and without any public debate, even though the British government has criticized other nations, like Russia, for allegedly engaging in cyber warfare.

But intelligence officials defended the British government’s actions as appropriate responses to illegal acts. One intelligence official also said that the newest set of Snowden documents published by NBC News that describe “Effects” campaigns show that British cyber spies were “slightly ahead” of U.S. spies in going on offense against adversaries, whether those adversaries are hackers or nation states. The documents also show that a one-time signals surveillance agency, GCHQ, is now conducting the kinds of active espionage operations that were once exclusively the realm of the better-known British spy agencies MI5 and MI6.

According to notes on the 2012 documents, a computer virus called Ambassadors Reception was “used in a variety of different areas” and was “very effective.” When sent to adversaries, says the presentation, the virus will “encrypt itself, delete all emails, encrypt all files, make [the] screen shake” and block the computer user from logging on.

But the British cyber spies’ operations do not always remain entirely online. Spies have long used sexual “honey traps” to snare, blackmail and influence targets. Most often, a male target is led to believe he has an opportunity for a romantic relationship or a sexual liaison with a woman, only to find that the woman is actually an intelligence operative. The Israeli government, for example, used a “honey trap” to lure nuclear technician Mordechai Vanunu from London to Rome. He expected an assignation with a woman, but instead was kidnapped by Israel agents and taken back to Israel to stand trial for leaking nuclear secrets to the media.

The version of a “honey trap” described by British cyber spies in the 2012 PowerPoint presentation sounds like a version of Internet dating, but includes physical encounters. The target is lured “to go somewhere on the Internet, or a physical location” to be met by “a friendly face.” The goal, according to the presentation, is to discredit the target.

A “honey trap,” says the presentation, is “very successful when it works.” But the documents do not give a specific example of when the British government might have employed a honey trap.

An operation described in the 2010 presentation also involves in-person surveillance. “Royal Concierge” exploits hotel reservations to track the whereabouts of foreign diplomats and send out “daily alerts to analysts working on governmental hard targets.” The British government uses the program to try to steer its quarry to “SIGINT friendly” hotels, according to the presentation, where the targets can be monitored electronically – or in person by British operatives.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 16:41:02 #75
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136442006
quote:
quote:
One of the three reporters at the center of NSA contractor Edward Snowden’s leaks is planning to enter the country that charged Snowden with espionage. Glenn Greenwald plans to “force the issue” by returning to the United States despite the possibility that he may be arrested.

Recent comments by government officials have made the situation even more tenuous such as House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers who called Greenwald “a thief” who was “selling” national security secrets based on Greenwald’s freelance work. An accusation that came after Director of National Intelligence James Clapper referred to Greenwald and other journalists as “accomplices” of Snowden’s leaks.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 18:36:24 #76
339669 JerryWesterby
Keep rocking in the free world
pi_136446312
Maar leest iemand dit artikel? Of is het tijd om dit artikel te versnipperen.
The 'physical world' is a postulated explanatory framework which abstracts certain properties (physical properties) from our experience and thinks of them as objectively existing.
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 18:37:20 #77
339669 JerryWesterby
Keep rocking in the free world
pi_136446336
Oftewel, graag in je eigen woorden, met eventueel verwijzing naar het artikel.
The 'physical world' is a postulated explanatory framework which abstracts certain properties (physical properties) from our experience and thinks of them as objectively existing.
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 19:28:08 #78
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136448130
quote:
0s.gif Op vrijdag 7 februari 2014 18:37 schreef JerryWesterby het volgende:
Oftewel, graag in je eigen woorden, met eventueel verwijzing naar het artikel.
Nee, altijd verwijzing naar het artikel. En de quote lijkt mij verder voldoende.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 19:53:06 #79
339669 JerryWesterby
Keep rocking in the free world
pi_136449084
Nee, liever in je eigen woorden. Het is een forum, geen prikbord.
The 'physical world' is a postulated explanatory framework which abstracts certain properties (physical properties) from our experience and thinks of them as objectively existing.
pi_136449181
quote:
0s.gif Op vrijdag 7 februari 2014 19:53 schreef JerryWesterby het volgende:
Nee, liever in je eigen woorden. Het is een forum, geen prikbord.
ik lees liever gewoon het bronartikel, zijn eigen bewoordingen interesseren me niet.
dus goed bezig papierversnipperaar ^O^
blablablablablablablablablablablablablabla
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 20:08:03 #81
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136449590
quote:
0s.gif Op vrijdag 7 februari 2014 19:55 schreef Schunckelstar het volgende:

[..]

ik lees liever gewoon het bronartikel, zijn eigen bewoordingen interesseren me niet.
dus goed bezig papierversnipperaar ^O^
Dank u wel. O+

quote:
0s.gif Op vrijdag 7 februari 2014 18:36 schreef JerryWesterby het volgende:
Maar leest iemand dit artikel?
Je hebt antwoord op je vraag.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 20:16:05 #82
339669 JerryWesterby
Keep rocking in the free world
pi_136449793
Ja, het antwoord is Schunckelstar.
The 'physical world' is a postulated explanatory framework which abstracts certain properties (physical properties) from our experience and thinks of them as objectively existing.
  vrijdag 7 februari 2014 @ 20:23:07 #83
339669 JerryWesterby
Keep rocking in the free world
pi_136449974
Bedankt.
The 'physical world' is a postulated explanatory framework which abstracts certain properties (physical properties) from our experience and thinks of them as objectively existing.
pi_136496314
Wat een eikels zeg. In plaats van het afluisterprogramma af te bouwen, willen ze het juist uitbreiden.

http://www.nu.nl/tech/3696240/nsa-kan-bellen-niet-bijhouden.html

quote:
'NSA kan het bellen niet bijhouden'

De Amerikaanse geheime dienst NSA verzamelt lang niet alle telefoongegevens in de Verenigde Staten, zoals wordt gedacht. De dienst kan de explosieve stijging van het aantal mobiele gesprekken namelijk niet bijhouden.

Foto: Getty

Dat meldt de Washington Post vrijdag.

De NSA zou minder dan 30 procent van de telefoontjes registreren, aldus huidige en vroegere functionarissen. Het nieuws slaat een behoorlijk hiaat in de algemene opvatting dat de NSA vrijwel al het binnenlandse telefoonverkeer in Amerika bijhoudt.

Tegelijkertijd rijst in de VS de vraag of het programma van de NSA wel goed genoeg is en of er geen belangrijke gegevens gemist worden in de strijd tegen terrorisme.

In 2006 verzamelde de NSA volgens de berichten nog bijna al het telefoonverkeer in de VS. Afgelopen zomer was dat gezakt naar minder dan een derde. De VS neemt maatregelen om de NSA weer naar het oude niveau te helpen.
  maandag 10 februari 2014 @ 16:29:34 #85
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136552977
Glenn Greenwald heeft zijn nieuwe project in de lucht:

quote:
quote:
The National Security Agency is using complex analysis of electronic surveillance, rather than human intelligence, as the primary method to locate targets for lethal drone strikes an unreliable tactic that results in the deaths of innocent or unidentified people.
en dan krijg je daar achteraan:

quote:
Boehoehoe we willen meer bevoegdheden. :'(
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 11 februari 2014 @ 17:49:27 #86
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136594158
quote:
quote:
Jacob Appelbaum is one of the leading US computer security activists and, along with Laura Poitras, a confidant of former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. DW spoke to Appelbaum about the NSA and living in exile.
quote:
I feel like a human being in exile. But I don't wear that on my sleeve as a victim, I'm just tired of it. You know, detained at airports, having my property stolen, stuff like that and I thought, well, maybe I should live in Europe for a while.
Al die Amerikanen in ballingschap: Glenn Greenwald, Snowden, Applebaum. Al die buitenlanders die niet naar Amerika durven: Assange, Birgitta Jónsdóttir, Rob Gongrijp.

Land of the Free. :')

[ Bericht 36% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 11-02-2014 18:00:41 ]
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 11 februari 2014 @ 18:20:15 #87
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136595114
quote:
quote:
About a year ago, Lissounov joined a hackathon sponsored by his employer, BitTorrent Inc., a company that seeks to transform the peer-to-peer protocol into a legitimate means of file-sharing for both consumers and businesses, and in a matter of hours, he slapped together a new BitTorrent tool that let him quickly and easily send encrypted photos of his three children across dodgy Eastern European network lines to the rest of his family. The tool won first prize at the hackathon, and within a few more months, after Lissounov honed the tool alongside various other engineers, the company delivered BitTorrent Sync, a Dropbox-like service that lets you seamlessly synchronize files across computers and mobile devices.

The difference is that, thanks to the BitTorrent protocol, which connects machines without the help of a central server, the service isn’t controlled by Dropbox or any other organization, including BitTorrent itself. This means it could be less vulnerable to surveillance by the NSA and other government organizations, and that seems to have struck a chord with many people across the net. Each month, according to BitTorrent, about 2 million people now use Sync, including not only individuals but businesses looking for simpler, safer, and more secure ways of sharing data across systems. “It immediately proved magical,” says BitTorrent CEO Eric Klinker.

Klinker believes his ten-year-old company’s fortunes are closely tied to this new tool. But beyond that, Sync is part of a larger trend towards internet services that are operated not by a central commercial company, but by independent machines spread across the internet. This includes everything from the bitcoin digital currency to open source tools that seek to replace social networking services like Twitter. They all do very different things, but the common denominator is that they put more control in the hands of the people — and less in the hands of corporations and governments.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136601774
quote:
7s.gif Op maandag 10 februari 2014 16:29 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
Glenn Greenwald heeft zijn nieuwe project in de lucht:

[..]

[..]

en dan krijg je daar achteraan:

[..]

Boehoehoe we willen meer bevoegdheden. :'(
The view from nowhere.
  woensdag 12 februari 2014 @ 15:48:20 #89
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136628320
quote:
quote:
The European parliament is to ditch demands on Wednesday that EU governments give guarantees of asylum and security to Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency whistleblower.

The parliament's civil liberties committee is to vote on more than 500 amendments to the first ever parliamentary inquiry into the NSA and GCHQ scandal, a 60-page report that is damning about the scale and the impact of mass surveillance.

But there is no consensus on an amendment proposed by the Greens calling on EU governments to assure Snowden of his safety in the event that he emerges from hiding in Russia and comes to Europe.

Amid what key MEPs have described as intense pressure from national governments on parliament – from the Conservatives and their allies, from the mainstream centre-right and from social democrats – the asylum call has no chance of passing.

"The amendment asking for asylum won't go through," said Claude Moraes, the British Labour MEP who is the principal author of the report. "That was a red line for the right. There was never going to be a realistic majority for that."

The proposed change to the report would have read: "[Parliament] calls on EU member states to drop criminal charges, if any, against Edward Snowden and to offer him protection from prosecution, extradition or rendition by third parties, in recognition of his status as whistleblower and international human rights defender."

Instead the report will call for international protection for whistleblowers without mentioning Snowden by name. Another amendment calling on the Americans not to prosecute Snowden is also unlikely to be adopted, parliamentary sources said.

"The only reason for this whole thing is Snowden and now he doesn't get mentioned. It's ridiculous," said Jan-Philip Albrecht, a German Green and co-author of the amendment.

The failure to make Snowden-specific demands comes amid wrangling over whether the whistleblower will and should be able to testify to the committee.

His lawyers told leading MEPs last week that he was prepared to testify via video from Moscow and questions have been sent to him. While the Conservatives opposed allowing him to testify on the NSA furore, parliamentary leaders have backed the idea by a majority.

But they are still arguing over the format of the testimony - whether live or pre-recorded video or in written answers to submitted questions. They are to meet next week to try to settle the issue.

The Americans are strongly opposed to Snowden testifying and MEPs say there has been enormous pressure from EU governments on the parliament to drop or dilute the report, which is to go before the full chamber in March.

"There has been a huge amount of pressure in the past few weeks," said Moraes. "From the member states. Most have not been friendly. They regard all this as a national competence and nothing to do with us."
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 12 februari 2014 @ 17:50:01 #90
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136634055
quote:
quote:
The logic of the Utah campaign is straightforward. Running the data center requires a lot of water – some 1.7m gallons daily, the activists estimate – to cool the anticipated 100,000 square feet of powerful computers and support equipment the NSA needs for storing a tremendous amount of data. The Wall Street Journal estimated this to be in the range of exabytes or even zettabytes (an exabyte is a billion gigabytes.)

Making it illegal to supply the water will cripple the data center, already beset with electrical problems, before it opens and complicate the NSA’s plans for expanding its storage capacity. For an agency that hoovers up a wide swath of the data communicated across the internet, not to mention the phone records of Americans that it can store for up to five years, it’s a problem.

But Utah is only the latest of about a dozen states to consider measures designed to restrict the NSA’s activities.

In the NSA’s home state of Maryland, eight lawmakers are backing a bill to stymie the provision of water and electricity to the agency’s Fort Meade headquarters. A similar measure, based off an initiative Maherrey’s organization calls the 4th Amendment Protection Act, has been introduced in California, Arizona, Oklahoma, Indiana, Mississippi, Washington state and Vermont.

“The provision of resources like water and electricity is a no-brainer in a state’s plenary authority,” said Buttar.

Four other states – Kansas, New Hampshire, Alaska and Missouri – are considering a related measure to prevent the sharing of NSA-derived data without a warrant.

The campaign faces unfavorable odds. The 4th Amendment Protection Act in Mississippi was referred to the state senate rules committee on 20 January, where it died on 4 February.

“I know it’s not going to pass in every state,” Maharrey said. But in Utah particularly, “we’re going to push it as hard as we can.”
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 13 februari 2014 @ 09:38:28 #91
38496 Perrin
Toekomst. Made in Europe.
pi_136654472
quote:
Republikein klaagt Obama aan wegens spionage NSA

De Republikeinse senator Rand Paul sleept de Amerikaanse president Barack Obama en enkele nationale veiligheidsfunctionarissen voor de rechter in een zogenaamde 'class action' zaak. Paul wil zo een einde maken aan de afluisterpraktijken van de spionagedienst NSA.

'Al te lang zijn Amerikanen bereid hun burgerlijke vrijheden opzij te schuiven in naam van de nationale veiligheid', stelt FreedomWorks. 'Ondanks herhaaldelijke verzoeken is de NSA nog niet in staat geweest enig bewijs te leveren dat de telefoongegevens nuttig geweest zijn om terroristische aanslagen te detecteren of voorkomen.'
Vóór het internet dacht men dat de oorzaak van domheid een gebrek aan toegang tot informatie was. Inmiddels weten we beter.
  vrijdag 14 februari 2014 @ 09:19:09 #92
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136693821
quote:
quote:
A number of media organizations have published stories based on a leaked National Security Agency memo that suggests NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden “swiped” the password of a co-worker, a civilian NSA employee, who has been forced to resign for sharing his password. The forced resignation by the civilian NSA employee is being reported as part of disciplining people for allowing breaches of security to happen, not as a part of the NSA’s effort to find people to take the fall for something the agency did not prevent from happening.

The memo, obtained and published by NBC News—and dated February 10, 2014, three days ago—provides an update to members of Congress of the House Judiciary Committee on “steps that the National Security Agency (NSA) has taken to assign accountability related to the unauthorized disclosure of classified information by former contractor Edward Snowden.”

“Three NSA affiliates have been implicated in this matter: an NSA civilian employee, an active duty military member and a contractor. The civilian employee recently resigned from employment at NSA,” the memo reports.

It adds, “On June 18, 2013, the NSA civilian admitted to FBI Special Agents that he allowed Mr. Snowden to use his (the NSA civilian’s) Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) certificate to access classified information on NSANet; access that he knew had been denied to Mr. Snowden. Further, at Mr. Snowden’s request, the civilian entered his PKI password at Mr. Snowden’s computer terminal. Unbeknownst to the civilian, Mr. Snowden was able to capture the password, allowing him even greater access to classified information. The civilian was not aware the Mr. Snowden intended to unlawfully disclose classified information. However, by sharing his PKI certificate, he failed to comply with security obligations.”

Notice what is not included in that description: when this password “swiping” occurred, whether Snowden actually needed to have the PKI to complete a task assigned to him, whether the employee typed the password in himself or actually wrote it down and handed it to him and whether this conduct would have actually been suspicious in the NSA whenever it took place.

NBC News clarifies the content of the memo with the phrase, “while the memo’s account is sketchy.” Yet, despite its “sketchiness,” NBC News published the report and presented it in a way that reinforces the narrative that Snowden did not blow the whistle and had accomplices to commit his dastardly deed.

The memo states the civilian employee was forced to resign on January 10, 2014. An active military member and contractor lost their access to NSA information and spaces in August 2013. However, there is virtually no evidence in this memo that these people being held responsible for the NSA actually had any role in helping Snowden.

Kirk Wiebe, a former NSA employee and whistleblower, suggested, “Such an act would not have been a reason for “firing” an NSA IT [information technology] guy 10 years ago, or even before the Snowden revelations in my opinion.”

“Part of the reason for tolerating such behavior before the Snowden leaks is that NSA does not have enterprise IT support. In other words, standards that make supporting NSA IT infrastructure – including data management – easy.”

The NSA does not really know the extent of what Snowden took and how he really did it. The forced resignation of this civilian employee and the decision to strip three people of their security clearances is reflective of an agency floundering in the aftermath of one of the most massive security breaches in its history.

The contact Snowden had with these employees are data points in the time Snowden worked for the agency. The confirmation bias of NSA leaders has driven them to take those data points and create causal relationships between events that took place. They decided that the civilian employee, wittingly or unwittingly, is a part of a conspiracy by Snowden because being victim of a conspiracy makes them look better than being a victim of an independent whistleblower.

Thomas Drake, a former NSA employee and whistleblower prosecuted by the administration of President Barack Obama for his act of trying to inform the public, recalled, “I had people pressured by NSA into making up stuff (including statements) about me and my character and obtaining information as well as purloining and stealing documents from NSA for the purposes of disclosing them to people”—reporters—”not authorized to receive them.” But, like Snowden, “I acted alone without any ‘help.’”

“NSA is simply choosing to believe that Snowden did not act alone. They are demonstrating something called confirmation bias.” They are looking for and manufacturing evidence to “prove” their allegations.” Or, by the simple act of forcing people out of the agency, they are creating the perception that those people played a role in Snowden’s act.

Even though unidentified FBI agents from the Washington field office, leading the investigation into Snowden, told the New York Times in December they believe Snowden “methodically downloaded the files over several months while working as a government contractor at the Hawaii facility” and “worked alone,” the story that Snowden did not do this by himself has continued to surface in the media without being appropriately questioned. (The Times did note again in January it was still the FBI’s conclusion Snowden acted alone.)

Though NBC News fails to make the connection, this civilian employee may be what House Intelligence Committee chairman was referring to when he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” some of what he had done was “beyond his technical capabilities.” And, “He had some help and he stole things that had nothing to do with privacy.”

“Some help” could be limited to the civilian NSA employee sharing the password that is mentioned in the memo. The phrase “beyond his technical capabilities” may be a way of saying he was not cleared for access in this instance and had to ask for a password to gain access to NSANet. Of course, the innuendo used by Rogers is much more effective in making Americans fear what Snowden did was malicious, especially since Rogers wants people to believe he did this with assistance from Russian foreign intelligence.
quote:
As another whistleblower and former whistleblower William Binney explained to Firedoglake in December, NSA never developed and implemented technology in order to have the capabilities to track activities by employees on the agencys systems. The reason was because of two groups of people: analysts and management.

The analysts realized that what that would be doing is monitoring everything they did and assessing what they were doing. They objected. They didnt want to be monitored and have their privacy violated.

Management resisted because it meant one would be able to assess returns on all the programs around the world. It would be possible to lay out all the programs in the world and map [them] against the spending and the return on investment.

It meant the agency would be exposed to Congress for auditing, Binney added. Management, those leading the NSA, did not want that.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 16 februari 2014 @ 00:15:30 #93
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136758248
The Washington Post:

quote:
quote:
Private contractors play a huge role in the government, particularly in civilian intelligence services like the CIA. Contracting critics say it's an addiction whose overhead costs drive up the federal budget and leads to data breaches like the kind perpetrated by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

In the wake of last year's NSA revelations, many agencies have been reviewing their contracting policies. But few people have a good grasp on just how many contractors the government employs. What's worse, the country's eight civilian intelligence agencies often can't sufficiently explain what they use those contractors for, according to a Government Accountability Office report.


[ Bericht 0% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 16-02-2014 00:24:25 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 16 februari 2014 @ 14:18:54 #94
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136769818
Duitsland slaat terug:

quote:
quote:
Spione aus dem Westen sollen es auf deutschem Boden künftig schwerer haben: Die Bundesregierung erwägt, die Tätigkeit westlicher Geheimdienste in Deutschland durch eigene Agenten beobachten zu lassen. Nach SPIEGEL-Informationen gibt es neun Monate nach Beginn der NSA-Affäre im Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz bereits Pläne, die Abteilung Spionageabwehr massiv auszubauen und etwa die Botschaften von Partnerländern wie den USA und Großbritannien einer "Sockelbeobachtung" zu unterziehen.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 17 februari 2014 @ 01:21:58 #95
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136800094
quote:
quote:
A lawyer who represents National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden and has spoken on his behalf numerous times was detained while going through customs at Heathrow airport in London.

Jesselyn Radack told Firedoglake she was directed to a specific Heathrow Border Force agent. He “didn’t seem interested” in her passport. She was then subjected to “very hostile questioning.”

As Radack recalled, she was asked why she was here. “To see friends,” she answered. “Who will you be seeing?” She answered, “A group called Sam Adams Associates.”
quote:
Her interrogation by a Border Force agent comes just after The New York Times reported, based off a document from Snowden, that NSA ally, Australia, has used the Australian Signals Directorate to spy on American lawyers.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 17 februari 2014 @ 17:54:16 #96
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136819211
quote:
quote:
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hoyt Sparks says he has no use for liberal Democrats and their "socialistic, Marxist, communist" ways.

Toni Lewis suspects tea party Republicans are "a bunch of people who probably need some mental health treatment."

Politically speaking, the tea-party supporter in rural North Carolina and the Massachusetts liberal live a world apart.

Who or what could get them thinking the same?

Edward Snowden and the National Security Agency.
quote:
Why does the NSA unite the right and left ends of the political spectrum?

"More extreme political views lead to more distrust of government," said George Mason University law professor Ilya Somin, who's studied the tea party's focus on the Constitution. People at the far ends of the political spectrum are less likely than middle-of-the-road voters to feel government is responsive to them.

On the flip side, Somin said, moderates generally don't follow politics as closely as people at the extremes, so they may be less aware of the scope of the NSA's activities.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 18 februari 2014 @ 09:57:43 #97
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136839271
quote:
quote:
Top-secret documents from the National Security Agency and its British counterpart reveal for the first time how the governments of the United States and the United Kingdom targeted WikiLeaks and other activist groups with tactics ranging from covert surveillance to prosecution.

The efforts – detailed in documents provided previously by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden – included a broad campaign of international pressure aimed not only at WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, but at what the U.S. government calls “the human network that supports WikiLeaks.” The documents also contain internal discussions about targeting the file-sharing site Pirate Bay and hacktivist collectives such as Anonymous.

One classified document from Government Communications Headquarters, Britain’s top spy agency, shows that GCHQ used its surveillance system to secretly monitor visitors to a WikiLeaks site. By exploiting its ability to tap into the fiber-optic cables that make up the backbone of the Internet, the agency confided to allies in 2012, it was able to collect the IP addresses of visitors in real time, as well as the search terms that visitors used to reach the site from search engines like Google.

Another classified document from the U.S. intelligence community, dated August 2010, recounts how the Obama administration urged foreign allies to file criminal charges against Assange over the group’s publication of the Afghanistan war logs.

A third document, from July 2011, contains a summary of an internal discussion in which officials from two NSA offices – including the agency’s general counsel and an arm of its Threat Operations Center – considered designating WikiLeaks as “a ‘malicious foreign actor’ for the purpose of targeting.” Such a designation would have allowed the group to be targeted with extensive electronic surveillance – without the need to exclude U.S. persons from the surveillance searches.

In 2008, not long after WikiLeaks was formed, the U.S. Army prepared a report that identified the organization as an enemy, and plotted how it could be destroyed. The new documents provide a window into how the U.S. and British governments appear to have shared the view that WikiLeaks represented a serious threat, and reveal the controversial measures they were willing to take to combat it.

In a statement to The Intercept, Assange condemned what he called “the reckless and unlawful behavior of the National Security Agency” and GCHQ’s “extensive hostile monitoring of a popular publisher’s website and its readers.”

“News that the NSA planned these operations at the level of its Office of the General Counsel is especially troubling,” Assange said. “Today, we call on the White House to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the extent of the NSA’s criminal activity against the media, including WikiLeaks, its staff, its associates and its supporters.”

Illustrating how far afield the NSA deviates from its self-proclaimed focus on terrorism and national security, the documents reveal that the agency considered using its sweeping surveillance system against Pirate Bay, which has been accused of facilitating copyright violations. The agency also approved surveillance of the foreign “branches” of hacktivist groups, mentioning Anonymous by name.

The documents call into question the Obama administration’s repeated insistence that U.S. citizens are not being caught up in the sweeping surveillance dragnet being cast by the NSA. Under the broad rationale considered by the agency, for example, any communication with a group designated as a “malicious foreign actor,” such as WikiLeaks and Anonymous, would be considered fair game for surveillance.

Julian Sanchez, a research fellow at the Cato Institute who specializes in surveillance issues, says the revelations shed a disturbing light on the NSA’s willingness to sweep up American citizens in its surveillance net.

“All the reassurances Americans heard that the broad authorities of the FISA Amendments Act could only be used to ‘target’ foreigners seem a bit more hollow,” Sanchez says, “when you realize that the ‘foreign target’ can be an entire Web site or online forum used by thousands if not millions of Americans.”
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 18 februari 2014 @ 14:12:54 #98
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136848652
quote:
quote:
Oppositiebronnen benadrukken tegenover NRC dat het politieke belang van de informatie in hun ogen op 12 december niet duidelijk was.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 18 februari 2014 @ 14:26:42 #99
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_136849137
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 18 februari 2014 14:12 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

[..]

En dat moet de regering controleren, wat een prutsers
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
  dinsdag 18 februari 2014 @ 15:44:48 #100
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136852447
James Flapper :')

http://www.theguardian.co(...)ulk-phone-collection

quote:
Clapper said that the controversy would not have occurred had the security apparatus been more open before. “I probably shouldn’t say this, but I will. Had we been transparent about this from the outset right after 9/11 – which is the genesis of the 215 program – and said both to the American people and to their elected representatives, we need to cover this gap, we need to make sure this never happens to us again, so here is what we are going to set up, here is how it’s going to work, and why we have to do it, and here are the safeguards … We wouldn’t have had the problem we had.”

His admission contradicts months of warnings, from his office and from elsewhere in the administration, that disclosure of the bulk data collection jeopardized US national security.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136858945
Mischien kennen jullie em al. Zoniet. Ik vond em wel leuk

pi_136879713
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 18 februari 2014 09:57 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
One classified document from Government Communications Headquarters, Britain’s top spy agency, shows that GCHQ used its surveillance system to secretly monitor visitors to a WikiLeaks site. By exploiting its ability to tap into the fiber-optic cables that make up the backbone of the Internet, the agency confided to allies in 2012, it was able to collect the IP addresses of visitors in real time, as well as the search terms that visitors used to reach the site from search engines like Google.
Dit is zuivere surveillance.
The view from nowhere.
  woensdag 19 februari 2014 @ 01:59:14 #103
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136880333
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 19 februari 2014 @ 22:42:07 #104
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136912245
quote:
David Miranda detention at Heathrow airport was lawful, high court rules

Detention of former Guardian journalist's partner was justified by 'very pressing' interests of national security, judges say

Three high court judges have dismissed a challenge that David Miranda, the partner of the former Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald, was unlawfully detained under counter-terrorism powers for nine hours at Heathrow airport last August.

The judges accepted that Miranda's detention and the seizure of computer material was "an indirect interference with press freedom" but said this was justified by legitimate and "very pressing" interests of national security.

The three judges, Lord Justice Laws, Mr Justice Ouseley and Mr Justice Openshaw, concluded that Miranda's detention at Heathrow under schedule 7 of the Terrorism 2000 Act was lawful, proportionate and did not breach European human rights protections of freedom of expression.

The ruling says that Miranda was stopped in transit between Berlin and Rio de Janeiro after meeting the film-maker Laura Poitras, who had been involved in making disclosures based on documents leaked by the US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.

Miranda was carrying encrypted files, including an external hard drive containing 58,000 highly classified UK intelligence documents, "in order to assist the journalistic activity of Greenwald". The Guardian made his travel reservations and paid for the trip.

Laws said he noted that the seized material included personal information that would allow staff to be identified, including those deployed overseas.

Greenwald told the judges that the security services were well aware that the seized material was in connection with journalism and not terrorism. He said there was no evidence to indicate that any disclosure had actually threatened or endangered life or any specific operation.

"In my view, this is not surprising, given the care we took not to create such a risk," Greenwald said in his witness statement. Miranda said the material was so heavily encrypted that he was unable to open it.

The judges dismissed Greenwald's claims, saying there was "no perceptible foundation" for the suggestion that they were not putting national security or lives at risk by possessing the material.

Laws accepted that agreeing not to publish material simply because a government official had said it might damage national security was antithetical to the most important traditions of responsible journalism, but said this was trivial compared with the threat to security.

He said that neither Greenwald nor Miranda was in a position to form an accurate judgment on the matter because they would depend on knowing the whole "jigsaw" of disparate pieces of intelligence.

Laws said he had no reason to doubt any of the evidence from Oliver Robbins, the deputy national security adviser at the Cabinet Office, that the material was likely to cause very great damage to security interests and possible loss of life.

"In my judgment, the schedule 7 stop was a proportionate measure in the circumstances. Its objective was not only legitimate but very pressing," he said.

Miranda said he would challenge the decision. "I will appeal [against] this ruling, and keep appealing until the end, not because I care about what the British government calls me, but because the values of press freedom that are at stake are too important to do anything but fight until the end," he told The Intercept website, which is edited by Greenwald. "I'm of course not happy that a court has formally said that I was a legitimate terrorism suspect, but the days of the British empire are long over and this ruling will have no effect outside of the borders of this country."

A Guardian News & Media spokesperson said: "We're disappointed by today's judgment, which means that an act designed to defeat terrorism can now be used to catch those who are working on fundamentally important issues. The judgment takes a narrow view of what 'journalism' is in the 21st century and a very wide view of the definition of 'terrorism'. We find that disturbing."

Miranda's solicitor, Gwendolen Morgan of Bindmans, said her client had no option but to take the case to the court of appeal as the ruling meant that journalism was at risk of being conflated with terrorism. The high court turned down a direct appeal, but Miranda has the right to petition the appeal court judges to hear the case.

The ruling was widely condemned by human rights groups, including Liberty, English Pen, Article 19, the Media Legal Defence Initiative, and the Coalition of Media and Free Speech Organisations, who actively intervened in the case, but Helen Ball, the Metropolitan police's national counter-terrorism co-ordinator,welcomed the ruling. She said Miranda's detention was lawful and undertaken for pressing reasons of national security. "Some commentators have characterised the stop as an attack on journalistic freedom. This was never the case. The judgment is a clear vindication of the officers' conduct, demonstrating that they acted lawfully and in good faith throughout," she said.

The ruling prompted strong criticism from some politicians. Former Conservative shadow home secretary, David Davis, said that when the counter-terrorism law was passed it was never thought that its powers would be used against journalists.

"There can be no suggestion that Mr Miranda was a terrorist or that he was seeking to abet terrorism, and it was for these purposes that this power was given to the politicians and the security agencies," he said.

Julian Huppert, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said the ruling showed schedule 7 was too broadly drafted. "We have already made some changes to the law which are about to take effect, but I think there is still more to do," he said.

The Tory MP Julian Smith, a strong critic of the Guardian, said: "This always seemed a bizarre complaint for Mr Miranda to have made since he was transporting such sensitive information about our national security. Let's hope the full truth about the risks to which he and the Guardian continue to expose the UK is now given the full focus it deserves. That is where there is a real legal case to be made."

Rosie Brighouse, Liberty's legal officer, said: "If such a barefaced abuse of power is lawful, then the law must change. Miranda's treatment showed schedule 7 for what it is: a chillingly over-broad power, routinely misused. People are held and interrogated for hours, their property confiscated while they're swabbed for saliva – all without any suspicion that they've done anything wrong."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 20 februari 2014 @ 15:35:48 #105
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136931392
quote:
On the UK’s Equating of Journalism With Terrorism

As my colleague Ryan Devereaux reports, a lower UK court this morning, as long expected, upheld the legality of the nine-hour detention of my partner, David Miranda, at Heathrow Airport last August, even as it acknowledged that the detention was “an indirect interference with press freedom”. For good measure, the court also refused permission to appeal (though permission can still be granted by the appellate court). David was detained and interrogated under the Terrorism Act of 2000.

The UK Government expressly argued that the release of the Snowden documents (which the free world calls “award-winning journalism“) is actually tantamount to “terrorism”, the same theory now being used by the Egyptian military regime to prosecute Al Jazeera journalists as terrorists. Congratulations to the UK government on the illustrious company it is once again keeping. British officials have also repeatedly threatened criminal prosecution of everyone involved in this reporting, including Guardian journalists and editors.

Equating journalism with terrorism has a long and storied tradition. Indeed, as Jon Schwarz has documented, the U.S. Government has frequently denounced nations for doing exactly this. Just last April, Under Secretary of State Tara Sonenshine dramatically informed the public that many repressive, terrible nations actually “misuse terrorism laws to prosecute and imprison journalists.” When visiting Ethiopia in 2012, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State William Burns publicly disclosed that in meetings with that nation’s officials, the United States “express[ed] our concern that the application of anti-terrorism laws can sometimes undermine freedom of expression and independent media.” The same year, the State Department reported that Burundi was prosecuting a journalist under terrorism laws.

It should surprise nobody that the UK is not merely included in, but is one of the leaders of, this group of nations which regularly wages war on basic press freedoms. In the 1970s, British journalist Duncan Campbell was criminally prosecuted for the crime of reporting on the mere existence of the GCHQ, while fellow journalist Mark Hosenball, now of Reuters, was forced to leave the country. The monarchy has no constitutional guarantee of a free press. The UK government routinely threatens newspapers with all sorts of sanctions for national security reporting it dislikes. Its Official Secrets Act makes it incredibly easy to prosecute journalists and others for disclosing anything which political officials want to keep secret. For that reason, it was able to force the Guardian to destroy its own computers containing Snowden material precisely because the paper’s editors knew that British courts would slavishly defer to any requests made by the GCHQ to shut down the paper’s reporting.

That such repressive measures come from British political culture is to be expected. The political elite of that country cling desperately to 17th century feudal traditions. Grown adults who have been elected or appointed to nothing run around with a straight face insisting that they be called “Lord” and “Baroness” and other grandiose hereditary titles of the landed gentry. They bow and curtsey to a “Queen”, who lives in a “palace”, and they call her sons “Prince”. They embrace a wide range of conceits and rituals of a long-ago collapsed empire. The wig-wearing presiding judge who issued this morning’s ruling equating journalism with terrorism is addressed as “Lord Justice Laws”, best known for previously approving the use of evidence to detain people that had been derived from torture at Guantanamo (he can be seen here).

None of this behavior bears any relationship to actual reality: it’s as though the elite political class of an entire nation somehow got stuck in an adolescent medieval fantasy game. But the political principles of monarchy, hereditary privilege, rigid class stratification, and feudal entitlement embedded in all of this play-acting clearly shape the repressive mentality and reverence for state authority which Her Majesty’s Government produces. That journalism disliked by the state can be actually deemed not just a crime but “terrorism” seems a natural by-product of this type of warped elite mindset, as does the fact that much of the British press led the way in demanding that the Guardian’s journalism be criminalized (not unlike how many members of the American media have become the most devoted defenders of the NSA and have taken the lead in demonizing the journalistic transparency brought to that and other government agencies).

As we made clear long ago, the obvious objective of these attacks – to intimidate the journalists working on this story and deter future disclosures – will remain completely unfulfilled. Since David’s detention and the compelled destruction of the Guardian’s computers, there have been a spate of top secret GCHQ documents reported on and published around the world: many of which, to its credit, have been published by the Guardian itself.

They include detailed reports on GCHQ’s attempts to compromise basic encryption methods used to safeguard internet security, the GCHQ’s role in spying on the Brazilian oil company Petrobras, the GCHQ’s targeting of UN charities and officials, the GCHQ’s use of “dirty tricks” including “honey traps” and fake victim blog posts, the GCHQ’s attacks on “hactivists”, GCHQ’s surveillance of YouTube and Blogger activity and related activities to covertly influence internet discourse, GCHQ’s surveillance through phone apps such as “Angry Birds”, and – just yesterday – GCHQ’s covert monitoring of visitors to the WikiLeaks website. Needless to say, there is much more GCHQ reporting to do, and nothing about today’s ruling – or anything else the UK Government can do – will stop that.

It is not difficult to apprehend the reason the UK government is so desperate to criminalize this reporting. The GCHQ itself made the reason clear in a once-secret memo previously reported by the Guardian. The British agency “has repeatedly warned it fears a ‘damaging public debate’ on the scale of its activities because it could lead to legal challenges against its mass-surveillance programmes.” Among other things, “GCHQ feared a legal challenge under the right to privacy in the Human Rights Act if evidence of its surveillance methods became admissible in court.” In particular, the spying agency feared that disclosures “could lead to damaging public debate which might lead to legal challenges against the current regime.” Privacy groups have now commenced such lawsuits against the GCHQ.

In sum, the UK Government wants to stop disclosure of its mass surveillance activities not because it fears terrorism or harm to national security but because it fears public debate, legal challenges and accountability. That is why the UK government considers this journalism to be “terrorism”: because it undermines the interests and power of British political officials, not the safety of the citizenry. I’ve spent years arguing that the word “terrorism” in the hands of western governments has been deprived of all consistent meaning other than “that which challenges our interests”, and I never imagined that we would be gifted with such a perfectly compelling example of this proposition.

As David told The Intercept this morning, he intends to appeal this ruling, and to keep appealing it, until the end if necessary – up to the highest UK court and then to the European Court of Human Rights – not because he cares what the British Government calls him, but because of the press freedoms at stake. But whatever the outcome, the reporting will continue as aggressively as ever no matter how many threats are made by the British (or American) governments to prosecute.
er staat een update op de site.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_136940519
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 18 februari 2014 17:28 schreef Tamabralski het volgende:
Mischien kennen jullie em al. Zoniet. Ik vond em wel leuk

Nja. De open source community kan gelukkig alles inzien.
  donderdag 20 februari 2014 @ 22:58:46 #107
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_136953792
quote:
Unnamed Officials Tell Wall Street Journal They May Keep More Data Because of NSA Lawsuits

Unnamed United States government officials have apparently told the Wall Street Journal that the National Security Agency might have to expand its “collection” of Americans’ phone records because people are suing the government to stop what they consider to be intrusive and unconstitutional surveillance.

This idea being floated in a major national newspaper is the first that any lawyer involved in cases against the government have heard this wild argument. Is it some kind of ham-handed attempt to help the NSA retain control of the phone records?

What government lawyers happen to believe, suddenly, is that federal court rules for preserving evidence “related to lawsuits require the agency to stop routinely destroying older phone records.” So, in theory, they should store more data on Americans while lawsuits are pending because they can’t destroy “evidence.”

Cindy Cohn, legal director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which has filed a lawsuit over the phone records collection program under the PATRIOT Act, questioned why the government was just now “considering this move.” EFF has had a lawsuit over NSA surveillance since 2008. “I think they’re looking for any way to throw rocks at the litigation…To the extent this is a serious concern, we should have had this discussion in 2008,” Cohn added.

What Patrick Toomey, an ACLU lawyer involved in also suing the government over the program, said is “it’s difficult to understand why the government would consider taking this position, when the relief we’ve requested in the lawsuit is a purge of our data.”

The EFF lawsuits involves a coalition of organizations, which allege the NSA is violating their First Amendment right of association by “illegally collecting their call records.”

In that case, the government has argued plaintiffs do not have “standing” for the suit. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court considers the collection to be “lawful.” The Court has never decided that collection violates the Fourth Amendment, and the plaintiffs are not entitled to details of “intelligence-gathering activities that could undermine the government’s compelling interest in preventing terrorist attacks.”

The government has also called allegations that calls could be “used to glean the identities” of associations’ members, constituents and others who wish to associate an allegation that is “attributable to misperceptions and conjecture about the government’s activities, but not one fairly traceable to the government’s actual conduct.”

In the ACLU lawsuit, the government has made similar arguments. It has argued, “Even if the government’s conduct implicated a protected Fourth Amendment interest, the bulk collection of telephony metadata would be ‘reasonable’ and permissible in light of the strong national interest in preventing terrorist attacks, and the minimal intrusion on individual privacy.”

A federal judge in December 2013 defended the government’s interest in maintaining secrecy and dismissed the ACLU’s lawsuit. The ACLU has now appealed.

Recently, Sen. Rand Paul filed a lawsuit against the government. Lawyer in the case, former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, said what the government is suggesting it may do is “just silly.” He even said he thought destroying phone records the government had “without demanding those records in pretrial discovery” would be acceptable to his clients.

Federal judge Richard Leon ruled, also in December, that the program did, in fact, infringe upon privacy and was “likely unconstitutional.” That case was brought by Larry Klayman of Judicial Watch. The government has appealed the decision.

Why the government would need to make this argument now is very unclear and seems ill-conceived, but journalist Marcy Wheeler points out that the government has made this argument before to the FISA Court.

EFF has another lawsuit filed in 2008 to “stop the warrantless wiretapping and hold the government and government officials behind the program accountable. A federal judge actually ruled in July 2013 that the government could not use the “state secrets privilege” to block a challenge to the constitutionality of the program. (It’s what Cohn is probably referring to in her comments to WSJ.)

Wheeler asks, “If the NSA is so cautious about retaining evidence in case of a potential crime, then why did it just blast away the 3,000 files of phone dragnet information they found stashed on a random server, which may or may not have been mingled in with STELLAR WIND data it found in 2012?”

The Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board described the data and its destruction like this:

. In one incident, NSA technical personnel discovered a technical server with nearly 3,000 files containing call detail records that were more than five years old, but that had not been destroyed in accordance with the applicable retention rules. These files were among those used in connection with a migration of call detail records to a new system. Because a single file may contain more than one call detail record, and because the files were promptly destroyed by agency technical personnel, the NSA could not provide an estimate regarding the volume of calling records that were retained beyond the five-year limit.

This seems like “evidence” the government lawyers would want to protect for lawsuits like the one being brought by EFF. But, as Wheeler notes, this evidence of illegal surveillance is “all gone.”

Perhaps, the appropriate response from EFF and the ACLU is to go to court and express concern that the government has, up until this point, not been preserving evidence of possible illegal or unconstitutional surveillance in this program.

What else have technical personnel discovered and deleted that is relevant to pending lawsuits, which aim to protect Americans’ privacy?
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 23 februari 2014 @ 15:21:32 #108
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137050065
quote:
'NSA luistert nu Duitse ministers af'

De Amerikaanse inlichtingendienst NSA luistert de Duitse bondskanselier Angela Merkel niet langer af, maar houdt ambtenaren en politici uit haar omgeving scherper in de gaten. Dat schrijft het Duitse zondagsblad Bild am Sonntag, dat bekendstaat om zijn goede contacten met de Duitse inlichtingendienst.

De Duitsers waren vorig jaar geschokt door de onthulling dat de NSA in Duitsland zeer actief was en zelfs de mobiele telefoon van Merkel afluisterde. President Barack Obama beloofde dat de Amerikaanse inlichtingendienst Merkel niet meer zou bespioneren, maar volgens het zondagsblad is nu onder anderen minister Thomas de Maizière van Binnenlandse Zaken een doelwit. Hij is een van de belangrijkste vertrouwelingen van de bondskanselier.

'Wij hebben de opdracht geen verlies aan informatie toe te staan, nu de communicatie van de bondskanselier niet meer direct mag worden gecontroleerd', zei een anonieme NSA-medewerker tegen Bild am Sonntag. Het Duitse ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken wilde niet op het bericht reageren. 'Wij geven nooit commentaar op wat 'anonieme individuen beweren', werd daar gezegd.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_137052163
Het loopt echt helemaal uit de hand.... "Wij hebben de opdracht geen verlies aan informatie toe te staan" ...
  maandag 24 februari 2014 @ 14:59:56 #110
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137091478
quote:
quote:
I’m going to have a story published later today about a new document, but until then, this new interview with (and profile of) Director of National Intelligence James Clapper by the Daily Beast‘s Eli Lake is worth spending a few moments examining. Last week, Lake published one excerpt of his interview where Clapper admitted that the U.S. Government should have told the American people that the NSA was collecting their communications records: as pure a vindication of Edward Snowden’s choice as it gets, for obvious reasons. But there are several new, noteworthy revelations from this morning’s article:
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 14:57:25 #111
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137126424
quote:
quote:
One of the many pressing stories that remains to be told from the Snowden archive is how western intelligence agencies are attempting to manipulate and control online discourse with extreme tactics of deception and reputation-destruction. It’s time to tell a chunk of that story, complete with the relevant documents.

Over the last several weeks, I worked with NBC News to publish a series of articles about “dirty trick” tactics used by GCHQ’s previously secret unit, JTRIG (Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group). These were based on four classified GCHQ documents presented to the NSA and the other three partners in the English-speaking “Five Eyes” alliance. Today, we at the Intercept are publishing another new JTRIG document, in full, entitled “The Art of Deception: Training for Online Covert Operations.”

By publishing these stories one by one, our NBC reporting highlighted some of the key, discrete revelations: the monitoring of YouTube and Blogger, the targeting of Anonymous with the very same DDoS attacks they accuse “hacktivists” of using, the use of “honey traps” (luring people into compromising situations using sex) and destructive viruses. But, here, I want to focus and elaborate on the overarching point revealed by all of these documents: namely, that these agencies are attempting to control, infiltrate, manipulate, and warp online discourse, and in doing so, are compromising the integrity of the internet itself.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 15:16:30 #112
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137127021
quote:
quote:
Four journalists who revealed the National Security Agency’s vast web of spying have been awarded the 2013 George Polk Awards in Journalism. Glenn Greenwald, Laura Poitras, Ewen MacAskill of The Guardian and Barton Gellman of The Washington Post were among the winners announced on Sunday. Even as the journalists who broke the stories based on Edward Snowden’s leaks were awarded one of journalism’s highest honors, a lawyer who represents Snowden was recently detained while going through customs at London’s Heathrow Airport. Jesselyn Radack joins us today to tell her story. Radack says she was subjected to "very hostile questioning" about Snowden and her trips to Russia. Radack also learned she might be on an "inhibited persons list," a designation reportedly used by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to require further vetting of certain passengers. Radack is just one of a growing number of people who are being stopped, harassed and interrogated for their work around Snowden, WikiLeaks and National Security Agency documents. Radack is the director of National Security & Human Rights at the Government Accountability Project, the nation’s leading whistleblower support organization.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 15:25:16 #113
358523 IkStampOpTacos
Tacostamper extraordinaire
pi_137127304
Wie hebben er een kopie / al die bestanden van Snowden nu dan? En waarom kwakken ze die hele mik niet gewoon online?
It's my life, it's now or never, I ain't gonna live forever.
-
Headstrong to take on anyone.
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 15:33:00 #114
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137127532
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 25 februari 2014 15:25 schreef IkStampOpTacos het volgende:
Wie hebben er een kopie / al die bestanden van Snowden nu dan? En waarom kwakken ze die hele mik niet gewoon online?
1 - Dat weet ik niet.
2 - Dat is niet wat journalisten doen. Ze geven duiding aan ruwe data. En in die ruwe data kunnen namen van mensen staan en die namen hoeven alleen gepubliceerd te worden als het gaat om Obama, Bush, Cheney of Beatrix.

Daarnaast geven ze zo de gelegenheid aan de regimes om zich dieper in de ellende te liegen.

"Document 1: Jullie luisteren af"
"Regering: Valt best mee"
"Document 2: Nee hoor."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 15:39:57 #115
358523 IkStampOpTacos
Tacostamper extraordinaire
pi_137127732
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 25 februari 2014 15:33 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

1 - Dat weet ik niet.
2 - Dat is niet wat journalisten doen. Ze geven duiding aan ruwe data. En in die ruwe data kunnen namen van mensen staan en die namen hoeven alleen gepubliceerd te worden als het gaat om Obama, Bush, Cheney of Beatrix.

Daarnaast geven ze zo de gelegenheid aan de regimes om zich dieper in de ellende te liegen.

"Document 1: Jullie luisteren af"
"Regering: Valt best mee"
"Document 2: Nee hoor."
Het gaat om duizenden bestanden, dan kunnen andere mensen daar toch ook duiding aan geven. Heb je niet alleen dat handjevol journalisten voor nodig die constant worden lastiggevallen door GCHQ zelf.

Wat is er precies erg aan dat instanties zich dieper in de ellende liegen?
It's my life, it's now or never, I ain't gonna live forever.
-
Headstrong to take on anyone.
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 15:43:20 #116
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137127842
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 25 februari 2014 15:39 schreef IkStampOpTacos het volgende:

[..]

Het gaat om duizenden bestanden, dan kunnen andere mensen daar toch ook duiding aan geven. Heb je niet alleen dat handjevol journalisten voor nodig die constant worden lastiggevallen door GCHQ zelf.
Het mooie is dat de NSA niet weet wat Snowden heeft meegenomen, en dus niet weet wat ze boven het hoofd hangt. Maar dat geheim moet je geheim houden en dat gaat niet als je de documenten uit deelt.
quote:
Wat is er precies erg aan dat instanties zich dieper in de ellende liegen?
Dat vind ik niet erg. ;)
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 15:47:30 #117
358523 IkStampOpTacos
Tacostamper extraordinaire
pi_137127942
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 25 februari 2014 15:43 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Het mooie is dat de NSA niet weet wat Snowden heeft meegenomen, en dus niet weet wat ze boven het hoofd hangt. Maar dat geheim moet je geheim houden en dat gaat niet als je de documenten uit deelt.

[..]

Dat vind ik niet erg. ;)
Oh op die fiets inderdaad. Nu snap ik dat 2e inderdaad ook, dat las ik anders.

Maar GCHQ hebben toch al eens ingevallen bij één van die nieuwsbedrijven en daar allerlei bestanden geconfisqueerd? Dan weten ze misschien ondertussen toch ook wel wat ze kunnen verwachten lijkt me.
It's my life, it's now or never, I ain't gonna live forever.
-
Headstrong to take on anyone.
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 15:50:13 #118
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137128037
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 25 februari 2014 15:47 schreef IkStampOpTacos het volgende:

[..]

Oh op die fiets inderdaad. Nu snap ik dat 2e inderdaad ook, dat las ik anders.

Maar GCHQ hebben toch al eens ingevallen bij één van die nieuwsbedrijven en daar allerlei bestanden geconfisqueerd? Dan weten ze misschien ondertussen toch ook wel wat ze kunnen verwachten lijkt me.
Ze wilden dolgraag de bestanden meenemen, maar dat wilde the Guardian natuurlijk niet. Na moeilijke onderhandelingen gingen ze er mee akkoord dat de journo's zelf de boel vernietigden. De Britten durfden het blijkbaar niet aan om de zooi gewoon in beslag te nemen.

Ik weet alleen niet of en wat ze hebben afgepakt van David Miranda.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 15:52:40 #119
358523 IkStampOpTacos
Tacostamper extraordinaire
pi_137128114
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 25 februari 2014 15:50 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Ze wilden dolgraag de bestanden meenemen, maar dat wilde the Guardian natuurlijk niet. Na moeilijke onderhandelingen gingen ze er mee akkoord dat de journo's zelf de boel vernietigden. De Britten durfden het blijkbaar niet aan om de zooi gewoon in beslag te nemen.

Ik weet alleen niet of en wat ze hebben afgepakt van David Miranda.
Waarschijnlijk kregen die diensten dan juridische problemen. Althans, dat mag ik toch hopen. :')

Niet dat vernietigen nut heeft. :')
It's my life, it's now or never, I ain't gonna live forever.
-
Headstrong to take on anyone.
pi_137134001
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 25 februari 2014 15:52 schreef IkStampOpTacos het volgende:

[..]

Waarschijnlijk kregen die diensten dan juridische problemen. Althans, dat mag ik toch hopen. :')

Niet dat vernietigen nut heeft. :')
Het was ook een symbolische actie, dat wisten ze wel... Maarja ze moesten toch een soort van statement maken.
  dinsdag 25 februari 2014 @ 19:10:55 #121
358523 IkStampOpTacos
Tacostamper extraordinaire
pi_137134021
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 25 februari 2014 19:10 schreef gebrokenglas het volgende:

[..]

Het was ook een symbolische actie, dat wisten ze wel... Maarja ze moesten toch een soort van statement maken.
Het enige statement wat je maakt is dat ze overduidelijk wat te verbergen hebben.
It's my life, it's now or never, I ain't gonna live forever.
-
Headstrong to take on anyone.
  woensdag 26 februari 2014 @ 12:49:36 #122
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137157021
Oorlog op Reddit: Het laatste artikel van Greenwald word door (bepaalde MOD's) constant weggegooid.

http://www.reddit.com/r/w(...)how_gchqnsa_use_the/

quote:
Why is this story being removed from all the popular subs over and over by mods?

Message the admins about the censorship of this article by /r/news and /r/worldnews mods. They have never seemed to care about this in the past but if enough users message them it will hopefully at least provoke a response of some kind. Something needs to be done about this or this site needs to be abandoned as a platform for legitimate political discourse.

Important Update: So, it turns out that the /r/news mod /u/BipolarBear0 who has been deleting all the instances of this story has previously been caught running a voting brigade to get anti-Semitic content upvoted on /r/conspiracy to discredit the sub. A fact which he admitted to me in another thread just a few minutes ago (he claims he was doing an "experiment"...) . This guy needs to be banned from the site.
quote:
This was all over the front page around 4am this morning. came back and really had to dig to find any mention of this story.

kind of alarming.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 27 februari 2014 @ 17:14:01 #123
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137205229
quote:
GCHQ intercepted webcam images of millions of Yahoo users worldwide

• Optic Nerve program collected Yahoo webcam images in bulk
• 1.8m users targeted by UK agency in six-month period alone
• Yahoo: 'A whole new level of violation of our users' privacy'
• Material included large quantity of sexually explicit images


Britain's surveillance agency GCHQ, with aid from the US National Security Agency, intercepted and stored the webcam images of millions of internet users not suspected of wrongdoing, secret documents reveal.

GCHQ files dating between 2008 and 2010 explicitly state that a surveillance program codenamed Optic Nerve collected still images of Yahoo webcam chats in bulk and saved them to agency databases, regardless of whether individual users were an intelligence target or not.

In one six-month period in 2008 alone, the agency collected webcam imagery – including substantial quantities of sexually explicit communications – from more than 1.8 million Yahoo user accounts globally.

Yahoo reacted furiously to the webcam interception when approached by the Guardian. The company denied any prior knowledge of the program, accusing the agencies of "a whole new level of violation of our users' privacy".

GCHQ does not have the technical means to make sure no images of UK or US citizens are collected and stored by the system, and there are no restrictions under UK law to prevent Americans' images being accessed by British analysts without an individual warrant.

The documents also chronicle GCHQ's sustained struggle to keep the large store of sexually explicit imagery collected by Optic Nerve away from the eyes of its staff, though there is little discussion about the privacy implications of storing this material in the first place.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 27 februari 2014 @ 17:19:20 #124
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137205420
quote:
A Key NSA Overseer's Alarming Dismissal of Surveillance Critics

The NSA's inspector general mischaracterized Edward Snowden's critique of the agency in remarks at Georgetown.

The National Security Agency's overseers have a spotty-at-best post-9/11 track record. The NSA carried out an illegal program of warrantless wiretapping during the Bush Administration. Even after the President's Surveillance Program was reformed, the agency built a surveillance dragnet that collected information on the private communications of millions of totally innocent Americans, a dramatic change in approach carried out without popular input or consent. And according to the FISA-court judges charged with overseeing the NSA—the very people who signed off on the phone dragnet, among other things—the agency has violated the Fourth Amendment and the law on at least thousands of occasions.

Some of those violations affected millions of people.

As well, insufficient operational security recently resulted in the theft of a still unknown number of highly classified documents by an employee of an NSA subcontractor. Civil libertarians and national-security statists alike have reason to be upset.

For all of these reasons, it must be a tough time to be George Ellard, the NSA's inspector general. The entity that he heads declares itself "the independent agent for individual and organizational integrity" within the NSA. "Through professional inspections, audits, and investigations," its website adds, "we work to ensure that the Agency respects Constitutional rights, obeys laws and regulations, treats its employees and affiliates fairly, and uses public resources wisely."

Since taking his post in 2007, Ellard has scarcely made a public statement. This week, however, he participated in a conference at Georgetown, and while efforts were reportedly made to keep his press exposure to a minimum, his remarks have been reported.

They're interesting—and do not inspire confidence. We begin with the account provided by Kevin Gosztola:

. Ellard was asked what he would have done if Snowden had come to him with complaints. Had this happened, Ellard says would have said something like, "Hey, listen, fifteen federal judges have certified this program is okay." (He was referring to the NSA phone records collection program.) "I would also have an independent obligation to assess the constitutionality of that law," Ellard stated. "Perhaps it’s the case that we could have shown, we could have explained to Mr. Snowden his misperceptions, his lack of understanding of what we do."

Even on their own, these comments are strange. Many aspects of the Section 215 phone dragnet are now public. Edward Snowden is on record with specific objections to them. The same goes for lots of other NSA initiatives: As they've been publicly fleshed out, Snowden has articulated why he believes the public ought to know about them. If Ellard understands what has transpired since last June, why is he speaking as if Snowden's leaks could've been averted if his supposed "misperceptions" had been corrected? That possibility isn't consistent with the facts. Knowing their actual nature, Snowden still thinks the programs should be public.

Misunderstanding Snowden so completely is strange. A subsequent statement is worrisome. It comes via Politico:

. “Perhaps it’s the case that we could have shown, we could have explained to Mr. Snowden his misperceptions, his lack of understanding of what we do,” Ellard said.

. And if Snowden wasn’t satisfied, Ellard said the NSA would have then allowed him to speak to the House and Senate intelligence committees. ”Given the reaction, I think somewhat feigned, of some members of that committee, he’d have found a welcoming audience,” Ellard said in a reference to outspoken NSA critics on the panel, including Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Mark Udall (D-Colo.).


It is difficult to know exactly what this means, but it certainly appears as if the inspector general of the NSA is questioning whether the Senate Intelligence Committee members expressing alarm at surveillance practices are actually earnest.

The Politico article continues:

. “Whether in the end he’d have been satisfied, I don’t know,” Ellard added. “But allowing people who have taken an oath to protect the constitution, to protect these national security interest, simply to violate or break that oath, is unacceptable.”

It's worth mentioning that Snowden never took an oath to protect national-security interests. As a CIA employee, he did take an oath to protect and defend the Constitution. Many Americans, myself included, believe that Snowden upheld his oath when he alerted the public to mass surveillance, Fourth Amendment violations, and thousands of instances of NSA lawbreaking. Other Americans believe that he violated his oath by leaking classified information to the press.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_137211798
quote:
7s.gif Op donderdag 27 februari 2014 17:14 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Het artikel gaat verder.
Ik las het. Echt belachelijk.
  donderdag 27 februari 2014 @ 23:54:46 #126
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137225234
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 28 februari 2014 @ 14:26:28 #127
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137238150
quote:
Why Reddit mods are 'censoring' Greenwald's latest bombshell

It’s been called “Censorship Fiasco 2: Electric Boogaloo.”

News over the past 72 hours has been dominated by the implosion of Mt. Gox, once the world’s largest Bitcoin exchange, and a report from Glenn Greenwald on how British intelligence agents have engaged in an extensive disinformation program to mislead Internet users.

Mt. Gox’s imminent demise has particularly gripped Reddit communities like r/Bitcoin and r/news following rumors of a $300 million hack that crippled the Japan-based business. Redditors from r/news have also obsessed over Greenwald’s latest Edward Snowden leak—only his story has been banned from the default subreddit.

All links to Greenwald’s piece on the Intercept, a publication founded by First Look Media and h ome to Snowden’s leaked materials, titled “How Covert Agents Infiltrate the Internet to Manipulate, Deceive, and Destroy Reputations,” has been removed more than six different times from r/news and at least once from r/worldnews.

In the article, Greenwald provides images from a Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) documents that show how the clandestine agency has tried to “control, infiltrate, manipulate, and warp online discourse, and in doing so, are compromising the integrity of the Internet itself.”

Greenwald also provides a great deal of context and explanation in his article, comparing it to similar programs allegedly carried out by the National Security Agency (NSA). Greenwald’s story was subsequently picked up on Boing Boing, RT.com, Daily Kos, Zero Hedge, and Der Speigel.

The removals have been the subject of numerous threads on r/subredditdrama (where redditors discuss “Internet fights and other dramatic happenings from other subreddits”) and r/undelete (home to submissions that moderators remove from the top 100 in r/all). Redditors are calling it an act of censorship.

“Sooo... the topic of discussion is direct evidence, in the form of leaked top secret documents, that the intelligence community goes to rather remarkable lengths to manipulate online social media,” damnface commented. “Does anyone see how the comments in this thread might look a little ironic at some point in the near future?”

The removal of the article was carried out by r/news moderators, volunteer gatekeepers of subreddits who have the power to ban users and content that either break Reddit’s official rules or rules instituted by each individual forum.

Moderator positions, particularly those on default subreddits like r/news, are coveted positions. All new registered Reddit users are automatically subscribed to these subreddits when they join, and most never unsubscribe from them. And thanks to Reddit's 112 million–plus unique visitors last month, a permanent place on Reddit's front page results in tremendous traffic and attention for sites submitted to these forums.

One r/news moderator who has drawn the ire of the community is BipolarBear0. He has defended the removal of the article citing r/news’s rule against posting “opinion/analysis or advocacy” pieces.

“Since the Firstlook article is primarily analytic and non-objective in nature, it wouldn't be allowed in /r/news,” he commented. “The story itself is irrelevant, it's simply how the story is presented—which is why any unbiased, objective and wholly factual news article on the event would be (and is) allowed in /r/news.”

Tuesday night, a rewrite of Greenwald’s article on examiner.com was posted on r/news and has since made its way to the third spot on the subreddit, gathering more than 900 comments.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 1 maart 2014 @ 11:54:06 #128
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137267267
quote:
quote:
Reacting to the Guardian’s revelation on Thursday that UK surveillance agency GCHQ swept up millions of Yahoo users’ webcam chats, senators Ron Wyden, Mark Udall and Martin Heinrich said in a joint statement that “any involvement of US agencies in the alleged activities reported today will need to be closely scrutinized”.

The senators described the interception as a “breathtaking lack of respect for privacy and civil liberties”.

On Friday, the Internet Association – a trade body representing internet giants including Google, Amazon, eBay, Netflix, AOL and Twitter – joined the chorus of condemnation, issuing a statement expressing alarm at the latest GCHQ revelations, and calling for reform.

According to documents provided to the Guardian by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, the GCHQ program codenamed Optic Nerve fed screengrabs of webcam chats and associated metadata into NSA tools such as Xkeyscore.

NSA research, the documents indicate, also contributed to the creation of Optic Nerve, which attempted to use facial recognition technology to identify intelligence targets, particularly those using multiple anonymous internet IDs.

Neither NSA nor GCHQ addressed the Guardian’s questions about US access to the images themselves. Outgoing NSA director Keith Alexander walked away from a reporter on Thursday who asked the army four-star general about the NSA’s role in Optic Nerve.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 1 maart 2014 @ 16:07:26 #129
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137274145
quote:
quote:
We are living in an era of Mass Surveillance, conducted by the Government Agencies like the NSA and GCHQ, and we ourselves gave them an open invitation as we all have sensors in our pockets that track us everywhere we go i.e. Smartphone. Encryption and security are more important today than any other time in our history. So, the best proactive way to keep your tracks clear is - Always use only trusted privacy tools and services.

The same folks behind the Anonymity Tool, Tor Browser Bundle is currently working on a new Privacy tool called 'Tor Instant Messaging Bundle' (TIMB), that will help you with encrypted communication to keep your online conversations private.

The Tor is the free software that lets users browse the Internet anonymously and mostly used by activists, journalists and to conceal their online activities from prying eyes.

Tor Instant Messaging Bundle, or TIMB is a real time anonymous chat system, that will simply route all of your chat data through the Tor's encrypted network, which uses proxy servers to hide the identities of its users, according to the documents posted from the Tor Project's 2014 Winter Dev Meeting. The client itself will be built on top of Instantbird, an open source instant messaging service.

The Tor Instant Messaging Bundle will encrypt user messages multiple times, including destination IP, making it sufficiently difficult to trace the original source.

Since the governments are engaged in the widespread data collection and analysis, using various gateways such as Cell phone location information, the Internet, Camera observations, and Drones. As technology and analytics advance, mass surveillance opportunities continue to grow. In which, the Tor Instant Messaging Bundle can come out to be the world's most secure real-time communication tool.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 1 maart 2014 @ 16:24:15 #130
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137274697
Voor de Glenn Greenwald fans onder ons: Dit is leuk, maar niet belangrijk.

quote:
quote:
In fact, I’ve been accused more times than I can count – including by a former NSA employee and a Eurasia Foundation spokesman - of being a Putin shill for not supporting the Ukrainian opposition and not denouncing Russian involvement there (by which they mean I’ve not written anything on this topic). Now we seem to have the exact opposite premise: that the real evil is supporting the opposition in Ukraine and any journalist who works at First Look – including ones who are repeatedly called criminals by top U.S. officials for publishing top secret government documents; or who risk their lives to go around the world publicizing the devastation wrought by America’s Dirty Wars and its dirty and lawless private contractors; or who have led the journalistic attack on the banks that own and control the government - are now tools of neo-liberal, CIA-cooperating imperialism which seeks to undermine Putin by secretly engineering the Ukrainian revolution. To call all of that innuendo muddled and incoherent is to be generous.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 3 maart 2014 @ 01:20:01 #131
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137334368
quote:
Labour to overhaul spy agency controls in response to Snowden files

Yvette Cooper says debate over privacy, civil liberties and the role of the intelligence agencies has barely started in Britain

Labour will on Monday propose substantial changes to the oversight of the British intelligence agencies, including the legal framework under which they operate, in response to the revelations emerging from files leaked by Edward Snowden.

The shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, is preparing to argue that the current arrangements are unsustainable for the government, and that it is damaging to trust in the agencies if ministers continue to hide their heads in the sand.

In a speech that represents Labour's most serious intervention since the controversy about the scale of state surveillance broke last summer, she will say: "The oversight and legal frameworks are now out of date. In particular that means we need major reforms to oversight and a thorough review of the legal framework to keep up with changing technology."

Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, by coincidence will also this week make a speech setting out his party's views on privacy and security.

Cooper will call for sweeping changes to strengthen the accountability of the intelligence agencies and a replacement to the out-of-date Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (Ripa). Her speech eschews direct criticism of MI5, MI6 and GCHQ, and accepts that the leaks by the former National Security Agency contractor Snowden have damaged national security while highlighting legitimate concerns about privacy in the internet age.

She will also argue that ministers have responded to the revelations in a patronising way by trying to stifle debate on the online role of the police, intelligence and security agencies, or of the legal framework that governs their work. "The government can't keep burying its head in the sand and hoping these issues will go away," she will say in the speech to the thinktank Demos.

She will urge David Cameron to learn instead from President Obama, who has welcomed, and led, a debate in the US about the balance between security and liberty in the wake of the Snowden leaks.

British ministers, Cooper is expected to argue, "have provided neither reassurance nor reform. They have simply asserted that the British agencies are abiding by the law. They haven't explained what the law does, what the privacy safeguards are, whether the law is still up to date, or why the work the agencies do is important. Neither prime minister, deputy prime minister, home secretary nor foreign secretary have provided any leadership or response.

In contrast President Obama commissioned an independent review and set out areas for reform to protect US citizens' privacy and civil liberties, while also robustly defending the purpose and work of the security and intelligence agencies. "So in the US the debate is moving on. But here in Britain, it's barely started. That's not sustainable."

The speech is the product of extensive soundings with civil liberty groups, the spy agencies and the police, and makes the prospect of changes to the law on communications after the election highly likely. Cooper singles out the three intelligence commissioners as needing a "major overhaul", saying they operate as much in the shadow as the spies they oversee.

Her criticism is aimed at the secrecy of the work of three commissioners – Sir Anthony May, responsible for intercepts (covering the police and agencies), Sir Mark Waller, responsible for the intelligence services, and Sir Christopher Rose, responsible for surveillance by public bodies. She is expected to complain: "None of them have made substantial public statements in response to the Snowden leaks. They are responsible for checking whether the agencies are abiding by the law. Yet in the face of allegations that GCHQ was breaking the law they have been silent – neither saying they would investigate, nor providing reassurance."

Her speech concedes that Waller, the interception of communications commissioner, has said he will review the legal framework, but Cooper says: "Few know it is happening and there is no opportunity for the public to submit views." Waller has also been summoned to appear in front of the Home Affairs Select Committee later this month, after earlier declining to give evidence .

She will suggest Britain may need to consider an inspector general, along Australian lines, with the resources to provide wide-ranging and stronger oversight of all the agencies. She will argue that Britain lacks a fast and flexible system that can not only check current legal compliance but can regularly review the law.

Cooper will also argue the government needs to conduct a full review of Ripa, which governs interception regulation, including whether the new forms of communication have dissolved the once clear distinction between content and communications data – especially given the information agencies and private companies such as Facebook can gather on the pattern of visited websites.

Cooper's speech criticises the response to Snowden by the intelligence and security committee, a group of MPs appointed by the prime minister and currently chaired by former Tory foreign secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind, arguing it simply has not had the capacity or resources for a full inquiry into the revelations. The committee's legitimacy would be strengthened, she adds, if it were always chaired by an MP from an opposition party, so it is not viewed as an extension of the government.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 3 maart 2014 @ 14:45:49 #132
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137345970
quote:
quote:
Volgens de Landelijke Politie is de informatie intern verspreid 'om collega's erop te attenderen dat de heer De Winter mogelijk zou proberen om met niet-correcte legitimatie terreinen of gebouwen binnen te komen'. Het gaat om onder andere het huisadres en de geboortedatum van De Winter.

Verder werd in de interne communicatie de indruk gewekt dat de journalist van plan zou zijn om de ICT-systemen van de politie binnen te dringen. Ten onrechte, oordeelt de Landelijke Politie nu. 'Dit had nooit mogen gebeuren.' Het ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken heeft een rectificatiebrief gepubliceerd.
quote:
Volgens De Winter is de roddel ontstaan bij de politie Rotterdam. Volgens hem bouwt de overheid 'een dossier van hinderen' op. 'Als ik iets geleerd heb, is het dat je de overheid dus niet zomaar met onze gegevens kunt vertrouwen.'
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 4 maart 2014 @ 09:49:15 #133
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137372729
quote:
Nick Clegg orders review into data gathering by spy agencies

Deputy PM commissions independent report after failing to persuade David Cameron of need for reform of oversight

Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, has commissioned a review into the new intrusive capabilities of British intelligence agencies and the legal framework in which they operate, after failing to persuade David Cameron that the coalition government should act now to tighten the accountability of Britain's spies.

Clegg has been trying for months inside government to persuade the Conservatives and intelligence agencies that the existing accountability structure is inadequate and could corrode trust, but in a Guardian article before a big speech on Tuesday the deputy prime minister admits he has failed to persuade Cameron of the need for reform.

In private discussions, Clegg had been urging the Conservatives to accept that the current oversight of the intelligence agencies could be reformed. "There was a lot of low-hanging fruit about the way in which the intelligence agencies are overseen that we could have made progress on now, but in the end we could not get agreement," explained a Clegg aide.

Clegg has as a result opted for an independent review, modelled on a report commissioned by Barack Obama, into the implications of the information harvesting technologies developed by US and UK intelligence agencies and exposed by leaks from the former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.

He warns: "It is not enough for the agencies to claim that they accurately interpret the correct balance between privacy and national security; they must be seen to do so, and that means strong, exacting third-party oversight."

The independent review, to be led by the intelligence and military thinktank the Royal United Services Institute, will look at the proportionality of the data gathered for surveillance purposes and the legal framework in which this happens.

The review, to be chaired by Rusi's director general, Michael Clarke, is in part modelled on the work commissioned in January by Obama from John Podesta, Bill Clinton's former chief of staff, into big data and privacy. Clegg says the aim of the review, due to report after the general election, will be to bring the issue into the mainstream of public debate, noting the "quality of the debate in the US provides an unflattering contrast to the muted debate on this side of the Atlantic".

The Clegg initiative by coincidence comes the day after Labour fully joined the debate for the first time when Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, called for a thorough overhaul of the way in which UK intelligence agencies are held to account. But Clegg appears to go further than Labour by questioning in greater detail the extent to which agencies are now routinely gathering data on private citizens.

The Lib Dem leader stresses he is not in principle opposed to the state gathering big data, but says this has to be governed by the principle that the government should intrude as little as possible into private affairs.

The deputy prime minister says the Rusi review needs to answer serious questions on how long the data is stored, by whom, and whether ministers or agencies should authorise its gathering. In the US Obama has suggested bulk data may need to be stored by a third party so that the state does not have untrammelled access.

Clegg also says the legal framework by which agencies can examine the content of communications is governed by laws written 14 years ago, before the internet revolution took hold.

He argues that although Britain's GCHQ listening headquarters primarily targets threats from abroad, the way internet communications are now sourced means that the old distinctions between external and internal communications are all but redundant, raising the threat that the content and metadata of domestic communications are being routinely collected and stored by GCHQ.

The government also has to examine the explosion of information, he says, pointing out that "in 2013, it took the world 10 minutes to generate the same amount of information that was created in the whole period from the dawn of history to 2002".

He sets out a programme that could be implemented immediately for reform of oversight of the agencies. Clegg's aides said this reform had been the focus of his behind-closed-doors and ultimately fruitless discussions with Cameron.

Clegg calls for reform of the parliamentary body responsible for overseeing the intelligence agencies, the intelligence and security committee chaired by the former Conservative foreign secretary Sir Malcom Rifkind. The ISC is belatedly starting an inquiry into the Snowden revelations nearly nine months after they first emerged, but Clegg writes the body "is widely seen as being too deferential to the bodies it scrutinises". He adds: "The coalition has recently given the committee more powers and resources, but we should go further. The membership of the committee should be expanded from 9 to 11, to match the standard size of select committees. The chair should in future be an opposition party member, to avoid accusations that the committee is too cosy with the government of the day. Hearings should be held wherever possible in public. Budgets should be set for 5 years ahead, to allow it the stability to plan a long term work programme".

He also calls for changes to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal, which considers complaints against the use of intrusive powers by the intelligence agencies and others.

He points out: "There is currently no right of appeal. If the IPT rules against an individual, his or her only recourse is to the European Court of Human Rights. We should enable appeals to be heard in this country, and publish the reasons for rulings."

Like Labour, he calls for the creation of an Inspector General for the UK intelligence services, with reinforced powers, remit and resources. The aim would be to bring together two existing offices, the Interception of Communications Commissioner and the Intelligence Services Commissioner.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 5 maart 2014 @ 15:15:41 #134
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137414843
quote:
quote:
At a panel on cyber security at Georgetown University, the National Security Agency (NSA) director made statements that suggested the NSA has been working on some kind of “media lHet artikel gaat verder. eaks legislation.” The legislation would obviously be in response to the disclosures from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, but, until now, there has been no public indication that any anti-leaks legislation would be proposed in response to what Snowden disclosed.

Spencer Ackerman, a journalist for The Guardian, reported that NSA chief Gen. Keith Alexander said during the event, “Recently, what came out with the justices in the United Kingdom …they looked at what happened on [David] Miranda and other things, and they said it’s interesting: journalists have no standing when it comes to national security issues. They don’t know how to weigh the fact of what they’re giving out and saying, is it in the nation’s interest to divulge this.”

It was his first public comments endorsing the British security services decision to have journalist Glenn Greenwald’s partner, Miranda, detained under a terrorism law in the country. The security services detained him to get their hands on Snowden documents he was believed to be carrying.

Alexander said: “My personal opinion: these leaks have caused grave, significant and irreversible damage to our nation and to our allies. It will take us years to recover.”

He argued, according to the New York Times, that the nation had not been able to pass legislation to protect against cyber attacks on Wall Street or other “civilian targets” because of Snowden.

“We’ve got to handle media leaks first,” Alexander additionally declared. “I think we are going to make headway over the next few weeks on media leaks. I am an optimist. I think if we make the right steps on the media leaks legislation, then cyber legislation will be a lot easier.”

Two individuals who specifically track developments such as leaks legislation had no idea what Alexander was talking about when he mentioned the legislation. Ackerman reported, “Angela Canterbury, the policy director for the Project on Government Oversight, a watchdog group, said she was unaware of any such bill. Neither was Steve Aftergood, an intelligence policy analyst at the Federation of American Scientists,” who posts regularly at Secrecy News.

Whatever Alexander has been working on behind the scenes likely has been developed with the support of Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Rep. Mike Rogers, who have been some of the most vocal critics of the disclosures (as well as the most fervent defenders of the NSA in the aftermath of the leaks).

In 2012, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which Feinstein chairs, approved anti-leaks measures as part of an intelligence authorization bill. The measures were being considered as a response to leaks that had occurred on cyber warfare against Iran, President Barack Obama’s “kill list,” and a CIA underwear bomb plot sting operation in Yemen.

The measures would have required: that Congress be notified when “authorized public disclosures of national intelligence” are made; that “authorized disclosures” of “classified information” be recorded; that procedures for conducting “administrative investigations of unauthorized disclosures” be revamped by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) ; that the DNI assess the possibility of expanding procedures for detecting and preventing “unauthorized disclosures” to other Executive Branch personnel; that certain people be prohibited from serving as consultants or having contracts with media organizations; that only a limited number of individuals in intelligence agencies be permitted to speak with members of the media and that responsibilities intelligence community employees have to protect “classified information” be made more clear.

The anti-leaks proposals also called for disciplinary measures against people who violated “classified information” by making “unauthorized disclosures.” This would have included: letters of reprimand, placing notice of violations in personnel files and informing congressional oversight committees of such notices, revoking security clearances, prohibiting employees from obtaining new security clearances and firing employees. Additionally, a provision would also have made it possible for an employee to lose his or her federal pension benefits if they were responsible for an “unauthorized disclosure.”

There was much condemnation of the proposals. A letter to the Senate signed by civil liberties, open government and watchdog groups argued the policy would not “protect” the “nation’s legitimate secrets” but would instead open the door to “abuse” and chill “critical disclosures of wrongdoing.” It described how the measure on surrendering pension benefits was an “extreme approach” to security that “would imperil the few existing safe channels for those in the intelligence community who seek to expose waste, fraud, abuse, and illegality. Conscientious employees or former employees considering reporting wrongdoing to Congress and agency Inspectors General, for example, would risk losing their pensions without adequate due process.”

Multiple newspapers published editorials criticizing the proposals and urging caution in the midst of all the leaks hysteria in Washington, DC.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 5 maart 2014 @ 16:48:56 #135
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137417852
Dit gaat over de CIA, maar omdat het gaat over een controlerende instantie, toch een beetje on-topic.

Het lekkere deel is helaas geheim, maar dat het stinkt is wel duidelijk.

quote:
quote:
The agency’s inspector general began the inquiry partly as a response to complaints from members of Congress that C.I.A. employees were improperly monitoring the work of staff members of the Senate Intelligence Committee, according to government officials with knowledge of the investigation.

The committee has spent several years working on a voluminous report about the detention and interrogation program, and according to one official interviewed in recent days, C.I.A. officers went as far as gaining access to computer networks used by the committee to carry out its investigation.

The events have elevated the protracted battle — which began as a fight over who writes the history of the program, perhaps the most controversial aspect of the American government’s response to the Sept. 11 attacks — into a bitter standoff that in essence is a dispute over the separation of powers and congressional oversight of spy agencies.
quote:
The origins of the current dispute date back more than a year, when the committee completed its work on a 6,000-page report about the Bush administration’s detention and interrogation program. People who have read the study said it is a withering indictment of the program and details many instances when C.I.A. officials misled Congress, the White House and the public about the value of the agency’s brutal interrogation methods, including waterboarding.
quote:
In a letter to President Obama on Tuesday, Mr. Udall made a vague reference to the dispute over the C.I.A.’s internal report.

“As you are aware, the C.I.A. has recently taken unprecedented action against the committee in relation to the internal C.I.A. review, and I find these actions to be incredibly troubling for the committee’s oversight responsibilities and for our democracy,” he wrote.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 5 maart 2014 @ 17:35:44 #136
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137419544
quote:
Journalist: NSA won’t give me a secure channel to communicate on

SAN FRANCISCO—Barton Gellman, one of the few journalists that has been given access to the entire trove of documents provided by whistleblower Edward Snowden, told the RightsCon conference Tuesday that American federal authorities have declined to provide him with a secure means to communicate with them.

Gellman told the assembled crowd that he had never before revealed this information in public.

“There's a peculiar thing: [intelligence agencies and I] do have conversations about stories that I'm going to publish,” he said. “I want to know context and I want to authenticate information or not be radically out of context. And sometimes they want to make a case to me about something that I don't know that would make a difference on what to publish. So I’ve said to them: 'How would you like to communicate other than open e-mail or telephone?' And they've yet to give me a secure channel—which I find surprising.”

Gellman explained that the government has set up a self-imposed classified trap, where officials are not allowed to discuss classified materials on nonclassified channels. They also can’t discuss declassified materials over open networks.

“It seems to me that they could solve this problem and ought to,” he said.

Last week, Gellman told another conference at Georgetown University that he had been informed that his phone records had been subject to a National Security Letter.

Gellman's book, Angler: The Shadow Presidency of Dick Cheney, was the only book that Snowden took with himwhen he fled from Hawaii to Hong Kong in June 2013.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 5 maart 2014 @ 22:05:08 #137
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137430970
quote:
quote:
A leading US senator has said that President Obama knew of an “unprecedented action” taken by the CIA against the Senate intelligence committee, which has apparently prompted an inspector general’s inquiry at Langley.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 6 maart 2014 @ 22:18:13 #138
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137466007
quote:
'Nieuwe spionagewet bij voorbaat achterhaald'

De vernieuwde spionagewet, waartoe het kabinet volgende week een aanzet geeft, lijkt bij voorbaat achterhaald, zegt hoogleraar computerbeveiliging Bart Jacobs. 'Ondanks alle onthullingen hebben ze geen idee wat er gaande is.'

Komende week komt het kabinet met een reactie op de commissie-Dessens, die in december een evaluatie van de Wet op de Inlichtingen- en Veiligheidsdiensten uit 2002 presenteerde. De boodschap: de bevoegdheden moeten worden verruimd, en het toezicht moet worden vergroot. Voortaan zou alle communicatie ongericht, met digitale sleepnetten moeten kunnen worden onderschept, zegt Dessens. Jacobs ziet daar geen heil in. 'De diensten zouden juist veel gerichter moeten gaan werken.'

Zijn tweede punt van kritiek: dat de adviseurs van het kabinet niet zien dat inlichtingendiensten steeds meer in de 'eindpunten' van communicatie proberen binnen te dringen. Ze hacken computers en telefoons bij de gebruiker, en proberen in de servers van internetbedrijven te kijken. 'Die operaties worden in het rapport-Dessens niet als belangrijke trend onderkend', zegt Jacobs. 'Het lijkt wel of Dessens achteruit heeft gekeken in plaats van vooruit.'
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 7 maart 2014 @ 00:45:27 #139
403394 Tamabralski
forum hoppen
pi_137471782
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 14 januari 2014 23:30 schreef Arthur_Spooner het volgende:

[..]

De arrogantie van de Amerikanen.
Volgens nieuwsberichten worden Europese inlichtingen betaald door Amerikaanse inlichingen. Voor toegang tot informatie of toegang voor kijk-operaties. Derhalve is de "shock and awe" van onze dames-heren Europese politici dus gewoon poppenkast. De schijn naar de kiezer toe dat zij het erg vinden, wat een buitenlandse inlichtingendienst doet in hun land. Maar eigenljk wisten zij het al..
pi_137479596
quote:
0s.gif Op vrijdag 7 maart 2014 00:45 schreef Tamabralski het volgende:

[..]

Volgens nieuwsberichten worden Europese inlichtingen betaald door Amerikaanse inlichingen. Voor toegang tot informatie of toegang voor kijk-operaties. Derhalve is de "shock and awe" van onze dames-heren Europese politici dus gewoon poppenkast. De schijn naar de kiezer toe dat zij het erg vinden, wat een buitenlandse inlichtingendienst doet in hun land. Maar eigenljk wisten zij het al..
Andere mogelijkheid: ook veel Europese politici zijn niet op de hoogte. Dat lijkt mij waarschijnlijker.
  vrijdag 7 maart 2014 @ 17:10:23 #141
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137488796
quote:
quote:
De Amerikaanse veiligheidsdienst NSA heeft lidstaten van de Europese Unie geadviseerd in de procedure afluisteren wettelijk mogelijk te maken. Dat stelt klokkenluider Snowden, die de afluisterpraktijken van de NSA onthulde, in een schriftelijke verklaring aan het Europees Parlement (EP).

Een van de belangrijkste taken van de afdeling Buitenlandse Zaken van de NSA was volgens Snowden 'het aanmoedigen van EU-lidstaten om wetten te veranderen om massaspionage mogelijk te maken', en 'het zoeken naar lokale mazen in de wet om het spioneren van willekeurige burgers te rechtvaardigen'. Snowden noemt hierbij specifiek Nederland als land waar de NSA 'juridisch advies' gaf.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 11 maart 2014 @ 18:17:23 #142
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137624481
Weer een een klein uitstapje:

quote:
Oakland emails give another glimpse into the Google-Military-Surveillance Complex

OAKLAND—On February 18, several hundred privacy, labor, civil rights activists and Black Bloc anarchists packed Oakland’s city hall. They were there to protest the construction of a citywide surveillance center that would turn a firehouse in downtown Oakland into a high-tech intelligence hub straight outta Mission Impossible.

It was a rowdy crowd, and there was a heavy police presence. Some people carried “State Surveillance No!” signs. A few had their faces covered in rags, and taunted and provoked city officials by jamming smartphones in their faces and snapping photos.

Main item on the agenda that night: The “Domain Awareness Center” (DAC) — a federally funded project that, if built as planned, would link up real time audio and video feeds from thousands of sensors across the city — including CCTV cameras in public schools and public housing projects, as well as Oakland Police Department mobile license plate scanners — into one high-tech control hub, where analysts could pipe the data through face recognition software, surveil the city by location and enrich its intelligence with data coming in from local, state and federal government and law enforcement agencies.

During the meeting, city officials argued that the DAC would help police deal with Oakland’s violent crime and invoked 9-11 and Hurricane Katrina, saying that a streamlined intelligence system would help protect residents in the event of natural disaster or terrorist attack.

Their explanation was met with hisses, boos, outbursts and constant interruption from the packed gallery, and the city council struggled to retain order, repeatedly threatening to clear the room.

The anger wasn’t just the standard objection to surveillance — or at least it was, but it had been intensified by a set of documents, obtained through a public records request by privacy activists, that showed city officials were more interested in using DAC’s surveillance capabilities to monitor political protests rather than fighting crime. The evidence was abundant and overwhelming: in email after email, Oakland officials had discussed the DAC usefulness for keeping tabs on activists, monitoring non-violent political protests and minimize port disruption due to union/labor strikes.

In particular, officials wanted to use the surveillance center to monitor Occupy Wall Street-style activists, and prevent union organizing and labor strikes that might shut down the Port of Oakland.

This revelation was particularly troubling in Oakland — a city with a large marginalized black population, a strong union presence and a long, ugly history of police brutality aimed at minority groups and political activists. Police conduct is so atrocious that the department now operates under federal oversight.

Ultimately, the information contained in the document helped anti-DAC activists convince Oakland’s city council to somewhat limit the scope and size of the surveillance center. It was a minor victory, but a victory nonetheless.

But buried deep in the thousands of pages of planning documents, invoices and correspondence was something that the activists either seemed to have missed or weren’t concerned by. A handful of emails revealing that representatives from Oakland had met with executives from Google to discuss a partnership between the tech giant and the DAC.

The emails showed that Google, the largest and most powerful megacorp in Surveillance Valley, was among several other military/defense contractors vying for a piece of DAC’s $10.9-million surveillance contracting action.

Here’s an email exchange from October 2013. It is between Scott Ciabattari, a Google “strategic partnership manager,” and Renee Domingo, an Oakland official spearheading the DAC project:
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 11 maart 2014 @ 20:28:25 #143
45206 Pietverdriet
Ik wou dat ik een ijsbeer was.
pi_137630555
Nederlandse inlichtingendiensten houden zich niet aan de regels
quote:
Onrechtmatigheden in werk AIVD en MIVD

DEN HAAG -
De inlichtingen- en veiligheidsdiensten AIVD en MIVD hebben niet stelselmatig buiten de wet om gegevens verzameld. Wel is er sprake van onrechtmatigheden in hun werk, waarbij de wet is overtreden. Een aantal van de onrechtmatigheden werden ook in 2011 al geconstateerd.


Harm Brouwer
Foto: ANP
Dat is de conclusie van onderzoek op verzoek van de Tweede Kamer door de CTIVD, de onafhankelijke commissie die toezicht houdt op het opereren van de AIVD en de MIVD. Zo verzamelde de Militaire Inlichtingen en Veiligheidsdienst gegevens in het kader van de samenwerking met buitenlandse geheime diensten zonder hiervoor specifiek toestemming te vragen aan de minister.
Ook de Algemene Inlichtingen- en Veiligheidsdienst maakte zich schuldig aan onrechtmatige werkwijzen. De dienst zet agenten in „om gegevens te verwerven op een manier die in feite neerkomt op de inzet van een tap, zonder hiervoor toestemming te vragen aan de minister”. Ook in het kader van de bevoegdheid om te hacken worden zonder toestemming van de minister gegevens verworven op een manier die gelijkstaat aan de inzet van een tap.
Voorzitter Harm Brouwer van de CTIVD lichtte de conclusies van zijn rapport dinsdag in een besloten bijeenkomst toe aan Tweede Kamerleden. Na afloop liet hij merken de onrechtmatigheden ernstig te vinden, omdat de diensten functioneren in een balans tussen de noodzaak van hun werk en de grondrechten van de burger. „Dat betekent ook dat je die onrechtmatigheden moet wegnemen. Dit is geen kattenpis. In het licht van die balans zijn dit zaken die je ernstig moet nemen.”
Dat betekent overigens niet dat hij zich zorgen maakt over het optreden van de diensten. Die staan volgens hem voldoende onder politieke controle.
De commissie stelt ook dat de AIVD en de MIVD in de afgelopen jaren steeds meer chatsessies, e-mails en telefoongesprekken en de bijbehorende 'metadata' (zoals nummers en tijdstippen van de gesprekken) zijn gaan verzamelen. De inbreuk die de diensten met deze methoden kunnen maken op de persoonlijke levenssfeer, gaat verder dan in 2002 bij het opstellen van de wet mogelijk was, aldus de commissie.
http://www.telegraaf.nl/b(...)chtmatigheden__.html
In Baden-Badener Badeseen kann man Baden-Badener baden sehen.
  woensdag 12 maart 2014 @ 12:11:27 #144
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137652452
quote:
quote:
Berners-Lee's Magna Carta plan is to be taken up as part of an initiative called "the web we want", which calls on people to generate a digital bill of rights in each country – a statement of principles he hopes will be supported by public institutions, government officials and corporations.

"Unless we have an open, neutral internet we can rely on without worrying about what's happening at the back door, we can't have open government, good democracy, good healthcare, connected communities and diversity of culture. It's not naive to think we can have that, but it is naive to think we can just sit back and get it."

Berners-Lee has been an outspoken critic of the American and British spy agencies' surveillance of citizens following the revelations by National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden. In the light of what has emerged, he said, people were looking for an overhaul of how the security services were managed.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 12 maart 2014 @ 16:27:39 #145
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137660331
Mooie samenvatting van The Guardian:

quote:
quote:
The documents are known as the “internal Panetta review”, after the former CIA director who presumably ordered them. How they came into the hands of staff members working for Senate select committee on intelligence is a story of intrigue and double-dealing worthy of the agency itself. The review was a sensitive, internal assessment of the CIA’s detention and interrogation program, which included techniques such as water-boarding that most experts say amounts to torture.

So furious was the CIA to have lost control of the set of documents it believed should never have become public, it is thought to have been behind the anonymous briefers who told newspapers that congressional staff had obtained them by somehow hacking into its networks – a feat that would challenge even the most determined international cyber-terrorist.

The review seems originally to have been intended for CIA eyes only, but according to Feinstein, it appeared in 2010 on the computer network established by the agency at a secret location in Virginia to facilitate an extensive investigation by her committee into post-9/11 interrogation techniques. It was just one in a remarkable series of events that culminated with a printed-out portion of the review being slipped out of the custody of the CIA to US Capitol, where it now resides in a safe of a second-floor Senate building, as an expanding controversy explodes around it.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 12 maart 2014 @ 17:33:01 #146
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137662359
En terug naar Glenn Greenwald:

quote:
quote:
Top-secret documents reveal that the National Security Agency is dramatically expanding its ability to covertly hack into computers on a mass scale by using automated systems that reduce the level of human oversight in the process.

The classified files – provided previously by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden – contain new details about groundbreaking surveillance technology the agency has developed to infect potentially millions of computers worldwide with malware “implants.” The clandestine initiative enables the NSA to break into targeted computers and to siphon out data from foreign Internet and phone networks.

The covert infrastructure that supports the hacking efforts operates from the agency’s headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland, and from eavesdropping bases in the United Kingdom and Japan. GCHQ, the British intelligence agency, appears to have played an integral role in helping to develop the implants tactic.

In some cases the NSA has masqueraded as a fake Facebook server, using the social media site as a launching pad to infect a target’s computer and exfiltrate files from a hard drive. In others, it has sent out spam emails laced with the malware, which can be tailored to covertly record audio from a computer’s microphone and take snapshots with its webcam. The hacking systems have also enabled the NSA to launch cyberattacks by corrupting and disrupting file downloads or denying access to websites.

The implants being deployed were once reserved for a few hundred hard-to-reach targets, whose communications could not be monitored through traditional wiretaps. But the documents analyzed by The Intercept show how the NSA has aggressively accelerated its hacking initiatives in the past decade by computerizing some processes previously handled by humans. The automated system – codenamed TURBINE – is designed to “allow the current implant network to scale to large size (millions of implants) by creating a system that does automated control implants by groups instead of individually.”

In a top-secret presentation, dated August 2009, the NSA describes a pre-programmed part of the covert infrastructure called the “Expert System,” which is designed to operate “like the brain.” The system manages the applications and functions of the implants and “decides” what tools they need to best extract data from infected machines.

Mikko Hypponen, an expert in malware who serves as chief research officer at the Finnish security firm F-Secure, calls the revelations “disturbing.” The NSA’s surveillance techniques, he warns, could inadvertently be undermining the security of the Internet.

“When they deploy malware on systems,” Hypponen says, “they potentially create new vulnerabilities in these systems, making them more vulnerable for attacks by third parties.”

Hypponen believes that governments could arguably justify using malware in a small number of targeted cases against adversaries. But millions of malware implants being deployed by the NSA as part of an automated process, he says, would be “out of control.”

“That would definitely not be proportionate,” Hypponen says. “It couldn’t possibly be targeted and named. It sounds like wholesale infection and wholesale surveillance.”

The NSA declined to answer questions about its deployment of implants, pointing to a new presidential policy directive announced by President Obama. “As the president made clear on 17 January,” the agency said in a statement, “signals intelligence shall be collected exclusively where there is a foreign intelligence or counterintelligence purpose to support national and departmental missions, and not for any other purposes.”
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 13 maart 2014 @ 16:05:14 #147
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137696267
quote:
quote:
Freedom of the Press Foundation, a non-profit dedicated to supporting and defending public-interest journalism, is announcing a new technical advisory board that includes top-notch journalists, technologists and academics.

The new board’s mission, according to foundation director Trevor Timm, is to function as a think-tank for digital security. The panel will discuss and devise methods for journalists and news organizations to better protect their electronic communications from the prying eyes of governments, criminals and others.

“Protecting digital communications is now the primary press freedom issues we’re going to face over the next decade,” Timm says. “The record number of source prosecutions, coupled with revelations from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden have shown journalists must protect their sources from the moment they start speaking with them.”

The foundation, which crowd-funded more than $480,000 that went to journalism focused on transparency and accountability last year, has at its main mission the preservation and strengthening of journalists’ First and Fourth Amendment rights. Their most recent campaign has focused on crowd-funding for free and open source encryption tools that journalists can use to better communicate.

The new nine-member Technology Advisory Board includes Christopher Soghoian, Jacob Appelbaum, Elleanor Saitta, Morgan Marquis-Boire, Eva Galperin, Ashkan Soltani, Oktavia Jonsdottir, Kevin Poulsen, Runa Sandvik and Kelly Caine. A list of the advisory board members' bios can be found here.

Soghoian, ACLU's principal technologist and senior policy analyst, has long pushed for journalists and news organizations to upgrade their security practices to account for governments' invasive surveillance practices.

"Journalists have an obligation to both their sources and readers to practice proper digital security," Soghoian says. "Unfortunately their knowledge on how to protect themselves falls far below the various actors attempting to spy on them. Freedom of the Press Foundation can fill a much-needed hole for journalists and we hope this advisory board can help them do it in effective way possible."

Soltani, an independent privacy researcher and consultant, has also reported on many privacy and surveillance related stories with the New York Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal.

“A common issue, a common mistake, is that no one is really investing time to figure out what solutions journalists need and what tools will work for them,” Soltani says. “It requires a number of experts to really take the time and delve into the underlying security and usability of tools to help journalists secure their communications.”

The advisory board is a mixture of technologically sophisticated journalists, technologists, researchers and academics. “We’re getting all of these people together to create an ideas lab for how we can better help journalists and news organizations protect themselves,” Timm says.

Toward that goal, advisory board member Kevin Poulsen, the investigations editor at WIRED, originally developed SecureDrop along with current Freedom of the Press Foundation staffer James Dolan and the late Aaron Swartz. “Press freedom today depends as much on technology as policy,” Poulsen says.

The foundation currently assists news agencies and journalists on how to use SecureDrop, an open-source whistleblower submission system that is being deployed by the New Yorker, Forbes, Pro Publica, San Francisco Bay Guardian, and the Intercept. For installation and inquires about training assistance, click here.

Two other respected technologists, Micah Lee and NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, also sit on the foundation's board of directors. FPF has previously published a comprehensive guide to digital security, called "Encryption Works: How to Protect Yourself in the Age of NSA Surveillance."

Contact Information

Trevor Timm
Executive Director
trevor@pressfreedomfoundation.org

Website and where to donate: https://pressfreedomfoundation.org
About FPF: https://pressfreedomfoundation.org/about
Board and staff: https://pressfreedomfoundation.org/about/staff
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 13 maart 2014 @ 16:12:02 #148
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137696534
quote:
NSA 'hijacked' criminal botnets to install spyware

(Reuters) - While U.S. law enforcement agencies have long tried to stamp out networks of compromised computers used by cyber criminals, the National Security Agency has been hijacking the so-called botnets as a resource for spying.

The NSA has "co-opted" more than 140,000 computers since August 2007 for the purpose of injecting them with spying software, according to a slide leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden and published by The Intercept news website on Wednesday. (r.reuters.com/xut57v)

Botnets are typically used by criminals to steal financial information from infected machines, to relay spam messages, and to conduct "denial-of-service" attacks against websites by having all the computers try to connect simultaneously, thereby overwhelming them.

In November, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey told the Senate that botnets had "emerged as a global cyber security threat" and that the agency had developed a "comprehensive public-private approach to eliminate the most significant botnet activity and increase the practical consequences for those who use botnets for intellectual property theft or other criminal activities."

According to the NSA slide published by The Intercept, one technique the intelligence agency used was called QUANTUMBOT, which "finds computers belonging to botnets, and hijacks the command and control channel." The program was described as "highly successful."

Reuters reported in May that U.S. agencies had tapped botnets to harvest data from the machines' owners or to maintain the ability to issue the infected computers new commands.

The slide leaked by Snowden is the first confirmation of the practice, and underscores the complications for the NSA of balancing its major mission of providing eavesdropping capability with the less well-funded missions of protecting critical national assets and assisting law enforcement.

The Top Secret slide was marked for distribution to the "Five Eyes" intelligence alliance, which includes the United States and Britain.

The NSA declined to confirm or deny the existence of the program. It is not known if the botnets hijacked by the agency

were in other counties or in the United States, or if the botnets could have been recaptured by criminals.

Many botnet operations disable the machines' security software, leaving them vulnerable to new attacks by others.

In a written statement, an NSA spokeswoman said: "As the President affirmed on 17 January, signals intelligence shall be collected exclusively where there is a foreign intelligence or counterintelligence purpose to support national and departmental missions, and not for any other purposes.

"Moreover, Presidential Policy Directive 28 affirms that all persons - regardless of nationality - have legitimate privacy interests in the handling of their personal information, and that privacy and civil liberties shall be integral considerations in the planning of U.S. signals intelligence activities."

The Intercept article and supporting slides showed that the NSA had sought the means to automate the deployment of its tools for capturing email, browsing history and other information in order to reach as many as millions of machines.

It did not say whether such widespread efforts, which included impersonating web pages belonging to Facebook Inc and other companies, were limited to computers overseas.

If it did pursue U.S. computers, the NSA also could have minimized information about those users.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 14 maart 2014 @ 17:17:12 #149
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137737125
quote:
Britain is treating journalists as terrorists – believe me, I know

My links to WikiLeaks and Edward Snowden mean I am treated as a threat and can't return to the UK. We need a free speech roadmap

Sarah Harrison

Free speech and freedom of the press are under attack in the UK. I cannot return to England, my country, because of my journalistic work with NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and at WikiLeaks. There are things I feel I cannot even write. For instance, if I were to say that I hoped my work at WikiLeaks would change government behaviour, this journalistic work would be considered a crime under the UK Terrorism Act of 2000.

This act defines terrorism as "the use or threat of action [...] designed to influence the government or an international governmental organisation" or "is made for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, racial or ideological cause" or "is designed seriously to interfere with or seriously to disrupt an electronic system". Elsewhere the act says "the government" means the government of any country – including the US. Britain has used this act to open a terrorism investigation relating to Snowden and the journalists who worked with him, and as a pretext to enter the Guardian's offices and demand the destruction of their Snowden-related hard drives. Britain is turning into a country that can't tell its terrorists from its journalists.

The recent judgment in the Miranda case proves this. David Miranda was assisting journalist Glenn Greenwald and transited through Heathrow with journalists' documents when he was held under schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act last summer. Schedule 7 means a person can be stopped and detained at a UK port for up to nine hours and affords no right to silence. It compels you to answer questions and give up any documents you possess, and so forced Miranda to hand over his Snowden documents. Subsequently Miranda fought a case against the UK government over the legality of his detainment, to show how this act infringes upon journalists' ability to work freely. Outrageously, the court found politically transparent excuses to ignore the well-defined protections for freedom of expression in the European convention on human rights.

If Britain is going to investigate journalists as terrorists take and destroy our documents, force us to give up passwords and answer questions – how can we be sure we can protect our sources? But this precedent is now set; no journalist can be certain that if they leave, enter or transit through the UK this will not happen to them. My lawyers advise me not to return home.

Snowden's US legal adviser, Jesselyn Radack, was questioned about Julian Assange and her client when she entered the UK recently. I am strongly connected to both men: I work for one, and rescued and watched over the other for four months. In addition, if schedule 7 is used to stop me upon entering the country . I could not answer such questions or relinquish anything, as this would be a risk to WikiLeaks's journalistic work, our people and our sources. As I would have no right to silence under this act, I would be committing a crime in the government's eyes. A conviction for "terrorism" would have severe consequences for free movement across international borders.

Schedule 7 is not really about catching terrorists, even in its own terms. The Miranda judgment states that it has in this case "constituted an indirect interference with press freedom" and is admittedly "capable, depending on the facts, of being deployed so as to interfere with journalistic freedom". Officers can detain someone not because they suspect them of being involved in terrorist activities, but to see "if someone appears" to – even indirectly – be "facilitating" the bizarre definition of terrorism used in the act.

Mr Justice Ouseley, who also presided over Assange's extradition case, stated in his judgment that an officer can act on "no more than hunch or intuition". It is now decreed by our courts that it is acceptable to interfere with the freedom of the press, based on a hunch – all in the name of "national security". Today instead of meaning "to ensure the stability of a nation for its people", national security is a catchphrase rolled out by governments to justify their own illegalities, whether that be invading another country or spying on their own citizens. This act – it is now crystal clear – is being consciously and strategically deployed to threaten journalists. It has become a tool for securing the darkness behind which our government can construct a brand new, 21st-century Big Brother.

This erosion of basic human civil rights is a slippery slope. If the government can get away with spying on us – not just in collusion with, but at the behest of, the US – then what checks and balances are left for us to fall back on? Few of our representatives are doing anything to act against this abusive restriction on our press freedoms. Green MP Caroline Lucas tabled an early day motion on 29 January but only 18 MPs have signed it so far.

From my refuge in Berlin, this reeks of adopting Germany's past, rather than its future. I have thought about the extent to which British history would have been the poorer had the governments of the day had such an abusive instrument at their disposal. What would have happened to all the public campaigns carried out in an attempt to "influence the government"? I can see the suffragettes fighting for their right to vote being threatened into inaction, Jarrow marchers being labelled terrorists, and Dickens being locked up in Newgate prison.

In their willingness to ride roughshod over our traditions, British authorities and state agencies are gripped by an extremism that is every bit as dangerous to British public life as is the (real or imaginary) threat of terrorism. As Ouseley states, journalism in the UK does not possess a "constitutional status". But there can be no doubt that this country needs a freedom of speech roadmap for the years ahead. The British people should fight to show the government we will preserve our rights and our freedoms, whatever coercive measures and threats it throws at us.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 14 maart 2014 @ 23:58:11 #150
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137753209
quote:
How the NSA Is Trying to Sabotage a U.S. Government-Funded Countersurveillance Tool

The NSA called it the king of Internet anonymity. But while the privacy-protecting Tor browser has proven to be a serious burden to the spy agency, that hasnt stopped it trying to secretly subvert the popular counter-surveillance tool.

On Friday, newly released documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed the extent of the agency’s attempts to monitor Tor users’ Internet activity. Top-secret slides shed light on how the NSA has worked to infiltrate the Tor anonymity network in apparent cooperation with allied agencies in Britain and the other members of the “Five Eyes” network—Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. But the spies’ efforts to infiltrate Tor have not been entirely successful, which will come as welcome news to privacy advocates. One NSA slide notes: “we will never be able to de-anonymize all Tor users all the time.”

Tor works by masking users’ IP addresses, bouncing their connection through a complex network of computers. Each day, the tool is used by about 500,000 people, many of whom are pro-democracy activists in authoritarian countries, journalists, human rights advocates, and others whose work can be compromised by government surveillance or censorship. But the software can also be used by criminal groups and terrorist plotters, which makes it of particular interest to spy agencies.

According to the leaked slides published Friday by the Guardian, the NSA has devised a way to identify targeted Tor users, and it has the capacity to covertly redirect targets to a set of special servers called “FoxAcid.” Once identified as a target, the spy agency can try to infect a user with malware by preying on software vulnerabilities in the Mozilla Firefox browser. This capability was hinted at in a report by Brazilian TV show Fantastico in September. As I noted at the time, the British spy agency GCHQ appeared to be monitoring Tor users as part of a program called “Flying Pig.”

Notably, the leaked Snowden files on Tor may shed light on some of the tactics used by the U.S. government to identify the recently outed alleged mastermind of the Silk Road online drug empire. Silk Road operated on a hidden Tor server, which was tracked down by the feds and shut down. Back in August, the feds also managed to shut down a Tor server allegedly used to host images of child abuse. In a malware attack that was linked by researchers to the NSA, the FBI reportedly exploited a Mozilla vulnerability to target users—similar to the spy methods described in the Snowden documents.

Going after Tor users is clearly not easy for the spies, however, and they appear to have considered sabotaging the anonymity tool because it has proven difficult to infiltrate. One NSA presentation titled “Tor Stinks” shows the agency considering whether it would be possible to “deny/degrade/disrupt Tor users.” One option for degrading the stability of Tor posed by the NSA, the 2012 presentation states, could be to set up a “relay” used by Tor users to access the service, but deliberately making it frustratingly slow in order to destabilize the network. Other slides suggest British spooks at GCHQ set up clandestine Tor “nodes” used to monitor users, with Australia’s Defense Signals Directorate also assisting in GCHQ’s efforts.

Somewhat ironically, the Tor Project was originally borne out of a U.S. Navy program to protect government communications. The initiative still receives a large portion of its funding from the U.S. government: In 2012, for instance, the State Department and the Defense Department wrote checks to the Tor Project worth more than $1.2 million. This means that the U.S. government is publicly investing in keeping Tor strong—while at the same time, in secret, the NSA is trying to weaken it.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 15 maart 2014 @ 00:17:36 #151
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137753920
quote:
Top Democrat on House intelligence panel offers new NSA reform plan

Top Democrat on House intelligence committee says details are still being worked on but proposal would end bulk collection

Supporters of a stalled congressional effort to end the National Security Agency’s bulk collection of Americans’ metadata are looking warily at an alternative proposal by a key NSA advocate purporting to seek the same goal.

This week, the top Democrat on the House intelligence committee, Congressman Dutch Ruppersberger, who represents the Maryland district home to the NSA’s Fort Meade headquarters, came out in favor of a remedy for the controversial surveillance.

Ruppersberger, in interviews with the Washington Post, National Journal and Politico, said he was working to craft a proposal that would require court orders for government requests for Americans’ phone records – perhaps on an individual basis – from the telephone companies, without requiring the companies to expand retention of their customer records beyond current practice.

It’s an idea that on its face aligns with what privacy advocates have wanted since the Guardian exposed the NSA bulk phone records collection in June, thanks to leaks from Edward Snowden.

But his idea also attracted suspicion. Not only has Ruppersberger been a staunch advocate for the NSA – and a fervent critic of Snowden – but his proposal would compete with the civil-libertarian alternative, the USA Freedom Act, that has 163 co-sponsors in both congressional chambers and would go further than Ruppersberger’s effort, as initially described.

Ruppersberger’s office concedes that the details of the proposal, which are crucial in the arcane world of surveillance authorities, are still being worked out – something giving privacy advocates pause.

On the other hand, sources said, Ruppersberger’s evolving position represents what one called a “huge step forward” toward an outright end to bulk domestic metadata collection. Ruppersberger’s credibility with the NSA might also be an asset for such an effort.

In a statement to the Guardian on Friday, Ruppersberger signaled that surveillance “reform” was necessary, framing it as critical to restoring confidence in the NSA.

“I believe that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act must be reformed. We must improve the American public’s confidence in, and perception of, our national security programs, by increasing transparency, strengthening oversight, and safeguarding civil liberties,” Ruppersberger said.

“I also believe that any proposal to reform the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act must preserve critical intelligence tools that protect our country and its allies. I am concerned with any approach that would eliminate this important intelligence tool and make the country more vulnerable to terrorist attacks, without providing a workable alternative.”

Ruppersberger is a close partner of the intelligence committee’s chairman, congressman Mike Rogers of Michigan, who has earlier signaled outright opposition to taking the phone records database away from the NSA.

But several sources were skeptical of any effort that would move surveillance reform through the intelligence committees instead of the judiciary committees, which have been more concerned with privacy issues. The judiciary committee, which has yet to move on the USA Freedom Act, insists on primary legislative jurisdiction over surveillance law.

The Obama administration has yet to take an outright position on the USA Freedom Act, an ambivalence that several members of Congress consider the equivalent of a rejection several months after the bill was introduced.

On Thursday, Jim Sensenbrenner, a Wisconsin Republican on the judiciary committee, called on Ruppersberger to embrace the USA Freedom Act that Sensenbrenner co-authored.

“I urge him to cosponsor the USA Freedom Act. It strikes the proper balance between security and privacy, and I am confident it has the votes to pass,” Sensenbrenner said in a statement to which Ruppersberger has yet to respond.

With the details still undetermined in Ruppersberger’s proposal, it is difficult to know how far the new effort would go in requiring court-ordered individual suspicion to access phone records, as well as requiring a specific “relevance” connection to an ongoing terrorism investigation, as required in the Patriot Act and the proposed USA Freedom Act – without which, privacy advocates argue, would leave the door open to dubious searches of government records.

“This certainly doesn’t go as far as the USA Freedom Act,” said Michelle Richardson, the ACLU’s surveillance lobbyist.

“Of course, the devil will be in the details. We’re going to see if we can get an advance copy and talk to the sponsors.”
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 15 maart 2014 @ 19:06:11 #152
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137774127
Het CIA-verhaal: Het Witte Huis zou de documenten ingepikt hebben.

quote:
White House withholding over 9,000 docs in CIA torture probe

For the last five years, the White House has withheld over 9,000 top-secret documents from a Senate investigation of the CIA’s former detention and torture program. The report comes one day after the CIA was accused of interfering in the probe.

Though the White House has publicly supported the investigation into Bush-era torture, the Obama administration has routinely rejected requests by the Select Senate Committee on Intelligence to see the records, McClatchy news service reported Wednesday.

It is not clear how substantial the documents are for the investigation, yet the White House has shielded them without wielding the claim of executive privilege that has been used often by the Obama and George W. Bush administrations to cover CIA and other government secrets following the attacks of September 11, 2001.

The White House told McClatchy a “small percentage” of the 6.2 million pages of documents given to the Committee were “set aside because they raise executive branch confidentiality interests.” The White House added that it had worked with the Committee “to ensure access to the information necessary to review the CIA’s former program.”

Neither the CIA nor the Committee would offer comment to McClatchy.

On Tuesday, Committee chairwoman Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D) alleged that the CIA secretly removed classified documents from a computer system used by Congress in the torture probe. Feinstein claimed the CIA improperly searched a stand-alone computer network at the agency’s Langley, Virginia headquarters that was put in place so that Intelligence Committee staffers could view sensitive documents.

The CIA denied the allegations, and the White House has stood behind CIA leadership on the matter. Reuters reported Wednesday the White House had previously tried to alleviate the longstanding tension between the CIA and the Committee after both entities alleged the other spied on it. Yet the failure to assuage the feud led Sen. Feinstein to write several letters appealing to Obama’s chief legal adviser, Kathryn Ruemmler, seeking a resolution. Those attempts also fell short.

Feinstein made no mention of the 9,400 White House documents during her Tuesday speech on the Senate floor. The held materials came to the Committee’s attention in 2009, though it is not clear whether the White House had given the Democrat-led Committee access to them and then rescinded the collection. Why the documents have been kept from the Committee is yet unknown.

“The most nefarious explanation is that they are not privileged and the White House simply doesn’t want to hand them over,” said Elizabeth Goitein, the co-director of the Brennan Center for Justice’s Liberty and National Security Program at the New York University Law School.

“Executive privilege is generally asserted after negotiations and brinksmanship behind the scenes. People put on paper what they want to be formalized, and these negotiations by their very nature are very informal.”

The documents have been referenced in public. Most prominently was in August, when Committee member Mark Udall [D] pressed the administration’s Pentagon general counsel nominee, Stephen W. Preston, for an answer on how he, as former CIA general counsel, played a role in the agency’s protection of the documents.

Preston responded by saying that “a small percentage of the total number of documents was set aside for further review. The agency [CIA] has deferred to the White House and has not been substantially involved in subsequent discussions about the disposition of those documents.”

In her speech Tuesday, Feinsten also intimated that the Committee found sometime in 2010 that it had mysteriously lost access to materials it had previously had clearance to read.

“This was done without the knowledge or approval of committee members or staff and in violation of our written agreements,” she said, going on to say the “matter was resolved” after CIA evasion and a subsequent appeal to the White House.

The documents in questions are separate from materials compiled by an internal CIA review of around 6.2 million pages of emails, operational cables, and other secret documents made available to the Committee in a secret electronic reading room at the CIA’s Langley headquarters.

The Committee approved a final draft of the 6,300-page study in December 2012, yet the report has been kept from the public.

As for Senate Republicans, who long ago opted out of involvement in the CIA torture probe, the party’s top member on the Committee has cast doubt on Feinstein’s assertions.

“Although people speak as though we know all the pertinent facts surrounding this matter, the truth is, we do not,” said Sen. Saxby Chambliss.

“No forensics have been run on the CIA computers…at the CIA facility to know what actually happened,”he said Tuesday.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 17 maart 2014 @ 04:59:24 #153
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137830249
quote:
Revealed: the MoD's secret cyberwarfare programme

Multimillion pound project will look at how internet users can be influenced by social media and other psychological techniques

The Ministry of Defence is developing a secret, multimillion-pound research programme into the future of cyberwarfare, including how emerging technologies such as social media and psychological techniques can be harnessed by the military to influence people's beliefs.

Programmes ranging from studies into the role of online avatars to research drawing on psychological theories and the impact of live video-sharing are being funded by the MoD in partnership with arms companies, academics, marketing experts and thinktanks.

The Guardian has seen a list of those hired to deliver research projects, which have titles such as Understanding Online Avatars, Cognitive and Behaviour Concepts of Cyber Activities, and Novel Techniques for Public Sentiment and Perception Elicitation.

The projects are being awarded by a "centre of excellence" managed by BAE Systems, which has received about £20m-worth of MoD funding since 2012. The MoD plans to procure a further £10m-worth of research through the centre this year.

While the centre commissions a wide range of research, such as studies of alcohol consumption in the armed forces, a substantial stream of research comes under the heading of "information activities and outreach". The term is significant in that it has its roots in Britain's 2010 strategic defence review and national security strategy. Its aims include understanding the behaviour of internet users from different cultures, the influence of social media such as Twitter and Facebook and the psychological impact of increased online video usage on sites such as YouTube.

Typical targets, for now, would include groups of young internet users deemed at risk of being incited or recruited online to commit terrorism.

Dr Tim Stevens of Kings College London, who studies cyberwar and strategy, said there was increased state interest in the role of emergent technologies such as social media and the development of powerful psychological techniques to wield influence.

"The current furore over inter-state cyberwar is probably not where the game's at. What is far more likely is that states will seek to influence their own populations and others through so-called 'cyber' methods, which basically means the internet and the device du jour, currently smartphones and tablets," he said.

"With the advent of sophisticated data-processing capabilities (including big data), the big number-crunchers can detect, model and counter all manner of online activities just by detecting the behavioural patterns they see in the data and adjusting their tactics accordingly.

"Cyberwarfare of the future may be less about hacking electrical power grids and more about hacking minds by shaping the environment in which political debate takes place," he added.

The current MoD research drive in the area is being run by the Defence Human Capability Science and Technology Centre (DHCSTC), which is administered by BAE.

While most projects remain under wraps an insight into the area of research has been provided by a previous report commissioned by the MoD, and which has been released under the Freedom of Information Act. It examined how chatbots – computer programmes that make human-sounding small talk and which have been used in everything from customer relations to sex industry marketing – could take on military roles in intelligence and propaganda operations to influence targets.

The research into the programmes, which are designed to emulate human conversation and are familiar as "virtual assistants" on retailers' websites, envisages a future in which "an influence bot could be deployed in both covert and overt ways – on the web, in IM/chatrooms/forums or in virtual worlds".

"It could be a declared bot and fairly overt influence play, or pretend to be a human and conduct its influencing in less obvious ways," says the 2011 report by Daden, a technology group that develops chatbots for commercial and educational clients.

Daden also suggested chatbots could be used as "cyberbuddies" shadowing soldiers through their careers or as data-gatherers in digital environments such as chatrooms and forums, where they could "scout for targets, potentially analyse behaviour, and record and relay conversation".

The report cautions, however, that the barriers to their use in data-gathering and influence operations include ethical issues, adding that "the adverse effect that the unmasking of a non-declared bot would have on the subject, and their wider group needs to be carefully considered".

It says: "One approach, as in real life, is for the bot to withdraw if it thinks it may be compromised. In the early days, it may be better that the bot activity is declared and overt – in the same way as much broadcast and UK plc promotional activity."

BAE declined to provide a comment when contacted.

The projects

• Full Spectrum Targeting – a sophisticated new concept that is growing in influence at the MoD and measures future battlefields in social and cognitive terms rather than just physical spaces. Emphasis is put on identifying and co-opting influential individuals, controlling channels of information and destroying targets based on morale rather than military necessity. The £65,285 project is being delivered by the Change Institute (a London-based thinktank whose previous work includes carrying out research for the government into understanding Muslim ethnic communities), the BAE subsidiary, Detica and another defence and security-orientated company, Montvieux.

• Cognitive and Behaviour Concepts of Cyber Activities – £310,822 project being delivered by Baines Associates, a strategic marketing firm, i to i Research, a consultancy in "social and behavioural change", and universities including Northumbria, Kent and University College London.

• Innovation: Tools and Techniques for Influence Activities – a £28,474 project being delivered by the Change Institute, the University of Kent and QinetiQ, a company spun out of the MoD research department.

• Understanding Online Avatars – a £17,150 project being delivered by the Change Institute.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 18 maart 2014 @ 17:00:24 #154
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137889894
quote:
Small Drones Are a Bigger Privacy Threat Than the NSA, Says Senate Intel Chair

Dianne Feinstein has a bone to pick with drones, especially since she confronted one on her own lawn.

“I’m in my home and there’s a demonstration out front, and I go to peek out the window, and there’s a drone facing me,” the California Democratic senator recalled to correspondent Morley Safer on "60 Minutes" Sunday night.

Demonstrators from Code Pink, who were protesting NSA surveillance outside her house in July, said it was just a tiny pink toy helicopter.

The confusion points to the problems with understanding and regulating and at least defining drones: a drone and a remote-controlled helicopter are the same thing.

Big, armed capital-D Drones with creepy names like the Predator and the Reaper have earned a shadowy reputation because they've been used—largely in secret by the CIA—to dramatically extend the reach of the military (and through lawfare, extend the boundaries of what's lawful), within politically vacuous spaces. In a way, this use of Drones is not unlike the use of electronic surveillance by other parts of the intelligence community.

But for the purposes of privacy in America, drones are nothing fancier than flying remote controlled GoPro cameras.

“When is a drone picture a benefit to society? When does it become stalking? When does it invade privacy? How close to a home can a drone go?” Feinstein asked, listing off questions she had to Safer.

In an extra segment, Safer asked Feinstein if she believed that "the drones were the worst thing that could happen to our privacy ever."

"To a great extent that's the way I feel right now," she said, "because the drone can take pictures. The sophisticated drone, which isn't necessarily the drone that's going to be used by the average person from 17,000, 20,000 feet and you don't know it's there."

quote:
The NSA's spying technology may not produce spectacular video, but both it and the drone involve potential intrusions on personal privacy. But Feinstein has said she sees drones as more risky to privacy than government internet surveillance because they are largely unregulated.

Privacy groups have challenged that view, criticizing what they've called Sen. Feinstein's contradictory views about government surveillance.

"I really wish the DiFi that just testified at #droneprivacy hearing could be chair of the Senate Intel Committee," Amie Stepanovich, the director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, tweeted after a hearing in January.
Het artikel gaat verder.

[ Bericht 21% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 18-03-2014 17:06:22 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 18 maart 2014 @ 17:32:59 #155
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137891060
quote:
NSA surveillance program reaches ‘into the past’ to retrieve, replay phone calls

The National Security Agency has built a surveillance system capable of recording “100 percent” of a foreign country’s telephone calls, enabling the agency to rewind and review conversations as long as a month after they take place, according to people with direct knowledge of the effort and documents supplied by former contractor Edward Snowden.

A senior manager for the program compares it to a time machine — one that can replay the voices from any call without requiring that a person be identified in advance for surveillance.

The voice interception program, called MYSTIC, began in 2009. Its RETRO tool, short for “retrospective retrieval,” and related projects reached full capacity against the first target nation in 2011. Planning documents two years later anticipated similar operations elsewhere.

In the initial deployment, collection systems are recording “every single” conversation nationwide, storing billions of them in a 30-day rolling buffer that clears the oldest calls as new ones arrive, according to a classified summary.

The call buffer opens a door “into the past,” the summary says, enabling users to “retrieve audio of interest that was not tasked at the time of the original call.” Analysts listen to only a fraction of 1 percent of the calls, but the absolute numbers are high. Each month, they send millions of voice clippings, or “cuts,” for processing and long-term storage.

At the request of U.S. officials, The Washington Post is withholding details that could be used to identify the country where the system is being employed or other countries where its use was envisioned.

No other NSA program disclosed to date has swallowed a nation’s telephone network whole. Outside experts have sometimes described that prospect as disquieting but remote, with notable implications for a growing debate over the NSA’s practice of “bulk collection” abroad.

Bulk methods capture massive data flows “without the use of discriminants,” as President Obama put it in January. By design, they vacuum up all the data they touch — meaning that most of the conversations collected by RETRO would be irrelevant to U.S. national security interests.

In the view of U.S. officials, however, the capability is highly valuable.

In a statement, Caitlin Hayden, spokeswoman for the National Security Council, declined to comment on “specific alleged intelligence activities.” Speaking generally, she said “new or emerging threats” are “often hidden within the large and complex system of modern global communications, and the United States must consequently collect signals intelligence in bulk in certain circumstances in order to identify these threats.”

NSA spokeswoman Vanee Vines, in an e-mailed statement, said that “continuous and selective reporting of specific techniques and tools used for legitimate U.S. foreign intelligence activities is highly detrimental to the national security of the United States and of our allies, and places at risk those we are sworn to protect.”

Some of the documents provided by Snowden suggest that high-volume eavesdropping may soon be extended to other countries, if it has not been already. The RETRO tool was built three years ago as a “unique one-off capability,” but last year’s secret intelligence budget named five more countries for which the MYSTIC program provides “comprehensive metadata access and content,” with a sixth expected to be in place by last October.

The budget did not say whether the NSA now records calls in quantity in those countries, or expects to do so. A separate document placed high priority on planning “for MYSTIC accesses against projected new mission requirements,” including “voice.”

Ubiquitous voice surveillance, even overseas, pulls in a great deal of content from Americans who telephone, visit and work in the target country. It may also be seen as inconsistent with Obama’s Jan. 17 pledge “that the United States is not spying on ordinary people who don’t threaten our national security,” regardless of nationality, “and that we take their privacy concerns into account.”

In a presidential policy directive, Obama instructed the NSA and other agencies that bulk acquisition may be used only to gather intelligence on one of six specified threats, including nuclear proliferation and terrorism. The directive, however, also noted that limits on bulk collection “do not apply to signals intelligence data that is temporarily acquired to facilitate targeted collection.”

The emblem of the MYSTIC program depicts a cartoon wizard with a telephone-headed staff. Among the agency’s bulk collection programs disclosed over the past year, its focus on the spoken word is unique. Most of the programs have involved the bulk collection of either metadata — which does not include content — or text, such as e-mail address books.

Telephone calls are often thought to be more ephemeral and less suited than text for processing, storage and search. Indeed, there are indications that the call-recording program has been hindered by the NSA’s limited capacity to store and transmit bulky voice files.

In the first year of its deployment, a program officer wrote that the project “has long since reached the point where it was collecting and sending home far more than the bandwidth could handle.”

Because of similar capacity limits across a range of collection programs, the NSA is leaping forward with cloud-based collection systems and a gargantuan new “mission data repository” in Utah. According to its overview briefing, the Utah facility is designed “to cope with the vast increases in digital data that have accompanied the rise of the global network.”

Christopher Soghoian, the principal technologist for the American Civil Liberties Union, said history suggests that “over the next couple of years they will expand to more countries, retain data longer and expand the secondary uses.”

Spokesmen for the NSA and the Office of Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr. declined to confirm or deny expansion plans or discuss the criteria for any change.

Based on RETRO’s internal reviews, the NSA has strong motive to deploy it elsewhere. In the documents and interviews, U.S. officials said RETRO is uniquely valuable when an analyst first uncovers a new name or telephone number of interest.

With up to 30 days of recorded conversations in hand, the NSA can pull an instant history of the subject’s movements, associates and plans. Some other U.S. intelligence agencies also have access to RETRO.

Highly classified briefings cite examples in which the tool offered high-stakes intelligence that would not have existed under traditional surveillance programs in which subjects were identified for targeting in advance. Unlike most of the government’s public claims about the value of controversial programs, the briefings supply names, dates, locations and fragments of intercepted calls in convincing detail.

Present and former U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to provide context for a classified program, acknowledged that large numbers of conversations involving Americans would be gathered from the country where RETRO operates.

The NSA does not attempt to filter out their calls, defining them as communications “acquired incidentally as a result of collection directed against appropriate foreign intelligence targets.”

Until about 20 years ago, such incidental collection was unusual unless an American was communicating directly with a foreign intelligence target. In bulk collection systems, which are exponentially more capable than the ones in use throughout the Cold War, calls and other data from U.S. citizens and permanent residents are regularly ingested by the millions.

Under the NSA’s internal “minimization rules,” those intercepted communications “may be retained and processed” and included in intelligence reports. The agency generally removes the names of U.S. callers, but there are several broadly worded exceptions.

An independent group tasked by the White House to review U.S. surveillance policies recommended that incidentally collected U.S. calls and e-mails — including those obtained overseas — should nearly always “be purged upon detection.” Obama did not accept that recommendation.

Vines, in her statement, said the NSA’s work is “strictly conducted under the rule of law.”

RETRO and MYSTIC are carried out under Executive Order 12333, the traditional grant of presidential authority to intelligence agencies for operations outside the United States.

Since August, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and others on that panel have been working on plans to assert a greater oversight role for intelligence gathering abroad. Some legislators are now considering whether Congress should also draft new laws to govern those operations.

Experts say there is not much legislation that governs overseas intelligence work.

“Much of the U.S. government’s intelligence collection is not regulated by any statute passed by Congress,” said Timothy H. Edgar, the former director of privacy and civil liberties on Obama’s national security staff. “There’s a lot of focus on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which is understandable, but that’s only a slice of what the intelligence community does.”

All surveillance must be properly authorized for a legitimate intelligence purpose, he said, but that “still leaves a gap for activities that otherwise basically aren’t regulated by law because they’re not covered by FISA.”

Beginning in 2007, Congress loosened 40-year-old restrictions on domestic surveillance because so much foreign data crossed U.S. territory. There were no comparable changes to protect the privacy of U.S. citizens and residents whose calls and e-mails now routinely cross international borders.

Vines noted that the NSA’s job is to “identify threats within the large and complex system of modern global communications,” where ordinary people share fiber-optic cables with legitimate intelligence targets.

For Peter Swire, a member of the president’s review group, the fact that Americans and foreigners use the same devices, software and networks calls for greater care to safeguard Americans’ privacy.

“It’s important to have institutional protections so that advanced capabilities used overseas don’t get turned against our democracy at home,” he said.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 18 maart 2014 @ 17:54:59 #156
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137891850
quote:
quote:
There's always been a lot of information about your activities. Every phone number you dial, every credit-card charge you make. It's long since passed that a typical person doesn't leave footprints. But we need explicit rules. If you were in a divorce lawsuit 20 years ago, is that a public document on the Web that a nosy neighbor should be able to pull up with a Bing or Google search? When I apply for a job, should my speeding tickets be available? Well, I'm a bus driver, how about in that case? And society does have an overriding interest in some activities, like, "Am I gathering nuclear-weapons plans, and am I going to kill millions of people?" If we think there's an increasing chance of that, who do you trust? I actually wish we were having more intense debates about these things.
quote:
If it's an intense debate about surveillance and the cloud that Gates would like, then the Syrian Electronic Army may be about to grant that wish. SEA has twice hacked Microsoft in 2014, giving Microsoft a red face and a pair of black eyes. SEA hackers warned that Microsoft is "spying on people" and not to "use Microsoft emails (Hotmail, Outlook), They are monitoring your accounts and selling the data to the governments." The pro-Assad hackers vowed to deliver the digital dirt by publishing stolen documents that "prove" Microsoft spies on email for governments.

Shortly thereafter, Microsoft admitted that targeted phishing attacks allowed SEA to steal law enforcement documents.

If Gates really wants an intense debate, that may be about to happen (again) for Microsoft. Yesterday, the Syrian Electronic Army tweeted that it will soon leak the documents showing what Microsoft is paid for email surveillance.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 18 maart 2014 @ 22:46:41 #157
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137906214
quote:
quote:
Notice how much the Fourth Amendment tells our enemies. "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated," it states, "and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

The Framers are usually considered patriots. Yet they gave traitors and criminals in their midst such powerful knowledge about concealing evidence of skullduggery! Today every terrorist with access to a pocket Constitution is privy to the same text. And thanks to the Supreme Court's practice of publishing its opinions, al-Qaeda need only have an Internet connection to gain a very nuanced, specific understanding of how the Fourth Amendment is applied in individual cases, how it constrains law enforcement, and how to exploit those limits.

Such were my thoughts Friday at UCLA Law School, where Stewart Baker, an attorney who worked in the Department of Homeland Security during the Bush Administration, participated in a debate about Edward Snowden. Some of his remarks focused on the NSA whistleblower's professed desire to trigger a debate among Americans, many of whom think it's their right to weigh in on all policy controversies.

Baker disagrees.
quote:
The next step would be obvious. There are ways in which the First, Second, and Fifth Amendments help to inform terrorists too. The same goes for related case law. Think how much less terrorists and criminals alike would know if all constitutional law, indeed all law of any kind, were interpreted before a secret body like the FISA court, rather than in open court where anyone can listen. Until then, our judges and constitutional-law scholars will regularly be putting out information that could be useful to our enemies. Stopping them would create an undemocratic system in which prosecutorial and police abuse would often be essentially undiscoverable and unchallengeable, and would inevitably end in civil liberties abuses of millions of innocents. But if, like Baker, you're not much bothered by mass surveillance of innocents, perhaps that price isn't too high to pay.
Het artikel gaat verder.

[ Bericht 21% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 18-03-2014 22:51:49 ]
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_137912234
Was deze al gepost? (geen zin om hele topic door te zoeken)

*WATCH* Sexy NSA commercial with Sasha Grey (NSFW)
As the officer took her away, she recalled that she asked,
"Why do you push us around?"
And she remembered him saying,
"I don't know, but the law's the law, and you're under arrest."
  woensdag 19 maart 2014 @ 09:34:56 #159
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137914536
quote:
quote:
Several Australian law enforcement agencies and the Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO) have submitted proposals asking the country's senate for more surveillance power, and state police have even asked that the government move to log its citizens' Web browsing history.

Several months ago, on the heels of revelations that Australian Intelligence had been sharing surveillance information with its partners in foreign nations, the Australian Senate opened an inquiry into whether the country's Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act of 1979 should be revised to better protect AU citizens' privacy. Unsurprisingly, the ASIO—along with Northern Territory, Western, and Victoria state police—has submitted commentary asking for more data retention and offering little in the way of more privacy protection.

In particular, the ASIO said that Snowden's leaks will make it more difficult for the organization to collect meaningful data about a person, so the organization should be given more leeway to perform its surveillance duties. In its proposal, the ASIO asserted that certain technological advances are detrimental to its spying on bad actors (a refrain that is not often heard, as it's generally accepted that technology is making it easier to spy on citizens).
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 19 maart 2014 @ 13:32:59 #160
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137922147
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 19 maart 2014 @ 13:37:12 #161
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137922319
quote:
quote:
Anonymous Hackers released their own Operating System with name "Anonymous-OS", is Live is an ubuntu-based distribution and created under Ubuntu 11.10 and uses Mate desktop. You can create the LiveUSB with Unetbootin.
quote:
Update: Another Live OS for anonymity available called "Tails". Which is a live CD or live USB that aims at preserving your privacy and anonymity.It helps you to use the Internet anonymously almost anywhere you go and on any computer:all connections to the Internet are forced to go through the Tor network or to leave no trace on the computer you're using unless you ask it explicitly, or use state-of-the-art cryptographic tools to encrypt your files, email and instant messaging. You can Download Tail from Here
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 19 maart 2014 @ 14:30:12 #162
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137924303
quote:
Facebook Fights Back Against the NSA Spy Machine

Mark Zuckerberg was apparently peeved enough to phone the President when he read recent reports that the NSA was using fake Facebook websites to intercept the social network’s traffic and infect private computers with surveillance software. But Joe Sullivan — the ex-federal prosecutor who now serves as Facebook’s chief security officer — says the company has now steeled its online services so that such a ploy is no longer possible.

“That particular attack is not viable,” the 45-year-old Sullivan told a room full of reporters yesterday at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California. It hasn’t been viable, he explained, since the company rolled out what’s called SSL data encryption for all its web traffic, a process it completed in the summer of last year.

According to outside security researchers, there are still ways of working around Facebook’s encryption. But these methods are much harder to pull off, and Sullivan’s message was clear: The situation around the NSA’s surveillance campaigns isn’t quite as dire as many have painted it. Unlike his counterparts at places like Google and Microsoft, Sullivan says that the ongoing stream of revelations from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden aren’t really that surprising, and he indicated that the leaked information has changed little about how his company approaches security.

Sullivan’s message stands in contrast to the one Zuckerberg unloaded on his Facebook page after his phoning the President. The Facebook founder expressed extreme frustration over the NSA’s practices, calling for sweeping changes to government policies. But the contrast isn’t that surprising. It very clearly shows the awkward situation that has engulfed companies like Facebook in the wake of Snowden’s revelations, which started tumbling out last summer. The giants of the web are certainly concerned over NSA surveillance — despite indications that they may have been complicit in some ways — and they’re actively fighting against it. But they must also reassure users that the situation is well in hand — that it’s safe to use their services today. This can be a difficult line to walk.

Certainly, the web’s largest operations — including Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft as well as Facebook — have now taken at least the basic steps needed to guard their online traffic against interlopers. Facebook not only uses SSL, or secure sockets layer, encryption to protect all data moving between its computer servers and virtually all of the than 1.2 billion people who use the social networking service. It has also installed technology that uses similarly hefty encryption techniques to protect information that flows between the massive data centers that underpin its online empire. This is just the sort of thing Snowden himself called for last week while appearing via video feed at a conference in Texas.

In using SSL to encode all data sent and received by its million of users, Facebook can indeed thwart the sort of fake-Facebook-server attack discussed in the press last week. As described, these attacks redirected users to NSA websites that looked exactly like Facebook by surreptitiously slipping certain internet addresses into their browsers. SSL encryption provides what is probably “solid” protection against such methods, says Nicholas Weaver, a staff researcher who specializes in network security at the International Computer Science Institute.

Weaver does acknowledge that attackers could compromise Facebook SSL encryption by somehow obtaining or creating fake encryption certificates, but he believes that such attacks are now unlikely. “That is very risky these days,” he says, pointing out that many companies are now on the lookout for such fake certificates.

It’s equally important that Facebook is now encrypting information as it moves between data centers. Documents released by Snowden have shown that the NSA has ways of tapping lines that connect the massive computing centers operated by the likes of Google and Facebook. Sullivan declined to say when Facebook had secured these lines, but he’s now confident this makes it much more difficult for agencies like the NSA to eavesdrop on Facebook data as it travels through network service providers outside of the company’s control. And Weaver agrees. Assuming the company’s encryption devices aren’t sabotaged, he says, the data is secure as it travels across the wire. “You’d need to break into the data center computers or the encryption devices themselves to access that data,” he says.

But Joe Sullivan’s rather sunny view of Facebook security doesn’t tell the whole story. Much of the rest of the web has yet to adopt similar encryption techniques, and there’s still so much we don’t know about what the NSA is capable of. It’s also worth noting that Facebook’s chief security officer sidestepped questions about future threats to the company’s operation, including the possibility of a quantum computer that could break current encryption techniques. In the Post-Snowden age, the giants of the web have certainly increased their security efforts. But there is always more to do.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 20 maart 2014 @ 15:58:55 #163
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137968751
quote:
quote:
I'm seeing a bunch of folks passing around a story by Spencer Ackerman at The Guardian, claiming that tech companies lied about their "denials" of PRISM. The story is incredibly misleading. Ackerman is one of the best reporters out there on the intelligence community, and I can't recall ever seeing a story that I think he got wrong, but this is one. But the storyline is so juicy, lots of folks, including the usual suspects are quick to pile on without bothering to actually look at the details, insisting that this is somehow evidence of the tech companies lying.

So, let's look at what actually happened.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 20 maart 2014 @ 17:51:00 #164
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137971873
quote:
Bondsdag gaat activiteiten NSA onderzoeken

De Duitse Bondsdag heeft vandaag besloten tot een parlementair onderzoek naar de activiteiten van de Amerikaanse National Security Agency (NSA) en andere buitenlandse inlichtingendiensten, waaronder het afluisteren van de mobiele telefoon van bondskanselier Angela Merkel.

Zowel de regeringspartijen als de oppositie stemden voor het onderzoek. Daarin wordt gekeken hoe breed en hoe diep de privécommunicatie van Duitsers door de Verenigde Staten en hun bondgenoten in het 'Five Eyes'-netwerk - Groot-Brittannië, Canada, Australië en Nieuw-Zeeland - werd bespioneerd en hoe veel Duitse functionarissen hiervan afwisten.

Het onderzoek begint volgende maand. Oppositielid Hans-Christian Ströbele wil dat ook NSA-klokkenluider Edward Snowden wordt gehoord, ook al zullen de VS daar waarschijnlijk bezwaar tegen makken. Snowden verblijft in Rusland, waar hij tijdelijk asiel heeft gekregen.

Het Duitse openbaar ministerie overweegt nog of het een strafrechtelijk onderzoek zal beginnen tegen de activiteiten van de NSA.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 20 maart 2014 @ 22:29:01 #165
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_137985357
quote:
Hacked emails show what Microsoft charges the FBI for user data

Microsoft often charges the FBI's most secretive division hundreds of thousands of dollars a month to legally view customer information, according to documents allegedly hacked by the Syrian Electronic Army.

The SEA, a hacker group loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, is best known for hijacking Western media companies' social media accounts. (These companies include the Associated Press, CNN, NPR, and even the Daily Dot.) The SEA agreed to let the Daily Dot analyze the documents with experts before the group published them in full.

The documents consist of what appear to be invoices and emails between Microsoft's Global Criminal Compliance team and the FBI's Digital Intercept Technology Unit (DITU), and purport to show exactly how much money Microsoft charges DITU, in terms of compliance costs, when DITU provides warrants and court orders for customers' data.

In December 2012, for instance, Microsoft emailed DITU a PDF invoice for $145,100, broken down to $100 per request for information, the documents appear to show. In August 2013, Microsoft allegedly emailed a similar invoice, this time for $352,200, at a rate of $200 per request. The latest invoice provided, from November 2013, is for $281,000.

None of the technologists or lawyers consulted for this story thought that Microsoft would be in the wrong to charge the FBI for compliance, especially considering it's well within the company's legal right to charge "reasonable expenses." Instead, they said, the documents are more of an indication of just how frequently the government wants information on customers. Some of the DITU invoices show hundreds of requests per month.

For ACLU Principal Technologist Christopher Soghoian, the documents reiterated his stance that charging a small fee is a positive, in part because it creates more of a record of government tracking. In 2010, Soghoian actually chided Microsoft for not charging the Drug Enforcement Agency for turning over user records when instructed to by courts, noting that companies like Google and Yahoo did.

Nate Cardozo, a staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, agreed, and told the Daily Dot the government should be transparent about how much it pays.

"Taxpayers should absolutely know how much money is going toward this," he said.

Compared with the National Security Agency, which has seen many of its programs exposed by former systems analyst Edward Snowden, DITU has a low profile. But it runs in the same circles. Multiple law enforcement and technology industry representatives described DITU to Foreign Policy as the FBI's liaison to the U.S.'s tech companies, and the agency's equivalent to the NSA.

To that note, DITU is mentioned as a little-noticed detail from Snowden slides that detail the NSA's notorious PRISM program, which allows it to collect users' communications from nine American tech companies, including Microsoft. One slide explicitly mentions DITU's role in getting data from those companies.

PRISM screengrab via freesnowden.is

It's impossible to fully verify the documents' authenticity without confirmation from someone with direct knowledge of Microsoft and DITU compliance practices, and those parties refused to comment. But there are multiple signs that indicate the documents are legitimate.

"I don’t see any indication that they’re not real," Cardozo said. "If I was going to fake something like this, I would try to fake it up a lot more sensational than this."

That the SEA twice attacked Microsoft with a phishing attack before leaking these documents is well documented. On Jan. 11, the day of the second attack, the SEA hijacked the company's blog and Twitter account. One representative told the Verge that day that it was part of a bigger plan: "We are making some distraction for Microsoft employees so we can success in our main mission," the hacker said.

In a blog post nearly two weeks later, Microsoft admitted: "[W]e have learned that there was unauthorized access to certain employee email accounts, and information contained in those accounts could be disclosed. It appears that documents associated with law enforcement inquiries were stolen."

A source familiar with several of the email addresses of the Microsoft employees in the emails confirmed the addresses were authentic.

When reached for comment, the company reiterated its stance that it complies with government demands as required by law. A spokesperson added that "as pursuant to U.S. law, Microsoft is entitled to seek reimbursement for costs associated with compliance with a valid legal demands. ... To be clear, these reimbursements cover only a portion of the costs we actually incur to comply with legal orders."

A spokesperson for the FBI declined to comment and deferred questions to Microsoft, "given that SEA claims to have stolen the documents" from there.

Indeed, there's plenty of history for communications companies charging compliance costs for cooperating with intelligence agencies' request for people's information. The CIA pays AT&T more than $10 million annually for access to its phone records, government officials told the New York Times. The Guardian, referencing other documents provided by Snowden, has reported that the NSA paid millions to Microsoft and the other eight companies used in PRISM for compliance costs.

Only the earliest of the Microsoft invoices provided by the SEA, dated May 10, 2012, breaks down requests by type of legal request, and it shows them to all explicitly come legally, though nothing in the documents indicates the later invoices refer to illegal surveillance. User information by a subpoena costs $50, a court order $75, and a search warrant $100. The requests come from FBI offices all around the U.S.



Later invoices to DITU don't break down requests to subpoena and court order, though the format is otherwise similar, and costs begin to rise to $100 and $200 per request.

And though the costs vacillate slightly depending on the invoice, they appear to be roughly in line with industry standards. Ashkan Soltani, who coauthored a Yale study on how much it costs agencies like the FBI to track targets by tapping phone companies for their cellphone locations, said that the range of costs seen in the SEA documents—$50 to $200 per order to Microsoft—"did seem a fair cost."

The invoices don't make explicit the exact type of information Microsoft charges DITU to provide, which may account for the price changes.

The biggest suspicion espoused by the experts we spoke with was just how apparently easy it was for the SEA to acquire this sort of information. If the documents aren't forged, that means Microsoft and the FBI simply email invoices and references to a presumably classified process.

"I’m surprised that they’re doing it by email," Soltani said. "I thought it would be a more secure system."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 21 maart 2014 @ 18:25:54 #166
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138012626
quote:
NSA hacks system administrators, new leak reveals

In its quest to take down suspected terrorists and criminals abroad, the United States National Security Agency has adopted the practice of hacking the system administrators that oversee private computer networks, new documents reveal.

The Intercept has published a handful of leaked screenshots taken from an internal NSA message board where one spy agency specialist spoke extensively about compromising not the computers of specific targets, but rather the machines of the system administrators who control entire networks.

Journalist Ryan Gallagher reported that Edward Snowden, a former sys admin for NSA contractor Booz Allen Hamilton, provided The Intercept with the internal documents, including one from 2012 that’s bluntly titled “I hunt sys admins.”

According to the posts — some labeled “top secret” — NSA staffers should not shy away from hacking sys admins: a successful offensive mission waged against an IT professional with extensive access to a privileged network could provide the NSA with unfettered capabilities, the analyst acknowledged.

“Who better to target than the person that already has the ‘keys to the kingdom’?” one of the posts reads.

“They were written by an NSA official involved in the agency’s effort to break into foreign network routers, the devices that connect computer networks and transport data across the Internet,” Gallagher wrote for the article published late Thursday. “By infiltrating the computers of system administrators who work for foreign phone and Internet companies, the NSA can gain access to the calls and emails that flow over their networks.”

Since last June, classified NSA materials taken by Snowden and provided to certain journalists have exposed an increasing number of previously-secret surveillance operations that range from purposely degrading international encryption standards and implanting malware in targeted machines, to tapping into fiber-optic cables that transfer internet traffic and even vacuuming up data as its moved into servers in a decrypted state.

The latest leak suggests that some NSA analysts took a much different approach when tasked with trying to collect signals intelligence that otherwise might not be easily available. According to the posts, the author advocated for a technique that involves identifying the IP address used by the network’s sys admin, then scouring other NSA tools to see what online accounts used those addresses to log-in. Then by using a previously-disclosed NSA tool that tricks targets into installing malware by being misdirected to fake Facebook servers, the intelligence analyst can hope that the sys admin’s computer is sufficiently compromised and exploited.

Once the NSA has access to the same machine a sys admin does, American spies can mine for a trove of possibly invaluable information, including maps of entire networks, log-in credentials, lists of customers and other details about how systems are wired. In turn, the NSA has found yet another way to, in theory, watch over all traffic on a targeted network.

“Up front, sys admins generally are not my end target. My end target is the extremist/terrorist or government official that happens to be using the network some admin takes care of,” the NSA employee says in the documents.

When reached for comment by The Intercept, NSA spokesperson Vanee Vines said that, “A key part of the protections that apply to both US persons and citizens of other countries is the mandate that information be in support of a valid foreign intelligence requirement, and comply with US Attorney General-approved procedures to protect privacy rights.”

Coincidentally, outgoing-NSA Director Keith Alexander said last year that he was working on drastically cutting the number of sys admins at that agency by upwards of 90 percent — but didn’t say it was because they could be exploited by similar tactics waged by adversarial intelligence groups. Gen. Alexander’s decision came just weeks after Snowden — previously one of around 1,000 sys admins working on the NSA’s networks, according to Reuters — walked away from his role managing those networks with a trove of classified information.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 22 maart 2014 @ 14:06:11 #167
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138039539
quote:
British intelligence watchdog is like Yes Prime Minister, says MP

Spy services' monitor has staff of just two and was bewildered by Snowden affair

Britain's intelligence services had a system of oversight no better than that seen in the TV comedy Yes, Prime Minister, an MP said on Tuesday during a meeting of a Commons committee.

Julian Huppert, a Liberal Democrat, said the sitcom depicting ineffectual government was an appropriate comparison after it emerged that the intelligence services commissioner appearing before MPs worked only part-time, and operated with only one other staff member.

Huppert said: "Can I come back to this comparison between Britain and the US? I presume you are both familiar with Yes, Prime Minister. There is a line there where it says, 'Good Lord, no. Any hint of suspicion, you hold a full inquiry, have a chap straight out for lunch, ask him straight out if there is anything in it and if he says no, you have got to trust a chap's word'."

Other MPs on the home affairs select committee also questioned Sir Mark Waller, the intelligence services commissioner, as to whether there was adequate political and legal oversight of MI5, MI6 and the surveillance agency GCHQ, and suggested the existing system was not robust enough.

Waller, a former judge, had initially refused to attend the committee but had to relent after being summoned. But he told MPs that he thought he had adequate resources to do his job.

Keith Vaz, the committee chairman, said Waller was clearly a "decent man" but questioned whether there was a need for a full-time commissioner, with a bigger staff with more powers.

Waller disagreed, saying that the prospect of a former judge scrutinising applications for warrants was sufficient to ensure that the intelligences agencies behaved properly. He added that he admired the agencies' "ethos" and that a bigger bureaucracy could have a detrimental effect, interfering with the important work of the intelligence agencies.

The intelligence service commissioner oversees the "lawful use of intrusive powers" – surveillance as it is used by the intelligence agencies. Waller also revealed that 1,700 warrants were issued last year. He estimated he checked about 6% of them to ensure they complied with the law.

The committee is investigating counter-terrorism but its hearings have become increasingly dominated by the revelations by the whistleblower Edward Snowden about the extent of mass surveillance and whether there is sufficient political and legal oversight.

Waller had been in the job 18 months when he heard about the Snowden revelations last summer. His response, he said, was: "Crikey."

His initial fear had been that he had been duped by the intelligence agencies. "I wanted to know if I had been spoofed for 18 months," Waller said.

Waller, who looked ill at ease during much of the questioning, said he had gone to see GCHQ to see if there was anything to the allegations. He saw the deputy chief of the GCHQ and was satisfied the allegations were without foundation.

Vaz said: "And how did you satisfy yourself? It seems from your comment that you had a discussion with them."

Waller replied: "Certainly."

Vaz said: "You heard what they had to say."

Waller replied: "Certainly."

Vaz probed further: "And you accepted what they had to say?"

Waller: "Certainly."

"Is that it?" asked Vaz.

"Certainly," replied Waller.

Vaz added: "Just a discussion?"

Waller: "Certainly."

Vaz, in conclusion, said: "And that's the way you were satisfied that there was no circumventing UK law. You went down, you went to see them, you sat round the table, you had a chat?

Waller replied: "You've got to remember that I've done a whole period – a year and a half's inspection. I have got a very good idea as to what the ethos of this agency is. They know perfectly well that they have had to make out their case and the legality of their case, etc, and I have absolutely, clearly, accepted it."

The committee also heard BT has refused to deny it has handed over data on millions of customers in bulk to government agencies, such as GCHQ, a group of MPs has been told.

Big Brother Watch director Nick Pickles told the committee BT had provided "no substantive answer" to the question of whether they had handed over masses of customer data to the UK government.

Pickles told MPs he feared BT was providing data under section 94 of the Telecommunications Act, which gives the secretary of state broad powers to demand information from an individual or organisation in the interests of national security.

Waller was followed on the witness list by Conservative MP David Davis, who has long questioned the extent of surveillance and called for increased political oversight. Asked about the role of Waller and Sir Anthony May, the interception of communications commissioner, who also acts as a watchdog and recently gave evidence to the committee, Davis said: "I think the commissioners are good people doing impossible jobs." Davis called for a beefed-up intelligence committee that was chosen by the Commons.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_138041201
Doe zo voort, Papierversnipperaar! ^O^
pi_138046756
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 22 maart 2014 14:49 schreef meth1745 het volgende:
Doe zo voort, Papierversnipperaar! ^O^
Inderdaad, tof dat iemand de informatie hieromtrent bijhoudt en aanvult.
pi_138047609
Dit stuk:

quote:
Waller, who looked ill at ease during much of the questioning, said he had gone to see GCHQ to see if there was anything to the allegations. He saw the deputy chief of the GCHQ and was satisfied the allegations were without foundation.

Vaz said: "And how did you satisfy yourself? It seems from your comment that you had a discussion with them."

Waller replied: "Certainly."

Vaz said: "You heard what they had to say."

Waller replied: "Certainly."

Vaz probed further: "And you accepted what they had to say?"

Waller: "Certainly."

"Is that it?" asked Vaz.

"Certainly," replied Waller.

Vaz added: "Just a discussion?"

Waller: "Certainly."

Vaz, in conclusion, said: "And that's the way you were satisfied that there was no circumventing UK law. You went down, you went to see them, you sat round the table, you had a chat?


[ Bericht 13% gewijzigd door #ANONIEM op 22-03-2014 17:51:21 ]
  zondag 23 maart 2014 @ 07:45:17 #171
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138065476
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 22 maart 2014 14:49 schreef meth1745 het volgende:
Doe zo voort, Papierversnipperaar! ^O^
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 22 maart 2014 17:25 schreef gebrokenglas het volgende:

[..]

Inderdaad, tof dat iemand de informatie hieromtrent bijhoudt en aanvult.
Dank U, dank U. :*

quote:
'NSA bespioneerde leiding en telecombedrijven China'

De Amerikaanse geheime dienst NSA heeft de voormalige Chinese president Hu Jintao en Chinese banken en telecombedrijven bespioneerd. Dat blijkt uit documenten van de voormalige NSA-medewerker Edward Snowden, aldus de Amerikaanse krant The New York Times en het Duitse weekblad Der Spiegel.

De NSA had het vooral gemunt op de Chinese telecomgigant Huawei. De Amerikanen vreesden dat Huawei het Chinese leger en door Peking gesteunde hackers zou helpen bij het stelen van geheime informatie van Amerikaanse bedrijven en de Amerikaanse regering. De NSA ondernam daarom in 2009 zelf actie tegen Huawei. Het lukte de spionagedienst om in het computernetwerk van Huawei te infiltreren en documenten te kopiëren.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 23 maart 2014 @ 14:43:03 #172
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138073327
quote:
quote:
Several members of the august “US Journalists Against Transparency” club are outraged by revelations in yesterday’s New York Times (jointly published by der Spiegel) that the NSA has been hacking the products of the Chinese tech company Huawei as well as Huawei itself at exactly the same time (and in exactly the same way) as the US Government has been claiming the Chinese government hacks. Echoing the script of national security state officials, these journalists argue that these revelations are unjustified, even treasonous, because this is the type of spying the NSA should be doing, and disclosure serves no public interest while harming American national security, etc. etc.

True to form, however, these beacons of courage refuse to malign the parties that actually made the choice to publish these revelations – namely, the reporters and editors of the New York Times – and instead use it to advance their relentless attack on Edward Snowden. To these journalists, there are few worse sins than “stealing” the secrets of the US government and leaking them to the press (just as was true in the WikiLeaks case, one must congratulate the US Government on its outstanding propaganda feat of getting its journalists to lead the war on those who bring transparency to the nation’s most powerful factions). But beyond the abject spectacle of anti-transparency journalists, these claims are often based on factually false assumptions about how these stories are reported, making it worthwhile once again to underscore some of the key facts governing this process:
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 23 maart 2014 @ 15:51:05 #173
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138075725
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 24 maart 2014 @ 22:57:52 #174
343860 UpsideDown
Baas Boven Baas
pi_138139135
quote:
Carter vertrouwt e-mail niet meer

maandag 24 mrt 2014, 20:54 (Update: 24-03-14, 22:25)

Voormalig president Jimmy Carter van de Verenigde Staten stuurt zijn post tegenwoordig weer op de traditionele manier. Persoonlijke brieven aan binnen- en buitenlandse kopstukken schrijft hij met de hand en hij doet ze weer zoals vroeger in de brievenbus.

Hij heeft geen vertrouwen meer in de telefoon of de e-mail, omdat de geheime diensten veel te veel mogelijkheden hebben om informatie te onderscheppen. Spionage is in de Verenigde Staten volledig uit de hand gelopen sinds de aanslagen van 11 september 2001, aldus Carter in verschillende Amerikaanse media.

"Ik denk niet dat er nog enige twijfel aan is dat de NSA of andere instanties vrijwel alle telefoontjes in de VS in de gaten houden, en ik neem aan dat dat ook voor het e-mailverkeer geldt."

Diep gezakt
Nog voordat klokkenluider Edward Snowden het grootschalig afluisteren van burgers door de NSA naar buiten bracht, vertrouwde de oud-president de diensten al niet meer. "We zijn diep gezakt in het schenden van Amerikaanse burgerrechten op het gebied van privacy", zegt Carter.

"Brieven aan buitenlandse leiders, en soms zelfs Amerikaanse leiders, schrijf ik met de hand en breng ik persoonlijk naar de brievenbus. Want ik denk dat mijn telefoongesprekken en mijn e-mail worden afgeluisterd. En er zijn dingen waarvan je niet wil dat iemand ze weet."

Sinds hij in 1981 het Witte Huis verliet zet Carter (89) zich in voor mensenrechten en de oplossing van internationale conflicten. Hij richtte na zijn presidentschap The Carter Center op, ter bevordering van mensenrechten en humanitaire hulp en voor het houden van toezicht bij verkiezingen. Als onderhandelaar sprak hij onder meer met Noord-Korea over nucleaire ontwapening in 1994. Ook bezocht hij landen als Syrië en Cuba.

140 landen
Jimmy en zijn vrouw Rosalynn Carter bezochten meer dan 140 landen. Ook is de oud-president lid van The Elders, een raad die in 2007 door Nelson Mandela werd opgericht waarin (voormalige) wereldleiders en andere prominenten uit de internationale politiek zitten.
Say what?
  maandag 24 maart 2014 @ 23:08:20 #175
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138139831
quote:
quote:
In a SPIEGEL interview, former NSA director Michael Hayden, 69, discusses revelations of US spying on Germany made public in documents leaked by Edward Snowden, surveillance against German leaders and tensions between Berlin and Washington.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 maart 2014 @ 12:56:10 #176
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138152559
Deze is leuk! :D

quote:
quote:
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers said Sunday former National Security Agency contractor and fugitive Edward Snowden is “actually supporting in an odd way this very activity of brazen brutality and expansionism of Russia. He needs to understand that. And I think Americans need to understand that….”
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 maart 2014 @ 16:48:46 #177
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138160230
quote:
quote:
Rather than grovel and beg for the U.S. government to respect our privacy, these innovators have taken matters into their own hands, and their work may change the playing field completely.

People used to assume that the United States government was held in check by the constitution, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures and which demands due process in criminal investigations, but such illusions have evaporated in recent years. It turns out that the NSA considers itself above the law in every respect and feels entitled to spy on anyone anywhere in the world without warrants, and without any real oversight. Understandably these revelations shocked the average citizen who had been conditioned to take the government’s word at face value, and the backlash has been considerable. The recent “Today We Fight Back” campaign to protest the NSA’s surveillance practices shows that public sentiment is in the right place. Whether these kinds of petitions and protests will have any real impact on how the U.S. government operates is questionable (to say the least), however some very smart people have decided not to wait around and find out. Instead they’re focusing on making the NSA’s job impossible. In the process they may fundamentally alter the way the internet operates.
quote:
Put all these technologies together and what we see emerging is a new paradigm of communications where decentralized networks replace massive servers, and where social media giants like Facebook and Google may very well go the way of the dinosaur myspace. If you can’t beat them at their game, make their game irrelevant.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 25 maart 2014 @ 17:10:13 #178
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138160987
quote:
The House's NSA bill could allow more spying than ever. You call this reform?

Congress' serial fabricator has the audacity to call his new law the 'End Bulk Collection Act'. Obama's proposal isn't much better

Trevor Timm
theguardian.com, Tuesday 25 March 2014 13.07 GMT


he White House and the House Intelligence Committee leaked dueling proposals last night that are supposedly aimed at ending the mass collection of all Americans’ phone records. But the devil is in the details, and when it comes to the National Security Agency’s unique ability to twist and distort the English language, the devil tends to wrap his horns around every word.

The House proposal, to be unveiled this morning by Reps Mike Rogers and Dutch Ruppersberger, is the more worrying of the two. Rogers has been the NSA’s most ardent defender in Congress and has a long history of distorting the truth and practicing in outright fabrication, whether in touting his committee’s alleged “oversight” or by way of his attempts to impugn the motives of the once again vindicated whistleblower who started this whole reform debate, former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

As a general rule, whenever Mike Rogers (not to be confused with incoming NSA director Michael Rogers) claims a bill does something particular – like, say, protect your privacy – it's actually a fairly safe assumption that the opposite will end up true. His new bill seems to have the goal of trading government bulk collection for even more NSA power to search Americans’ data while it sits in the hands of the phone companies.

While the full draft of the bill isn’t yet public, the Guardian has seen a copy, and its description does not inspire confidence. Under the Rogers and Ruppersberger proposal, slyly named the “End Bulk Collection Act”, the telephone companies would hold on to phone data. But the government could search data from those companies based on "reasonable articulable suspicion" that someone is an agent of a foreign power, associated with an agent of a foreign power, or "in contact with, or known to, a suspected agent of a foreign power". The NSA’s current phone records program is restricted to a reasonable articulable suspicion of terrorism.

A judge would reportedly not have to approve the collection beforehand, and the language suggests the government could obtain the phone records on citizens at least two “hops” away from the suspect, meaning if you talked to someone who talked to a suspect, your records could be searched by the NSA. Coupled with the expanded “foreign power” language, this kind of law coming out of Congress could, arguably, allow the NSA to analyze more data of innocent Americans than it could before.

President Obama’s reported proposal sounds more promising, though we have even fewer details than the Intelligence Committee proposal. The administration’s plan would supposedly end the collection of phone records by the NSA, without requiring a dangerous new data retention mandate for the phone companies, while restricting analysis to the current rules around terrorism and, importantly, still requiring a judge to sign off on each phone-record search made to the phone companies – under what the New York Times described as "a new kind of court order".

This phone plan, apparently, represents Obama coming full-circle as his self-imposed deadline on NSA reform arrives Friday, when the court order authorizing bulk collection runs out. But there’s no indication that the president's plan would stop other types of bulk collection – such as internet or financial records – and there’s still a big question about what the NSA could do with the data they receive on innocent people two "hops" away from a suspect.

Critically, neither proposal touches the NSA’s under-reported and incredibly dangerous “corporate store”, at least that we know of. For years, the NSA has been allowed to search phone numbers up to three “hops” away from suspect, so long as it had “reasonable articulable suspicion” that the suspect was involved in terrorism. This was recently ratcheted down to two hops, but the hop-scotching method inevitably pulled millions of innocent people into the NSA’s dragnet.

The NSA insisted the database was only used for that sole purpose of monitoring someone within a couple degrees of separation from a suspect. However, it was only revealed recently that the NSA then dumps all of those numbers and connections – even those three hops away – into another database called “the corporate store”, where the NSA can do further analysis of your information and doesn't need “reasonable articulable suspicion” for anything. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has also exempted the corporate store from audit requirements about how often the vast database is searched.

The American Civil Liberties Union puts it like this:

. If, for some reason, your phone number happens to be within three hops of an NSA target, all of your calling records may be in the corporate store, and thus available for any NSA analyst to search at will.


This is bulk collection at its worst, and these new reforms aren't nearly good enough.

Rep James Sensenbrenner’s bill, the USA Freedom Act, would make a much stronger and more comprehensive bill than either new proposal – at least for those interested in real NSA reform. Sensenbrenner, who originally wrote the Patriot Act provision that the NSA re-interpreted in secret, called the House Intelligence proposal "a convoluted bill that accepts the administration's deliberate misinterpretations of the law". Although, even his bill could be strengthened to ensure bulk collection of Americans' records is no longer an option for the NSA, or any other government agency.

In the end, there's a simple way to stop all forms of bulk collection and mass surveillance: write a law expressly prohibiting it.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 27 maart 2014 @ 01:35:28 #179
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138215768
quote:
quote:
Aanhangers van de voormalige NSA-medewerker Edward Snowden hebben vandaag twee petities met meer dan 100.000 handtekeningen bij het Amerikaanse ministerie van Justitie afgeleverd. Ze eisen dat de klokkenluider, die het spionageprogramma van de Amerikaanse inlichtingendiensten heeft onthuld, zijn reispas terugkrijgt en in het buitenland niet verder vervolgd wordt.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 27 maart 2014 @ 13:50:39 #180
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138224952
quote:
quote:
De Britse regering heeft vorige zomer gedreigd The Guardian te sluiten als de krant zou doorgaan met onthullingen over de werkwijze van geheime diensten. Dat heeft adjunct-hoofdredacteur Paul Johnson van The Guardian gezegd in Dublin, meldde The Irish Times vandaag.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 28 maart 2014 @ 14:07:05 #181
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138261888
quote:
quote:
Bij Arroware in het Canadese Burlington werken ze al twee jaar aan een nieuw sociaal netwerk, dat zich van andere onderscheidt omdat het de bescherming van de privacy van zijn gebruikers als hoogste goed beschouwt. De zorgen over het schier eindeloze gegraai van data door de Amerikaanse spionagedienst NSA heeft internetters bewust gemaakt van hoe onbeschermd hun gegevens zijn, denkt oprichter en directeur Harvey Medcalf. MyApollo is deze week van start gegaan en de 27-jarig Medcalf doet een rondje Europa om de nieuwe dienst aan te prijzen.

'We zijn anders omdat we je foto's, documenten en berichten niet op centrale servers opslaan zoals Facebook of Google', legt Medcalf uit. MyApollo is gebaseerd op peer-to-peer-technologie, waarbij datapakketjes versleuteld en in losse brokjes over internet worden verstuurd. Elke computer die zich aansluit op zo'n netwerk levert een deel van de verbindingen en opslag die nodig zijn voor het dataverkeer, maar er is geen groot, centraal en kwetsbaar middelpunt.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 29 maart 2014 @ 17:32:00 #182
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138301167
quote:
quote:
Meer dan 120 regeringsleiders en staatshoofden waren in ieder geval tot 2009 spionagedoelwit voor de Amerikaanse inlichtingendienst NSA. Alleen al over de Duitse bondskanselier Angela Merkel heeft de dienst meer dan 300 documenten bewaard.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 29 maart 2014 @ 20:16:13 #183
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138306338
quote:
Microsoft will no longer look through your Hotmail to investigate leaks

Company will call in law enforcement when privacy is at stake.

Amid widespread privacy concerns in the wake of a leak investigation, Microsoft has announced a change in the way it handles private customer accounts. Under the new policy, effective immediately, any investigation that suggests that Microsoft's services have been used to traffic stolen Microsoft intellectual property will no longer result in Microsoft accessing private account information. Instead, the investigation will be handed over to law enforcement agencies, and it will be for those agencies to demand access to necessary private information.

Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith also said that the company's terms of service will be updated to reflect this new policy in coming months.

Court documents last week revealed that Microsoft read private Hotmail e-mails of a blogger who received secret information from a disgruntled employee. Microsoft's terms of service, in common with those of Yahoo, Google, and Apple, give the company the legal right to access private information for such investigations. Nonetheless, the lack of transparency and oversight caused widespread alarm.

In the immediate aftermath of the outcry, Redmond announced that in the future, it would seek input from a former judge to determine whether accessing private data was justified and would include the number of such accesses in its periodic transparency reports.

The newly announced policy goes much further: now, any investigation that reveals the use of Microsoft's own services will be held to exactly the same legal and evidential standard as investigations that reveal the use of non-Microsoft services and the same oversight and transparency as Microsoft and others are demanding to be used in government investigations.

This is a solid response from the company and perhaps reflects the way attitudes have changed since the 2012 investigation. The question of access to personal data stored on cloud services has become a major concern in the wake of Edward Snowden's NSA leaks. The old policy may not have been exceptional, but it took an approach that's no longer palatable to many of today's customers.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 31 maart 2014 @ 05:42:56 #184
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138352807
quote:
NSA revelations 'changing how businesses store sensitive data'

Survey suggests many firms choosing more secure forms of storage over 'cloud computing' in light of Snowden's disclosures

The vast scale of online surveillance revealed by Edward Snowden is changing how businesses store commercially sensitive data, with potentially dramatic consequences for the future of the internet, according to a new study.

A survey of 1,000 business leaders from around the world has found that many are questioning their reliance on "cloud computing" in favour of more secure forms of data storage as the whistleblower's revelations continue to reverberate.

The moves by businesses mirror efforts by individual countries, such as Brazil and Germany, which are encouraging regional online traffic to be routed locally rather than through the US, in a move that could have a big impact on US technology companies such as Facebook and Google.

Daniel Castro, a senior analyst at the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, said the study confirmed "anecdotal evidence that suggests US tech firms are going to be hit hard in the coming years by a global backlash against technology 'made in America'".

"The Snowden revelations have led to a paradigm shift in how IT decision-makers buy technology," he said. "Now companies are not just competing on price and quality, they are also competing on geography. This might be the final nail in the coffin for the vision of a global, borderless internet."

Ian Brown, from the Oxford Internet Institute, said the survey revealed a significant level of concern among business leaders: "We'll have to see over the next year how much impact this type of reaction has on the bottom line of US tech companies, but it will give them even more incentive to put pressure on the Obama administration and US Congress for significant surveillance reform."

The survey of 1,000 information and communications technology decision-makers from France, Germany, Hong Kong, the UK and the US was carried out by NTT Communications. It found that, following the Snowden revelations, almost 90% had changed the way they use the cloud – a storage service that allows data to be accessed from anywhere in the world but which is more susceptible to online surveillance.

The study also found that almost a third of those questioned were moving their company's data to locations where they "know it will be safe", and 16% said they had delayed or cancelled their contracts with cloud service providers.

Len Padilla, from NTT Communications in Europe, said: "Our findings show that the NSA allegations have hardened ICT decision-makers' attitudes towards cloud computing, whether it is modifying procurement policies, scrutinising potential suppliers or taking a heightened interest in where their data is stored."

The Guardian, and some of the world's other major media organisations, began disclosing details of the extent and reach of mass surveillance programmes run by Britain's eavesdropping centre, GCHQ, and its US equivalent, the National Security Agency, last year.

US technology firms have repeatedly raised concerns about the impact of the NSA revelations on their ability to operate around the world, and earlier this month Facebook's founder, Mark Zuckerberg, and Eric Schmidt, executive chairman of Google, met President Barack Obama to voice their concerns about the commercial impact of government surveillance programmes.

But Castro warned that it was not just the global firms that are being affected in the US. "This isn't something that just the big players have to worry about, it's the start-ups and mid-size companies too – across the board this backlash is going to hurt their bottom line."

And Brown said that pressure is now likely to be felt by the other governments as more businesses attempt to protect their data.

"As the US limits its own mass surveillance programmes, US firms will no doubt be asking pointed questions about the continuing surveillance activities of European and other governments," he said.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 31 maart 2014 @ 15:45:32 #185
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138365155
quote:
'NSA verzamelt 6 miljard metadata per dag'

De Amerikaanse geheime dienst NSA verzamelt 6 miljard metadata per dag. Daarbij gaat het om gegevens wie wanneer met wie belt, chat of e-mailt. Dat hebben journalisten van het Duitse weekblad Der Spiegel gemeld bij de presentatie van hun boek Der NSA-Komplex (Het NSA-complex).

Voor de publicatie hebben zij documenten geanalyseerd van klokkenluider Edward Snowden. De Amerikanen willen in kaart brengen wie contact heeft met wie en leggen daarvoor 'een puzzle met 100.000 delen', aldus een van de auteurs.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_138368389
quote:
7s.gif Op maandag 31 maart 2014 15:45 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
'NSA verzamelt 6 miljard metadata per dag'
Verschrikkelijk.

[ Bericht 15% gewijzigd door gebrokenglas op 31-03-2014 22:26:12 ]
  maandag 31 maart 2014 @ 17:14:43 #187
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138368439
quote:
Exclusive: NSA infiltrated RSA security more deeply than thought - study

(Reuters) - Security industry pioneer RSA adopted not just one but two encryption tools developed by the U.S. National Security Agency, greatly increasing the spy agency's ability to eavesdrop on some Internet communications, according to a team of academic researchers.

Reuters reported in December that the NSA had paid RSA $10 million to make a now-discredited cryptography system the default in software used by a wide range of Internet and computer security programs. The system, called Dual Elliptic Curve, was a random number generator, but it had a deliberate flaw - or "back door" - that allowed the NSA to crack the encryption.

A group of professors from Johns Hopkins, the University of Wisconsin, the University of Illinois and elsewhere now say they have discovered that a second NSA tool exacerbated the RSA software's vulnerability.

The professors found that the tool, known as the "Extended Random" extension for secure websites, could help crack a version of RSA's Dual Elliptic Curve software tens of thousands of times faster, according to an advance copy of their research shared with Reuters.

While Extended Random was not widely adopted, the new research sheds light on how the NSA extended the reach of its surveillance under cover of advising companies on protection.

RSA, now owned by EMC Corp, did not dispute the research when contacted by Reuters for comment. The company said it had not intentionally weakened security on any product and noted that Extended Random did not prove popular and had been removed from RSA's protection software in the last six months.

"We could have been more skeptical of NSA's intentions," RSA Chief Technologist Sam Curry told Reuters. "We trusted them because they are charged with security for the U.S. government and U.S. critical infrastructure."

Curry declined to say if the government had paid RSA to incorporate Extended Random in its BSafe security kit, which also housed Dual Elliptic Curve.

An NSA spokeswoman declined to comment on the study or the intelligence agency's motives in developing Extended Random.

The agency has worked for decades with private companies to improve cybersecurity, largely through its Information Assurance Directorate. After the 9/11 attacks, the NSA increased surveillance, including inside the United States, where it had previously faced strict restrictions.

Documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden showed that the agency also aimed to subvert cryptography standards. A presidential advisory group in December said that practice should stop, though experts looking at the case of Dual Elliptic Curve have taken some comfort in concluding that only the NSA could likely break it.

"It's certainly well-designed," said security expert Bruce Schneier, a frequent critic of the NSA. "The random number generator is one of the better ones."

RANDOM NUMBERS

Cryptography experts have long been suspicious of Dual Elliptic Curve, but the National Institute of Standards and Technology and RSA only renounced the technology after Snowden leaked documents about the back door last year.

That was also when the academic team set out to see if they could break Dual Elliptic Curve by replacing two government-issued points on the curve with their own. The professors plan to publish a summary of their study this week and present their findings at a conference this summer.

Random numbers are used to generate cryptographic keys - if you can guess the numbers, you can break the security of the keys. While no random number generator is perfect, some generators were viewed as more predictable than others.

In a Pentagon-funded paper in 2008, the Extended Random protocol was touted as a way to boost the randomness of the numbers generated by the Dual Elliptic Curve.

But members of the academic team said they saw little improvement, while the extra data transmitted by Extended Random before a secure connection begins made predicting the following secure numbers dramatically easier.

"Adding it doesn't seem to provide any security benefits that we can figure out," said one of the authors of the study, Thomas Ristenpart of the University of Wisconsin.

Johns Hopkins Professor Matthew Green said it was hard to take the official explanation for Extended Random at face value, especially since it appeared soon after Dual Elliptic Curve's acceptance as a U.S. standard.

"If using Dual Elliptic Curve is like playing with matches, then adding Extended Random is like dousing yourself with gasoline," Green said.

The NSA played a significant role in the origins of Extended Random. The authors of the 2008 paper on the protocol were Margaret Salter, technical director of the NSA's defensive Information Assurance Directorate, and an outside expert named Eric Rescorla.

Rescorla, who has advocated greater encryption of all Web traffic, works for Mozilla, maker of the Firefox web browser. He and Mozilla declined to comment. Salter did not respond to requests for comment.

Though few companies appear to have embraced Extended Random, RSA did. The company built in support for the protocol in BSafe toolkit versions for the Java programming language about five years ago, when a preeminent Internet standards group - the Internet Engineering Task Force - was considering whether to adopt Extended Random as an industry standard. The IETF decided in the end not to adopt the protocol.

RSA's Curry said that if Dual Elliptic Curve had been sound, Extended Random would have made it better. "When we realized it was not likely to become a standard, we did not enable it in any other BSafe libraries," he added.

The academic researchers said it took about an hour to crack a free version of BSafe for Java using about $40,000 worth of computer equipment. It would have been 65,000 times faster in versions using Extended Random, dropping the time needed to seconds, according to Stephen Checkoway of Johns Hopkins.

The researchers said it took them less than 3 seconds to crack a free version of BSafe for the C programming language, even without Extended Random, because it already transmitted so many random bits before the secure connection began. And it was so inexpensive it could easily be scaled up for mass surveillance, the researchers said.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 31 maart 2014 @ 18:11:38 #188
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138370234
quote:
quote:
SAN FRANCISCO — Microsoft has lost customers, including the government of Brazil.

IBM is spending more than a billion dollars to build data centers overseas to reassure foreign customers that their information is safe from prying eyes in the United States government.

And tech companies abroad, from Europe to South America, say they are gaining customers that are shunning United States providers, suspicious because of the revelations by Edward J. Snowden that tied these providers to the National Security Agency’s vast surveillance program.
quote:
Brazil and the European Union, which had used American undersea cables for intercontinental communication, last month decided to build their own cables between Brazil and Portugal, and gave the contract to Brazilian and Spanish companies. Brazil also announced plans to abandon Microsoft Outlook for its own email system that uses Brazilian data centers.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 1 april 2014 @ 00:21:01 #189
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138387045
quote:
quote:
Over the last 40 years, the U.S. government has relied on extreme fear-mongering to demonize transparency. In sum, every time an unwanted whistleblower steps forward, we are treated to the same messaging: You’re all going to die because of these leakers and the journalists who publish their disclosures! Lest you think that’s hyperbole, consider this headline from last week based on an interview with outgoing NSA chief Keith Alexander:
quote:
But whenever it suits the agency to do so–meaning when it wants to propagandize on its own behalf–the NSA casually discloses even its most top secret activities in the very countries where such retaliation is most likely.
quote:
Leave aside how corrupted this rationale is: It would mean that no bad acts of the U.S. government should ever be reported, lest those disclosures make people angry and want to attack government agents. Indeed, that is the rationale that the Obama administration used to protect evidence of Bush-era torture from disclosure (to disclose torture photos, Obama said, would be to further inflame anti-American opinion and to put our troops in greater danger).

What is so extraordinary is that the NSAat exactly the same time it is telling news organizations that disclosing its collect-it-all activities will endanger its personnelruns to its favorite L.A. Times reporter and does exactly that, for no reason other than to make itself look good and to justify these activities. (Absolutely invaluable, retired Gen. David H. Petraeus, the former U.S. commander in Iraq, said.)
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 1 april 2014 @ 12:32:33 #190
312994 deelnemer
ff meedenken
pi_138395052
quote:
7s.gif Op maandag 31 maart 2014 18:11 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

[..]

[..]

Een nieuwe wapenwedloop.
The view from nowhere.
  woensdag 2 april 2014 @ 17:22:57 #191
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138441015
quote:
quote:
Voor het eerst heeft James Clapper, het hoofd van de gezamenlijke Amerikaanse inlichtingendiensten, toegegeven dat analisten van de NSA naar gegevens hebben gezocht die betrekking hebben op Amerikanen. Dat schrijft The Washington Post.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 3 april 2014 @ 19:44:55 #192
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138480370
quote:
Germany opens hearings on U.S. spying

BERLIN – A chapter in transatlantic relations that Washington would sooner forget got a new lease on life Thursday as German lawmakers opened their first parliamentary hearings into the Edward Snowden scandal.

Revelations of large-scale U.S. spying on Germans, up to and including Chancellor Angela Merkel, prompted an initial wave of outrage here last year. But now, the lengthy committee investigations could keep the spotlight on leaks by the former NSA contractor for a year or two to come.

The hearings also have the potential to provoke further antipathy. Indeed, a number of lawmakers here are now demanding safe passage to Berlin for Snowden — who is living in self-imposed exile in Moscow — to testify before the eight-person committee. Any such move would likely outrage the United States, which is seeking to take Snowden into custody.

Given the potential for angering Washington, analysts believe Merkel’s government will find a way to sidestep such a move. Nevertheless, the push to give Snowden his day here serves as another reminder that, even as the scandal appears to be dissipating in other parts of Europe, it remains at the top of the agenda in Germany.

“Mass surveillance of citizens will not be accepted,” Clemens Binninger, committee chairman from Merkel’s center-right Christian Democratic Union, said at the start of the hearings Thursday.

The committee is set to call dozens of witnesses and review piles of documents. But even its members appear to concede the limits of their effort, which is likely to be hampered by an anticipated lack of full cooperation by U.S. officials. It suggests that the hearings are being called at least in part for national catharsis and as an outlet for German rage.

Parliament’s airing of the evidence began Thursday, even as fresh revelations continue to stoke public anger. In recent days, Germany’s Der Spiegel magazine published further details from the Snowden leaks, including evidence of an NSA dossier on Merkel that allegedly included more than 300 intelligence reports. Though U.S. snooping on Merkel is not new, the reports served as a continuing reminder for an already-bitter German public.

In addition, the magazine documented the infiltration of German Internet firms by the British secret service, fueling an ever-expanding plot line here that the Americans were not the only friends eavesdropping on German targets. Indeed, outrage from the Snowden scandal has been far more muted in some parts of Europe, in part because of assumptions by the British, French and other Europeans that their own secret services are not wholly innocent either.

A growing sense of intelligence vulnerabilities here has generated an intensifying debate over whether Germany should begin to beef up its own intelligence operations, targeting allies and non-allies alike. Given Germany’s typical post-World War II knee-jerk reaction against anything that could be seen as provocative or aggressive, however, analysts say any such moves are likely to be long in coming, if at all.

“German foreign policy is focused on one topic — doing things in cooperation,” said Marcel Dickow, an international security expert at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs. “Obviously, even with the Snowden [revelations], spying on allies is going to be seen as something that undermines cooperation.”

However, the hearings could be just the beginning here.

A top German prosecutor is still weighing whether to open a criminal investigation into the affair, which could further damage ties between Washington and Berlin. And there is no mistaking the lingering anger of German lawmakers, particularly those clamoring to bring Snowden to Berlin to testify.

Such a move is considered a long shot, in part because it would create fresh tensions at a time when Europe and the United States are trying to maintain a common front on the Russian-Ukraine crisis. But some here seem to believe that bringing Snowden to Berlin is exactly the kind of thumb-nosing the Americans deserve.

Snowden is the “key to clarification of the NSA spying scandal,” Hans-Christian Ströbele, a politician from the Green Party who met with Snowden in Russia last October, told reporters in Berlin on Thursday.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_138481214
ik snap niet waarom snowden perse daarheen zou moeten :?
blablablablablablablablablablablablablabla
  vrijdag 4 april 2014 @ 12:50:08 #194
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138502028
quote:
0s.gif Op donderdag 3 april 2014 20:03 schreef Schunckelstar het volgende:
ik snap niet waarom snowden perse daarheen zou moeten :?
Om Amerika een trap na te geven, natuurlijk.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 5 april 2014 @ 17:20:05 #195
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138541659
quote:
quote:
This week, the Associated Press exposed a secret program run by the U.S. Agency for International Development to create “a Twitter-like Cuban communications network” run through “secret shell companies” in order to create the false appearance of being a privately owned operation. Unbeknownst to the service’s Cuban users was the fact that “American contractors were gathering their private data in the hope that it might be used for political purposes”–specifically, to manipulate those users in order to foment dissent in Cuba and subvert its government. According to top-secret documents published today by The Intercept, this sort of operation is frequently discussed at western intelligence agencies, which have plotted ways to covertly use social media for ”propaganda,” “deception,” “mass messaging,” and “pushing stories.”

These ideas–discussions of how to exploit the internet, specifically social media, to surreptitiously disseminate viewpoints friendly to western interests and spread false or damaging information about targets–appear repeatedly throughout the archive of materials provided by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. Documents prepared by NSA and its British counterpart GCHQ–and previously published by The Intercept as well as some by NBC News–detailed several of those programs, including a unit devoted in part to “discrediting” the agency’s enemies with false information spread online.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 5 april 2014 @ 17:21:19 #196
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138541698
quote:
quote:
(Reuters) - The United States on Friday criticized proposals to build a European communication network to avoid emails and other data passing through the United States, warning that such rules could breach international trade laws.

In its annual review of telecommunications trade barriers, the office of the U.S. Trade Representative said impediments to cross-border data flows were a serious and growing concern.

It was closely watching new laws in Turkey that led to the blocking of websites and restrictions on personal data, as well as calls in Europe for a local communications network following revelations last year about U.S. digital eavesdropping and surveillance.

"Recent proposals from countries within the European Union to create a Europe-only electronic network (dubbed a 'Schengen cloud' by advocates) or to create national-only electronic networks could potentially lead to effective exclusion or discrimination against foreign service suppliers that are directly offering network services, or dependent on them," the USTR said in the report.

Germany and France have been discussing ways to build a European network to keep data secure after the U.S. spying scandal. Even German Chancellor Angela Merkel's cell phone was reportedly monitored by American spies.

The USTR said proposals by Germany's state-backed Deutsche Telekom to bypass the United States were "draconian" and likely aimed at giving European companies an advantage over their U.S. counterparts.

Deutsche Telekom has suggested laws to stop data traveling within continental Europe being routed via Asia or the United States and scrapping the Safe Harbor agreement that allows U.S. companies with European-level privacy standards access to European data. (www.telekom.com/dataprotection)

"Any mandatory intra-EU routing may raise questions with respect to compliance with the EU's trade obligations with respect to Internet-enabled services," the USTR said. "Accordingly, USTR will be carefully monitoring the development of any such proposals."

U.S. tech companies, the leaders in an e-commerce marketplace estimated to be worth up to $8 trillion a year, have urged the White House to undertake reforms to calm privacy concerns and fend off digital protectionism.

In the report, the USTR also criticized restrictions on Internet telephony in India and China, foreign investment limits in countries, including China, and efforts to increase the rates U.S. telecommunications operators must pay in order to connect long-distance calls in Pakistan, Fiji, Tonga and Uganda.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 6 april 2014 @ 06:35:31 #197
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138560712
quote:
Snowden en Greenwald waarschuwen voor metadata

NSA-klokkenluider Edward Snowden en verslaggever Glenn Greenwald waarschuwen ervoor dat overheden meer inbreuk op de privacy doen door metadata te verzamelen dan door direct telefoongesprekken en e-mails af te tappen.

Metadata zijn gegevens over telefoongesprekken: welke nummers met elkaar bellen, wanneer en hoe lang. Bij metadata wordt de inhoud van een gesprek niet opgeslagen. 'Ze laten onze verbindingen zien, onze politieke verbintenissen en onze eigenlijke activiteiten', aldus Snowden.

Greenwald en Snowden spraken gisteren via een videoverbinding op een conferentie van Amnesty International in de Amerikaanse stad Chicago. Amnesty International voert campagne om een einde te maken aan de afluisterpraktijken van de Amerikaanse overheid. Vorig jaar bracht Snowden naar buiten dat zijn voormalige werkgever, veiligheidsdienst NSA, massaal telefoongesprekken afluistert en e-mails bekijkt.

Meer onthullingen
Snowden leeft in ballingschap in Rusland, als hij naar de Verenigde Staten komt kan hij gearresteerd worden. Greenwald schreef over de onthullingen en beloofde gisteren dat er binnen twee maanden nog meer komen.

'Ik hoop en geloof dat hoe meer we verslag doen en hoe meer mensen de omvang van het misbruik zien, en niet alleen de omvang van het toezicht, hoe meer mensen erom zullen geven', zei hij vanuit Brazilië.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 7 april 2014 @ 12:01:52 #198
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138605170
quote:
CERF: Classified NSA Work Mucked Up Security For Early TCP/IP

Internet pioneer Vint Cerf says that he had access to cutting edge cryptographic technology in the mid 1970s that could have made TCP/IP more secure – too bad the NSA wouldn’t let him!

Did the National Security Agency, way back in the 1970s, allow its own priorities to stand in the way of technology that might have given rise to a more secure Internet? You wouldn’t be crazy to reach that conclusion after hearing an interview with Google Vice President and Internet Evangelist Vint Cerf on Wednesday.

As a graduate student in Stanford in the 1970s, Cerf had a hand in the creation of ARPANet, the world’s first packet-switched network. He later went on to work as a program manager at DARPA, where he funded research into packet network interconnection protocols that led to the creation of the TCP/IP protocol that is the foundation of the modern Internet.

Cerf is a living legend who has received just about every honor a technologist can: including the National Medal of Technology, the Turing Award and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. But he made clear in the Google Hangout with host Leo Laporte that the work he has been decorated for – TCP/IP, the Internet’s lingua franca – was at best intended as a proof of concept, and that only now – with the adoption of IPv6 – is it mature (and secure) enough for what Cerf called “production use.”

Specifically, Cerf said that given the chance to do it over again he would have designed earlier versions of TCP/IP to look and work like IPV6, the latest version of the IP protocol with its integrated network-layer security and massive 128 bit address space. IPv6 is only now beginning to replace the exhausted IPV4 protocol globally.

“If I had in my hands the kinds of cryptographic technology we have today, I would absolutely have used it,” Cerf said. (Check it out here)

Researchers at the time were working on the development of just such a lightweight but powerful cryptosystem. On Stanford’s campus, Cerf noted that Whit Diffie and Martin Hellman had researched and published a paper that described a public key cryptography system. But they didn’t have the algorithms to make it practical. (That task would fall to Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adleman, who published the RSA algorithm in 1977).

Curiously enough, however, Cerf revealed that he did have access to some really bleeding edge cryptographic technology back then that might have been used to implement strong, protocol-level security into the earliest specifications of TCP/IP. Why weren’t they used, then? The culprit is one that’s well known now: the National Security Agency.

Cerf told host Leo Laporte that the crypto tools were part of a classified project he was working on at Stanford in the mid 1970s to build a secure, classified Internet for the National Security Agency.

“During the mid 1970s while I was still at Stanford and working on this, I also worked with the NSA on a secure version of the Internet, but one that used classified cryptographic technology. At the time I couldn’t share that with my friends,” Cerf said. “So I was leading this kind of schizoid existence for a while.”

Hindsight is 20:20, as the saying goes. Neither Cerf, nor the NSA nor anyone else could have predicted how much of our economy and that of the globe would come to depend on what was then a government backed experiment in computer networking. Besides, we don’t know exactly what the cryptographic tools Cerf had access to as part of his secure Internet research or how suitable (and scalable) they would have been.

And who knows, maybe too much security early on would have stifled the growth of the Internet in its infancy – keeping it focused on the defense and research community, but acting as an inhibitor to wider commercial adoption?

But the specter of the NSA acting in its own interest without any obvious interest in fostering the larger technology sector is one that has been well documented in recent months, as revelations by the former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed how the NSA worked to undermine cryptographic standards promoted by NIST and the firm RSA .

It’s hard to listen to Cerf lamenting the absence of strong authentication and encryption in the foundational protocol of the Internet, or to think about the myriad of online ills in the past two decades that might have been preempted with a stronger and more secure protocol and not wonder what might have been.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_138672338
quote:
Snowden: vooral Nederland, Duitsland, Zweden en VK delen data met NSA

Klokkenluider Snowden heeft tijdens een live-verbinding met de Raad van Europa laten weten dat vooral Nederland, Duitsland, Zweden en het Verenigd Koninkrijk nauwe banden met de NSA hebben. Ook maakte hij bekend dat de NSA zich op mensenrechtenorganisaties richt.

Snowden sprak dinsdag de Commissie Juridische Zaken en Mensenrechten van de Raad van Europa vanuit Rusland toe via een live-videoverbinding toe en beantwoordde ook vragen van aanwezigen. Onder andere het Nederlandse CDA-Kamerlid Pieter Omtzigt was aanwezig om de klokkenluider te ondervragen. Volgens Snowden zijn alle inlichtingendiensten met voldoende middelen betrokken bij het op grote schaal vergaren van data waarbij ze met opzet de mazen opzochten.

"Er waren geen echte regels, restricties of internationale standaarden. Dat vormde een vruchtbare grond voor het experimenteren met nieuwe technologie en nieuwe capaciteiten, en het zorgde voor nieuwe kansen." Volgens Snowden moet ook niet alleen de NSA de beschuldigende vinger krijgen: "De Amerikaanse inlichtingendienst heeft alleen de meest capaciteiten, omdat de dienst het meeste geld krijgt."

"Met name Nederland, Duitsland, Zweden en het Verenigd Koninkrijk zijn niet zozeer doelwitten, maar bereidwillige partners van de NSA", zei Snowden, die nieuwe onthullingen in het vooruitzicht stelde. De landen hebben volgens hem geen enkele garantie dat de uitgewisselde data niet illegaal gebruikt wordt. Eerder beweerde de Amerikaan al dat deze landen instructies kregen van de NSA over hoe ze de juridische bescherming van de communicatie van hun inwoners konden inperken.

Daarnaast onthulde hij dat mensenrechtenorganisaties doelwitten van spionage door de NSA waren. "De NSA richtte zich specifiek op de top van een aantal civiele organisaties en ngo's, ook binnen de landsgrenzen van de VS." Op de vraag of de NSA de gevoelige en geheime communicatie van grote organisaties als Amnesty en Human Rights Watch aftapte, antwoordde Snowden volgens The Guardian "Dat antwoord is zonder twijfel ja, absoluut." http://tweakers.net/nieuw(...)en-data-met-nsa.html
Uber schoothondje Nederland hoort er weer bij hoor ;( ;(
Never argue with idiots. First they will lower you to their level then beat you with experience.
  donderdag 10 april 2014 @ 14:28:50 #200
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138726773
quote:
Why Human Rights Groups Attracted the NSA's Attention

Not content with spying on UNICEF or the World Health Organization, it appears that western intelligence agencies are specifically targeting the communications of human rights groups.

While talking via video link to the Parliamentary Assembly of Council of Europe (full video here), Edward Snowden was asked if the NSA or GCHQ were currently spying on groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.

“Without question, yes, absolutely,” was his response. “The NSA has in fact specifically targeted the communications of either leaders or staff members in a number of purely civil or human rights organisation of the kind described.”

Although it wasn't directly addressed towards a specific organisation, both Amnesty and HRW published press releases condemning the actions.

“If it's true that the NSA spied on groups like Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, it's outrageous, and indicative of the overreach that US laws allows to security agencies,” said Dinah PoKempner from Human Rights Watch. “Such actions would again show why the US needs to overhaul its system of indiscriminate surveillance.”

Unfortunately, this won't be much of a surprise to Amnesty, who last December raised concerns with the UK government that their communications had been unlawfully accessed by intelligence agencies. In a claim to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal, the group claimed a breach of the right to privacy and the right to freedom of expression, referencing the Human Rights Act of 1998.

But why would the NSA, a government body purportedly gathering intelligence for the sake of national security, be concerned in surveilling human rights groups?

One clear reason is to gain access to communications with sources. Global NGOs have contacts in Libya, Russia, China, and pretty much everywhere else in the world, and being able to read the emails of an NGO source in a country or government of interest could save the hassle of building up your own presence in the area.

This is what seems to have worried Michael Bochenek, the legal and policy director for Amnesty International. “This raises the very real possibility that our communications with confidential sources have been intercepted,” he said.

This approach isn't far fetched either. Al Jazeera—which, last time I checked, is a journalistic entity rather than a terrorist organisation—had its computer systems broken into by the NSA during George Bush's second term in office. The already encrypted information was then passed onto other departments for analysis, with the NSA saying that Al Jazeera had “high potential as sources of intelligence.” (The US Justice Department was also caught last year spying on the Associated Press.)

Another reason is that the campaigns carried out by human rights groups do pose a threat to the interests of those in power. Amnesty International UK is currently highlighting cases of damage caused by energy corporations, in particular Shell. The organisation refers to documents that “show, in detail, how the UK intervened to support Shell and Rio Tinto in high-profile US human rights court cases, following requests from companies.”

It appears that the UK government feels responsible for ensuring that these companies can carry on business as usual. According to government documents, government agencies tasked with business development “believe that the prosperity and potentially significant commercial considerations," justifying their support of corporations in the court room.

With environmentalists increasingly being viewed as a security threat, and the close relationship between government and private energy sectors, it's plausible that spying on those opposed to abusive industries would be occurring.

If the NSA are willing to break into a media outlet's internal communications for the purposes of gathering intel, or the British government continue to explicitly support third party interests, it would be naive to think they wouldn't deploy similar tactics in order to undermine the work of human rights organisations.

Assuming that Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are some of the groups affected by this snooping, who else could be affected? An obvious example is the American Civil Liberties Union, who are heavily involved with all things anti-surveillance, and who count Snowden's lawyer among their staff. Knowing what their next big scoop might be, who a whistleblower in the waiting is, or even their plans to generate support for initiatives such as The Day We Fight Back would all be valuable to an intelligence agency that just wants to keep on spying.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 10 april 2014 @ 17:06:14 #201
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138732385
quote:
Angela Merkel denied access to her NSA file

Frustration with US government rises over failure to clear up questions about surveillance of German chancellor's phone

The US government has refused to grant Angela Merkel access to her NSA file, adding to the growing frustration with Washington over its failure to clear up remaining questions about the monitoring of the German chancellor's phone.

The latest information emerged in response to a parliamentary query by Green MP Omid Nouripour, who asked if the German chancellor had requested the release of paperwork relating to US intelligence agents' surveillance of her phone calls.

In its response, a spokesperson for the German interior ministry confirmed that Merkel's government had submitted an official request on 24 October 2013, but that the US government "had not supplied information in this regard".

Nouripour, who is the Green party's spokesperson on foreign affairs, said he intended to make further inquiries with the government and would seek to clarify if Merkel had asked for her NSA file to be destroyed.

Nouripour criticised both the German and the US governments for their response to the NSA revelations. "Last year, their failure to answer questions could have been due to genuine ignorance – now it looks like deliberate obfuscation. The Germans aren't asking the tough questions so they can protect their notion of a transatlantic partnership, and the US is happy that the Germans aren't asking tough questions so they can avoid further diplomatic scandals."

The news comes amid growing German frustration with the US and UK governments' failure to yield basic information about their surveillance activities. Earlier this week, interior minister Thomas de Maizière told Der Spiegel that the US response to the affair remained "inadequate".

"If two-thirds of what Edward Snowden reports, or of what is reported with attribution to him, is correct, then I come to the conclusion: the USA is acting without any restraint", said de Maizière, who emphasised that he was still a "transatlanticist by conviction". "America should be interested in improving the current situation. And words alone won't achieve that."

The US government's refusal to allow Merkel access to her own file contrasts with the relative ease with which German citizens are able to access files relating to the surveillance activities of the East German secret service, the Stasi.

In January 1992, after pressure from human rights activists, the German government took the unprecedented step of opening up the Stasi archive to the public – the federal agency in charge of the Stasi archives still receives around 5,000 applications a month.

In 1992, 13,088 pages worth of files relating to the NSA's surveillance of the West German government, sold to the Stasi by the US spy James W Hall, had been returned to the US, with permission of the German interior ministry.

Angela Merkel has defended the decision to keep access to the Stasi archive open to German citizens, and has reportedly used the opportunity to view her own Stasi file in person. "Many in former socialist countries envy us for this opportunity", she said in 2009.

In Germany, the aftermath of the Snowden revelations continues to be debated with vigour. On Wednesday, the head of a parliamentary inquiry into NSA surveillance resigned over a disagreement as to whether Snowden should be invited as a witness. Green and left politicians insist that the whistleblower should be invited to give testimony in person, but panel chairman Clemens Binninger, of Merkel's Christian Democrats, was more sceptical, arguing that most of the key information was already out in the public realm.

Academics at Rostock University, meanwhile, have voted to award Edward Snowden an honorary doctorate. Members of the philosophy faculty said they wanted to reward Snowden's "civil courage" and his "substantial contribution to a new global discourse about freedom, democracy, cosmopolitanism and the rights of the individual".
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 10 april 2014 @ 19:12:28 #202
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138736297
quote:
Glenn Greenwald, Laura Poitras Returning To U.S. For First Time Since Snowden Revelations

NEW YORK -- Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras, two American journalists who have been at the forefront of reporting on documents leaked by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden, will return to the United States on Friday for the first time since revelations of worldwide surveillance broke.

Greenwald and Poitras, currently in Berlin, will attend Friday’s Polk Awards ceremony in New York City. The two journalists are sharing the prestigious journalism award with The Guardian’s Ewen MacAskill and with Barton Gellman, who has led The Washington Post’s reporting on the NSA documents. Greenwald and Poitras interviewed Snowden last June in Hong Kong as he first revealed himself.

In an interview with The Huffington Post, Greenwald said he’s motivated to return because “certain factions in the U.S. government have deliberately intensified the threatening climate for journalists.”

“It’s just the principle that I shouldn’t allow those tactics to stop me from returning to my own country,” Greenwald said.

Greenwald suggested government officials and members of Congress have used the language of criminalization as a tactic to chill investigative journalism.

In January, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper suggested that journalists reporting on the NSA documents were acting as Snowden’s “accomplices.” The following month, Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, claimed that Greenwald was selling stolen goods by reporting stories on the NSA documents with news organizations around the world. Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) has called for Greenwald to be prosecuted.

Greenwald said the government has not informed his legal counsel whether or not he could face any potential charges, or if he's been named in any grand jury investigation tied to the NSA disclosures.

Journalists have faced increased threats during the Obama years, both in the government's severe crackdown on leaks and the record use of the Espionage Act to prosecute sources who provide classified information to the media. During a March conference on the state of national security reporting, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), author of a federal shield law intended to protect journalists, said the bill was "probably not enough" to protect Greenwald.

Greenwald drew a distinction between his situation and that of Gellman, who has not been been similarly singled out by the government. Gellman, who didn't meet with Snowden in Hong Kong but interviewed him later in Moscow, has continued to live in the U.S. while reporting for The Washington Post. Greenwald and Poitras, however, have lived abroad the entire time and have published these documents with news outlets worldwide.

Greenwald currently lives in Rio de Janeiro with his partner, David Miranda, who was detained in London’s Heathrow airport last year while carrying documents from Berlin. Poitras, a filmmaker who has reported extensively on war and surveillance and has been detained dozens of times at the U.S. border, currently lives in Berlin.

The Pulitzer Prizes will be announced Monday and it is expected that reporting on the NSA, one of the biggest stories of the past year, will be honored in some capacity.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 10 april 2014 @ 20:45:51 #203
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138740134
quote:
NSA monitors WiFi on US planes ‘in violation’ of privacy laws

Companies that provide WiFi on US domestic flights are handing over their data to the NSA, adapting their technology to allow security services new powers to spy on passengers. In doing so, they may be in violation of privacy laws.

In a letter leaked to Wired, Gogo, the leading provider of inflight WiFi in the US, admitted to violating the requirements of the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA). The act is part of a wiretapping law passed in 1994 that requires telecoms carriers to provide law enforcement with a backdoor in their systems to monitor telephone and broadband communications.

Gogo states in the letter to the Federal Communications Commission that it added new capabilities to its service that go beyond CALEA, at the behest of law enforcement agencies.

“In designing its existing network, Gogo worked closely with law enforcement to incorporate functionalities and protections that would serve public safety and national security interests,” Gogo attorney Karis Hastings wrote in the leaked letter, which dates from 2012. He did not elaborate as to the nature of the changes, but said Gogo “worked with federal agencies to reach agreement regarding a set of additional capabilities to accommodate law enforcement interests.”

Gogo, which provides WiFi services to the biggest US airlines, are not the only ones to adapt their services to enable spying. Panasonic Avionics also added “additional functionality” to their services as per an agreement with US law enforcement, according to a report published in December.

The deals with security services have civil liberties organizations up in arms. They have condemned the WiFi providers’ deals with authorities as scandalous.

“Having ISPs [now] that say that CALEA isn’t enough, we’re going to be even more intrusive in what we collect on people is, honestly, scandalous,” Peter Eckersley, of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told Wired.

The powers of the National Security Agency and other US law enforcement agencies have come under harsh criticism since the data leaks from whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed the extent to which they monitor citizens’ communications. In particular, critics have taken issue with the NSA’s mass, indiscriminate gathering of metadata which has been described as “almost Orwellian in nature” and a violation of the Fourth Amendment.

Judge Richard Leon of the US District Court for the District of Columbia has filed a lawsuit against the US agency and is pushing to have the case heard in the US Supreme Court. Last week the Supreme Court said that Leon would have to wait for a ruling from the lower court before his case could be heard.

Since the NSA scandal blew up last year, prompting widespread public anger in the US and internationally at the violation of privacy rights, President Barack Obama’s administration has reluctantly taken some modest steps to curb the powers of the agency.

At the beginning of this year, Obama announced that the NSA would no longer be able to monitor the personal communications of world leaders. In addition, last month Obama formally proposed to end the NSA’s bulk data collection, proposing legislation that would oblige the agency to get a court order to access information through telecoms companies.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_138744063
quote:
7s.gif Op donderdag 10 april 2014 19:12 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
Laura Poitras Returning To U.S. For First Time Since Snowden Revelations
Die Greenwald durft wel zeg, naar de US of A afreizen. Ik denk dat 'ie - net als zijn partner vorig jaar - direct even vastgehouden wordt op het vliegveld, of dat 'ie voor het gemak meegenomen wordt naar het dichtsbijzijnde politiebureau. Voor een x aantal dagen...
  vrijdag 11 april 2014 @ 14:58:05 #205
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138764749
quote:
quote:
Whistle-blower Edward Snowden has challenged the National Security Agency to explicitly deny that he tried -- before leaking secret documents to journalists -- to use legal, internal means to raise a red flag about the possibly unconstitutional nature of the outfit's surveillance programs.

"The NSA at this point not only knows I raised complaints, but that there is evidence that I made my concerns known to the NSA's lawyers, because I did some of it through e-mail. I directly challenge the NSA to deny that I contacted NSA oversight and compliance bodies directly via e-mail and that I specifically expressed concerns about their suspect interpretation of the law, and I welcome members of Congress to request a written answer [from the NSA] to this question," Snowden told Vanity Fair in a feature that's scheduled for publication later this week.

The challenge came in response to a claim by NSA Deputy Director Rick Ledgett, who led the agency's investigation of Snowden and who Vanity Fair says told the magazine that Snowden made no formal complaints and that no one at the NSA has reported Snowden mentioning his concerns to them.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_138771438
quote:
7s.gif Op vrijdag 11 april 2014 14:58 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Snowden to NSA: Go ahead, deny I tried to raise the alarm legally

[..]

Nou maar dit is dus een punt. Als de NSA zegt nooit mail te hebben ontvangen, heeft Snowden hier het nakijken. Het gaat alleen goed als Snowden bevestigingsemail had gekregen.
  vrijdag 11 april 2014 @ 22:46:57 #207
343860 UpsideDown
Baas Boven Baas
pi_138781240
quote:
‘NSA wist al jaren van internetlek Heartbleed’

De NSA zou al minstens twee jaar op de hoogte zijn van de Heartbleed-bug, mogelijk het grootste internetlek ooit. De inlichtingendienst verzweeg het lek om het voor spionage te kunnen gebruiken.


Dat zeggen bronnen tegenover Bloomberg.

De Heartbleed-bug is een kwetsbaarheid in veiligheidssoftware OpenSSL. Die software wordt gebruikt door de helft tot tweederde van alle sites om informatie als wachtwoorden, creditcards en andere gevoelige informatie veilig te versturen.

De NSA zou het lek gebruikt hebben om “kritieke informatie” over doelwitten te verzamelen. Door het lek te verzwijgen was de informatie van miljoenen mensen over de hele wereld onnodig kwetsbaar voor kwaadwillende hackers.

De NSA wil niet tegenover Bloomberg reageren, maar het is bekend dat de inlichtingendienst er een gewoonte van maakt kwetsbaarheden in software te verzamelen en in te zetten voor spionage. Aan het vinden van lekken als die in OpenSSL worden miljoenen besteed.

Na de onthullingen van Snowden raadde een adviescommissie de Amerikaanse President Obama al aan de stoppen met controversiële verzamelen van dergelijke bugs en lekken.
Say what?
  vrijdag 11 april 2014 @ 23:06:08 #208
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138782107
quote:
quote:
The journalists who first revealed the extent of the National Security Agency’s surveillance activities dedicated a prestigious award on Friday to their source, Edward Snowden.

Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras had earlier cleared immigration at John F Kennedy airport in New York without a hitch as they arrived to share a George Polk Award for national security reporting with Ewen MacAskill of the Guardian and Barton Gellman of the Washington Post.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_138782236
quote:
7s.gif Op vrijdag 11 april 2014 23:06 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

[..]

[pessimist]Huh? Niet eens aangehouden? Dan worden ze vast geschaduwd nu...[/pessimist]

Ze waren er zelf ook niet helemaal gerust op.

[ Bericht 5% gewijzigd door gebrokenglas op 12-04-2014 08:19:06 ]
  maandag 14 april 2014 @ 22:00:20 #210
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138885096
Win!

quote:
Pulitzerprijs voor onthullingen over NSA

De Amerikaanse Pulitzerprijs voor de journalistiek in de categorie dienstverlening gaat dit jaar naar de Britse krant The Guardian en de Amerikaanse Washington Post. Dat meldde de jury vandaag. De twee winnen de prijs voor met name de publicaties over de Amerikaanse geheime dienst NSA (National Securitey Agency).

Zij publiceerden vorig jaar de informatie die de Amerikaanse klokkenluider Edward Snowden beschikbaar stelde. Snowden bracht een schat aan informatie over de NSA naar buiten, nadat hij er had gewerkt. De omvang van de spionageactiviteiten van de Amerikaanse dienst schokte de hele wereld.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 15 april 2014 @ 21:19:19 #211
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138922003
quote:
Ex-UK defense chief blasts Snowden, Greenwald in op-ed


The former head of the United Kingdom's Ministry of Defense is accusing former Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald and other journalists of helping to empower terrorists by reporting on documents from National Security Agency (NSA) leaker Edward Snowden.

Greenwald, who won a Pulitzer Prize on Monday for his stories based on Snowden’s documents, and his “malicious associates” share a “virulent anti-Western, and particularly anti-American” point of view, Liam Fox said in a Wall Street Journal op-ed published on Tuesday.

“We have actually seen chatter among specific terrorist groups, at home and abroad, discussing how to avoid what they now perceive to be vulnerable communications methods and, consequently, how to select communications that they perceive not to be exploitable,” he added.

“No doubt these terrorist groups are extremely grateful to Messrs. Snowden and Greenwald and their accomplices for these useful tools in their war against our citizens, our armed forces and our way of life.”

The heated critique against both the former NSA contractor and journalists who published documents he took from the agency comes just a day after the Pulitzer Prize board praised Greenwald and other reporters at the Guardian for helping “to spark a debate about the relationship between the government and the public over issues of security and privacy.”

The award was seen as a show of support for Snowden’s defenders, who have sometimes accused the mainstream press of bias against him.

Snowden said the honor was a “vindication for everyone who believes that the public has a role in government.”

Greenwald recently left the Guardian to start a new outlet, the Intercept, along with filmmaker Laura Poitras, who also led reporting on the Snowden stories.

Fox, a conservative member of Parliament who served as secretary of state for defense from 2010 to 2011, retorted that Snowden “thinks of himself as a cyber-age guerrilla warrior, but in reality he is a self-publicizing narcissist.”

His comments echoed concern from many defenders of the NSA who have warned that the leaks have made it easier for terrorists and other bad actors to evade detection.

In the op-ed, he said that the revelations might have “diminished” the ability to keep watch of Russian movements ahead of the country's action in Ukraine.

“If true, this would be the first practical demonstration of how Mr. Snowden and his acolytes had successfully damaged security to the benefit of Vladimir Putin’s regime," he wrote.

The op-ed was adapted from a speech Fox is scheduled to give at the American Enterprise Institute on Wednesday.


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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 16 april 2014 @ 17:40:16 #212
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138948497
quote:
Kabinet komt na de zomer met update spionagewet

Het kabinet komt voor het einde van het jaar met een voorstel voor een update van de wet op de inlichtingendiensten uit 2002. Dat heeft minister Ronald Plasterk van Binnenlandse Zaken vandaag gezegd in de Tweede Kamer. Hij wilde nog niet zeggen of de inlichtingendiensten AIVD en MIVD straks ook grootscheeps data mogen verzamelen via de kabel.

De diensten mogen nu ongericht (grootscheeps) communicatie door de ether onderscheppen, maar geen 'kabelgebonden' data. Dat beperkt hun activiteiten te sterk, constateerde een speciale adviescommissie onder voorzitterschap van Stan Dessens eind vorig jaar. Veel internetverkeer loopt tegenwoordig immers via de kabel. De diensten moeten al het internet- en telefoonverkeer onafhankelijk van de techniek kunnen 'verkennen en analyseren', aldus Dessens.

Het kabinet heeft nog niet besloten of het dit advies zonder meer overneemt, omdat 'de balans tussen veiligheid en privacy nauw luistert'. Er wordt momenteel nagedacht over nieuwe criteria voor het onderscheppen van data. 'We vragen ons af: wat zou je nou willen kunnen onderscheppen dat nodig is voor de veiligheid, terwijl tegelijk de privacy van mensen wordt beschermd? Van daaruit gaan we de wet inrichten', aldus de bewindsman.

Plasterk wilde er verder nog niks over zeggen, maar beloofde op tijd (maar niet voor de zomer) een brief te sturen zodat de Kamer er voorafgaande aan het wetsvoorstel over kan debatteren.

Commissie-stiekem
Met name SP, D66 en GroenLinks betoogden in het debat dat het toezicht van de Kamer op de diensten verbeterd moet worden. D66-Kamerlid Gerard Schouw liet weten zelf het initiatief te zullen nemen. Hij start een commissie die gaat kijken hoe het parlementaire toezicht op inlichtingendiensten in het buitenland is geregeld. Over vier maanden moet de commissie met een advies komen voor Nederland.

Plasterk en Hennis zien geen reden om iets te veranderen aan de huidige gang van zaken, waarin de CIVD (de commissie-stiekem, waar fractievoorzitters in vertrouwen worden bijgepraat) een belangrijke rol speelt. In de reactie op 'Dessens' schreef Plasterk al dat dit 'ongemak' met zich meebrengt. 'Er blijft altijd een ongemak, hoe we de parlementaire controle ook inrichten', zo herhaalde de minister vandaag.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 17 april 2014 @ 19:47:06 #213
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138987918
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 18 april 2014 @ 15:16:22 #214
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139012882
Snowden over zijn vraag aan Pappa Poetin.

quote:
quote:
So why all the criticism? I expected that some would object to my participation in an annual forum that is largely comprised of softball questions to a leader unaccustomed to being challenged. But to me, the rare opportunity to lift a taboo on discussion of state surveillance before an audience that primarily views state media outweighed that risk. Moreover, I hoped that Putin's answer – whatever it was – would provide opportunities for serious journalists and civil society to push the discussion further.
Commentaar op Techdirt:

quote:
quote:
Snowden, however, has said from the beginning, that this story has never been about him, and he accepts that the end result of his starting the process may not be good for himself. He's made it clear that he was willing to effectively sacrifice himself to get this debate going -- and having done it once, he apparently has decided he can do it again in another context. While I was confused by this move 24 hours ago, I'll admit it was because I never thought Snowden would go this far (and so quickly) to criticize Russia while he was there. Already, given what Snowden did in releasing the NSA documents, he's shown that he's much braver (and in many ways, patriotic to the public) than just about anyone. In now questioning --and then calling BS on Putin's answer -- he's shown that bravery was not a one time thing, but a position he intends to live by going forward.


[ Bericht 40% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 18-04-2014 15:28:52 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 19 april 2014 @ 02:05:16 #215
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139035599
Donald Trumpet! *O*

realDonaldTrump twitterde op zaterdag 19-04-2014 om 01:43:35 Remember, Russia still has Snowden. When are we going to bring that piece of human garbage back home to stand trial? He caused great damage! reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 20 april 2014 @ 17:36:47 #216
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139077548
quote:
The Government is Silencing Twitter and Yahoo, and It Won't Tell Us Why

The government is using shaky legal arguments to silence major Internet companies without giving them – or the public – the opportunity to respond. In three separate recent cases, the government has sent a grand jury subpoena to Yahoo or Twitter and requested a gag order from a magistrate judge, attempting to bar these tech companies from informing the customers in question. To make matters worse, the government won't disclose its reasoning for requesting the gag, effectively shutting the public out of the courthouse without any explanation.

The ACLU filed a motion last night seeking to represent the public's interest in open court proceedings when the government seeks gag orders on Internet companies. We know about the three cases only because the magistrate judge pushed back on the government, inviting Yahoo and Twitter to weigh in and ordering the government to make its legal arguments public. The government appealed those orders to a district court, where the judge ordered the appeals sealed. The ACLU is now moving to intervene in the district court for the purpose of opening these gag order proceedings to public scrutiny. In a democracy, if your government is going to gag someone from speaking, it should publicly explain why.

The federal government has an awesome array of tools and technologies in its investigative arsenal, and it often goes to great lengths to shield its tactics from outside scrutiny. Not only does this secrecy prevent people from challenging surveillance used against them, but it also means that elected officials can't openly debate the underlying policies, and communities can't discuss their government's actions.

Traditionally, gag order applications are considered ex parte – meaning with only the government's argument on the record before the court. However, Magistrate Judge Facciola noted that the government's request in this case raised controversial legal questions, and so invited Twitter and Yahoo to respond. (In one case, the government withdrew its gag order application after Judge Facciola invited Twitter's participation.) He also ordered the government file public copies of its gag order applications with limited redactions.

We are now asking to unseal the documents in these cases, and expressing support for Judge Facciola's invitation for responsive briefing from Twitter and Yahoo. As we say in our filing:

. The ACLU is troubled, as the Court should be, by the government's overuse of gag orders to prevent public and judicial scrutiny of its invasions of citizens' privacy. Transparency concerning judicial documents like the ones at issue ensures fairness, decreases bias, improves public perception of the justice system, and enhances the chances that the resulting orders will be well-justified and narrowly tailored. These interests are particularly acute where, as here, the government relies on a controversial statutory authority affecting the First Amendment rights of private individuals and where at least one court has openly questioned the applicability of that authority.

If the government is going to take extraordinary measures to silence the companies we rely on daily, then it should be prepared to explain itself.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 20 april 2014 @ 23:00:45 #217
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139094506
quote:
Glenn Greenwald book to contain 'new stories from the Snowden archive'

Journalist who broke Guardian story about NSA surveillance says new documents 'will help inform the debate even further'

Glenn Greenwald, one of the journalists who broke the National Security Agency revelations from Edward Snowden in the Guardian, said on Sunday a book he is writing about the case will contain “a lot of new stories from the Snowden archive”.

Speaking to Brian Stelter, the host of CNN's Reliable Sources, at the end of a week in which Guardian US and the Washington Post shared a Pulitzer prize for public service reporting, Greenwald said: “There are stories that I felt from the beginning really needed the length of a book to be able to report and to do justice to, so there’s new documents, [and] there’s new revelations in the book that I think will help inform the debate even further.”

Greenwald left the Guardian in October 2013. In February 2014 he launched a website, The Intercept, which was the first venture from First Look, a media company backed by the eBay billionaire Pierre Omidyar. His book on Snowden is due out in May.

Greenwald, who lives in Brazil, recently returned to the US for the first time since stories about the NSA based on documents provided by Snowden were published, in June last year. On Friday 11 April he collected a George Polk Award, with Ewen MacAskill of the Guardian and the filmmaker Laura Poitras.

Asked about his return to the US and whether he had expected any government action, Greenwald said: “I had lawyers working for several months, including many who have connections at the highest levels of the Justice Department, trying to get some indication about what the government’s intentions were if I want to try to return. And they were given no information – they were completely stonewalled.

“The government wouldn’t say if there was a grand jury empaneled, if there was an indictment under seal, if they intended to arrest us. They wanted to keep us in this state of uncertainty.”

In August 2013 Greenwald's partner, David Miranda, was detained for nine hours at Heathrow airport, under UK terrorism laws.

Greenwald said the release of his book would likely lead to more visits back to the US.

“I think the material in the book which includes a lot of new stories from the Snowden archive has a lot of impact for the United States,” he said, “and I want to come back and talk to the people most affected by that story, which are Americans.”

On Monday, the Republican congressman Peter King used Twitter to say: “Awarding the Pulitzer to Snowden enablers is a disgrace.”

Asked about such opinions, which have also been expressed by figures within the Obama administration, Greenwald cited US government attitudes to previous cases involving whistleblowers, such as that of Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers, and said: “You know, I look at Peter King’s condemnation as an enormous badge of honour.”
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 22 april 2014 @ 20:30:53 #218
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139157350
quote:
quote:
Snowden's puzzling single-question Q&A with Russian president Vladimir Putin on the topic of domestic surveillance prompted many to believe this was an indication that he was, at the very least, under control of Russian intelligence, if not actually acting in concert with it. Putin took the apparent softball and lined it right down the middle, responding with a series of statements and denials that made Russia appear to be the antithesis of the US government: tightly controlled intelligence built on respect for its citizens' privacy.

As Snowden later clarified, he was pulling a Wyden -- crafting a question about the mass collection and storage of communications that would either result in transparency or an easily-disproven denial. Putin delivered the latter.

. "Mr Snowden you are a former agent, a spy, I used to work for a intelligence service, we are going to talk the same language."

He said Russia did not have a comparable programme, stating: "Our agents are controlled by law. You have to get court permission to put an individual under surveillance. We don't have mass permission, and our law makes it impossible for that kind of mass permission to exist."


Putin's response was laughable. After all, his nation's intelligence services originally put the "surveillance" in Surveillance State. In the USSR, along with the Eastern Bloc, citizens were very closely watched and routinely punished for not toeing the Party line.

Not much has changed, even if Russia is nominally a "free" country. The Russian Federal Service for Telecoms Supervision (Roskomnazdor) is continually expanding its internet censorship efforts and Russian intelligence services have made public announcements about their surveillance plans, like the collection of all foreign communications during the Sochi Olympics.

While Roskomnazdor mans the front door, Russian intelligence lets itself in the back, according to information gathered by Privacy International.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_139204096
As the officer took her away, she recalled that she asked,
"Why do you push us around?"
And she remembered him saying,
"I don't know, but the law's the law, and you're under arrest."
  donderdag 24 april 2014 @ 21:22:29 #220
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139229236
quote:
Hennis herhaalt: Nederland werkt niet mee aan illegale drone-aanvallen

Minister Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert van Defensie blijft erbij dat Nederland niet meewerkt aan illegale liquidaties met drones. Volgens haar beschikt het kabinet ook niet over aanwijzingen dat Nederlandse inlichtingen zijn gebruikt voor handelingen die in strijd zijn met het internationale recht.

Minister Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert van Defensie blijft erbij dat Nederland niet meewerkt aan illegale liquidaties met drones. Volgens haar beschikt het kabinet ook niet over aanwijzingen dat Nederlandse inlichtingen zijn gebruikt voor handelingen die in strijd zijn met het internationale recht.

Dat stelde de minister donderdag in een reactie op uitspraken van een Amerikaanse voormalige dronepiloot, Brandon Bryant. Die heeft tegen NRC Handelsblad en het televisieprogramma Zembla gezegd dat het 'ondenkbaar' is dat Nederlandse inlichtingen over Somalië niet door Amerikanen zijn gebruikt bij aanvallen met onbemande vliegtuigjes om terroristen of anderen uit te schakelen. De oppositiepartijen SP, CDA en D66 vroegen direct om opheldering, omdat Hennis woensdagavond in een debat volgens hen nog stellig ontkende dat Nederlandse data voor zogeheten 'targeted killings' worden gebruikt.

Partnerlanden
De militaire inlichtingendienst MIVD kan tijdens militaire operaties gegevens delen met partnerlanden. Ook bij Ocean Shield, de antipiraterijmissie van de NAVO voor de kust van Somalië, heeft de MIVD inlichtingen verzameld. De uitwisseling daarvan gebeurt volgens de minister 'in het kader van de reguliere samenwerking'. Volgens haar is het daarbij niet gebruikelijk dat diensten elkaar melden of informatie ook voor andere doelen wordt gebruikt. Het is ook niet bekend op basis van welke informatie andere landen operaties uitvoeren.

De uitspraken van ex-piloot Bryant zijn geheel voor zijn rekening, aldus Hennis. Er is volgens haar geen aanleiding terug te komen op haar eerdere uitspraken over de kwestie.

'Als zou blijken dat een buitenlandse partner aantoonbaar illegale targeted killings uitvoert, waarvoor ook Nederlandse informatie wordt gebruikt, zal dit leiden tot het opnieuw beoordelen van de vraag of dergelijke inlichtingen met die partner worden gedeeld', zegt Hennis. De Tweede Kamer wil dat het kabinet voor het delen van inlichtingen expliciet als voorwaarde stelt dat deze niet gebruikt mogen worden voor illegale liquidaties.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 27 april 2014 @ 21:28:35 #221
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139320212
quote:
quote:
The University of Connecticut hosted a keynote speaking event with former United States senator and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on April 23. She was asked a question about former NSA contractor Edward Snowden and proceeded to express puzzlement and mock him for disclosing information on top secret surveillance programs.

Much of what Clinton said deserves a rebuttal, particularly if this is going to be the talking points that Democratic Party politicians repeat throughout the next fear years. So, I have decided to go line by line through her remarks.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 27 april 2014 @ 21:53:48 #222
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139321794
quote:
US Grants Itself the Right to Demand Online Data Stored Overseas

The United States has given itself some more power over the Internet with the help of a federal judge. According to a recent ruling, Internet service providers are now obliged to turn over customer emails and other digital content demanded by the US government through search warrants even when the information is stored overseas.

Basically, the United States can now bypass individual laws given by the world’s governments and any efforts to safeguard information from the prying eyes of the NSA by storing data outside the United States.

US Magistrate Judge James Frances in New York decided that Internet service providers such Google or Microsoft must turn over any customer information demanded by the government, along with any emails stored in data centers outside the United States.

The reasoning behind this decision is that it would just take too long for US agencies to coordinate efforts with foreign governments to obtain the desired data, which would burden the government substantially. “Law enforcement efforts would be seriously impeded,” the judge said.

Considering the current international debate over privacy following the huge disclosures by whistleblower Edward Snowden about the NSA’s efforts to collect huge amounts of customer data from everywhere in the world.

Companies such as Google and Microsoft have data centers in many countries of the world. So far, this meant that the United States government couldn’t easily gain access to the data stored in these locations and therefore many were content with the added layer of security.

Brazil had in fact considered demanding that tech companies store citizens’ data on specially created data centers so they wouldn’t be easily accessed by the United States government following the NSA revelations.

The decision comes as Microsoft challenged a warrant because the US government shouldn’t be allowed to search the content of email stored overseas.

“A US prosecutor cannot obtain a US warrant to search someone’s home located in another country, just as another country’s prosecutor cannot obtain a court order in her home country to conduct a search in the United States. We think the same rules should apply in the online world, but the government disagrees,” said a Microsoft spokesperson, echoing the frustration felt by many in the world.

The details of the warrant, as well as which agency issued it remain undisclosed, but in the grand scheme of things, it doesn’t even really matter. What does matter, however, is the fact that the United States is trying to use companies with headquarters on its grounds to stretch its access to data it shouldn’t have access to under normal circumstances.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 30 april 2014 @ 19:15:36 #223
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139422368
quote:
UK slips down global press freedom list due to Snowden leaks response

British government's draconian response to the Guardian's reporting sees UK drop five places on Freedom House list

Britain has slipped down the global rankings for freedom of the press as a result of the government's crackdown on the Guardian over its reporting of whistleblower Edward Snowden's surveillance disclosures.

The annual index of media freedom, published on Wednesday, attributes the UK's drop to "negative developments", mainly the way the government responded last year to the Guardian with threats of legal action, the destruction of computer hard drives and the nine-hour detention of David Miranda, the partner of journalist Glenn Greenwald.

Freedom of Press 2014 is published by the US-based Freedom House, a non-governmental organisation established in 1941 that has been ranking countries worldwide since 1980 in relation to democracy, human rights and press freedom.

The organisation said press freedom had fallen to its lowest level in over a decade. It partly blames regressive steps in countries such as Egypt, Libya, Jordan, Turkey and Ukraine, as well as the actions taken against journalists reporting on national security issues in both the US and UK.

"We see declines in media freedom on a global level, driven by governments' efforts to control the message and punish the messenger," said Karin Karlekar, the report's project director.

Of the 197 countries and territories assessed during 2013, 63 were rated free, 68 partly free and 66 not free.

Britain has dropped from 31st place last year to 36th, ranking it alongside Malta and Slovakia.

"Significant decline took place in Turkey, which fell into the 'not free' category, as well as in Greece, Montenegro and the United Kingdom," Freedom House said.

Snowden, who worked for both the CIA and the NSA, leaked tens of thousands of secret documents to the Guardian and the Washington Post. The revelations about the scope of surveillance sparked a worldwide debate about the balance between national security and privacy.

The British government took a more draconian approach than the US, threatening legal action and sending two members of GCHQ to the Guardian's head office to watch over the destruction of the hard drives which had contained the leaked documents as well as reporters' stories. Miranda was held for nine hours at Heathrow en route from Berlin to his home in Rio de Janeiro.

Countries are ranked from zero to 100 in terms of press freedom, with the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden at the top, each on 10, and North Korea at the bottom, on 97.

Britain remains in the 'free' category but is on 23 points, down from 21. The drop would have been much sharper but was partly balanced by what Freedom House viewed as a positive development in reforming the libel law. Countries drop into the 'partly free' category if they drop to 31 points.

The British intelligence services claim the disclosures in the Guardian have created serious damage to their ability to monitor terrorists. Stephen Phipson, a director at the office for security and counter-terrorism, said at a security conference in London on Tuesday that terrorists had substantially changed their methods of communications as a result of the leaks.

"Our adversaries, the terrorists out there, now have full sight of the sorts of tools and range of techniques that are being used by government," he said. "I can tell you data shows a substantial reduction in the use of those methods of communication as a result of the Snowden leaks."

The US also dropped down the Freedom House rankings, from 18 points to 21. Freedom House cited federal government efforts to curb reporters covering national security issues.

"However, a number of negative developments stemmed from the government's response to the revelations of surveillance by the NSA and its British counterpart GCHQ," the report says.

"Authorities used the Terrorism Act to detain the partner of investigative journalist Glenn Greenwald, who broke the story; raided the offices of the Guardian newspaper and destroyed hard drives containing potentially sensitive source material; and subsequently threatened the Guardian with further action."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 1 mei 2014 @ 15:26:01 #224
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139453521
quote:
Germany blocks Edward Snowden from testifying in person in NSA inquiry

Officials say a personal invitation for US whistleblower to attend hearing would put 'grave strain' on US-German relations

The German government has blocked Edward Snowden from giving personal evidence in front of a parliamentary inquiry into NSA surveillance, it has emerged hours before Angela Merkel travels to Washington for a meeting with Barack Obama.

In a letter to members of a parliamentary committee obtained by Süddeutsche Zeitung, government officials say a personal invitation for the US whistleblower would "run counter to the political interests of the Federal Republic", and "put a grave and permanent strain" on US-German relations.

Opposition party members in the committee from the Left and Green party had for weeks insisted that the former NSA employee was a key witness and therefore would need to appear in person, not least because of concerns that Russia otherwise could influence his testimony.

However, the ruling Christian Democratic and Social Democratic parties, said that a written questionnaire would suffice. The disagreement led to the resignation of the CDU head of the committee this month.

Last June the German foreign ministry rejected Snowden's application for asylum because it was not submitted in person on German soil. If Snowden had been invited as a witness, he could have met these requirements.

Given that only the government could supply Snowden with permits for entering and staying in the country, as well as legal protection from an extradition query, it now looks highly unlikely that the whistleblower will be able to travel to Germany before his asylum in Russia expires at the end of June. Snowden's lawyer Jesselyn Radack said on Wednesday that she expected his Russian visa to be renewed.

Opposition politicians said they would seek ways to challenge the government's veto. The Green party leader, Simone Peter, accused the chancellor of cowardice.

"Merkel is displaying cowardice towards our ally America," she said. "We owe the Americans nothing in this respect. The government must at least make a serious effort to safely bring Snowden to Germany and let him give evidence here. But Merkel doesn't want that."

On Friday Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert, said that even though Berlin last year pressed for a bilateral "no-spy" pact with Washington, "concrete results" were not expected during Merkel's US visit.

On Tuesday German government officials confirmed that Merkel would raise the issue of NSA surveillance during her scheduled four-hour meeting with Obama, but that the situation in the Ukraine and the transatlantic trade agreement (TTIP) would dominate the agenda.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 1 mei 2014 @ 20:37:14 #225
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139463715
quote:
quote:
The White House is calling for Congress to pass new privacy laws that would add more safeguards for Americans' data and provide more protections for emails sought in the course of a law enforcement investigation.

The recommendations come in a new White House report about government and private sector use of large amounts of data.

President Barack Obama requested the review in January, when he called for changes to some of the National Security Agency's surveillance programs that amass large amounts of data belonging to Americans and foreigners.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 14:05:46 #226
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139520006
quote:
quote:
De Duitse hacker Matthias Ungethüm heeft de Amerikaanse geheime dienst NSA behoorlijk te kijk gezet. Hij hackte de website van de dienst, die flink onder vuur ligt vanwege het afluisteren van bevriende buitenlandse politici, zoals bondskanselier Angela Merkel.


Tegen DPA zei Ungethüm dat hij niet had verwacht gaten in de beveiliging van de site te kunnen vinden. 'Ik was er een nacht mee bezig', zegt de 24-jarige Duitser. Eenmaal binnen veranderde hij de slogan op de site. Van 'Codebreakers and Codemakers' maakte hij 'Durchleuchten Sie Ihre Homepage'. Dat betekent zoiets als lichten jullie eens je website door.

Nadat de Duitse zender MDR over de hack had bericht, heeft de NSA het gat gedicht, maar daarmee is de kous nog niet af. Ungethüm ontdekte ook dat het een koud kunstje was om bij een databank van de geheime dienst te komen. 'Ik kon informatie krijgen die helemaal niet voor de buitenwereld is bestemd', zegt hij. Ungethüm zegt dat hij niets uit de databanken heeft gehaald. 'Maar zulke sites zijn natuurlijk heel aantrekkelijk voor kwaadwillenden.'

De Duitser heeft de NSA via een mailtje van zijn bevindingen op de hoogte gesteld. Hij heeft er nog geen antwoord op gekregen. Bang dat de NSA hem op de korrel meent, is hij niet. 'Daar maak ik me echt geen zorgen over.'
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 19:29:20 #227
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139528059
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 19:41:10 #228
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139528476
quote:
Edward Snowden: NSA Spies Most on Americans

"We watch our own people more closely than we watch any other population in the world."

Edward Snowden told a crowd of fans Wednesday that the U.S. government's surveillance programs collect more data on Americans than it does on any other country.

"Do you think it's right that the NSA is collecting more information about Americans in America than it is about Russians in Russia?" Snowden said. "Because that''s what our systems do. We watch our own people more closely than we watch any other population in the world."

Snowden also took several shots at the National Security Agency and its top officials, and criticized the agency for wearing two contradictory hats of protecting U.S. data and exploiting security flaws to gather intelligence on foreign threats.

"U.S. government policy directed by the NSA ... is now making a choice, a binary choice, between security of our communications and the vulnerability of our communications," Snowden said, suggesting the government was biased toward the latter activity.

The former NSA contractor was awarded the Ridenhour Award for Truth-Telling along with Laura Poitras, one of his chief confidants. The 30-year-old fugitive remains in Russia, where he fled and earned temporary asylum following his disclosures of classified information about the NSA's bulk data-collection practices.

Poitras also beamed into the ceremony from Berlin. The documentary filmmaker is believed to be one of only two people—along with journalist Glenn Greenwald—to possess the entire cache of Snowden files.

The two collectively lambasted both the Senate and House Intelligence committees for what they said was a failure of sufficient oversight of the intelligence community. Snowden also said he believed the Judiciary committees were more likely to enact substantive surveillance reform, and noted his support of the USA Freedom Act, a bill that would end much of the government's bulk collection of phone "metadata."

Snowden, who has also been nominated this year for the Nobel Peace Prize, was a natural choice for the Ridenhour award, which has honored in recent years journalist and undocumented immigrant Jose Antonio Vargas and Thomas Drake, a former NSA official who also exposed secrets kept by the spy agency. The left-leaning group is named named after Ron Ridenhour, a Vietnam veteran who helped expose the massacre of hundreds of unarmed civilians by U.S. soldiers at My Lai in 1968.

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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 4 mei 2014 @ 11:12:05 #229
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139544923
quote:
Everyone is under surveillance now, says whistleblower Edward Snowden

People's privacy is violated without any suspicion of wrongdoing, former National Security Agency contractor claims

The US intelligence whistleblower Edward Snowden has warned that entire populations, rather than just individuals, now live under constant surveillance.

“It's no longer based on the traditional practice of targeted taps based on some individual suspicion of wrongdoing,” he said. “It covers phone calls, emails, texts, search history, what you buy, who your friends are, where you go, who you love.”

Snowden made his comments in a short video that was played before a debate on the proposition that surveillance today is a euphemism for mass surveillance, in Toronto, Canada. The former US National Security Agency contractor is living in Russia, having been granted temporary asylum there in June 2013.

The video was shown as two of the debaters – the former US National Security Administration director, General Michael Hayden, and the well-known civil liberties lawyer and Harvard law professor, Alan Dershowitz – argued in favour of the debate statement: “Be it resolved state surveillance is a legitimate defence of our freedoms.”

Opposing the motion were Glenn Greenwald, the journalist whose work based on Snowden’s leaks won a Pulitzer Prize for the Guardian last month, and Alexis Ohanian, co-founder of the social media website Reddit.

The Snowden documents, first leaked to the Guardian last June, revealed that the US government has programs in place to spy on hundreds of millions of people’s emails, social networking posts, online chat histories, browsing histories, telephone records, telephone calls and texts – “nearly everything a typical user does on the internet”, in the words of one leaked document.

Greenwald opened the debate by condemning the NSA’s own slogan, which he said appears repeatedly throughout its own documents: “Collect it all.”

“What is state surveillance?” Greenwald asked. “If it were about targeting in a discriminate way against those causing harm, there would be no debate.

“The actual system of state surveillance has almost nothing to do with that. What state surveillance actually is, is defended by the NSA's actual words, that phrase they use over and over again: 'Collect it all.’ ”

Dershowitz and Hayden spent the rest of the 90 minutes of the debate denying that the pervasive surveillance systems described by Snowden and Greenwald even exist and that surveillance programs are necessary to prevent terrorism.

“Collect it all doesn't mean collect it all!” Hayden said, drawing laughter.

Greenwald sparred with Dershowitz and Hayden about whether or not the present method of metadata collection would have prevented the terrorist attacks on 11 September, 2011.

While Hayden argued that intelligence analysts would have noticed the number of telephone calls from San Diego to the Middle East and caught the terrorists who were living illegally in the US, Greenwald argued that one of the primary reasons the US authorities failed to prevent the attacks was because they were taking in too much information to accurately sort through it all.

Before the debates began, 33% of the audience voted in favour of the debate statement and 46% voted against. It closed with 59% of the audience siding with Greenwald and Ohanian.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 4 mei 2014 @ 11:17:54 #230
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139545049
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 6 mei 2014 @ 17:18:51 #231
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139624770
quote:
Exclusive: Emails reveal close Google relationship with NSA

Email exchanges between National Security Agency Director Gen. Keith Alexander and Google executives Sergey Brin and Eric Schmidt suggest a far cozier working relationship between some tech firms and the U.S. government than was implied by Silicon Valley brass after last year’s revelations about NSA spying.

Disclosures by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden about the agency’s vast capability for spying on Americans’ electronic communications prompted a number of tech executives whose firms cooperated with the government to insist they had done so only when compelled by a court of law.

But Al Jazeera has obtained two sets of email communications dating from a year before Snowden became a household name that suggest not all cooperation was under pressure.

On the morning of June 28, 2012, an email from Alexander invited Schmidt to attend a four-hour-long “classified threat briefing” on Aug. 8 at a “secure facility in proximity to the San Jose, CA airport.”

“The meeting discussion will be topic-specific, and decision-oriented, with a focus on Mobility Threats and Security,” Alexander wrote in the email, obtained under a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, the first of dozens of communications between the NSA chief and Silicon Valley executives that the agency plans to turn over.

Alexander, Schmidt and other industry executives met earlier in the month, according to the email. But Alexander wanted another meeting with Schmidt and “a small group of CEOs” later that summer because the government needed Silicon Valley’s help.

“About six months ago, we began focusing on the security of mobility devices,” Alexander wrote. “A group (primarily Google, Apple and Microsoft) recently came to agreement on a set of core security principles. When we reach this point in our projects we schedule a classified briefing for the CEOs of key companies to provide them a brief on the specific threats we believe can be mitigated and to seek their commitment for their organization to move ahead … Google’s participation in refinement, engineering and deployment of the solutions will be essential.”

Jennifer Granick, director of civil liberties at Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society, said she believes information sharing between industry and the government is “absolutely essential” but “at the same time, there is some risk to user privacy and to user security from the way the vulnerability disclosure is done.”

The challenge facing government and industry was to enhance security without compromising privacy, Granick said. The emails between Alexander and Google executives, she said, show “how informal information sharing has been happening within this vacuum where there hasn’t been a known, transparent, concrete, established methodology for getting security information into the right hands.”

The classified briefing cited by Alexander was part of a secretive government initiative known as the Enduring Security Framework (ESF), and his email provides some rare information about what the ESF entails, the identities of some participant tech firms and the threats they discussed.

Alexander explained that the deputy secretaries of the Department of Defense, Homeland Security and “18 US CEOs” launched the ESF in 2009 to “coordinate government/industry actions on important (generally classified) security issues that couldn’t be solved by individual actors alone.”

“For example, over the last 18 months, we (primarily Intel, AMD [Advanced Micro Devices], HP [Hewlett-Packard], Dell and Microsoft on the industry side) completed an effort to secure the BIOS of enterprise platforms to address a threat in that area.”

“BIOS” is an acronym for “basic input/output system,” the system software that initializes the hardware in a personal computer before the operating system starts up. NSA cyberdefense chief Debora Plunkett in December disclosed that the agency had thwarted a “BIOS plot” by a “nation-state,” identified as China, to brick U.S. computers. That plot, she said, could have destroyed the U.S. economy. “60 Minutes,” which broke the story, reported that the NSA worked with unnamed “computer manufacturers” to address the BIOS software vulnerability.

But some cybersecurity experts questioned the scenario outlined by Plunkett.

“There is probably some real event behind this, but it’s hard to tell, because we don’t have any details,” wrote Robert Graham, CEO of the penetration-testing firm Errata Security in Atlanta, on his blog in December. “It”s completely false in the message it is trying to convey. What comes out is gibberish, as any technical person can confirm.”

And by enlisting the NSA to shore up their defenses, those companies may have made themselves more vulnerable to the agency’s efforts to breach them for surveillance purposes.

“I think the public should be concerned about whether the NSA was really making its best efforts, as the emails claim, to help secure enterprise BIOS and mobile devices and not holding the best vulnerabilities close to their chest,” said Nate Cardozo, a staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s digital civil liberties team.

He doesn’t doubt that the NSA was trying to secure enterprise BIOS, but he suggested that the agency, for its own purposes, was “looking for weaknesses in the exact same products they’re trying to secure.”

The NSA “has no business helping Google secure its facilities from the Chinese and at the same time hacking in through the back doors and tapping the fiber connections between Google base centers,” Cardozo said. “The fact that it’s the same agency doing both of those things is in obvious contradiction and ridiculous.” He recommended dividing offensive and defensive functions between two agencies.

Two weeks after the “60 Minutes” broadcast, the German magazine Der Spiegel, citing documents obtained by Snowden, reported that the NSA inserted back doors into BIOS, doing exactly what Plunkett accused a nation-state of doing during her interview.

Google’s Schmidt was unable to attend to the mobility security meeting in San Jose in August 2012.

“General Keith.. so great to see you.. !” Schmidt wrote. “I’m unlikely to be in California that week so I’m sorry I can’t attend (will be on the east coast). Would love to see you another time. Thank you !” Since the Snowden disclosures, Schmidt has been critical of the NSA and said its surveillance programs may be illegal.

Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, did attend that briefing. Foreign Policy reported a month later that Dempsey and other government officials — no mention of Alexander — were in Silicon Valley “picking the brains of leaders throughout the valley and discussing the need to quickly share information on cyber threats.” Foreign Policy noted that the Silicon Valley executives in attendance belonged to the ESF. The story did not say mobility threats and security was the top agenda item along with a classified threat briefing.

A week after the gathering, Dempsey said during a Pentagon press briefing, “I was in Silicon Valley recently, for about a week, to discuss vulnerabilities and opportunities in cyber with industry leaders … They agreed — we all agreed on the need to share threat information at network speed.”

Google co-founder Sergey Brin attended previous meetings of the ESF group but because of a scheduling conflict, according to Alexander’s email, he also could not attend the Aug. 8 briefing in San Jose, and it’s unknown if someone else from Google was sent.

A few months earlier, Alexander had emailed Brin to thank him for Google’s participation in the ESF.

“I see ESF’s work as critical to the nation’s progress against the threat in cyberspace and really appreciate Vint Cerf [Google’s vice president and chief Internet evangelist], Eric Grosse [vice president of security engineering] and Adrian Ludwig’s [lead engineer for Android security] contributions to these efforts during the past year,” Alexander wrote in a Jan. 13, 2012, email.

“You recently received an invitation to the ESF Executive Steering Group meeting, which will be held on January 19, 2012. The meeting is an opportunity to recognize our 2012 accomplishments and set direction for the year to come. We will be discussing ESF’s goals and specific targets for 2012. We will also discuss some of the threats we see and what we are doing to mitigate those threats … Your insights, as a key member of the Defense Industrial Base, are valuable to ensure ESF’s efforts have measurable impact.”

A Google representative declined to answer specific questions about Brin’s and Schmidt’s relationship with Alexander or about Google’s work with the government.

“We work really hard to protect our users from cyberattacks, and we always talk to experts — including in the U.S. government — so we stay ahead of the game,” the representative said in a statement to Al Jazeera. “It’s why Sergey attended this NSA conference.”

Brin responded to Alexander the following day even though the head of the NSA didn’t use the appropriate email address when contacting the co-chairman.

“Hi Keith, looking forward to seeing you next week. FYI, my best email address to use is [redacted],” Brin wrote. “The one your email went to — sergey.brin@google.com — I don’t really check.”
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 9 mei 2014 @ 17:45:57 #233
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139746541
quote:
MPs: Snowden files are 'embarrassing indictment' of British spying oversight

All-party committee demands reforms to make security and intelligence services accountable in wake of disclosures

Edward Snowden's disclosures of the scale of mass surveillance are "an embarrassing indictment" of the weak nature of the oversight and legal accountability of Britain's security and intelligence agencies, MPs have concluded.

A highly critical report by the Commons home affairs select committee published on Friday calls for a radical reform of the current system of oversight of MI5, MI6 and GCHQ, arguing that the current system is so ineffective it is undermining the credibility of the intelligence agencies and parliament itself.

The MPs say the current system was designed in a pre-internet age when a person's word was accepted without question. "It is designed to scrutinise the work of George Smiley, not the 21st-century reality of the security and intelligence services," said committee chairman, Keith Vaz. "The agencies are at the cutting edge of sophistication and are owed an equally refined system of democratic scrutiny. It is an embarrassing indictment of our system that some in the media felt compelled to publish leaked information to ensure that matters were heard in parliament."

The cross-party report is the first British parliamentary acknowledgement that Snowden's disclosures of the mass harvesting of personal phone and internet data need to lead to serious improvements in the oversight and accountability of the security services.

The MPs call for radical reform of the system of oversight including the election of the membership of the intelligence and security committee, including its chairman, and an end to their exclusive oversight role. Its chairman should also be a member of the largest opposition party, the MPs say, in direct criticism of its current head, Sir Malcolm Rifkind, who is a former Conservative foreign secretary.

Rifkind, however, said he had read the report, and had concluded: "The recommendations regarding the ISC are old hat. For several years, Mr Vaz has been trying to expand the powers of his committee so that they can take evidence from MI5, MI6 and GCHQ. This is what this bit of his report is all about."

Rifkind attempted to head off some of the MPs' conclusions by announcing that the ISC would conduct its own inquiry into personal privacy and state surveillance. He also attacked Snowden and his supporters for their "insidious use of language such as mass surveillance and Orwellian" – which, he argued, "blurs, unforgivably, the distinction between a system that uses the state to protect the people, and one that uses the state to protect itself against the people".

However, a complete overhaul of the "part-time" and under-resourced system of oversight commissioners is recommended by the MPs, as is an end to some of the secrecy surrounding the Investigatory Powers Tribunal – the only body that is able to investigate individual complaints against the security agencies.

A parliamentary inquiry into the principal legal framework that legitimises state communications surveillance, the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, should be launched, they say, to bring it up to date with modern technology and improve its oversight safeguards.

The committee also voices strong concerns that a data protection ruling by the European court of justice last month has left the legality of the bulk collection of communications data by the phone and internet companies in serious doubt. "It is essential that the legal position be resolved clearly and promptly," say the MPs, who reveal that the home secretary, Theresa May, has ordered urgent work into the ruling's full implications for the police and security services.

The MPs say they decided to look at the oversight of the intelligence agencies following the theft of a number of National Security Agency documents by Snowden in order to publicise the mass surveillance programmes run by a number of national intelligence agencies.

Their report says Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian, responded to criticism of newspapers that decided to publish Snowden's disclosures, including the head of MI6's claim that it was "a gift to terrorists", by saying that the alternative would be that the next Snowden would just "dump the stuff on the internet".

The MPs say: "One of the reasons that Edward Snowden has cited for releasing the documents is that he believes the oversight of security and intelligence agencies is not effective. It is important to note that when we asked British civil servants – the national security adviser and the head of MI5 – to give evidence to us they refused. In contrast, Mr Rusbridger came before us and provided open and transparent evidence."

The report makes clear the intelligence chiefs should drop their boycott of wider parliamentary scrutiny. "Engagement with elected representatives is not, in itself, a danger to national security and to continue to insist so is hyperbole," it says.

But a move by Labour and Lib Dem MPs to congratulate the Guardian and other media outlets for "responsibly reporting" the disclosures – saying they had opened a "wide and international public debate" – was voted down by four Tory MPs.

Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said the report showed there was a cross-party consensus behind Labour's proposals, including reform of the commissioners system and an opposition chair of the ISC. "The government should now set out plans for oversight reforms," she said.

Nick Clegg has also outlined proposals for reforming the oversight system.

Cooper added that the select committee had added their voice to the growing number of MPs, who were calling for reform. She said that the police and security services needed to keep up with the challenges of the digital age but stronger safeguards and limits to protect personal privacy and sustain confidence in their vital were also needed: "The oversight and legal frameworks are now out of date," said the shadow home secretary.Emma Carr, of Big Brother Watch, the privacy campaign group, said: "When a senior committee of parliament says that the current oversight of our intelligence agencies is not fit for purpose, ineffective and undermines the credibility of parliament, the government cannot and must not continue to bury its head in the sand."

Last night, a statement by the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) and the Terrorism and Allied Matters (TAM) Board – consisting of assistant commissioner Cressida Dick, chief constable Sara Thornton, chief constable Sir Peter Fahy, chief constable Chris Sims, chief constable Mark Gilmore and chief constable Matt Baggott – said they were "concerned" the committee had recommended that responsibility for counter-terrorism policing should be moved to the National Crime Agency.

The statement described it as "a decision that does not appear to supported by the evidence and is based on an apparent misunderstanding of the role played by the Metropolitan Police Service."Counter-terrorism policing is not directed through a single lead force but rather has responsibility vested in nine chief constables across the UK in areas where the threat is considered to be the greatest. These chief constables act collaboratively and effectively on behalf of all forces, while at the same time maintaining close and critical links into local policing."

The statement added: "The Home Secretary has previously confirmed that she will conduct a review of counter-terrorism structures. We welcome any such review and look forward to participating fully and constructively in it. "

The Home Office said: "Our security agencies and law enforcement agencies operate within a strict legal and policy framework and under the tightest of controls and oversight mechanisms. This represents one of the strongest systems of checks and balances and democratic accountability for secret intelligence anywhere in the world."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 9 mei 2014 @ 20:28:01 #234
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139752561
quote:
quote:
In the ongoing saga over the NSA's snooping on just about everyone, the one message the NSA and its defenders keep going back to is this idea that we need to "trust" them. And they insist that the trust is fine because everything they do is carefully monitored and audited. In John Oliver's recent interview with former NSA boss, General Keith Alexander, Alexander insisted that this kind of tracking and auditing was fool-proof, claiming that it had caught the twelve people who had abused their authority to spy on specific individuals. Except that Alexander was flat out lying there. First of all, internal investigations have shown thousands of abuses, not just twelve. As for the twelve that Alexander is talking about, when we looked through the details, it became clear that only three of the twelve were caught because of audits. And many were only caught because the guilty party later confessed -- sometimes many years later.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_139752984
quote:
NSA Still Has No Idea How Many Documents Snowden Took... But Insists We Can Trust Them Because They Audit Everything
En die Duitser die vrij makkelijk binnen kwam... 't is toch bijzonder voor een inlichtingendienst, om je eigen beveiliging niet op orde te hebben. En dat voor het enorme budget waar ze alles voor kunnen doen...

[ Bericht 9% gewijzigd door gebrokenglas op 11-05-2014 07:52:54 ]
  zondag 11 mei 2014 @ 00:53:54 #236
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139812356
quote:
Attempts to stay anonymous on the web will only put the NSA on your trail

The sobering story of Janet Vertesi's attempts to conceal her pregnancy from the forces of online marketers shows just how Kafkaesque the internet has become

When searching for an adjective to describe our comprehensively surveilled networked world – the one bookmarked by the NSA at one end and by Google, Facebook, Yahoo and co at the other – "Orwellian" is the word that people generally reach for.

But "Kafkaesque" seems more appropriate. The term is conventionally defined as "having a nightmarishly complex, bizarre, or illogical quality", but Frederick Karl, Franz Kafka's most assiduous biographer, regarded that as missing the point. "What's Kafkaesque," he once told the New York Times, "is when you enter a surreal world in which all your control patterns, all your plans, the whole way in which you have configured your own behaviour, begins to fall to pieces, when you find yourself against a force that does not lend itself to the way you perceive the world."

A vivid description of this was provided recently by Janet Vertesi, a sociologist at Princeton University. She gave a talk at a conference describing her experience of trying to keep her pregnancy secret from marketers. Her report is particularly pertinent because pregnant women are regarded by online advertisers as one of the most valuable entities on the net. You and I are worth, on average, only 10 cents each. But a pregnant woman is valued at $1.50 because she is about to embark on a series of purchasing decisions stretching well into her child's lifetime.

Professor Vertesi's story is about big data, but from the bottom up. It's a gripping personal account of what it takes to avoid being collected, tracked and entered into databases.

First – and most obviously – she determined that there would be absolutely no mention of her new state on social media. She phoned or wrote individually to friends and family members to give them the good news, and asked them not to mention it on Facebook. But an uncle in Australia sent her a congratulatory message via Facebook. "I then did," she said, "what any rational person would do. I deleted the thread of all our conversations and unfriended him." He replied plaintively: "But I didn't put it on your wall", apparently unaware that chats and other messages aren't private in the sense that he assumed.

In preparing for the birth of her child, Vertesi was nothing if not thorough. Instead of using a web-browser in the normal way – ie leaving a trail of cookies and other digital tracks, she used the online service Tor to visit babycenter.com anonymously. She shopped offline whenever she could and paid in cash. On the occasions when she had to use Amazon, she set up a new Amazon account linked to an email address on a personal server, had all packages delivered to a local locker and made sure only to pay with Amazon gift cards that had been purchased with cash.

The really significant moment came when she came to buy a big-ticket item – an expensive stroller (aka pushchair) that was the urbanite's equivalent of an SUV. Her husband tried to buy $500 of Amazon gift vouchers with cash, only to discover that this triggered a warning: retailers have to report people buying large numbers of gift vouchers with cash because, well, you know, they're obviously money launderers.

At this point, some sobering thoughts begin to surface. The first is Melvin Kranzberg's observation that "technology is neither good nor bad; nor is it neutral". Our technologies have values built into them, which is why Vertesi in her talk cites someone's observation that "the iPod is a tool to make us moral" (because it encourages people to buy music rather than download it illicitly) and philosophers argue about whether surveillance encourages moral – ie socially approved – behaviour (think speed cameras).

Even more sobering, though, are the implications of Professor Vertesi's decision to use Tor as a way of ensuring the anonymity of her web-browsing activities. She had a perfectly reasonable reason for doing this – to ensure that, as a mother-to-be, she was not tracked and targeted by online marketers.

But we know from the Snowden disclosures and other sources that Tor users are automatically regarded with suspicion by the NSA et al on the grounds that people who do not wish to leave a digital trail are obviously up to no good. The same goes for people who encrypt their emails.

This is why the industry response to protests about tracking is so inadequate. The market will fix the problem, the companies say, because if people don't like being tracked then they can opt not to be. But the Vertesi experiment shows that if you take measures to avoid being tracked, then you increase the probability that you will be. Which is truly Kafkaesque.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 13 mei 2014 @ 21:30:00 #237
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139922312
quote:
quote:
Greenwald’s pugilistic skills are on full display in his new book, No Place to Hide. My copy came with CONFIDENTIAL stamped on every page and a nondisclosure agreement that expires today. The prepublication insistence on secrecy seemed a little self-conscious given the topic. And in the end, it wasn’t newsy revelations that kept me reading.
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Many writers would stop there, short of naming names. After all, if you want to be welcome in the home of the establishment (and most journalists wouldn’t mind being invited for the weekend at least), it’s better to attack a faceless Washington columnist than a cadre of real ones. But Greenwald skewers the media outlets and individual journalists who he believes proved his point about how “subservient to the government’s interests” the press can be. He thinks the New York Times has become a “mouthpiece for those in power.” And he singles out Bob Schieffer of Face the Nation, Walter Pincus of the Washington Post, Andrew Ross Sorkin of the New York Times, and Jeffrey Toobin of The New Yorker for wrong-footedly denouncing Snowden, Greenwald, or both as narcissists, plotters, or traitors. Some (genius) members of the press justified the idea of prosecuting Greenwald along with Snowden by insisting that he wasn’t a journalist at all. Beginning with the Times, in a profile that appeared soon after the first Snowden-driven stories, reporters and columnists labeled Greenwald a “blogger,” a “polemicist,” or an “activist” to more easily dismiss him. Never mind that Greenwald was publishing article after investigative article in the Guardian based on the biggest scoop in half a century. (He’s now working on a Pierre Omidyar-funded investigative journalism startup, and he promises in GQ this month that the biggest Snowden shoe is yet to drop.)
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 14 mei 2014 @ 18:20:41 #238
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139953689
quote:
quote:
Amidst the year's surreal procession of revelations about government spying, it can be easy to lose sight of the significance of these leaks. But the NSA is an entity so obsessed with secrecy that in Washington, its initials at one time were said to stand for “No Such Agency,” and so formidable that prior to 2013, prominent elected critics spoke publicly of its excess only in cryptic warnings. The amount of transparency and criticism in the wake of the Snowden Files was previously unthinkable; it poses an existential threat to the status quo.

So when government officials label Snowden or Greenwald a terrorist or criminal, it's not idle bullshit—it's representatives of one of the planet’s most powerful forces identifying an enemy. After Greenwald's partner, David Miranda, was released after almost nine hours of detention in Heathrow Airport under a terrorism statute, he said, “There's really nothing scarier than being told by these two governments that you're a terrorist. … You realize they can do anything to you. … They kidnap people, imprison them without charges or a lawyer, disappear them, put them in Guantanamo, they kill them.” Greenwald surmises offhandedly at one point that the security state is more powerful than the president, and there is no real reason to believe he's wrong.

No Place to Hide is a deeply satisfying punctuation mark on what has surely been a singularly uncomfortable year for the defense establishment. It is a damning picture of a government that operates outside of accountability, and of the war waged in the press against the people associated with the Snowden Files, against journalism, and against dissent. But ultimately, No Place to Hide will be shocking in proportion to the depth of your illusions as to the goodness of the mainstream media and the powerful interests it defends. It leaves little room for argument: What's normal in Washington is very dangerous indeed.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 14 mei 2014 @ 19:35:52 #239
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139956276
quote:
quote:
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That is a stunning statement. It implies that the signals intelligence exchange between the American and Israeli governments has been driven almost entirely by the NSA giving information to the Israelis, instead of Israel giving information to the U.S. … even though we were the ones attacked on 9/11.

Remember, the raw data in American citizens collected by the NSA is shared with Israel. As the Guardian reported in September:

. The National Security Agency routinely shares raw intelligence data with Israel without first sifting it to remove information about US citizens, a top-secret document provided to the Guardian by whistleblower Edward Snowden reveals.

***

. According to the agreement, the intelligence being shared would not be filtered in advance by NSA analysts to remove US communications. “NSA routinely sends ISNU [the Israeli Sigint National Unit] minimized and unminimized raw collection”, it says.

***

. A much stricter rule was set for US government communications found in the raw intelligence. The Israelis were required to “destroy upon recognition” any communication “that is either to or from an official of the US government“. Such communications included those of “officials of the executive branch (including the White House, cabinet departments, and independent agencies), the US House of Representatives and Senate (member and staff) and the US federal court system (including, but not limited to, the supreme court)”
.

This not only raises major privacy concerns for American citizens, but it might mean that Israel is spying on the American Congress and other high-level politicians.

We have nothing against Israel, but – as American citizens – we want our intelligence agencies to put the American people and American security first.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 14 mei 2014 @ 20:23:25 #240
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139958476
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 15 mei 2014 @ 17:29:00 #241
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139989359
quote:
Swedish Foreign Ministry prevents Snowden’s invitation

The next European meeting of internet activists will be held in Sweden at the end of May. The “Stockholm Internet Forum” focusses on global development as well as surveillance. However, the world’s most important digital rights activist is not welcome: Edward Snowden

Sarah Harrison showed her anger at the USA. She explained how the US secret service surveyed the world, how it collected and analyzed data. The journalist that accompanied Snowden during his journey from Hong Kong to Moscow was a speaker at Berlin’s internet conference re:publica in the beginning of May. The hall was crowded, it was Europe’s largest gathering on these topics. But Harrison did not want to dismiss her audience without a warning: “You have two months to sort your government out, folks!” Snowden’s asylum in Russia ends in August. Up to that point a new shelter for the world’s most important whistleblower has to be found.

The Federal government has repeatedly resisted accepting Snowden. The opposition in the NSA parliamentary committee demand just that: The ex NSA employee should testify in Germany, and give him an opportunity here. The governing coalition prefers leaving Snowden in Moscow – and instead questioning him via video.

Harrison, aware of this political controversy, demanded EU neighboring states to jump in: “Other countries have to support and put pressure on Germany.”

But they seem to show little interest in the fate of Edward Snowden. For example Sweden: According to information by Cicero Online, the Swedish Foreign Ministry has disinvited Snowden and some of his closest confidants to an internet conference in its own country.

When third “Stockholm Internet Forum” opens on May 26, the activists will not descend on an old postal industrial area as they did for Berlin’s re:publica in 2014. Sweden’s largest digital convention will take place in the town hall, under the red brick tower with three golden crowns. It’s there in the ballroom where the Nobel prizes are awarded each year.

The event will not be hosted by a group of bloggers, but rather by the Swedish government. The minister of development will hold the opening address, adding meaning to the conference’s motto “Internet Freedom for Global Development”.

Sweden, which is regularly awarded top rankings for freedom, human rights and social welfare, wants to prove its democratic virtue again during this event. In an online podcast, Foreign Minister Carl Bildt has already sketched out the scope of topics: The Forum will not only discuss the opportunities in the digital world, but also the question as to how state control and censorship can be countered. The first point on the agenda the following morning is “the debate regarding surveillance and the right to privacy in the wake of the revelations by Edward Snowden”.

There’s a flipside: Neither the former NSA employee Edward Snowden nor any of his confidantes will be at the conference in Stockholm. The Swedish government has taken care of that.

In addition to the ministries of foreign affairs and development, a third partner has helped organize and finance the forum: the internet organization .SE. They administer Sweden’s top level domains and were responsible for selecting suitable experts worldwide for the Stockholm Internet Forum. The SIF only accepts hand-picked speakers and guests. This year about 500 participants are expected.

So how did this come about?

.SE – the only non-governmental organization among the hosts – made a list of possible candidates. The most important name on it: Edward Snowden. Further names included journalists Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras, the two journalists that informed the world about the NSA’s activities, Guardian Editor in Chief Alan Rusbridger as well as hacker Jacob Appelbaum, who found the mobile phone number of German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Snowden’s database. The list of candidates was sent to the Swedish Foreign Ministry for approval.

According to information from Cicero Online, that’s where Snowden’s name was marked in red. In official use, this apparently means: “do not invite”. The ministry had no comment on this when asked. Instead, it stated that the focus of the conference was to “represent a wide array of backgrounds, cultures and opinions”. The main ambition was to invite equal numbers of women and men and that at least half of the participants came from developing countries. “We would also like to point out that those who haven’t been invited are able to follow the entire conference online and give opinions and raise questions during the discussions”, the ministry added.

Indeed, Edward Snowden would not have been able to escape his Russian asylum in order to go to Stockholm. However, his invitation would have been a symbol. With a little imagination the hosts could have included him anyway. The German NSA parliamentary committee is currently discussing a video interrogation. Snowden has already answered questions posed by the European Council via a live broadcast; that was also the way he chose to spoke to participants of a tech festival in Texas.

Sweden could also have allowed Snowden’s confidantes to speak for him. That’s what other hosts of large computer and internet conferences have recently done. The Net Mundial in São Paulo, Brazil, chose a live broadcast with Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, hacker Jacop Appelbaum was there personally. The Chaos Communication Congress had Glenn Greenwald speaking via video. Appelbaum and Harrison spoke there too, as well as at Berlin’s re:publica.

The Swedish Foreign Ministry only authorized one name among the Snowden confidantes: Laura Poitras. The documentary filmmaker has recently refrained from loud political demands. She eventually turned down the invitation. “Of course I would boycott any conference with a blacklist”, she said to Cicero Online.

The objection against Appelbaum was supposedly recorded as follows: “Has been discussed, and has to be discussed further.”

Appelbaum himself is outraged. “It is unacceptable that I am the target of retribution for attempting to discuss the issues of mass surveillance and the chilling effect it has on society.”

The Swedish Foreign Ministry replied to Cicero’s inquiries saying it had wanted to select participants that they believed would benefit from coming to the convention and who hadn’t been there before. “Only a fraction of the participants have been invited to all three SIFs [Stockholm Internet Forums, the editor]. Mr. Appelbaum was invited to both previous SIFs.”

Apparently the Swedish government’s selection of participants also upset the non-governmental host. The organization .SE, which had helped with the first two conferences, has reduced its involvement this year. The development ministry confirmed this. A .SE spokeswoman attested that “this year we are offering our support as a sponsor but we are not involved in the SIF program”.

Stockholm’s Internet Freedom convention will send out a contradictory message to the world: On the one hand, it wants to talk about surveillance and data protection issues. On the other hand, it locks out those people who could best speak about these topics. “Is this what they mean by internet freedom?” Jacob Appelbaum wonders. “Or by freedom in general?

Perhaps Sweden does not want to spoil its chances with the powerful American ally. After all, the EU state shares its destiny with the USA. Just as the fox lurks in front of the rabbit cave, both countries await the extradition of their whistleblower: Assange here, Snowden there. This could explain why Sweden refrains from inviting Snowden.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 16 mei 2014 @ 10:45:05 #242
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140012383
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 16 mei 2014 @ 10:59:42 #243
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140012791
HERINNER JE JE DEZE NOG!? NOG!? .. nog!?.. nog!? .. nog ... nog ....

NWS / Anonops #5: Anonymous en de MO-revoluties


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The head of a security company who boasted that he could identify the leaders of hacktivist collective Anonymous has found his Twitter account, emails and company website hacked by members of the group.
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Last week the loose hacker group Anonymous released a set of more than 40,000 emails from HBGary Federal, the security firm whose servers it hacked earlier this month. One of the files in those emails was a PowerPoint presentation that described “the WikiLeaks Threat,” created by a group of three security firms that suggested Nixonesque tactics for sabotaging the site on behalf of Bank of America, including spreading misinformation, launching cyberattacks against the site, and pressuring journalists.
quote:
The emails also show that it was Barr who suggested pressuring Salon.com journalist Glenn Greenwald, though Palantir, another firm working with HBGary Federal, quickly accepted that suggestion and added it to the PowerPoint presentation that the group was assembling.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 16 mei 2014 @ 20:54:14 #244
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140033058
quote:
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Glenn Greenwald joined HuffPost Live Friday to discuss Edward Snowden, the latest news on NSA spying and his recent book "No Place to Hide." The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist weighed in on the turmoil at the New York Times this week and had some choice words for incoming executive editor Dean Baquet, who with the LA Times in 2006, was accused of killing a story about collaboration between AT&T and the NSA.

HuffPost Live host Alyona Minkovski asked Greenwald what kind of leader Baquet will be for the New York Times. "I think of all the executive editors of the New York Times," Greenwald began, "at least in recent history, or I'll say in the last 10 years since I’ve paying extremely close attention to how the New York Times functions, Jill Abramson was probably the best advocate for an adversarial relationship between the government and the media. I don’t know if she’s always been that way but in her stewardship of the paper as editor in chief I think that was definitely the case."

Greenwald did not have kind words for incoming executive editor Dean Baquet. He said, "By contrast, her successor Dean Baquet does have a really disturbing history of practicing this form of journalism that is incredibly subservient to the American National security state, and if his past record and his past actions and statements are anything to go by, I think it signals that the New York Times is going to continue to descend downward into this sort of journalism that is very neutered and far too close to the very political factions that it's supposed to exercise oversight over."

WATCH THE FULL INTERVIEW WITH GLENN GREENWALD BELOW:
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 17 mei 2014 @ 15:14:10 #245
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140054130
quote:
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It appears likely that Edward Snowden was involved with CryptoParty. Cryptome has uncovered a public key for cincinnatus@lavabit.com, which is the same alias he used to contact Glenn Greenwald — and it’s associated with the organizing of an event in Honolulu, Hawaii in December 2012, where the now-famous NSA whistleblower was then living. Here’s the original page via Wayback Machine. Although I’m awaiting official confirmation from his lawyers, the odds are very high that it was him. CryptoParty is a global movement that was spawned nearly two years ago from an idea by Asher Wolf, an Australian activist.
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There’s also the video that Snowden created which I discovered in July last year, and has since been confirmed by Greenwald; a tutorial on GPG encryption for journalists, which was credited to “Anonymous 2013″ and posted by the Vimeo user anon108. Although setting up PGP proved too difficult for Greenwald, behind the voice-changing effect is someone who sounds extremely knowledgable about the mechanisms of digital security. Combined with the EFF and Tor Project stickers pictured on his laptop, the Anonymous and CryptoParty connections show a man attuned to the struggle for our rights on the internet; one with his eye on those communities.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 17 mei 2014 @ 21:42:56 #246
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140068862
quote:
Everyone should know just how much the government lied to defend the NSA

A web of deception has finally been untangled: the Justice Department got the US supreme court to dismiss a case that could have curtailed the NSA's dragnet. Why?

If you blinked this week, you might have missed the news: two Senators accused the Justice Department of lying about NSA warrantless surveillance to the US supreme court last year, and those falsehoods all but ensured that mass spying on Americans would continue. But hardly anyone seems to care – least of all those who lied and who should have already come forward with the truth.

Here's what happened: just before Edward Snowden became a household name, the ACLU argued before the supreme court that the Fisa Amendments Act – one of the two main laws used by the NSA to conduct mass surveillance – was unconstitutional.

In a sharply divided opinion, the supreme court ruled, 5-4, that the case should be dismissed because the plaintiffs didn't have "standing" – in other words, that the ACLU couldn't prove with near-certainty that their clients, which included journalists and human rights advocates, were targets of surveillance, so they couldn't challenge the law. As the New York Times noted this week, the court relied on two claims by the Justice Department to support their ruling: 1) that the NSA would only get the content of Americans' communications without a warrant when they are targeting a foreigner abroad for surveillance, and 2) that the Justice Department would notify criminal defendants who have been spied on under the Fisa Amendments Act, so there exists some way to challenge the law in court.

It turns out that neither of those statements were true – but it took Snowden's historic whistleblowing to prove it.

One of the most explosive Snowden revelations exposed a then-secret technique known as "about" surveillance. As the New York Times first reported, the NSA "is searching the contents of vast amounts of Americans' e-mail and text communications into and out of the country, hunting for people who mention information about foreigners under surveillance." In other words, the NSA doesn't just target a contact overseas – it sweeps up everyone's international communications into a dragnet and searches them for keywords.

The Snowden leaks also pushed the Justice Department to admit – contrary to what it told the court – that the government hadn't been notifying any defendants they were being charged based on NSA surveillance, making it actually impossible for anyone to prove they had standing to challenge the Fisa Amendments Act as unconstitutional.

It's unclear how much Solicitor General Donald Verrilli knew when he told the government's lies – twice – to the justices of the supreme court. Reports suggest that he was livid when he found out that his national security staff at the Justice Department misled him about whether they were notifying defendants in criminal trials of surveillance. And we don't know if he knew about the "about" surveillance that might well have given the ACLU standing in the case. But we do know other Justice Department officials knew about both things, and they have let both lies stand without correcting the record.

Lawyers before the supreme court are under an ethical obligation to correct the record if they make false statements to the Court – even if they are unintentional – yet the Justice Department has so far refused. As ACLU deputy legal director Jameel Jaffer explained, the Justice Department has corrected the record in other cases where it was much less clear-cut whether it had misled the court.

The government's response, instead, has been to explain why it doesn't think these statements are lies. In a letter to Senators Ron Wyden and Mark Udall that only surfaced this week, the government made the incredible argument that the "about" surveillance was classified at the time of the case, so it was under no obligation to tell the supreme court about it. And the Justice Department completely sidestepped the question of whether it lied about notifying defendants, basically by saying that it started to do so after the case, and so this was somehow no longer an issue.

But there's another reason the government wanted any challenge to the Fisa Amendments Act dismissed without being forced to argue that it doesn't violate the Fourth Amendment: it has an extremely controversial view about your (lack of) privacy rights, and probably doesn't want anyone to know. As Jaffer wrote here at the Guardian earlier this week, the government has since been forced to defend the Fisa Amendments Act, and it's pretty shocking how they've done it. Here's what the government said in a recent legal brief:

. The privacy rights of US persons in international communications are significantly diminished, if not completely eliminated, when those communications have been transmitted to or obtained from non-US persons located outside the United States.

This is an incredibly radical view of the right to privacy. We already know the government does not think you have any right to privacy when it comes who you talk to, or when, or for how long, or where you are while you're talking. Now the government has said, in court, that you don't have any right to the content of private conversations with anyone who is located outside the United States – or to any domestic communication remaining private if it is, at some point, transmitted overseas, which happens often. Jaffer explained the consequences of this view:

. If the government is right, nothing in the Constitution bars the NSA from monitoring a phone call between a journalist in New York City and his source in London. For that matter, nothing bars the NSA from monitoring every call and email between Americans in the United States and their non-American friends, relatives, and colleagues overseas.

Intelligence director James Clapper's infamous lie to Congress – in which he claimed just months before Snowden's leaks that the NSA was not collecting data on millions of Americans – will certainly follow him for the rest of his career even if it never leads to his prosecution. But while Clapper almost certainly broke the law, the senate committee members in front of whom he spoke knew the truth regardless.

The Justice Department, on the other hand, convinced the supreme court to dismiss a case that could have dramatically curtailed the NSA's most egregious abuses of power based on false statements. And now all of us are forced to live with the consequences of that.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 18 mei 2014 @ 14:51:27 #247
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140089250
ggreenwald twitterde op zondag 18-05-2014 om 14:29:36 I'll be in Amsterdam on Tuesday night, 8 pm, at the John Adams Institute discussing "No Place to Hide" - tickets: http://t.co/tgO2BYZHE9 reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 19 mei 2014 @ 03:11:22 #248
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140119053
quote:
Cisco chief urges Obama to curb NSA surveillance activity

(Reuters) - Cisco Systems Inc's chief executive officer has written a letter to President Barack Obama urging him to curtail government surveillance after evidence circulated showing the National Security Agency had intercepted Cisco equipment, a company spokesman said on Sunday.

In a letter dated May 15, John Chambers, chief executive officer and chairman of the networking equipment giant, warned of an erosion of confidence in the U.S. technology industry and called for new "standards of conduct" in how the NSA conducts its surveillance.

"We simply cannot operate this way, our customers trust us to be able to deliver to their doorsteps products that meet the highest standards of integrity and security," Chambers said in the letter.

The letter follows the circulation of pictures on the Internet showing NSA staff opening boxes of Cisco gear, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. "There have been allegations that the NSA has intercepted IT equipment in transit from manufacturers to customers to help monitor and gain information on surveillance targets," the paper wrote.

The allegations stem from early reporting from Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald, who has written about a number of NSA documents that were provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

In the letter, Chambers states that "if these allegations are true, these actions will undermine confidence in our industry and in the ability of technology companies to deliver products globally."

In a separate blog post on Cisco's site dated May 13, the company's general counsel, Mark Chandler, wrote that "...we ought to be able to count on the government to ... not interfere with the lawful delivery of our products in the form in which we have manufactured them."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 19 mei 2014 @ 05:05:54 #249
300435 Eyjafjallajoekull
Broertje van Katlaah
pi_140119165
Goed dat je blijft doorposten papierversnipperaar!
Opgeblazen gevoel of winderigheid? Zo opgelost met Rennie!
  maandag 19 mei 2014 @ 17:49:16 #250
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140136216
quote:
2s.gif Op maandag 19 mei 2014 05:05 schreef Eyjafjallajoekull het volgende:
Goed dat je blijft doorposten papierversnipperaar!
Dank je wel.

Speciaal voor jou een leuke column:

quote:
quote:
As I described in a previous column, the copyright monopoly cannot be enforced without mass surveillance. There is no way to tell a private conversation in a digital environment from a monopolized audio file being transferred, not without actually looking at what’s being transferred. At that point, the secrecy of correspondence has been broken and mass surveillance introduced.

The copyright industry has been continuously and relentlessly pushing for more mass surveillance, including surveillance of citizens who aren’t under any suspicion (“mass surveillance”) for this reason. They defended the now-illegal Data Retention Directive, which logs everybody’s communications and location all the time (specifically including yours), as well as similar initiatives.

Most notably, the copyright industry is known for using child porn as an argument for introducing mass surveillance, so that the mass surveillance can be expanded in the next step to targeting people who share knowledge and culture in violation of that industry’s distribution monopolies. This is a case study in taking corporate cynicism to the next level.

This mass surveillance is also what feeds the NSA, the GCHQ, and its other European counterparts (like the Swedish FRA). It is continuously argued, along the precise same lines, that so-called “metadata” – whom you’re calling, from where, for how long – is not sensitive and therefore not protected by privacy safeguards. This was the argument that the European Court of Justice struck down with the force of a sledgehammer, followed by about two metric tons of bricks: it’s more than a little private if you’re talking to a sex service for 19 minutes at 2am, or if you’re making a call to the suicide hotline from the top of a bridge. This is the kind of data that the spy services wanted to have logged, eagerly cheered on by the copyright industry.

This has a direct connection to free speech as such.

In Germany, the effect of this logging and violation of people’s privacy has been studied extensively. According to a study conducted by polling institute Forsa before the data retention was in place, over half of German citizens would refrain from placing communications that could be used against them in the future – drug helplines, psychologists, even marriage counseling. A significant portion of Germans had already refrained from taking such contacts for that reason.
De column gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 19 mei 2014 @ 18:17:27 #251
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140137104
ForumNetwork twitterde op maandag 19-05-2014 om 15:41:49 The conversation btwn @ggreenwald and Noam Chomsky on Edward Snowden & the NSA is up: http://t.co/Fo397erv0t reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 19 mei 2014 @ 19:55:55 #252
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140141166
quote:
quote:
The National Security Agency is secretly intercepting, recording, and archiving the audio of virtually every cell phone conversation on the island nation of the Bahamas.

According to documents provided by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, the surveillance is part of a top-secret system – code-named SOMALGET – that was implemented without the knowledge or consent of the Bahamian government. Instead, the agency appears to have used access legally obtained in cooperation with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to open a backdoor to the country’s cellular telephone network, enabling it to covertly record and store the “full-take audio” of every mobile call made to, from and within the Bahamas – and to replay those calls for up to a month.

SOMALGET is part of a broader NSA program called MYSTIC, which The Intercept has learned is being used to secretly monitor the telecommunications systems of the Bahamas and several other countries, including Mexico, the Philippines, and Kenya. But while MYSTIC scrapes mobile networks for so-called “metadata” – information that reveals the time, source, and destination of calls – SOMALGET is a cutting-edge tool that enables the NSA to vacuum up and store the actual content of every conversation in an entire country.

All told, the NSA is using MYSTIC to gather personal data on mobile calls placed in countries with a combined population of more than 250 million people. And according to classified documents, the agency is seeking funding to export the sweeping surveillance capability elsewhere.

The program raises profound questions about the nature and extent of American surveillance abroad. The U.S. intelligence community routinely justifies its massive spying efforts by citing the threats to national security posed by global terrorism and unpredictable rival nations like Russia and Iran. But the NSA documents indicate that SOMALGET has been deployed in the Bahamas to locate “international narcotics traffickers and special-interest alien smugglers” – traditional law-enforcement concerns, but a far cry from derailing terror plots or intercepting weapons of mass destruction.

“The Bahamas is a stable democracy that shares democratic principles, personal freedoms, and rule of law with the United States,” the State Department concluded in a crime and safety report published last year. “There is little to no threat facing Americans from domestic (Bahamian) terrorism, war, or civil unrest.”
quote:
The NSA documents dont specify who is providing access in the Bahamas. But they do describe SOMALGET as an umbrella term for systems provided by a private firm, which is described elsewhere in the documents as a MYSTIC access provider. (The documents dont name the firm, but rather refer to a cover name that The Intercept has agreed not to publish in response to a specific, credible concern that doing so could lead to violence.)
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 20 mei 2014 @ 16:48:37 #253
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140171719
quote:
7s.gif Op maandag 19 mei 2014 19:55 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

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[..]

Het artikel gaat verder.
wikileaks twitterde op dinsdag 20-05-2014 om 00:35:47 @GGreenwald @johnjcook We will reveal the name of the censored country whose population is being mass recorded in 72 hours. reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 20 mei 2014 @ 16:59:06 #254
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140172051
quote:
Secrets, lies and Snowden's email: why I was forced to shut down Lavabit

For the first time, the founder of an encrypted email startup that was supposed to insure privacy for all reveals how the FBI and the US legal system made sure we don't have the right to much privacy in the first place

My legal saga started last summer with a knock at the door, behind which stood two federal agents ready to to serve me with a court order requiring the installation of surveillance equipment on my company's network.

My company, Lavabit, provided email services to 410,000 people – including Edward Snowden, according to news reports – and thrived by offering features specifically designed to protect the privacy and security of its customers. I had no choice but to consent to the installation of their device, which would hand the US government access to all of the messages – to and from all of my customers – as they travelled between their email accounts other providers on the Internet.

But that wasn't enough. The federal agents then claimed that their court order required me to surrender my company's private encryption keys, and I balked. What they said they needed were customer passwords – which were sent securely – so that they could access the plain-text versions of messages from customers using my company's encrypted storage feature. (The government would later claim they only made this demand because of my "noncompliance".)

Bothered by what the agents were saying, I informed them that I would first need to read the order they had just delivered – and then consult with an attorney. The feds seemed surprised by my hesitation.

What ensued was a flurry of legal proceedings that would last 38 days, ending not only my startup but also destroying, bit by bit, the very principle upon which I founded it – that we all have a right to personal privacy.

In the first two weeks, I was served legal papers a total of seven times and was in contact with the FBI every other day. (This was the period a prosecutor would later characterize as my "period of silence".) It took a week for me to identify an attorney who could adequately represent me, given the complex technological and legal issues involved – and we were in contact for less than a day when agents served me with a summons ordering me to appear in a Virginia courtroom, over 1,000 miles from my home. Two days later, I was served the first subpoena for the encryption keys.

With such short notice, my first attorney was unable to appear alongside me in court. Because the whole case was under seal, I couldn't even admit to anyone who wasn't an attorney that I needed a lawyer, let alone why. In the days before my appearance, I would spend hours repeating the facts of the case to a dozen attorneys, as I sought someone else that was qualified to represent me. I also discovered that as a third party in a federal criminal indictment, I had no right to counsel. After all, only my property was in jeopardy – not my liberty. Finally, I was forced to choose between appearing alone or facing a bench warrant for my arrest.

In Virginia, the government replaced its encryption key subpoena with a search warrant and a new court date. I retained a small, local law firm before I went back to my home state, which was then forced to assemble a legal strategy and file briefs in just a few short days. The court barred them from consulting outside experts about either the statutes or the technology involved in the case. The court didn't even deliver transcripts of my first appearance to my own lawyers for two months, and forced them to proceed without access to the information they needed.

Then, a federal judge entered an order of contempt against me – without even so much as a hearing.

But the judge created a loophole: without a hearing, I was never given the opportunity to object, let alone make any any substantive defense, to the contempt change. Without any objection (because I wasn't allowed a hearing), the appellate court waived consideration of the substantive questions my case raised – and upheld the contempt charge, on the grounds that I hadn't disputed it in court. Since the US supreme court traditionally declines to review decided on wholly procedural grounds, I will be permanently denied justice.

In the meantime, I had a hard decision to make. I had not devoted 10 years of my life to building Lavabit, only to become complicit in a plan which I felt would have involved the wholesale violation of my customers' right to privacy. Thus with no alternative, the decision was obvious: I had to shut down my company.

The largest technological question we raised in our appeal (which the courts refused to consider) was what constitutes a "search", i.e., whether law enforcement can demand the encryption keys of a business and use those keys to inspect the private communications of every customer, even when the court has only authorized them to access information belonging to specific targets.

The problem here is technological: until any communication has been decrypted and the contents parsed, it is currently impossible for a surveillance device to determine which network connections belong to any given suspect. The government argued that, since the "inspection" of the data was to be carried out by a machine, they were exempt from the normal search-and-seizure protections of the Fourth Amendment.

More importantly for my case, the prosecution also argued that my users had no expectation of privacy, even though the service I provided – encryption – is designed for users' privacy.

If my experience serves any purpose, it is to illustrate what most already know: courts must not be allowed to consider matters of great importance under the shroud of secrecy, lest we find ourselves summarily deprived of meaningful due process. If we allow our government to continue operating in secret, it is only a matter of time before you or a loved one find yourself in a position like I did – standing in a secret courtroom, alone, and without any of the meaningful protections that were always supposed to be the people's defense against an abuse of the state's power.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 21 mei 2014 @ 13:12:25 #255
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140201530
quote:
Restrictions placed on NSA's data store after intense talks over surveillance bill

USA Freedom Act heads to the House with government required to 'promptly' purge phone records that do not contain 'foreign intelligence information'

Last-minute negotiations over the details of a congressional surveillance bill have resulted in restrictions around the National Security Agency’s massive repository of analysed call data.

Intense closed-door talks between lawmakers and Obama administration and intelligence officials that wrapped up Tuesday afternoon have finalised the language of the USA Freedom Act. The bill is expected to receive a vote on the House floor on Thursday.

The latest twist for the bill is an expanded provision that would require the government to “promptly” purge phone records that do not contain “foreign intelligence information,” effectively pruning irrelevant records from the NSA’s trees of analyzed phone data.

But several other changes to the bill, which civil libertarians already considered watered down after a series of legislative compromises, have cost it critical support from privacy groups ahead of Thursday’s vote.

Under the new provision, the government would have to “adopt minimisation procedures that require the prompt destruction of all call detail records” turned over by the telecoms firms “that the government determines are not foreign intelligence information.”

The government would ultimately have to “destroy all call detail records produced under the order as prescribed by such procedures”.

A previous version of that language tasked the government merely with destroying call records “not later than five years after the production of such records, except for records that are relevant to an authorised investigation.”

While several privacy protections within the USA Freedom Act have been diluted in recent weeks, several people familiar with the negotiations said they thought the new provision better protects privacy than the old one, as it represents the first known restriction on the NSA’s “corporate store” of analysed data.

The “corporate store” is the digital warehouse where the NSA stores all the US call records it has amassed when searching for connections to the target phone numbers it believes may be tied to specific terrorist groups. Until this year, data up to three “hops” from such a phone number was fit for inclusion in the store.

Once data is placed in the store, NSA analysts face virtually no restrictions on their ability to search through it.

“NSA may apply the full range of Sigint [signals intelligence] analytic tradecraft” to phone records placed in the store, according to a footnote in a Fisa court order declassified by the government last year. Searches through data placed in the corporate store can occur “without the requirement” that reasonable articulable suspicion of connection to wrongdoing exist; nor is the NSA required to keep an “auditable record” of searches performed within the corporate store.

The amount of data contained within the corporate store is voluminous. A January report from the US government’s civil liberties watchdog estimated that the 300 searches of Americans’ phone data the NSA said it performed in 2012 would yield “records involving over 120m phone numbers” in that year alone.

The watchdog, the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, recommended that the NSA have to possess the same “reasonable articulable suspicion” to search data in the corporate store as it must to analyse phone records once collected.

Until now, the USA Freedom Act, increasingly the consensus bill for surveillance reforms, left the “corporate store” alone.

Under the bill, the government would no longer collect call records in bulk. But it would be permitted to acquire Americans’ phone data when a judge certifies that there is reasonable articulable suspicion of a connection to terrorism or foreign espionage, and it can collect phone records from the contacts of the contacts – two “hops” – of the original person or phone account the government targets.

The new language would apparently restrict the NSA from retaining data on the contacts of the targets not believed to have a connection to foreign intelligence information – what surveillance observers sometimes refer to as the “pizza guy” problem, where the NSA amasses data on random and irrelevant people or accounts connected to targets.

But the language does not define key terms, such as how long a record can be withheld before its “prompt” destruction. Nor does it specify how the government will “determine” a call record is unrelated to foreign intelligence information if, as can occur with the corporate store today, NSA’s automated programs sift through the data.

"Placing meaningful limits on the NSA's use of this vast pool of data is crucial to protecting Americans' privacy – and to any reform effort. Congress should not leave the NSA with a wide open backdoor to many of Americans' call records via the corporate store,” said Patrick Toomey, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, who has focused on the corporate store.

A deal on the corporate store restriction was easier to reach than over a different critical definition contained within the USA Freedom Act – one that defines the source of the records the government will be able to collect.

That category is a “specific selection term.” That is the root data from which the government must suspect of connection to terrorism or espionage to launch the collection of call records. Without possessing that term, the government cannot collect obtain the call records at issue.

The version of the USA Freedom Act that cleared House committees earlier this month defined it simply as a term that “uniquely describe[s] a person, entity, or account.”

But the version that will head to the floor, at the Obama administration’s insistence, has broadened the definition, opening the door to broader data collection than the bill’s architect’s initially envisioned.

The bill now defines a “specific selection term” as “a discrete term, such as a term specifically identifying a person, entity, account, or device, used by the government to limit the scope of the information or tangible things sought.”

Sources familiar with the process said the government had pushed for an even broader definition.

Privacy groups had already watched with dismay as their favored bill gradually grew less restrictive on the NSA and its transparency requirements about what recipients of surveillance orders can disclose to their customers became weaker.

But after the finalized bill was released on Tuesday, the USA Freedom Act lost the support of the Open Technology Institute, which had strenuously advocated in its favor since its October introduction in the House.

“We cannot in good conscience support this weakened version of the bill, where key reforms – especially those intended to end bulk collection and increase transparency – have been substantially watered down,” policy director Kevin Bankston said in a statement.

“We're gravely disappointed that rather than respecting the wishes of the unanimous Judiciary and Intelligence Committees, the House leadership and the Obama Administration have chosen to disrupt the hard-fought compromise that so many of us were willing to support just two weeks ago.”

Amie Stepanovich, a lawyer with the digital-rights group Access, which also revoked its support for the bill, said: "It’s greatly disappointing to witness House leaders succumb to the pressure applied by the Obama administration and others, turning its back on the compromise version of USA Freedom that so many supported just two weeks ago."

Julian Sanchez of the Cato Institute tweeted: "So, seems like nobody’s happy with New Coke USA FREEDOM, but resigned to the alternative being [the House intelligence committee's] (even worse) bill."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 22 mei 2014 @ 21:08:33 #256
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140255938
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While the initial disclosures by Edward Snowden revealed how US authorities are conducting mass surveillance on the world's communications, further reporting by the Guardian newspaper uncovered that UK intelligence services were just as involved in this global spying apparatus. Faced with the prospect of further public scrutiny and accountability, the UK Government gave the Guardian newspaper an ultimatum: hand over the classified documents or destroy them.

The Guardian decided that having the documents destroyed was the best option. By getting rid of only the documents stored on computers in the UK, it would allow Guardian journalists to continue their work from other locations while acquiescing to the Government's demand. However, rather than trust that the Guardian would destroy the information on their computers to the Government's satisfaction, GCHQ sent two representatives to supervise the operation. Typically, reliable destruction of such hardware in the circumstances would be to shred or melt all electronic components using a much larger version of the common paper shredder and leaving only the dust of the original devices. Indeed, some devices such as external USB sticks were turned to dust.

Alternatively, it might have been expected that GCHQ would solely target the hard drives of the devices in question. The hard drives, after all, are one of the few components of a computer where user data is supposed to be retained after the power to the device is removed.

Surprisingly, however, GCHQ were not just interested in hard drives nor did they destroy whole devices. An examination of the targeted hardware by Privacy International, with cooperation from the Guardian, has found the whole episode to be more troubling and puzzling than previously believed. 1

During our invesitgation, we were surprised to learn that a few very specific components on devices, such as the keyboard, trackpad and monitor, were targeted along with apparently trivial chips on the main boards of laptops and desktops. Initial consultation with members of the technology community supported our identification of the components and that the actions of GCHQ were worth analyzing further.

In light of GCHQ's actions, we have asked hardware manufacturers to explain what these elements actually do: what information can be stored on a device, how much information it can retain, and for how long.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 23 mei 2014 @ 20:36:45 #257
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140290574
The New York Times:
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Greenwald was the go-between for Edward Snowden and some of the newspapers that reported on Snowdens collection of classified documents exposing huge eavesdropping by the National Security Agency, among other scandals. His story is full of journalistic derring-do, mostly set in exotic Hong Kong. Its a great yarn, which might be more entertaining if Greenwald himself didnt come across as so unpleasant. Maybe hes charming and generous in real life. But in No Place to Hide, Greenwald seems like a self-righteous sourpuss, convinced that every issue is straightforward, and if you dont agree with him, youre part of something he calls the authorities, who control everything for their own nefarious but never explained purposes.
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The trouble is this: Greenwald says that Snowden told him to use your journalistic judgment to only publish those documents that the public should see and that can be revealed without harm to any innocent people. Once again, this testimony proves the opposite of what Greenwald and Snowden seem to think. Snowden may be willing to trust Greenwald to make this judgment correctly but are you? And even if you do trust Greenwalds judgment, which on the evidence might be unwise, how can we be sure the next leaker will be so scrupulous?

The question is who decides. It seems clear, at least to me, that the private companies that own newspapers, and their employees, should not have the final say over the release of government secrets, and a free pass to make them public with no legal consequences. In a democracy (which, pace Greenwald, we still are), that decision must ultimately be made by the government. No doubt the government will usually be overprotective of its secrets, and so the process of decision-making whatever it turns out to be should openly tilt in favor of publication with minimal delay. But ultimately you cant square this circle. Someone gets to decide, and that someone cannot be Glenn Greenwald.
The Intercept:
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Kinsley has actually done the book a great favor by providing a vivid example of so many of its central claims. For instance, I describe in the book the process whereby the government and its media defenders reflexively demonize the personality of anyone who brings unwanted disclosure so as to distract from and discredit the substance revelations; Kinsley dutifully tells Times readers that I “come across as so unpleasant” and that I’m a “self-righteous sourpuss” (yes, he actually wrote that). I also describe in the book how jingoistic media courtiers attack anyone who voices any fundamental critiques of American political culture; Kinsley spends much of his review deriding the notion that there could possibly be anything anti-democratic or oppressive about the United States of America.
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So lets recap: The New York Times chose someone to review my book about the Snowden leaks who has a record of suggesting that journalists may be committing crimes when publishing information against the governments wishes. That journalist then proceeded to strongly suggest that my prosecution could be warranted. Other prominent journalists including the one who hosts Meet the Pressthen heralded that review without noting the slightest objection to Kinsleys argument.

Do I need to continue to participate in the debate over whether many U.S. journalists are pitifiully obeisant to the U.S. government? Did they not just resolve that debate for me? What better evidence can that argument find than multiple influential American journalists standing up and cheering while a fellow journalist is given space in The New York Times to argue that those who publish information against the governments wishes are not only acting immorally but criminally?


[ Bericht 6% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 23-05-2014 20:51:11 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 25 mei 2014 @ 11:55:22 #258
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140339682
quote:
The empire strikes back: How Brandeis foreshadowed Snowden and Greenwald

So-called liberals attack the whistle-blower duo -- and a brilliant Supreme Court justice saw it all coming
quote:
In the famous wiretapping case Olmstead v. United States, argued before the Supreme Court in 1928, Justice Louis Brandeis wrote one of the most influential dissenting opinions in the history of American jurisprudence. Those who are currently engaged in what might be called the Establishment counterattack against Glenn Greenwald and Edward Snowden, including the eminent liberal journalists Michael Kinsley and George Packer, might benefit from giving it a close reading and a good, long think.

Brandeis’ understanding of the problems posed by a government that could spy on its own citizens without any practical limits was so far-sighted as to seem uncanny. (We’ll get to that.) But it was his conclusion that produced a flight of memorable rhetoric from one of the most eloquent stylists ever to sit on the federal bench. Government and its officers, Brandeis argued, must be held to the same rules and laws that command individual citizens. Once you start making special rules for the rulers and their police – for instance, the near-total impunity and thick scrim of secrecy behind which government espionage has operated for more than 60 years – you undermine the rule of law and the principles of democracy.

“Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher,” Brandeis concluded. “For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the Government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. To declare that in the administration of the criminal law the end justifies the means — to declare that the Government may commit crimes in order to secure the conviction of a private criminal — would bring terrible retribution.”
quote:
Any systematic opposition to the deeds of the state, and any attempt to interrogate its mysteries beyond the boundaries of the official narrative, is likely to be depicted as treasonous, as tinfoil-hat material or even as terrorism. Doing a series of network news interviews after McVeighs execution, Vidal describes how the interchangeable TV hosts handle anyone who tries to explain why something happened. First, he is asked whether he is claiming there was a conspiracy. A twinkle starts in a pair of bright contact lenses there is a wriggling of the body, followed by a tiny snort and a significant glance into the camera to show that the guest has just been delivered to the studio by flying saucer.

It would be obscene to suggest any parallel between Timothy McVeigh and Edward Snowden, but I dont have to. Defenders of the official narrative have already drawn the comparison, explicitly or otherwise. Both are loners with no history, manifestations of a libertarian loony-tunes personality disorder that of course cannot be explained and has no roots in anything the United States government ever did. (Packer devotes a lot of virtual ink to convincing his presumed liberal readership that Snowden is a fringe right-winger.) No doubt McVeigh is understood as more extreme, but he is also less dangerous because he is more easily dismissed as a child-killing lunatic, and in any case is not available for interviews with Brian Williams.
Het artikel gaat verder.

[ Bericht 25% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 25-05-2014 12:16:59 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 27 mei 2014 @ 18:55:24 #259
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140436953
quote:
quote:
In early January, Micah Lee worried journalist Glenn Greenwald's computer would get hacked, perhaps by the NSA, perhaps by foreign spies.

Greenwald was a target, and he was vulnerable. He was among the first to receive millions of top secret NSA documents from former contractor Edward Snowden, a scoop that eventually helped win the most recent Pulitzer prize.

Though Greenwald took precautions to handle the NSA documents securely, his computer could still be hacked.

"Glenn isn't a security person and he's not a huge computer nerd,"

"Glenn isn't a security person and he's not a huge computer nerd," Lee tells Mashable. "He is basically a normal computer user, and overall, normal computer users are vulnerable."

Lee, 28, is the technologist hired in November to make sure Greenwald and fellow First Look Media employees use state-of-the-art security measures when handling the NSA documents, or when exchanging emails and online chats with sensitive information. First Look was born in October 2013, after eBay founder Pierre Omydiar pledged to bankroll a new media website led by Greenwald, with documentary journalists Laura Poitras and Jeremy Scahill.

Essentially, Lee is First Look's digital bodyguard, or as Greenwald puts it, "the mastermind" behind its security operations.

Lee’s position is rare in the media world. But in the age of secret-spilling and the government clampdown on reporters' sources, news organizations are aiming to strengthen their digital savvy with hires like him — that is, if they want to resist this new media reality.

"Every news organization should have a Micah Lee on their staff," Trevor Timm, executive director and cofounder of Freedom of the Press Foundation, tells Mashable.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 28 mei 2014 @ 05:31:48 #260
313372 Linkse_Boomknuffelaar
Vrijheid voor Demoon_uit Hemel
pi_140457213
Ik word droevig van al deze berichten. ;(
  woensdag 28 mei 2014 @ 11:58:14 #261
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140463411
quote:
quote:
Edward Snowden is 'meer dan alleen een hacker of systeembeheerder', zoals de Amerikaanse regering en de media hem hebben afgeschilderd. Hij werkte undercover voor de CIA en de National Security Agency (NSA). Dat zei Snowden zelf in een interview met NBC Nightly News, dat gisteravond werd uitgezonden.
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Snowden ging verder: 'Ik ben een technisch specialist. Ik ben een technisch expert. Ik ontwikkelde systemen voor de Verenigde Staten. Dat heb ik op alle niveaus gedaan: vanaf het begin tot het einde.'

De klokkenluider zei dat hij buiten de VS voor zowel de CIA als de NSA lesgaf bij de 'Joint Counterintelligence Training Academy', 'waar ik bronnen en methoden ontwikkelde voor de veiligheid van onze informatie en mensen in de meest vijandige en gevaarlijke gebieden over de hele wereld', aldus Snowden. 'Dus als critici zeggen dat ik een simpele systeembeheerder ben en dat ik niet weet waar ik het over heb, zou ik zeggen dat dat een beetje misleidend is.'
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 28 mei 2014 @ 23:13:27 #262
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140490560
quote:
quote:
Many of these members of the press aren't thinking, certainly not in the way Hannah Arendt spoke of it. Their hostility is aimed at the people who "misbehave" by breaking the social rules rather than the government that carried on a clandestine spy operation that is clearly running amock and is working overtime to restrict the very work they are supposedly charged with doing. And appallingly, in many cases, it's simply because of what they see as a threat to their social hierarchy and their own clubby little rules of behavior.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 29 mei 2014 @ 19:34:11 #263
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140515497
quote:
Top NSA officials struggled over surge in Foia requests, emails reveal

• Snowden leaks prompted thousands of open record requests
• Top agency officials discussed how to fend off Foia inquiries


National Security Agency officials wrestled for weeks with how to respond to an unprecedented surge in open records requests from members of the public in the wake of the first mass surveillance revelations from Edward Snowden almost a year ago.

Newly released NSA emails, obtained by the Guardian under a Freedom of Information Act (Foia) request filed last November, reveal that top officials discussed how to fend off journalists, advocacy groups and individuals who flooded the agency with more than 1,000 requests between 5 June and 25 June last year for classified data related to the former contractor’s disclosures.

The Guardian published the first Snowden story, revealing a secret court order that allowed the NSA the phone records of millions of US citizens, on 5 June. The following day, details of the Prism program were revealed by the Guardian and the Washington Post.

The NSA is one of the few US government agencies virtually exempt from open records laws because its activities are considered properly classified under a presidential executive order and many Foia exemptions.

But since details about the NSA’s vast surveillance activities were no longer a secret thanks to Snowden's disclosures, the agency didn’t know how to respond to requesters.

Internal discussions took place between a newly formed media leaks taskforce, NSA’s public affairs office, the office of general counsel, the policy and records division and the Foia office.

Pamela Phillips, the NSA’s Foia chief, suggested in one email that the agency could “buy more time for processing” if “a paper or sheet of unclassified facts” about the metadata and the data mining program, Prism, was released to requesters.

“Having a paper or sheet of unclassified facts that could be provided to the public may make it easier to respond, because we could provide that with initial responses, and then either indicate that all other details are still classified (or have to be reviewed),” Phillips wrote on 11 June 2013. “It may buy more time for processing if requesters get something up front.”

The NSA emails specifically deal with the agency’s response to post-Snowden document requests. There are some discussions between NSA officials about transparency, particularly president Barack Obama’s “direction regarding transparency in government”.

But, ironically, the internal communications the agency turned over to the Guardian are heavily redacted and are marked “top secret”or “secret”. Phillips said in a letter included with the documents that it would “cause exceptionally grave damage to national security” if the information were disclosed.

Still, the emails leave no doubt that Snowden prompted thousands to use open records laws to push the NSA to shine even more light on the controversial surveillance programs he exposed, an achievement that the agency continues to confront to this day.

“We have received over 5,200 requests since 6 June 2013," Phillips said in a recent interview. "We received just over 800 requests for the same period last year. For the one-year period from June 2012 through May 2013, we received an average of 83 requests per month. Since June 2013, we’ve received an average of 521 requests per month.”

In a 25 June 2013 email, David Sherman, the associate director for policy and records, advised the media leaks task force and nearly a dozen NSA officials whose names are redacted that the “the overwhelming majority” of records requests the NSA had received were “from individuals seeking records the NSA allegedly holds on them”.

He said there was “at least one website facilitating individual requests accounting for half the total. By way of example [redacted].”

The NSA refused to entertain requests from private citizens about whether the agency stored their metadata. The emails provide a rare look inside the development of a “neither confirm nor deny” policy, known as a “Glomar response”, and the back and forth discussions that took place at the highest levels of the agency.

“[Redacted] has pieced together some language on the recent press coverage that would allow us to make a reasonable response to individuals who are seeking information on themselves (either broadly stated as ‘all records on me,’ or more narrowly focused to information regarding their phone number, metadata, or phone calls,” Phillips wrote on 14 June to Sherman and other NSA officials.

“It still ends up being a Glomar response, but more focused on the programs at hand. It is consistent with how we’ve always treated requests from US persons for NSA information (other than Privacy Act information).”

On 17 June, Phillips sent an email asking: “What do we need to do to have this officially blessed so that I can provide this to my folks to start responding to the requests?”

Two days later, the NSA sent out about 300 of the Glomar letters to requesters that highlighted the legality of the surveillance programs at issue.

“Thanks for your reviews and assistance so that we can begin to work down the volume of requests we’ve received over the past week and a half,” Phillips wrote in an email sent to a dozen NSA officials, a majority of whose names are redacted.

Sherman sent an email to Phillips and several other officials congratulating her office and the office of general counsel for “doing an absolutely super job under difficult and rapidly changing conditions”.

“It’s confirming every day why NSA’s Foia program is called out as best-in-class,” Sherman added in the email with the subject line, 'Media Leaks: Strategic Guidance Needed on Engaging Foia Requesters.' “I’m the new guy and the amateur at all this, but for what it is worth I am extraordinarily proud and glad that I was offered the opportunity to be here with you at this time and see what is exceptional public service, in the true sense of the words, in action.”

Phillips shared the email with her staff the next day.

“Thought you’d like to see Dave’s vote of confidence for the entire Foia/PA staff! Dave and I and OGC met with [head of media leaks task force] Rick Ledgett yesterday afternoon to go over the Glomar process, and he was totally comfortable with it after the meeting, as well as everything else the Foia Office is doing,” she wrote.

Sherman advised the Foia office staff as well as the media leaks task force that journalists were a different breed, however, and the agency would need to come up with an alternative strategy to deal with media requests that, according to the NSA, were so “broad as to be impossible to respond to”.

“In the current context, the alternative of being portrayed in the media as unresponsive seems to carry too much risk,” he said.

He suggested that NSA Foia officials attempt to “negotiate” with the media and help them “focus” their requests so the NSA could meet “their needs … consistent with [the NSA’s] obligation to protect classified information”.

The “negotiations” included personal phone calls to the journalists, according to the emails.

Patrice McDermott of transparency organization OpenTheGovernment, who is due to testify in Congress on Thursday about the continued withholding of material despite Obama's transparency order, said a line in one of the NSA emails was concerning. In Phillips advises other NSA officials that the agency "can deny all classified and all FOUO [for official use only]" Foia requests on the Prism and metadata programs and "the rest we have to process."

McDermott told the Guardian that Obama's order “was clearly intended to stop the use of markings such as FOUO and to end the use of even accepted [controlled unclassified information] markings as automatic grounds for withholding information sought through Foia” hasn't yet been implemented. Agencies such as the NSA “are using the delay to inappropriately withhold information”.

"There is no Foia exemption for FOUO or other such made-up 'agency policies,' but that has not stopped them from invoking it as a reason to deny records," McDermott said.

Nate Jones, the Foia coordinator for George Washington University's National Security Archive, said the public should not be fooled by the NSA's attempts to portray the agency as being genuinely concerned with transparency.

“For those who believe the public has the right to know what information the NSA is allowed to collect the conclusion drawn in this case is that the Snowden leaks worked and the Freedom of Information Act did not,” he said.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 29 mei 2014 @ 23:29:33 #264
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140524765
Wat leuk dat dit via de media word uitgevochten :')

quote:
NSA releases email in dispute over Snowden 'internal whistleblowing'

• Leaker says he raised surveillance concerns internally
• Agency: email 'did not raise allegations or concerns'


The National Security Agency has disputed Edward Snowden's insistence that he made efforts to raise his concerns about its surveillance practices internally before he decided to go public.

Releasing an email exchange it claimed to be the only record it could find of such an effort by Snowden, the agency said on Thursday he was merely “asking for an explanation of some material that was in a training course he had just completed”.

Six months ago, the agency issued a statement saying it had “not found any evidence to support Mr Snowden's contention that he brought these matters to anyone's attention”.

The email exchange with the NSA's Office of General Counsel, dated April 2013, emerged after Snowden repeated his claim to have attempted an internal whistleblowing during an interview with NBC that aired on Wednesday night.

Snowden told interviewer Brian Williams: “I actually did go through channels, and that is documented. The NSA has records, they have copies of emails right now to their Office of General Counsel, to their oversight and compliance folks, from me raising concerns about the NSA’s interpretations of its legal authorities.

“The response, more or less, in bureaucratic language, was: ‘You should stop asking questions.’”

Snowden's description appears to match parts, if not all, of the newly emerged email, which was made public on Thursday via the Senate intelligence chair, Dianne Feinstein.

“Hello, I have a question regarding the mandatory USSID 18 training,” writes Snowden to a redacted address that appears to be in the Office of General Counsel.

He goes on to cite a list provided in the training that ranks presidential executive orders alongside federal statutes in the hierarchy of orders governing NSA behaviour.

“I'm not entirely certain, but this does not seem correct, as it seems to imply Executive Orders have the same precedence as law,” adds Snowden.

“My understanding is that EOs may be superseded by federal statute, but EO's may not override statute. Am I incorrect in this?”

In a reply which was cc'd to a number of redacted email addresses, Snowden is told by an unnamed individual that he is “correct that EO's cannot override a statute” but that they have the “force and effect of law”.

The issue is an important one in the context of whether NSA surveillance activities were permissible, as it addresses possible conflict between laws passed by Congress and orders given by the White House.

Senate intelligence committee members Ron Wyden and Mark Udall have long argued the administration may have been in breach of surveillance statutes in its activities. They were prevented from raising many of their concerns in public due to confidentiality requirements.

The NSA, however, disputes that this latest email exchange is proof of Snowden raising concerns about “interpretations of its legal authorities”.

“The email did not raise allegations or concerns about wrongdoing or abuse, but posed a legal question that the Office of General Counsel addressed,” said the agency in a statement released on Thursday.

It added: “There are numerous avenues that Mr Snowden could have used to raise other concerns or whistleblower allegations.

“We have searched for additional indications of outreach from him in those areas and to date have not discovered any engagements related to his claims.”

The denial was repeated by the White House, which went further than it normally does when asked by an NBC reporter about the possibility of Snowden's return to the US and stated: “Clemency is not on the table.”

“There are avenues available to somebody like Mr Snowden to raise those kind of concerns,” added Obama spokesman Jay Carney.

Senator Feinstein said the email had been provided to her committee on 10 April, in response to a request, and added: “It does not register concerns about NSA’s intelligence activities, as was suggested by Snowden in an NBC interview this week.”

Ben Wizner, Snowden’s legal adviser, said of the email: “This whole issue is a red herring. The problem was not some unknown and isolated instance of misconduct. The problem was that an entire system of mass surveillance had been deployed – and deemed legal – without the knowledge or consent of the public. Snowden raised many complaints over many channels. The NSA is releasing a single part of a single exchange after previously claiming that no evidence existed.”

During the interview, Snowden also repeated his calls for full disclosure of the communication trail.

“I would say one of my final official acts in government was continuing one of these communications with a legal office,” he told NBC.

“And in fact, I’m so sure that these communications exist that I’ve called on Congress to write a letter to the NSA to verify that they do.”

Six months ago, responding to questions on the subject from Washington Post reporter Barton Gellman, the NSA issued a statement claiming there was no evidence of a paper trail at all.

“After extensive investigation, including interviews with his former NSA supervisors and co-workers, we have not found any evidence to support Mr Snowden's contention that he brought these matters to anyone's attention," said the agency.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_140528005
quote:
7s.gif Op donderdag 29 mei 2014 23:29 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
Wat leuk dat dit via de media word uitgevochten :')

[..]

Is er ook maar iemand die de NSA nog gelooft dan? :')
  vrijdag 30 mei 2014 @ 20:58:39 #266
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140550038
quote:
EFF to Court: There's No Doubt the Government Destroyed NSA Spying Evidence

EFF Urges Judge to Rule Destroyed Evidence Would Show Clients Were Surveilled

San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) told a federal court today that there was no doubt that the government has destroyed years of evidence of NSA spying – the government itself has admitted to it in recent court filings. In a brief filed today in response to this illegal destruction, EFF is asking that the court make an "adverse inference" that the destroyed evidence would show that plaintiffs communications and records were in fact swept up in the mass NSA spying programs.

EFF filed its first lawsuit challenging illegal government spying in 2006. The current dispute arises from Jewel v. NSA, EFF's 2008 case that challenges the government's mass seizure of three kinds of information: Internet and telephone content, telephone records, and Internet records, all going back to 2001. EFF's brief notes that the government's own declarations make clear that the government has destroyed five years of the content it collected between 2007 and 2012, three years worth of the telephone records it seized between 2006 and 2009, and seven years of the Internet records it seized between 2004 and 2011, when it claims to have ended the Internet records seizures.

"The court has issued a number of preservation orders over the years, but the government decided – without consent from the judge or even informing EFF – that those orders simply don't apply," said EFF Legal Director Cindy Cohn. "Regular civil litigants would face severe sanctions if they so obviously destroyed relevant evidence. But we are asking for a modest remedy: a ruling that we can assume the destroyed records would show that our plaintiffs were in fact surveilled by the government."

The government's reinterpretation of EFF's lawsuits and the preservation orders came to light in March, when government lawyers revealed secret court filings from 2007. In these filings, the government unilaterally claimed that EFF's lawsuits only concerned the original Bush-era spying program, which was done purely on claims of executive power. Without court approval, much less telling EFF, the government then decided that it did not need even to preserve evidence of the same mass spying done pursuant to FISA court orders, which were obtained in 2004 for Internet records, 2006 for telephone records, and 2007 for mass content collection from fiber optic cables.

"EFF and our clients have always had the same simple claim: the government's mass, warrantless surveillance violates the rights of all Americans and must be stopped. The surveillance was warrantless under the executive's authority and it is still warrantless under the FISA court, as those orders are plainly not warrants." said Cohn. "The government's attempt to limit our claims based upon their secret, shifting rationales is nothing short of outrageous, and their clandestine decision to destroy evidence under this flimsy argument is rightly sanctionable. Nevertheless, we are simply asking the court to ensure that we are not harmed by the government's now-admitted destruction of this evidence."

For the full brief on the government's non-compliance:
https://www.eff.org/docum(...)-preservation-orders

For more on Jewel v. NSA:
https://www.eff.org/cases/jewel
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 30 mei 2014 @ 21:02:50 #267
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140550203
quote:
Join us on June 5th to Reset the Net

The NSA has corrupted the Internet. On June 5, we will Reset the Net. We hope you’ll join us.

June 5 is the one-year anniversary of the first documents leaked by Edward Snowden. While EFF has been fighting NSA surveillance for years, 2013 marked a new chapter in our battle against mass spying. The documents made it clear to everyone why we care so much, and why they should too.

Surveillance affects everyone, in the United States and internationally. Millions of innocent people have had their communications swept up by the NSA’s dragnet surveillance. Thomas Drake, former NSA official and whistleblower described recently retired NSA chief General Keith Alexander’s surveillance philosophy: “He is absolutely obsessed and completely driven to take it all, whenever possible.” This philosophy clearly underpinned his nearly nine year tenure at the NSA. In addition to this collect-it-all strategy, the NSA has used tactics such as deploying malware, trying to weaken encryption, and other sophisticated techniques that make the Internet less secure.

Mass surveillance is toxic for the Internet. The Internet is a powerful force that can promote democracy, innovation, and creativity, but it’s being subverted as a tool for government spying.

That’s why EFF has joined with dozens of other organizations in calling for a day of action to Reset the Net. On June 5th, Reset the Net is asking everyone to help by installing free software tools that are designed to protect your privacy on a computer or a mobile device. Reset the Net is also calling on websites and developers to add surveillance resistant features, like HTTPS and forward secrecy.

Don’t wait for your privacy and freedom. Start taking it back.
http://resetthenet.tumblr.com/
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 1 juni 2014 @ 10:57:01 #268
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140592023
quote:
N.S.A. Collecting Millions of Faces From Web Images

The National Security Agency is harvesting huge numbers of images of people from communications that it intercepts through its global surveillance operations for use in sophisticated facial recognition programs, according to top-secret documents.

The spy agency’s reliance on facial recognition technology has grown significantly over the last four years as the agency has turned to new software to exploit the flood of images included in emails, text messages, social media, videoconferences and other communications, the N.S.A. documents reveal. Agency officials believe that technological advances could revolutionize the way that the N.S.A. finds intelligence targets around the world, the documents show. The agency’s ambitions for this highly sensitive ability and the scale of its effort have not previously been disclosed.

The agency intercepts “millions of images per day” — including about 55,000 “facial recognition quality images” — which translate into “tremendous untapped potential,” according to 2011 documents obtained from the former agency contractor Edward J. Snowden. While once focused on written and oral communications, the N.S.A. now considers facial images, fingerprints and other identifiers just as important to its mission of tracking suspected terrorists and other intelligence targets, the documents show.

“It’s not just the traditional communications we’re after: It’s taking a full-arsenal approach that digitally exploits the clues a target leaves behind in their regular activities on the net to compile biographic and biometric information” that can help “implement precision targeting,” noted a 2010 document.

One N.S.A. PowerPoint presentation from 2011, for example, displays several photographs of an unidentified man — sometimes bearded, other times clean-shaven — in different settings, along with more than two dozen data points about him. These include whether he was on the Transportation Security Administration no-fly list, his passport and visa status, known associates or suspected terrorist ties, and comments made about him by informants to American intelligence agencies.

It is not clear how many people around the world, and how many Americans, might have been caught up in the effort. Neither federal privacy laws nor the nation’s surveillance laws provide specific protections for facial images. Given the N.S.A.’s foreign intelligence mission, much of the imagery would involve people overseas whose data was scooped up through cable taps, Internet hubs and satellite transmissions.

Because the agency considers images a form of communications content, the N.S.A. would be required to get court approval for imagery of Americans collected through its surveillance programs, just as it must to read their emails or eavesdrop on their phone conversations, according to an N.S.A. spokeswoman. Cross-border communications in which an American might be emailing or texting an image to someone targeted by the agency overseas could be excepted.

Civil-liberties advocates and other critics are concerned that the power of the improving technology, used by government and industry, could erode privacy. “Facial recognition can be very invasive,” said Alessandro Acquisti, a researcher on facial recognition technology at Carnegie Mellon University. “There are still technical limitations on it, but the computational power keeps growing, and the databases keep growing, and the algorithms keep improving.”

State and local law enforcement agencies are relying on a wide range of databases of facial imagery, including driver’s licenses and Facebook, to identify suspects. The F.B.I. is developing what it calls its “next generation identification” project to combine its automated fingerprint identification system with facial imagery and other biometric data.

The State Department has what several outside experts say could be the largest facial imagery database in the federal government, storing hundreds of millions of photographs of American passport holders and foreign visa applicants. And the Department of Homeland Security is funding pilot projects at police departments around the country to match suspects against faces in a crowd.

The N.S.A., though, is unique in its ability to match images with huge troves of private communications.

“We would not be doing our job if we didn’t seek ways to continuously improve the precision of signals intelligence activities — aiming to counteract the efforts of valid foreign intelligence targets to disguise themselves or conceal plans to harm the United States and its allies,” said Vanee M. Vines, the agency spokeswoman.

She added that the N.S.A. did not have access to photographs in state databases of driver’s licenses or to passport photos of Americans, while declining to say whether the agency had access to the State Department database of photos of foreign visa applicants. She also declined to say whether the N.S.A. collected facial imagery of Americans from Facebook and other social media through means other than communications intercepts.

“The government and the private sector are both investing billions of dollars into face recognition” research and development, said Jennifer Lynch, a lawyer and expert on facial recognition and privacy at the Electronic Frontier Foundation in San Francisco. “The government leads the way in developing huge face recognition databases, while the private sector leads in accurately identifying people under challenging conditions.”

Ms. Lynch said a handful of recent court decisions could lead to new constitutional protections for the privacy of sensitive face recognition data. But she added that the law was still unclear and that Washington was operating largely in a legal vacuum.

Laura Donohue, the director of the Center on National Security and the Law at Georgetown Law School, agreed. “There are very few limits on this,” she said.

Congress has largely ignored the issue. “Unfortunately, our privacy laws provide no express protections for facial recognition data,” said Senator Al Franken, Democrat of Minnesota, in a letter in December to the head of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, which is now studying possible standards for commercial, but not governmental, use.

Facial recognition technology can still be a clumsy tool. It has difficulty matching low-resolution images, and photographs of people’s faces taken from the side or angles can be impossible to match against mug shots or other head-on photographs.

Dalila B. Megherbi, an expert on facial recognition technology at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell, explained that “when pictures come in different angles, different resolutions, that all affects the facial recognition algorithms in the software.”

That can lead to errors, the documents show. A 2011 PowerPoint showed one example when Tundra Freeze, the N.S.A.’s main in-house facial recognition program, was asked to identify photos matching the image of a bearded young man with dark hair. The document says the program returned 42 results, and displays several that were obviously false hits, including one of a middle-age man.

Similarly, another 2011 N.S.A. document reported that a facial recognition system was queried with a photograph of Osama bin Laden. Among the search results were photos of four other bearded men with only slight resemblances to Bin Laden.

But the technology is powerful. One 2011 PowerPoint showed how the software matched a bald young man, shown posing with another man in front of a water park, with another photo where he has a full head of hair, wears different clothes and is at a different location.

It is not clear how many images the agency has acquired. The N.S.A. does not collect facial imagery through its bulk metadata collection programs, including that involving Americans’ domestic phone records, authorized under Section 215 of the Patriot Act, according to Ms. Vines.

The N.S.A. has accelerated its use of facial recognition technology under the Obama administration, the documents show, intensifying its efforts after two intended attacks on Americans that jarred the White House. The first was the case of the so-called underwear bomber, in which Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a Nigerian, tried to trigger a bomb hidden in his underwear while flying to Detroit on Christmas in 2009. Just a few months later, in May 2010, Faisal Shahzad, a Pakistani-American, attempted a car bombing in Times Square.

The agency’s use of facial recognition technology goes far beyond one program previously reported by The Guardian, which disclosed that the N.S.A. and its British counterpart, General Communications Headquarters, have jointly intercepted webcam images, including sexually explicit material, from Yahoo users.

The N.S.A. achieved a technical breakthrough in 2010 when analysts first matched images collected separately in two databases — one in a huge N.S.A. database code-named Pinwale, and another in the government’s main terrorist watch list database, known as Tide — according to N.S.A. documents. That ability to cross-reference images has led to an explosion of analytical uses inside the agency. The agency has created teams of “identity intelligence” analysts who work to combine the facial images with other records about individuals to develop comprehensive portraits of intelligence targets.

The agency has developed sophisticated ways to integrate facial recognition programs with a wide range of other databases. It intercepts video teleconferences to obtain facial imagery, gathers airline passenger data and collects photographs from national identity card databases created by foreign countries, the documents show. They also note that the N.S.A. was attempting to gain access to such databases in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Iran.

The documents suggest that the agency has considered getting access to iris scans through its phone and email surveillance programs. But asked whether the agency is now doing so, officials declined to comment. The documents also indicate that the N.S.A. collects iris scans of foreigners through other means.

In addition, the agency was working with the C.I.A. and the State Department on a program called Pisces, collecting biometric data on border crossings from a wide range of countries.

One of the N.S.A.’s broadest efforts to obtain facial images is a program called Wellspring, which strips out images from emails and other communications, and displays those that might contain passport images. In addition to in-house programs, the N.S.A. relies in part on commercially available facial recognition technology, including from PittPatt, a small company owned by Google, the documents show.

The N.S.A. can now compare spy satellite photographs with intercepted personal photographs taken outdoors to determine the location. One document shows what appear to be vacation photographs of several men standing near a small waterfront dock in 2011. It matches their surroundings to a spy satellite image of the same dock taken about the same time, located at what the document describes as a militant training facility in Pakistan.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 12:21:49 #269
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140627616
Hello crypto-lovers. Letten we even op?

quote:
Bombshell TrueCrypt advisory: Backdoor? Hack? Hoax? None of the above?

A sampling of theories behind Wednesday's notice that TrueCrypt is unsafe to use.
quote:
Wednesday's bombshell advisory declaring TrueCrypt unsafe to use touched off a tsunami of comments on Ars, Twitter, and elsewhere. At times, the armchair pundits sounded like characters in Oliver Stone's 1991 movie JFK, as they speculated wildly—and contradictorily—about what was behind a notice that left so many more questions than answers. Here are some of the more common theories, along with facts that either support or challenge their accuracy.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 13:04:23 #270
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140629178
quote:
TrueCrypt krijgt doorstart

Enkele Zwitserse activisten van de Piratenpartij werken aan een doorstart van de bekende encryptiesoftware TrueCrypt, die deze week offline ging.

De mysterieuze ontwikkelaars van TrueCrypt trokken eerder deze week de stekker uit het project. Ook waarschuwden ze dat het programma onveilig zou zijn. Ze raadden gebruikers aan te migreren naar Bitlocker. Op de originele TrueCrypt-site staat nog slechts TrueCrypt 7.2, waarmee het alleen mogelijk is om versleutelde TrueCrypt-bestanden te decrypten.

Zwitsers Thomas Bruderer en Joseph Doekbrijder, ex-president en ex-vicepresident van de Zwitserse Piratenpartij, zijn nu TrueCrypt.ch gestart als een soort doorstart. De laatste werkende versie, TrueCrypt 7.1a, is door de Zwitsers weer online gebracht, hoewel zij ook waarschuwen voor mogelijke beveiligingsproblemen.

Fork

De Zwitsers willen met hun project meewerken aan een 'fork', een afsplitsing van het originele TrueCrypt. Die zou waarschijnlijk wel een andere naam krijgen. De huidige ontwikkelaars van TrueCrypt zijn onbekend. Dat zou volgens de Zwitsers voor hun fork juist niet moeten gelden.

De Zwitsers wachten voor de fork op de uitkomst van het
Crypto Open Audit-project. Het onderzoek is nog maar gedeeltelijk afgerond.

Oproep voor hulp

De Zwitsers doen ook een oproep voor mensen die willen helpen om beveiligingsrisico's in kaart te brengen. Ook wordt gezocht naar experts die kunnen helpen om juridische problemen op te lossen. Met de hosting in Zwitserland zou de juridische dreiging al minder zijn.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 13:09:14 #271
358523 IkStampOpTacos
Tacostamper extraordinaire
pi_140629378
quote:
7s.gif Op maandag 2 juni 2014 13:04 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Handig dat encrypten, maar hoe zit dat nu met die wet dat het niet opgeven van je wachtwoord strafbaar wordt?
It's my life, it's now or never, I ain't gonna live forever.
-
Headstrong to take on anyone.
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 14:04:20 #272
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140631046
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 14:14:21 #273
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140631374
quote:
Reddit, Imgur and Boing Boing launch anti-NSA-surveillance campaign

The Reset the Net campaign aims to encourage direct action, urging visitors to install privacy and encryption tools



Some of the world's largest websites are planning a coordinated day of action on Thursday to oppose mass surveillance online.

The sites, which include Reddit, Imgur and BoingBoing, will be taking part in the campaign, called "Reset the Net", in a number of ways.

Some will showing a splash screen to all users, reminiscent of the one used in the successful protests against SOPA, the US copyright bill which many feared would damage the backbone of the internet. But rather than telling users to write to their electoral representatives, this protest will push more direct action, encouraging visitors to install privacy and encryption tools.

Other sites have committed to improving their own privacy as part of the campaign, by enabling standards such as HTTPS, which prevents attackers from eavesdropping on visitors. Such security standards are common in the world of ecommerce, but rarer for sites which don't think of themselves as holding sensitive information.

"We can take back control of our personal and private data one website, one device, one internet user at a time," said Reddit's General Manager Erik Martin. "We’re proud to stand up for our users’ rights and help Reset the Net."

The campaign is being co-ordinated by Fight for the Future, whose co-founder Tiffiniy Cheng said "Now that we know how mass surveillance works, we know how to stop it. That’s why people all over the world are going to work together to use encryption everywhere and make it too hard for any government to conduct mass surveillance.

"There are moments in history where people and organisations must choose whether to stand on the side of freedom or tyranny. On June 5th, the internet will show which side it’s on.”
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 3 juni 2014 @ 15:53:08 #274
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140670816
De vervolging van journalisten komt naar je toe deze zomer ... zomer ... zomer ....

quote:
'Politie wilde niet dat journalist De Winter over de nucleaire top schreef'

De Nationale Politie heeft begin dit jaar geprobeerd te voorkomen dat onderzoeksjournalist Brenno de Winter zou schrijven over de beveiliging van de internationale nucleaire top (NSS) in Den Haag. Dat schrijft De Winter vandaag in zijn column voor The Post Online.

Een en ander zou blijken uit documenten die De Winter heeft opgevraagd. 'Men wilde koste wat het kost voorkomen dat ik mijn vak zou uitoefenen tijdens de NSS-top', schrijft de Winter. 'Want een andere mening over digitale spionage en criminaliteit is de Firma Opstelten niet welgevallig.'

De Winter haalt een passage aan waarin staat: 'Deze aandachtsvestiging is in de landelijke dia-bak geplaatst. Dit met het oog op de NSS en de mogelijkheden die de betrokkene zou kunnen aangrijpen om zijn vak uit te oefenen.' De Winter: 'Hoe ik het ook lees, hier staat toch echt dat ik gesignaleerd heb gestaan uit angst dat ik artikelen of columns zou gaan typen. Als de overheid haar macht inzet om kritische journalisten het werk te beletten dan is daar maar één woord voor dat nu waarschijnlijk ook door uw hoofd spookt, maar ik niet zal noemen. Hoe diep kun je zinken als land?'

De Winter zegt verder dat hem werd geadviseerd om geen accreditatie voor de NSS-top aan te vragen. 'Ik moet mijn bronnen beschermen, maar ik kan wel vertellen dat de waarschuwing uit politiekringen kwam.'

Privégegevens
Enkele maanden geleden gaf de Landelijke Politie in een brief toe dat er privégegevens van De Winter, waaronder zijn adres, zijn verzameld en intern zijn verspreid. Ten onrechte zouden medewerkers van politie en het ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken voor de journalist zijn gewaarschuwd.

'De politie heeft zelf niet toegegeven dat dit ten onrechte is gebeurd,' licht De Winter telefonisch toe. 'Ik heb nog steeds geen fatsoenlijk gesprek met de Nationale Politie gehad. Ik krijg totaal geen informatie. Ik weet niet of ik nog steeds word gevolgd en of er een rechtszaak tegen mij komt. Ik weet helemaal niets.'

Gesignaleerd
Uit de documenten die De Winter heeft opgevraagd en ingezien blijkt verder dat hij werd gesignaleerd terwijl hij in Den Haag achter een laptop op een bankje zat. Een beveiliger van de dienst Bewaken en Beveiliging herkende hem en deed een melding. 'De beveiliger keek De Winter aan en zag dat De Winter geschrokken naar beneden naar zijn laptop keek,' staat in het verslag te lezen.

'Knullig', meent De Winter. 'Hoe eng dat er voor bewakers ook uitziet, het was niets meer dan het afmaken van een column voor ThePostOnline.' Hij vindt de inmenging onacceptabel. 'Een ieder heeft het recht zijn mening te uiten zonder de inmenging van enig openbaar gezag. Dat geldt voor iedereen dus ook voor mij.'

De Nationale Politie wil niet inhoudelijk op de beweringen van De Winter reageren. 'We hebben het met onze jurist overlegd, maar in het kader van de Wet Politiegegevens mogen wij niet ingaan op vragen over gegevens die over een specifiek persoon gaan', laat een woordvoerder desgevraagd weten.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 3 juni 2014 @ 16:04:43 #275
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140671183
quote:
REVEALED: GCHQ's BEYOND TOP SECRET Middle Eastern INTERNET SPY BASE

Snowden leaks that UK.gov suppressed

Above-top-secret details of Britain’s covert surveillance programme - including the location of a clandestine British base tapping undersea cables in the Middle East - have so far remained secret, despite being leaked by fugitive NSA sysadmin Edward Snowden. Government pressure has meant that some media organisations, despite being in possession of these facts, have declined to reveal them. Today, however, the Register publishes them in full.

The secret British spy base is part of a programme codenamed “CIRCUIT” and also referred to as Overseas Processing Centre 1 (OPC-1). It is located at Seeb, on the northern coast of Oman, where it taps in to various undersea cables passing through the Strait of Hormuz into the Persian/Arabian Gulf. Seeb is one of a three site GCHQ network in Oman, at locations codenamed “TIMPANI”, “GUITAR” and “CLARINET”. TIMPANI, near the Strait of Hormuz, can monitor Iraqi communications. CLARINET, in the south of Oman, is strategically close to Yemen.

British national telco BT, referred to within GCHQ and the American NSA under the ultra-classified codename “REMEDY”, and Vodafone Cable (which owns the former Cable & Wireless company, aka “GERONTIC”) are the two top earners of secret GCHQ payments running into tens of millions of pounds annually.

The actual locations of such codenamed “access points” into the worldwide cable backbone are classified 3 levels above Top Secret and labelled “Strap 3”. The true identities of the companies hidden behind codenames such as “REMEDY”, “GERONTIC”, “STREETCAR” or “PINNAGE” are classified one level below this, at “Strap 2”.

After these details were withheld, the government opted not to move against the Guardian newspaper last year for publishing above-top-secret information at the lower level designated “Strap 1”. This included details of the billion-pound interception storage system, Project TEMPORA, which were revealed in 2013 and which have triggered Parliamentary enquiries in Britain and Europe, and cases at the European Court of Human Rights. The Guardian was forced to destroy hard drives of leaked information to prevent political embarrassment over extensive commercial arrangements with these and other telecommunications companies who have secretly agreed to tap their own and their customers’ or partners’ overseas cables for the intelligence agency GCHQ. Intelligence chiefs also wished to conceal the identities of countries helping GCHQ and its US partner the NSA by sharing information or providing facilities.

According to documents revealed by Edward Snowden to journalists including Glenn Greenwald among others, the intelligence agency annually pays selected companies tens of millions of pounds to run secret teams which install hidden connections which copy customers' data and messages to the spooks’ processing centres. The GCHQ-contracted companies also install optical fibre taps or “probes” into equipment belonging to other companies without their knowledge or consent. Within GCHQ, each company has a special section called a “Sensitive Relationship Team” or SRT.

BT and Vodafone/C&W also operate extensive long distance optical fibre communications networks throughout the UK, installed and paid for by GCHQ, NSA, or by a third and little known UK intelligence support organization called the National Technical Assistance Centre (NTAC).

Snowden’s leaks reveal that every time GCHQ wanted to tap a new international optical fibre cable, engineers from “REMEDY” (BT) would usually be called in to plan where the taps or “probe” would physically be connected to incoming optical fibre cables, and to agree how much BT should be paid. The spooks' secret UK access network feeds Internet data from more than 18 submarine cables coming into different parts of Britain either direct to GCHQ in Cheltenham or to its remote processing station at Bude in Cornwall.

Among the cables specifically identified in one document as currently being intercepted or “on cover” are an Irish connection, Hibernia Atlantic, landing in Southport, and three European connections landing at Yarmouth, Dover, and Brighton.

The majority of large cables come ashore in Cornwall, and have been connected directly to Bude. These include major connections such as FLAG (Fibre optic Link Around the Globe), two of whose cables have been intercepted. Because the FLAG interceptions had to be kept secret from the cables’ owners, one report states, the tapping connections were installed in an undisclosed UK location and “backhauled” to Bude, in the technical language of the communications industry.

Although GCHQ interception of overseas communications can be authorised by a general “external” tapping warrant, the wording of the law does not permit storage of every communication for examination, as GCHQ wished to do. In 2009, the spooks persuaded then Foreign Secretary David Miliband to sign a new warrant legalising what they wished to do. The terms of such warrants have never been published.

The special “external” warrants, issued under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA), authorise the interception of all communications on specified international links. Miliband’s first 2009 warrant for TEMPORA authorised GCHQ to collect information about the “political intentions of foreign powers”, terrorism, proliferation, mercenaries and private military companies, and serious financial fraud.

Certificates attached to external interception warrants are re-issued every six months, and can be changed by ministers at will. GCHQ officials are then free to target anyone who is overseas or communicating from overseas without further checks or controls, if they think they fall within the terms of a current certificate.

The secret overseas internet monitoring centre, codenamed CIRCUIT, is at Seeb in the state of Oman. It is the latest of a series of secret collaborations with the autocratic Middle Eastern state, which has been ruled for 44 years by Sultan Qaboos bin Said, installed as head of state in a British-led and SAS-supported coup against his father. The Seeb centre was originally built in collaboration with the Omani government to monitor civil communications satellites orbiting above the Middle East. It has six large satellite dishes, forming part of the well-known and long running “ECHELON” intercept system run by the “Five Eyes” English-speaking (US/UK/Australia/Canada/New Zealand) intelligence agencies.

When GCHQ obtained government approval in 2009 to go ahead with its “Mastering the Internet” project, the Seeb base became the first of its global network of Internet tapping locations. Another centre, OPC-2, has been planned, according to documents leaked by Snowden.

The CIRCUIT installation at Seeb is regarded as particularly valuable by the British and Americans because it has direct access to nine submarine cables passing through the Gulf and entering the Red Sea. All of the messages and data passed back and forth on the cables is copied into giant computer storage “buffers”, and then sifted for data of special interest.

Information about Project TEMPORA and the Seeb facility was contained in 58,000 GCHQ documents which Snowden downloaded during 2012. Many of them came from an internal Wikipedia style information site called GC-Wiki. GCHQ feared the political consequences of revelations about its spying partners other than the United States and English speaking nations, according to knowledgeable sources.

Although information about the monitoring station at Seeb in its older ECHELON role has been available on the public Internet for several years, Cabinet Secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood was determined to prevent its new importance and cost becoming known.

It was this which lay behind the British government’s successful-until-today efforts to silence the Guardian and the rest of the media on the ultra-classified, beyond Top Secret specifics of Project TEMPORA - the places and names behind the codewords CIRCUIT, TIMPANI, CLARINET, REMEDY and GERONTIC. ®
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 3 juni 2014 @ 18:17:33 #276
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140675570
quote:
NSA chief Michael Rogers: Edward Snowden 'probably not' a foreign spy

New NSA director plays down speculation that 'our gentleman in Moscow' was working for a foreign intelligence agency

The new director of the National Security Agency says he believes whistleblower Edward Snowden was "probably not" working for a foreign intelligence agency, despite frequent speculation and assertion by the NSA's allies to the contrary.

In one of his first public remarks since becoming NSA director in April, Admiral Michael Rogers, who also leads the military’s cybersecurity and cyberattack command, distanced himself on Tuesday from contentions that Snowden is or has been a spy for Russia or another intelligence service.

“Could he have? Possibly. Do I believe that’s the case? Probably not,” Rogers said during a cybersecurity forum hosted by Bloomberg Government.

The recently installed NSA director struck a more nuanced tone on the man he called “our gentleman in Moscow” than his predecessor, Keith Alexander, or many of his congressional champions – chief among them his namesake Mike Rogers, the chairman of the House intelligence committee, who has frequently intimated that Snowden is a Russian spy.

“You gotta be very balanced. I thought he was an intelligent individual, articulate. [He] seemed fairly arrogant to me,” the NSA’s Rogers said on Snowden’s interview with NBC last week.

“He clearly believes in what he’s doing. I question that; I don’t agree with it. I fundamentally disagree with what he did. I believe it was wrong, I believe it was illegal.”

Rogers declined to say that there were no other Snowdens waiting to leak documents from the NSA. He sounded cautious about how many documents Snowden actually took from the NSA, despite a still-classified Defense Intelligence Agency assessment asserting that Snowden absconded with 1.7 million documents – an assessment based on Snowden’s internal access to NSA documents.

“We have a fairly good idea here, and I’m not going to get into specifics here,” Rogers said.

In another departure from past practice, Rogers confirmed the broad outline of a New York Times story based on the Snowden disclosures that reported NSA’s mass collection of digitized images of people’s faces and other biometric identifiers.

“We use facial recognition as a tool to help us understand these foreign intelligence targets. Counter-terrorism is another big area – this has probably had more impact for us in the counterterrorism arena than anywhere else,” Rogers said.

The Guardian reported in February that the NSA has aided its British counterpart, GCHQ, in collecting imagery from millions of unsuspecting users of Yahoo webcam chats, which GCHQ used for experiments with automated facial recognition software. At the time, months before Rogers became NSA director, the NSA declined to answer questions about its involvement in the effort.

At the Tuesday event, Rogers pledged increased candor with the public about NSA’s operations, which he acknowledged was a cultural challenge for America’s most secret intelligence agency. But he indicated a desire to move the agency out from under the shadow of the Snowden revelations.

“One of the things that I try to tell the workforce out there is: this is not what is going to define us,” he said. “We cannot go into this hunched-down crunch. We have an important mission.”

Echoing a year’s worth of reluctant statements by intelligence leaders, Rogers told Reuters last month that transparency would be key to restoring confidence in the NSA, even as he declined to criticize the broad surveillance that prompted widespread outrage.

Fulfilling the agency’s transparency pledge has been complicated by measures from the US director of national intelligence to clamp down on public interaction, even on unclassified matters, without the approval of the secretive agencies’ press monitors. Critics, noting the government’s selective and incomplete intelligence disclosures, consider the NSA and its allies more interested in reasserting control over its public image than in shedding light on its practices and authorities.

Occasionally animated during his talk, Rogers appeared relaxed and jocular. While rejecting charges of NSA wrongdoing, he said he was open to public debate about the proper scope of the agency’s surveillance authorities – though he neglected to mention that the agency and its allies worked behind the scenes last month to weaken privacy and transparency provisions in a major surveillance reform bill.

“A broad dialogue of what we’re doing and why is a good thing for us as a nation. I don’t question that for one minute,” said Rogers, who repeatedly described himself, to laughter, as a “direct” person.

Rogers declined to discuss Bowe Bergdahl, a former Taliban captive in Afghanistan whom the Obama administration traded for five Taliban leaders detained at Guantanamo Bay. Responding generically to a question about the NSA monitoring the five ex-detainees, Rogers noted that the agency has “the means to track individuals with a foreign intelligence dimension to them” but said he could not guarantee tracking “every individual constantly.”

More broadly, Rogers warned of a danger in inflating national security threats to justify the expansion of government security powers.

“There are groups and individuals out there who if they had their way, we would no longer exist as a nation,” Rogers said.

“Now, I’m not one who’s going to sit here and overhype the threat [or say] that in the name of this threat we have to make dramatic changes and curtail our rights, because if we go down that road, in the end, they’ve won. If we change who we are and what we believe and what we represent in the name of security, they have won. I have always believed that.”
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 3 juni 2014 @ 19:50:59 #277
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140679332
quote:
quote:
Flagger.io does just one thing: It adds a random selection of keywords, like “terrorist,” “pressure cooker,” “Al Qaeda,” etc. to the address of every website you visit. The idea is that, because the US National Security Agency (NSA) is gathering essentially all the internet traffic that passes through the US, the more noise it has to sort through—like the sort of faux-terroristic requests made by a web browser running Flagger.io—the harder the NSA’s job will be.

Lyon has also just released a second browser extension to help users thwart the NSA more directly: Turtl.it is an app for storing encrypted notes. (The main author of Turtl is actually Lyons’ brother, Andrew.) Eventually, says Lyon, it will also be usable for file storage—like Google’s document-sharing service, Google Drive. Because it’s open-source, users can be (relatively more) assured that it hasn’t been tainted by the NSA’s efforts to weaken commercial cryptography.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 4 juni 2014 @ 22:39:08 #278
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140726543
quote:
Microsoft: US must act on 'unfinished business' of NSA surveillance

General counsel Brad Smith says in strongly-worded piece that government must 'reduce technology trust deficit it has created'
quote:
Microsoft’s top lawyer on Wednesday called upon the US government to act on “unfinished business” a year after the Guardian and the Washington Post first broke news of the extent of the National Security Agency’s cyber-spying operations.

In an often toughly-worded blogpost, Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith set out five areas where he believes the government needs to take more action in the wake of Edward Snowden’s revelations. While there had been some “initial positive reforms,” Smith said, “the reality is clear. The US government needs to address important unfinished business to reduce the technology trust deficit it has created.”

Snowden’s revelations had shown that the government was “not just seeking a relatively small amount of content” via legal orders, said Smith.

“It’s now apparent that the government intercepted data in transit across the internet and hacked links between company data centres. These disclosures rightly have prompted a vigorous debate over the extent and scope of government surveillance, leading to some positive changes. But much more needs to be done.

“With the advent of mobile devices and cloud services, technology has never been more powerful or more personal. But as I encountered in virtually every meeting during a recent trip to Europe, as well as discussions with others from around the world, people have real questions and concerns about how their data are protected.

"These concerns have real implications for cloud adoption. After all, people won’t use technology they don’t trust. We need to strike a better balance between privacy and national security to restore trust and uphold our fundamental liberties,” he wrote.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 juni 2014 @ 16:39:38 #279
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140750030
quote:
quote:
De Secret Service, onder meer verantwoordelijk voor de beveiliging van de Amerikaanse president Obama, wil een monitor kopen die sarcasme op sociale media kan herkennen. Dat blijkt uit online documenten van de Amerikaanse veiligheidsdienst. Op die manier hopen de geheim agenten straks beter in te kunnen schatten of dreigtweets serieus zijn, of dat ze de humor ervan moeten inzien. Op Twitter waren de reacties op het nieuws - niet geheel onverwacht - vooral sarcastisch.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 juni 2014 @ 20:53:40 #280
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140758648
quote:
Edward Snowden, a year on: reformers frustrated as NSA preserves its power

A year ago, Edward Snowden exposed the NSA's widespread surveillance practices. Privacy advocates demanded a change in the law – but today, the agency's powers remain largely intact
quote:
For two weeks in May, it looked as though privacy advocates had scored a tenuous victory against the widespread surveillance practices exposed by Edward Snowden a year ago. Then came a resurgent intelligence community, armed with pens, and dry, legislative language.

During several protracted sessions in secure rooms in the Capitol, intelligence veterans, often backed by the congressional leadership, sparred with House aides to abridge privacy and transparency provisions contained in the first bill rolling back National Security Agency spying powers in more than three decades. The revisions took place in secret after two congressional committees had passed the bill. The NSA and its allies took creative advantage of a twilight legislative period permitting technical or cosmetic language changes.

The episode shows the lengths to which the architects and advocates of bulk surveillance have gone to preserve their authorities in the time since the Guardian, 12 months ago today, began disclosing the scope of NSA data collection. That resistance to change, aided by the power and trust enjoyed by the NSA on Capitol Hill, helps explain why most NSA powers remain intact a year after the largest leak in the agency's history.

"This is not how American democracy is supposed to work," said congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat who had supported the bill but ultimately voted against it.

Senior leaders at the agency say that Snowden thrust them into a new era. The NSA, adept at cultivating a low profile, is now globally infamous – so much so that even Snowden, in his recent NBC interview, cautioned against writing the agency off as a voracious privacy-killing monstrosity. James Clapper, the director of US national intelligence, said the intelligence agencies need to grant a greater degree of transparency or risk losing public confidence permanently.

But exactly one year on, the NSA’s greatest wound so far has been its PR difficulties. The agency, under public pressure, has divested itself of exactly one activity, the bulk collection of US phone data. Yet while the NSA will not itself continue to gather the data directly, the major post-Snowden legislative fix grants the agency wide berth in accessing and searching large volumes of phone records, and even wider latitude in collecting other kinds of data.

There are no other mandated reforms. President Obama in January added restrictions on the dissemination of non-Americans' "personal information", but that has not been codified in law. The coalition of large internet firms demanding greater safeguards around their customers’ email, browsing and search histories have received nothing from the government for their effort. A recent move to block the NSA from undermining commercial encryption and amassing a library of software vulnerabilities never received a legislative hearing. (Obama, in defiance of a government privacy board, permits the NSA to exploit some software flaws for national security purposes.)

Even Clapper’s transparency call is questionable after the director recently clamped down on intelligence officials’ ability to speak to the press without the approval of their public-affairs shops, even when not discussing classified material.

Some NSA critics look to the courts for a fuller tally of their victories in the wake of the Snowden disclosures. Judges have begun to permit defendants to see evidence gathered against them that had its origins in NSA email or call intercepts, which could disrupt prosecutions or invalidate convictions. At least one such defendant, in Colorado, is seeking the exclusion of such evidence, arguing that its use in court is illegal.

Still other cases challenging the surveillance efforts have gotten beyond the government’s longtime insistence that accusers cannot prove they were spied upon, as the Snowden trove demonstrated a dragnet that presumptively touched every American’s phone records. This week, an Idaho federal judge implored the supreme court to settle the question of the bulk surveillance's constitutionality.

"The litigation now is about the merits. It’s about the lawfulness of the surveillance program," said Jameel Jaffer, the ACLU’s deputy legal director.

There have also been significant commercial changes brought by companies that fear the revelations imperiling their businesses. Google's Gmail service broadened its use of encryption and the company will soon present end-to-end encryption for its Chrome browser. After the Washington Post revealed that the NSA intercepts data transiting between Google and Yahoo storage centers, Google expanded encryption for Gmail data flowing across the internet and Yahoo implemented default email encryption.

But perhaps the bitterest disappointment has been the diminished ambitions for surveillance reform contained in the USA Freedom Act. "That," Jaffer said, "was a very frustrating process for us."
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 6 juni 2014 @ 02:22:18 #281
379282 Woods
Ich Bin Ein Berliner
pi_140769563
:')
woensdag 6 mei 2015 17:54 schreef Libertarisch het volgende:
Helaas pindakaas dan, het leven is hard. Je kunt niet iedereen blijven begeleiden alsof het kinderen zijn, je zult het zelf moeten doen.
  vrijdag 6 juni 2014 @ 17:50:44 #283
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140784984
quote:
quote:
In January, the math community had its big event of the year — the Joint Mathematics Meeting — where 3,000 mathematicians and math students gathered to talk about new advances in the field and jostle for jobs. The National Security Agency is said to be the largest employer of mathematicians in the country and so it always has a sizeable presence at the event to recruit new candidates. This year, it was even easier for the agency as the four-day conference took place at the Baltimore Convention Center, just 22 minutes away from NSA headquarters in Fort Meade. Thomas Hales, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh, who describes himself as a “mathematician who’s upset about what’s going on,” is dismayed at the idea of the brightest minds in his field going to work for the agency. In reaction to the Snowden revelations — which started exactly a year ago – about NSA’s mass surveillance and compromising of encryption standards, Hales gave a grant to the San Francisco-based civil liberties group Electronic Frontier Foundation to fly a representative to Baltimore to try to convince mathematicians young and old not to go help the agency with data-mining and encryption-breaking.

“Mathematicians aiding in national defense goes all the way back to Archimedes, defending against the Roman siege and designing the catapult. Mathematician Lewis Fry Richardson destroyed his work after realizing researchers in poison gas were looking at it. Mathematicians were involved in the Manhattan Project, developing nuclear weapons,” says Hales. “Many mathematicians work for the NSA or organizations with ties to it. They’re involved in facial recognition development and big data aspects of mass surveillance. If privacy disappears from the face of the Earth, mathematicians will be some of the primary culprits.”
Het artikel gaat verder
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 6 juni 2014 @ 17:52:12 #284
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140785022
quote:
quote:
NPR’s David Folkenflik has a revealing new look at what I have long believed is one of the most important journalistic stories of the last decade: The New York Times‘ 2004 decision, at the behest of George W. Bush himself, to suppress for 15 months (through Bush’s re-election) its reporters’ discovery that the NSA was illegally eavesdropping on Americans without warrants. Folkenflik’s NPR story confirms what has long been clear: The only reason the Times eventually published that article was because one of its reporters, James Risen, had become so frustrated that he wrote a book that was about to break the story, leaving the paper with no choice (Risen’s co-reporter, Eric Lichtblau, is quoted this way: “‘He had a gun to their head,’ Lichtblau told Frontline. ‘They are really being forced to reconsider: The paper is going to look pretty bad’ if Risen’s book disclosed the wiretapping program before the Times“).

As Folkenflik notes, this episode was one significant reason Edward Snowden purposely excluded the Times from his massive trove of documents. In an interview with Folkenflik, the paper’s new executive editor, Dean Baquet, describes the paper’s exclusion from the Snowden story as “really painful”. But, as I documented in my book and in recent interviews, Baquet has his own checkered history in suppressing plainly newsworthy stories at the government’s request, including a particularly inexcusable 2007 decision, when he was the managing editor of The Los Angeles Times, to kill a story based on AT&T whistleblower Mark Klein’s revelations that the NSA had built secret rooms at AT&T to siphon massive amounts of domestic telephone traffic.
Het artikel gaat verder
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_140805377
When the student is ready, the teacher will appear.
When the student is truly ready, the teacher will disappear.
  zaterdag 7 juni 2014 @ 14:35:02 #286
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140806000
En dat is twéééééééééé:

quote:
Deutsche Telekom to follow Vodafone in revealing surveillance

Deutsche Telekom, operating in 14 countries including the US, Spain and Poland, has already published data for Germany

Germany's biggest telecoms company is to follow Vodafone in disclosing for the first time the number of surveillance requests it receives from governments around the world.

Deutsche Telekom, which owns half of Britain's EE mobile network and operates in 14 countries including the US, Spain and Poland, has already published surveillance data for its home nation – one of the countries that have reacted most angrily to the Edward Snowden revelations. In the wake of Vodafone's disclosures, first published in the Guardian on Friday, it announced that it would extend its disclosures to every other market where it operates and where it is legal.

A spokeswoman for Deutsche Telekom, which has 140 million customers worldwide, said: "Deutsche Telekom has initially focused on Germany when it comes to disclosure of government requests. We are currently checking if and to what extent our national companies can disclose information. We intend to publish something similar to Vodafone."

Bosses of the world's biggest mobile networks, many of which have headquarters in Europe, are gathering for an industry conference in Shanghai this weekend, and the debate is expected to centre on whether they should join Deutsche and Vodafone in using transparency to push back against the use of their technology for government surveillance.

Mobile companies, unlike social networks, cannot operate without a government-issued licence, and have previously been reluctant to discuss the extent of their cooperation with national security and law enforcement agencies.

But Vodafone broke cover on Friday by confirming that in around half a dozen of the markets in which it operates, governments in Europe and outside have installed their own secret listening equipment on its network and those of other operators.

Under this direct access system, wires suck up traffic at key points in the network, allowing unfettered access to the content of phone conversations and text messages, and in some cases delivering live data about the location of customers.

They allow surveillance without the usual warrants, and it means the phone company cannot know how many people are being targeted and what the justification is for any snooping.

Vodafone will formally table its Law Enforcement Disclosure report, which sets out country by country the laws that oblige it to help governments spy on citizens, at the GSMA industry group conference in Shanghai.

Disclosure may pose a dilemma for Orange, formerly France Telecom. Like Deutsche it is still partially state-owned, and French newspaper Le Monde reported this year that the company had deep links with its domestic intelligence agency.

A spokesperson for Orange said: "Orange respects the laws and regulations of every country in which it is present. Naturally, this means that the group rigorously adheres to the legal framework with regards to all surveillance requests emanating from state authorities across its footprint."

The newspaper confirmed, using files obtained by Snowden, that Orange had collaborated with the Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure (DGSE) to break encryption codes, and that the agency was allowed free and total access to all traffic on its network.

Campaign group Access asked Orange at its annual meeting this year to begin publishing data on warrant numbers, and has called on all operators to do so. The biggest European companies, including Spain's Telefónica, Portugal Telecom and Telecom Italia, operate in many of the same markets for which Vodafone has published its numbers.

"Working together, operators can make a clear stand against unfettered surveillance," said Access policy counsel Peter Micek. "Competition on transparency is something we would welcome. It's not going to happen overnight, but I think Vodafone has made a great headstart for the sector and it is incumbent on the rest of the field to follow up quickly."

"Europe has a strong charter of fundamental rights, and those rights apply online as they do offline. There is a strong basis for Europe to act in a concernted manner to end practices like direct access."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 7 juni 2014 @ 21:23:46 #287
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140816119
quote:
Jimmy Wales: UK needs US-style first amendment to protect whistleblowers

Wikipedia founder calls for new free speech laws at conference marking first anniversary of publication of Snowden files


Britain should introduce its own constitution with an enshrined right to freedom of speech similar to that of the US to ensure that whistleblowers can come forward, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales has said.

He said that doing so would help prevent governments from cracking down on media organisations that wanted to publish potentially damaging stories.

"One of the big differences between the US and the UK is the first amendment, so the idea of smashing computers in the basement of the New York Times is basically inconceivable," he said, referring to the British government's demand that the Guardian destroy hard-drives used to store Edward Snowden's secret files.

"One of the important things about the US is that something like the first amendment and the rest of the Bill of Rights is very difficult to change – whereas here, it's not so easy to construct something that's difficult to change. Parliament can ultimately change anything with a majority vote and that's that."

Wales was speaking on Saturday at a London summit marking the anniversary of the start of Snowden's revelations, which were first published in the Guardian and the Washington Post.

The day of action has been billed as the biggest privacy event of 2014, with more than 500 people attending the event in east London.

The Wikipedia founder's call for a "British first amendment" echoed that of the Guardian's editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger, who was ordered to destroy the hard-drives by the government under threat of legal action.

Rusbridger said no right to free speech is enshrined in British law and said that he felt a "sense of foreboding, that something bad would happen" in the UK in reaction to the Guardian publishing Snowden's material.

He said he had no such concerns about the US government because of the protections afforded by that nation's constitution.

"By forcing the reporting out of the UK to the US, the British government lost any handle on this story at all. So, I hope the British government will think about that in the future," he said.

Wales, Rusbridger and a host of other speakers addressed a packed Shoreditch Town Hall on Saturday on the subject of privacy in the wake of Snowden's revelations of industrial-scale spying by the UK and US governments.

The event has been organised by the Guardian and the Don't Spy on Us Campaign, a coalition of privacy, free expression and digital rights organisations which is urging the UK government to end the mass surveillance of the web and mobile phone networks by the British eavesdropping centre, GCHQ.

The day started with a video address from performer Stephen Fry, who called the government's actions in spying on its own citizens "squalid and rancid".

In a prerecorded address, he said: "The idea of having your letters read by somebody, your telegrams, your faxes, your postcards intercepted, was always considered one of the meanest, most beastly things a human being could do, and for a government to do, without good cause.

"Using the fear of terrorism that we all have, the fear of the unknown that we all share, the fear of enemies that hate us, is a duplicitous and deeply wrong means of excusing something as base as spying on the citizens of your own country," he said.

Fry added: "It's enough that corporations know so much about us and our spending habits, our eating habits, our sexual preferences, everything else.

"But that a government, something that we elect, something that should be looking out for our best interests, should presume without asking to take information that we swap, we hope privately, between ourselves is frankly disgraceful."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 8 juni 2014 @ 21:25:38 #288
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140845021
quote:
A letter from Edward Snowden and the ACLU

Technology has been a liberating force in our lives. It allows us to create and share the experiences that make us human, effortlessly. But in secret, our very own government—one bound by the Constitution and its Bill of Rights—has reverse-engineered something beautiful into a tool of mass surveillance and oppression. The government right now can easily monitor whom you call, whom you associate with, what you read, what you buy, and where you go online and offline, and they do it to all of us, all the time.

Today, our most intimate private records are being indiscriminately seized in secret, without regard for whether we are actually suspected of wrongdoing. When these capabilities fall into the wrong hands, they can destroy the very freedoms that technology should be nurturing, not extinguishing. Surveillance, without regard to the rule of law or our basic human dignity, creates societies that fear free expression and dissent, the very values that make America strong.

In the long, dark shadow cast by the security state, a free society cannot thrive.

That’s why one year ago I brought evidence of these irresponsible activities to the public—to spark the very discussion the U.S. government didn’t want the American people to have. With every revelation, more and more light coursed through a National Security Agency that had grown too comfortable operating in the dark and without public consent. Soon incredible things began occurring that would have been unimaginable years ago. A federal judge in open court called an NSA mass surveillance program likely unconstitutional and “almost Orwellian.” Congress and President Obama have called for an end to the dragnet collection of the intimate details of our lives. Today legislation to begin rolling back the surveillance state is moving in Congress after more than a decade of impasse.

I am humbled by our collective successes so far. When the Guardian and The Washington Post began reporting on the NSA’s project to make privacy a thing of the past, I worried the risks I took to get the public the information it deserved would be met with collective indifference.

One year later, I realize that my fears were unwarranted.

Americans, like you, still believe the Constitution is the highest law of the land, which cannot be violated in secret in the name of a false security. Some say I’m a man without a country, but that’s not true. America has always been an ideal, and though I’m far away, I’ve never felt as connected to it as I do now, watching the necessary debate unfold as I hoped it would. America, after all, is always at our fingertips; that is the power of the Internet.

But now it’s time to keep the momentum for serious reform going so the conversation does not die prematurely.

Only then will we get the legislative reform that truly reins in the NSA and puts the government back in its constitutional place. Only then will we get the secure technologies we need to communicate without fear that silently in the background, our very own government is collecting, collating, and crunching the data that allows unelected bureaucrats to intrude into our most private spaces, analyzing our hopes and fears. Until then, every American who jealously guards their rights must do their best to engage in digital self-defense and proactively protect their electronic devices and communications. Every step we can take to secure ourselves from a government that no longer respects our privacy is a patriotic act.

We’ve come a long way, but there’s more to be done.

Edward J. Snowden, American
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 9 juni 2014 @ 15:02:52 #289
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140871409
quote:
'Nederland heeft zijn eigen Edward Snowden, en hij heet Brenno de Winter'

Is Brenno de W., in 2011 nog journalist van het jaar, echt de staatsvijand die de veiligheidsdiensten in hem zien?, vraagt Jean-Pierre Geelen zich af in zijn rubriek Medialogica.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 9 juni 2014 @ 22:54:48 #290
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140895981
War on wistleblowers in full effect:

quote:
quote:
Naar aanleiding van het schandaal stapte de minister voor Veteranenzaken, Eric Shinseki, eind mei op.
quote:
quote:
It's not shadowy spies or engineers from the National Security Agency secretly reading the hundreds of tips about government fraud that the Project on Government Oversight (POGO) has received in less than a month.

Instead, it's lawyers from the President Barack Obama administration employing the power of the administrative subpoena in a bid to siphon data from POGO's encrypted submission portal. POGO's site encourages whistleblowers to use Tor as the gateway and has garnered more than 700 tips about abuse and mismanagement at the US Veterans Administration after less than a month of operation.

"If they are successful, that defeats the purpose of trying to improve our online security with encryption," Jon Newman, the project's communications director, said in a telephone interview.

The administrative subpoena, which does not require the Fourth Amendment standard of probable cause, comes as the number of so-called drop boxes from media organizations and other whistleblower groups is on the rise in the wake of the Edward Snowden revelations. The Washington Post and the Guardian were among the latest to deploy drop boxes on June 5. But no matter how securely encrypted the boxes might be, the subpoena is an old-school cracking tool that doesn't require any electronic decryption methods.

POGO launched its submission tool in the immediate aftermath of the disclosure of the Veterans Administration scandal, which on Monday blossomed to revelations that as many as 57,000 vets have been awaiting treatment for as long as three months each because of 1990s-era scheduling technology. The agency is also accused of trying to cover that up.
quote:
The group said in an e-mail that 25 percent of the tips it has received "come from current or former VA staffers."

If the VA doesn't drop its subpoena, POGO said it would never turn the data over, even if ordered to by a judge.

"We are certainly prepared to go to court," Newman said. "We are certainly prepared to go to jail to prevent any of that information from being released."


[ Bericht 9% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 09-06-2014 23:00:00 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 9 juni 2014 @ 23:22:06 #291
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140897770
quote:
Hundreds sign up to protest outside GCHQ in Cheltenham

Hundreds of people have signed up to protest against Cheltenham-based listening post GCHQ.
The event, organised on social media site Facebook, aims to say “enough is enough” to the organisation following the Edward Snowden leaks.

Running from August 29 to September 1, it is organised by the group Anonymous.
A statement on the page said: “With all the latest leaks coming out about the power of GCHQ, the NSA and Five Eyes it is high time that we showed our faces and said enough is enough.”

A GCHQ spokes person said: "People have a right to protest peacefully within the law.

"All of GCHQ's work is carried out in accordance with a strict legal and policy framework which ensures that our activities are authorised, necessary and proportionate, and that there is rigorous oversight, including from the Secretary of State, the Interception and Intelligence Services Commissioners and the Parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee. All our operational processes rigorously support this position."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 10 juni 2014 @ 16:22:17 #292
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140918499
quote:
AIVD heeft geen toegang tot providers in Nederland

De inlichtingendienst AIVD heeft geen toegang tot providers in Nederland. De dienst kan ook niet zomaar Nederlanders afluisteren zonder dat de minister van Binnenlandse Zaken of Defensie daar toestemming voor heeft gegeven. Maar als Nederlanders bellen met iemand in het buitenland waar inlichtingendiensten wel toegang hebben tot providers, zouden ze wellicht wel kunnen worden afgeluisterd.

Dat zei minister Ronald Plasterk van Binnenlandse Zaken vandaag in het vragenuurtje in de Tweede Kamer. Aanleiding is de bekendmaking vorige week van Vodafone dat overheden van zes landen directe toegang hebben geëist tot de netwerken van het telecombedrijf.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 10 juni 2014 @ 18:31:32 #293
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140922699
quote:
quote:
In an era of too-big-to-fail banks, we should have known it was coming: An intelligence agency too big to rein in — and brazen enough to say so.

In a remarkable legal filing on Friday afternoon, the NSA told a federal court that its spying operations are too massive and technically complex to comply with an order to preserve evidence. The NSA, in other words, now says that it cannot comply with the rules that apply to any other party before a court — the very rules that ensure legal accountability — because it is too big.

The filing came in a long-running lawsuit filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation challenging the NSA's warrantless collection of Americans' private data. Recently, the plaintiffs in that case have fought to ensure that the NSA is preserving relevant evidence — a standard obligation in any lawsuit — and not destroying the very data that would show the agency spied on the plaintiffs' communications. Yet, as in so many other instances, the NSA appears to believe it is exempt from the normal rules.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 13 juni 2014 @ 17:19:18 #294
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141037333
quote:
Universiteit Groningen dwingt onderzoekers tot gebruik van Gmail

De Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (RUG) dwingt alle onderzoeksgroepen voortaan mail van Google te gebruiken. Een verzoek van de faculteit Wiskunde en Natuurwetenschappen om een eigen (en uit eigen zak betaald) mailsysteem te blijven gebruiken is afgewezen.

Daardoor denkt de faculteit contracten te verliezen. Bedrijven die met de onderzoekers samenwerken, zeggen dat correspondentie over bijvoorbeeld octrooiaanvragen niet veilig zijn bij Google. Onder meer IBM en DSM zouden daar volgens bronnen bij de faculteit bang voor zijn.

Volgens faculteitsbestuurder Peter van Haastert bedraagt de totale waarde van de contracten enkele tientallen miljoenen euro's, zo zei hij tegen de Groningse universiteitskrant UK. Daarin zei hoogleraar Michel Boesten, tevens werkzaam bij DSM Research, dat het delen van informatie via Google voor zijn bedrijf een probleem is. 'Dit wordt nu binnen het bedrijf aangescherpt.'

Veel Nederlandse universiteiten en hogescholen hebben het afgelopen jaar de e-mail van hun studenten overgeheveld naar Gmail van Google. De RUG is de eerste Nederlandse universiteit die ook de onderzoekers gaat overzetten. Daarmee zouden tonnen kunnen worden bespaard.

Namens vier onderzoeksgroepen (biotechnologen, farmaceuten, chemici en materiaalonderzoekers) en dertig individuele onderzoekers eiste de faculteit Wiskunde en Natuurwetenschappen een alternatief.

Nadelen
Volgens de wetenschappers wegen de voordelen van Gmail (grotere mailbox, goede beveiliging tegen hackers) niet op tegen de nadelen, zoals het mogelijke meekijken van de NSA en van Google zelf. Het faculteitsbestuur had 150 duizend euro per jaar over voor het behoud van de universitaire e-maildienst.

Maar de faculteit kon niet aantonen dat de bedrijven waarmee de onderzoekers samenwerken daadwerkelijk last zouden hebben van Google, zegt een woordvoerder van de universiteit. In de contracten staat wel dat informatie niet mag worden gedeeld met derden, maar Google wordt nergens expliciet als risico genoemd. De universiteit vindt dat onderzoekers hun mail maar moeten versleutelen, als de communicatie geheim moet blijven.

Individuele onderzoekers kunnen nog steeds een individueel bezwaar indienen, maar ook zij zullen moeten bewijzen dat contracten worden opgezegd als zij Gmail gaan gebruiken.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 13 juni 2014 @ 18:46:57 #295
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141040176
quote:
quote:
As the whistleblowing NSA sysadmin Edward Snowden made his dramatic escape to Russia a year ago, a secret US government jet - previously employed in CIA "rendition" flights on which terror suspects disappeared into invisible "black" imprisonment - flew into Europe in a bid to spirit him back to America, the Register can reveal.

On the evening of 24 June 2013, as Snowden arrived in Moscow from Hong Kong intending to fly on to Cuba, an unmarked Gulfstream V business jet - tail number N977GA - took off from a quiet commercial airport 30 miles from Washington DC. Manassas Regional Airport discreetly offers its clients "the personal accommodations and amenities you can't find at commercial airports".

Early next morning, N977GA was detected heading east over Scotland at the unusually high altitude of 45,000 feet. It had not filed a flight plan, and was flying above the level at which air traffic control reporting is mandatory.

"The plane showed up on our system at 5:20 on 25 June," according to our source, a member of an internet aircraft-tracking network run by enthusiasts in the UK. "We knew the reputation of this aircraft and what it had done in the past."

N977GA was not reporting its progress to air-traffic controllers, and thus it would normally have been necessary to use a massive commercial or military radar installation to follow its path. But, even if pilots have turned off automated location data feeds, ordinary enthusiasts equipped with nothing more than suitable radio receivers connected to the internet can measure differences in the time at which an aircraft's radar transponder signal reaches locations on the ground. Using the technique of multilateration, this information is sufficient to calculate the transponder's position and so track the aircraft. (The ACMS/ACARS data feeds which automatically report an aircraft's position are a separate system from the transponder which responds to air-traffic radar pulses. They too can be picked up by receivers on the ground beneath, if they are activated.)

Several such online tracking networks are active in the UK, using this and other sources of information: they include www.flightradar24.com, www.planefinder.net, Planeplotter (www.coaa.co.uk/planeplotter.htm) and www.radarvirtuel.com. UK-based Planeplotter is one of the more sophisticated of these global "virtual radar" systems. It boasts 2,000 members with receivers hooked up to the internet.

The online tracking information reveals that the Gulfstream did not make it all the way to Moscow, but set down and waited at Copenhagen Airport.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 15 juni 2014 @ 12:25:01 #296
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141104863
quote:
quote:
While Edward Snowden was trapped in the transit zone of Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport last year, U.S. officials were confronting their own dearth of options in the White House Situation Room.

For weeks, senior officials from the FBI, the CIA, the State Department and other agencies assembled nearly every day in a desperate search for a way to apprehend the former intelligence contractor who had exposed the inner workings of American espionage then fled to Hong Kong before ending up in Moscow.

Convened by White House homeland security adviser Lisa Monaco, the meetings kept ending at the same impasse: Have everyone make yet another round of appeals to their Russian counterparts and hope that Snowden makes a misstep.

“The best play for us is him landing in a third country,” Monaco said, according to an official who met with her at the White House. The official, who like other current and former officials interviewed for this article discussed internal deliberations on the condition of anonymity, added, “We were hoping he was going to be stupid enough to get on some kind of airplane, and then have an ally say: ‘You’re in our airspace. Land.’ ”

U.S. officials thought they saw such an opening on July 2 when Bolivian President Evo Morales, who expressed support for Snowden, left Moscow aboard his presidential aircraft. The decision to divert that plane ended in embarrassment when it was searched in Vienna and Snowden was not aboard.
quote:
Michael McFaul, who served as U.S. ambassador to Russia until February, said he never had detailed information on the American fugitive’s whereabouts. “I do not know where Mr. Snowden is living, what his relationship to the Russian government is or how he makes a living,” said McFaul, who has returned to the faculty at Stanford University.

Several U.S. officials cited a complication to gathering intelligence on Snowden that could be seen as ironic: the fact that there has been no determination that he is an “agent of a foreign power,” a legal distinction required to make an American citizen a target of espionage overseas.

If true, it means that the former CIA employee and National Security Agency contractor, who leaked thousands of classified files to expose what he considered rampant and illegal surveillance of U.S. citizens, is shielded at least to some extent from spying by his former employers.

Snowden is facing espionage-related charges, and the FBI has power to conduct wiretaps and enlist the NSA and CIA in its investigative efforts overseas. But even with such help, officials said, the bureau’s reach in Moscow is limited.

“The FBI doesn’t have any capability to operate in Moscow without the collaboration of the FSB,” said a former senior U.S. intelligence official who served in the Russian capital.

The lack of a warrant deeming Snowden a foreign agent would also cast doubt on the claims of some of his critics. U.S. officials, including Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, have speculated that Snowden had Russian help in stealing U.S. secrets and probably works with the FSB now.
quote:
The United States did not request that any country force down President Moraless plane, said Hayden, the National Security Council spokeswoman. What we did do ... was communicate via diplomatic and law enforcement channels with countries through which Mr. Snowden might transit.

Another U.S. official described the effort as a full-court press involving CIA station chiefs in Europe.

As it crossed Austria, the aircraft made a sudden U-turn and landed in Vienna, where authorities searched the cabin with Moraless permission, officials said but saw no sign of Snowden.

The initial, official explanation that Morales was merely making a refueling stop quickly yielded to recriminations and embarrassment.

Austrian officials said they were skeptical of the plan from the outset and noted that Moraless plane had taken off from a different airport in Moscow than where Snowden was held. Unless the Russians had carted him across the city, one official said, it was unlikely he was on board.

Even if Snowden had been a passenger, officials said, it is unclear how he could have been removed from a Bolivian air force jet whose cabin would ordinarily be regarded as that countrys sovereign domain especially in Austria, a country that considers itself diplomatically neutral.

We would have looked foolish if Snowden had been on that plane sitting there grinning, said a senior Austrian official. There would have been nothing we could have done.

Diverting Moraless plane was more than a diplomatic setback. It also probably caused Snowden to abandon any idea of leaving Russia, squandering what Monaco had described as the best play for the United States.


[ Bericht 18% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 15-06-2014 12:32:02 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 17 juni 2014 @ 13:42:20 #297
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141198070
quote:
Mass surveillance of social media is permitted by law, says top UK official

Charles Farr's statement marks first time government has commented on how it exploits the UK's legal framework to operate mass interception

Mass surveillance of social media, such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, and even Google searches, is permissible because they are "external communications", according to the government's most senior security official.

In the first detailed justification of the UK's online interception policy, Charles Farr, director general of the Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism, has defended the way in which it sidesteps the need for individual search warrants.

The policy's rationale has been published as part of the government's defence against a case being brought by Privacy International, Liberty, Amnesty International and other civil rights groups before the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT), which deals with complaints against the intelligence services.

The claims have been brought in the wake of revelations from the US whistleblower Edward Snowden about mass surveillance under the Tempora programme by the UK monitoring agency GCHQ and the US National Security Agency (NSA). Under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA), the interception of any domestic communications requires an individual warrant – a legal safeguard that previously was thought to extend to all users.

In a 48-page explanation, Farr sets out the history of monitoring online communications. He says: "Any regime that … only permitted interception in relation to specific persons or premises, would not have allowed adequate levels of intelligence information to be obtained and would not have met the undoubted requirements of intelligence for the protection of national security."

Farr's statement, published on Tuesday by the Privacy International and other human rights organisations, is the first time the government has commented on how it exploits the UK's legal framework to operate the mass interception programme.

Under section 8(1) of RIPA, internal communications between British residents within the UK may only be monitored pursuant to a specific warrant. These specific warrants should only be granted where there is some reason to suspect the person in question of unlawful activity. "External communications", however, may be monitored indiscriminately under a general warrant according to section 8(4).

Eric King, deputy director of Privacy International, said: "Intelligence agencies cannot be considered accountable to parliament and to the public they serve when their actions are obfuscated through secret interpretations of byzantine laws.

"Moreover, the suggestion that violations of the right to privacy are meaningless if the violator subsequently forgets about it not only offends the fundamental, inalienable nature of human rights, but patronises the British people, who will not accept such a meagre excuse for the loss of their civil liberties."

James Welch, legal director of Liberty, said: "The security services consider that they're entitled to read, listen and analyse all our communications on Facebook, Google and other US-based platforms. If there was any remaining doubt that our snooping laws need a radical overhaul, there can be no longer. The agencies now operate in a legal and ethical vacuum; why the deafening silence from our elected representatives?"

Michael Bochenek, senior director of international law and policy at Amnesty International, said: "British citizens will be alarmed to see their government justifying industrial-scale intrusion into their communications. The public should demand an end to this wholesale violation of their right to privacy."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 18 juni 2014 @ 14:03:03 #298
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141243689
quote:
Britse veiligheidsdienst tapt Google en Facebook af

Britten die gebruikmaken van webdiensten als Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google of een e-mailadres hebben bij Hotmail of Yahoo worden massaal bespioneerd door de Britse veiligheidsdienst GCHQ. De Britse spionagechef Charles Farr gaf dat toe in een rechtszaak die verschillende burgerrechtenorganisaties hebben aangespannen tegen GCHQ.


Communicatie tussen Britten in Groot-Brittannië mag pas worden opgevangen als een minister daar nadrukkelijk toestemming voor heeft gegeven. Maar zodra Britten met elkaar communiceren via bijvoorbeeld Amerikaanse diensten als Facebook en Hotmail, gaat die vlieger niet op. Volgens Farr betekent dit overigens niet dat alle afgetapte berichten ook worden gelezen.

Het is de eerste keer dat de Britse regering toelicht hoe wetgeving GCHQ in staat stelt op grote schaal communicatie tussen Britse burgers in de gaten te houden.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 18 juni 2014 @ 14:05:04 #299
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141243760
quote:
European court to rule on allegations Facebook passes personal data to NSA

High court in Dublin refers to Strasbourg a challenge by Austrian privacy campaigner Max Schrems

A European court has been asked to rule on a landmark case which seeks to force watchdogs to audit the personal data Facebook allegedly releases to US spy chiefs.

The high court in Dublin has referred to Strasbourg a challenge by an Austrian privacy campaigner on the back of the Prism surveillance operation exposed by whistleblower Edward Snowden.

Max Schrems's initial attempt to have the social media giant audited over data that its Irish arm allegedly passes on to the US National Security Agency (NSA) was dismissed last year by Ireland's Data Protection Commission.

On Wednesday, Judge Desmond Hogan ordered the privacy challenge – taken in the Irish courts by Schrems's EuropeVFacebook campaign – be referred to the European court of justice.

The judge said evidence suggests that personal data is routinely accessed on a "mass and undifferentiated basis" by the US security authorities.

He said Facebook users should have their privacy respected under the Irish constitution.

"For such interception of communications to be constitutionally valid, it would, accordingly, be necessary to demonstrate that this interception and surveillance of individuals or groups of individuals was objectively justified in the interests of the suppression of crime and national security and, further, that any such interception was attended by the appropriate and verifiable safeguards," the judge said.

Judge Hogan adjourned the case in the Irish courts while European judges look at two questions.

He is asking Strasbourg to examine whether Ireland's data watchdog is bound by what is known as Safe Harbour – a European commission decision from 2000 that US data protection rules are adequate if information is passed by companies to its security agencies on a "self-certify" basis.

Judge Hogan is also asking whether an investigation can be launched in Ireland in light of the Snowden revelations that internet data and communications were being intercepted by the NSA on a global scale.

Examining the background to Schrems's challenge, Judge Hogan said only the naive or credulous could have been surprised by the Snowden expose.

"Only the foolish would deny that the US has, by virtue of its superpower status, either assumed – or, if you prefer, has had cast upon it – far-reaching global security responsibilities," he said.

"It is probably the only world power with a global reach which can effectively monitor the activities of rogue states, advanced terrorist groups and major organised crime, even if the support of allied states such as the UK is also of great assistance.

"The monitoring of global communications – subject, of course, to key safeguards – is accordingly regarded essential if the US is to discharge the mandate which it has assumed.

"These surveillance programmes have undoubtedly saved many lives and have helped to ensure a high level of security, both throughout the western world and elsewhere.

"But there may also be suspicion in some quarters that this type of surveillance has had collateral objects and effects, including the preservation and reinforcing of American global political and economic power."

The case will be mentioned in the high court in two weeks before the issue is sent to the European court.

Schrems is understood to be in Vienna examining the ruling.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 18 juni 2014 @ 14:19:32 #300
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141244312
quote:
Hillary Clinton backs overhaul of surveillance powers in NSA criticism

Former secretary of state calls for the restoration of constitutional privacy protections weakened after 9/11 attacks

Hillary Clinton has thrown her weight behind political efforts to rein in US surveillance powers in her most forthright criticism yet of the National Security Agency (NSA).

The former secretary of state, who has hitherto largely stayed out of the debate sparked by leaks from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, called on Congress to restore constitutional privacy protections weakened after terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre.

"We are finally taking stock of the laws that we passed after 9/11," she told Fox News interviewer Greta Van Susteren. "We did all of this in an a hurry because we were worried and scared and now we need to take a step back and figure out how we make sure that the balance between liberty and security is right."

Clinton, who admitted in an earlier CNN interview that she had disagreed with her husband's cautious support for Snowden, defended the government's legal right to carry out some bulk collection of American data but said she now backed efforts in Congress to change the law.

"Laws that were passed after 9/11 gave the executive very broad authority ... what has happened is that people have said, OK, the emergency is over and we want to get back to regular order," she said.

"It's a really difficult balancing act, but you are absolutely right that we need to make some changes to secure that constitutional right to privacy that Americans are due."

The House of Representatives recently passed a version of the USA Freedom Act that seeks to outlaw the bulk collection of American data, although civil liberties campaigners worry that it has been watered down by administration lawyers and are pushing for a tougher version in the Senate.

Clinton was also scathing the of NSA's spying on the leaders of foreign allies such as Germany and was asked whether chancellor Angela Merkel was right to be angry.

"Yes, she should be. That was absolutely uncalled for," replied Clinton. "There is [legitimate counter-terrorism] work that we need to do with the Germans and inside Germany ... that has nothing to do with Angela Merkel's cell phone and that should be off limits."

The Fox News interview, a rare foray by Clinton in hostile political territory, was dominated by familiar questions about her reaction to attacks on US consular staff in Benghazi but the former secretary of state also strayed into more contemporary diplomatic questions during a separate interview on CNN.

Clinton appeared to distance herself from suggestions by current secretary of state John Kerry that the US could seek assistance from Iran in stemming insurgent attacks in Iraq.

"I am not prepared to say that we go in with Iran right now until we have a better idea what we are getting ourselves into," she told CNN.

But Clinton also supported a growing consensus inside Democratic circles that unilateral US military intervention could also be a mistake.

She criticised Iraqi prime minister Maliki, claiming he had "purged the military that we trained ... and forced out some of the most able commanders" and suggested the White House was seeking tougher assurances from him before offering support.

"I think that right now there are those hard negotiations going on," said Clinton. "With respect to air attacks that needs to be part of a larger package and I believe that is part of the intense negotiations that are going on."

She also said it was a mistake for Iraq not to strike an agreement for an ongoing US troop presence after its main military withdrawal.

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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 18 juni 2014 @ 14:25:48 #301
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141244544
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
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