The NSA watches you poop.

Eomer

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Are you really trying to imply that Petraeus had anything to do with the coining of that term?
 

Big Phoenix

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Since I started to use internet 15~ years ago I always considered anybody could potentially access my online shit, 15 years ago I was more thinking about any hacker, today it's any governement. It has good and bad sides but I always considered it the "beauty" of internet, because it work both ways.
Big difference between having to worry about downloading malicious programs that steal information, and your government tapping into the backbone of the internet and doing the same.
 

fanaskin

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FDA Spies On Whistleblowers to Protect Big Pharma Washingtons Blog

When one of the most respected radiologists in America - the former head of the radiology department at Yale University - attempted to blow the whistle on the fact that the FDA had approved a medical device manufactured by General Electric because it put out massive amounts of radiation, the FDA installed spyware to record his private emails and surfing activities (including installing cameras to snap pictures of his screen), and then used the information to smear him and other whistleblowers:
F.D.A. Surveillance of Scientists Spread to Outside Critics - NYTimes.com
 

chaos

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fanaskin

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Florida Cops Secret Weapon: Warrantless Cellphone Tracking | Threat Level | Wired.com

Police in Florida have offered a startling excuse for having used a controversial "stingray" cellphone tracking gadget 200 times without ever telling a judge: the device's manufacturer made them sign a non-disclosure agreement that they say prevented them from telling the courts.

The shocking revelation came during an appeal over a 2008 sexual battery case in Tallahassee in which the suspect also stole the victim's cellphone. Using the stingray - which simulates a cellphone tower in order to trick nearby mobile devices into connecting to it and revealing their location - police were able to track him to an apartment.

During recent proceedings in the case, authorities revealed that they had used the equipment at least 200 additional times since 2010 without disclosing this to courts and obtaining a warrant.
 

Numbers_sl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/...A2228K20140303

Electronic spying tools used by the U.S. government could end up in the hands of organized criminals and hackers, further eroding Internet security, warned industry leaders who called for new restrictions and oversight of government activity.

"It is a big worry" that the methods will spread, said Andrew France, former deputy director of the UK's NSA equivalent, GCHQ, and now chief executive of security startup Darktrace.

The government habit of purchasing information about undisclosed holes in software is also "really troublesome," said former White House cyber security advisor Howard Schmidt. "There's collateral damage."

Both France and Schmidt spoke to Reuters at the annual RSA Conference, the world's largest cyber security gathering, in San Francisco last week. RSA is the security division of electronic storage maker of EMC Corp.

Security researchers say that secret state tools tend to fall into the hands of mobsters and eventually lone hackers. That trend could worsen after former spy contractor Edward Snowden disclosed U.S. National Security Agency capabilities for breaking into Cisco Systems Inc routers, Dell Inc computer servers and all kinds of personal computers and smartphones, industry leaders and experts warned at the RSA conference and two smaller gatherings in San Francisco convened partly to discuss RSA's government deals.
 

chaos

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I would want some more information on that. Which tools are they referencing? Just the vulnerabilities or are they trying to extend that to the TAO shit that was released? Because that stuff falling into "lone hacker" hands is just absurd,
 

Royal

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As prophesied sixteen years ago by Jon Voight:

"Privacy's been dead for years because we can't risk it. The only privacy that's left is the inside of your head. Maybe that's enough."- Thomas Reynolds, Enemy of the State.
 

Numbers_sl

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Judge Halts Destruction Of NSA Surveillance Records

A federal judge in San Francisco stopped the destruction of millions of telephone records collected by the National Security Agency more than five years ago.

U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White, who is overseeing an invasion-of-privacy lawsuit against the agency, issued a nationwide order Monday to safeguard evidence until March 19, when he will hold a hearing on extending the deadline further.

The secret federal court that approved the agency's surveillance has required that documents be purged after five years for privacy reasons. On Friday, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court denied the federal government's request to keep the records for the sake of pending lawsuits.

The NSA, which has acknowledged obtaining phone numbers and other information on all U.S. calls, was prepared on Tuesday to destroy all records collected more than five years ago, according to court documents.

White said he was enforcing an order he had issued in an earlier NSA surveillance case that halted evidence from being destroyed.

He wrote that "the Court would be unable to afford effective relief once the records are destroyed" and before he decided if their collection was legal. The plaintiffs in the lawsuits include civil rights, environmental and religious groups as well as gun organizations and marijuana advocates.
 

Numbers_sl

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NSA surveillance program reaches to retrieve, replay phone calls - The Washington Post

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.
 

Big Phoenix

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US tech giants knew of NSA data collection, agency's top lawyer insists | World news | theguardian.com


While Section 702 forbids the intentional targeting of Americans or people inside the United States - a practice known as "reverse targeting" - significant amounts of Americans' phone calls and emails are swept up in the process of collection.

In 2011, according to a now-declassified Fisa court ruling, the NSA was found to have collected tens of thousands of emails between Americans, which a judge on the court considered a violation of the US constitution and which the NSA says it is technologically incapable of fixing.

Renewed in December 2012 over the objections of senate intelligence committee members Ron Wyden and Mark Udall, Section 702 also permits NSA analysts to search through the collected communications for identifying information about Americans, an amendment to so-called "minimisation" rules revealed by the Guardian in August and termed the "backdoor search loophole" by Wyden.

De and his administration colleagues, testifying before the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, strongly rejected suggestions by the panel that a court authorise searches for Americans' information inside the 702 databases."If you have to go back to court every time you look at the information in your custody, you can imagine that would be quite burdensome,"deputy assistant attorney general Brad Wiegmann told the board.
God damn that is ironic. Thats theexactsame sentiment that the anti-anonymity guy was espousing at the debate I went to at school last semester. Either way lawyers and judges are fucking scum and vermin. Only such fucking morons could hold themselves in such high esteem and proclaim themselves masters of their craft yet fail so hard at it.

Also lol @ every shitbag tech company saying they didnt know what was going on. Yeah you didnt know terabytes of data was being copied from your networks everyday and literal spyware was being installed into your hardware/code.
 

fanaskin

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AP News : US cites security more to censor, deny records

The Obama administration more often than ever censored government files or outright denied access to them last year under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, according to a new analysis of federal data by The Associated Press.
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Police keep quiet about cell-tracking technology :: WRAL.com

Police across the country may be intercepting phone calls or text messages to find suspects using a technology tool known as Stingray. But they're refusing to turn over details about its use or heavily censoring files when they do.
A Stingray device tricks all cellphones in an area into electronically identifying themselves and transmitting data to police rather than the nearest phone company's tower. Because documents about Stingrays are regularly censored, it's not immediately clear what information the devices could capture, such as the contents of phone conversations and text messages, what they routinely do capture based on how they're configured or how often they might be used.

In one of the rare court cases involving the device, the FBI acknowledged in 2011 that so-called cell site simulator technology affects innocent users in the area where it's operated, not just a suspect police are seeking.