NSA Wiretapping and Snowden on the run

babylon1

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The National Security Administration is secretly collecting phone record information for all calls on the Verizon network. “Under the terms of the blanket order, the numbers of both parties on a call are handed over, as is location data, call duration, unique identifiers, and the time and duration of all calls,” reports The Guardian, which broke the story of the top-secret project after it obtained record of a court order mandating Verizon hand over the information.

The contents of the call are not recorded and it is also not known whether Verizon is the only cell-phone carrier complying with the massive spying project. The court order concerns all calls to, from, and within the United States.

With this so-called “metadata,” the government knows “the identity of every person with whom an individual communicates electronically, how long they spoke, and their location at the time of the communication,” explains the Guardian.

The Senate’s tech-savviest member, Ron Wyden (CrunchGov Grade: A), has been discretely warning citizens of these kinds of secretive government projects. “There is now a significant gap between what most Americans think the law allows and what the government secretly claims the law allows,” wrote Wyden and Senator Mark Udall to embattled Attorney Eric Holder.

The order apparently draws from a 2001 Bush-era provision in the Patriot Act (50 USC section 1861). The revelation dovetails similar exposes on massive government spying projects, including one project to combine federal datasets and look for patterns on anything which could be related to terrorism.

Late last year, I wrote about a few actual harms that citizens should be worried about from these types of big-data spying programs. Blackmailing citizens critical of the government seemed like a distant hypothetical, until we learned that the IRS was auditing Tea Party groups and journalists were being wiretapped. Nefarious actors inside the government like to abuse national security programs for political ends, and that should make us all (even more) suspect of government spying.

:birdman::whoa::childplease:
 

Julius Skrrvin

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Your texts, mobile browsing, and fukk, probably social media too.

:demonic:
 

Consigliere

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Big Data is no joke.

'With this so-called “metadata,” the government knows “the identity of every person with whom an individual communicates electronically, how long they spoke, and their location at the time of the communication,” explains the Guardian.'

Anyone who's a heavy spreadsheet or database user should be terrified at what they can extrapolate with all the data the government has collected on you.

Folks used to be afraid the government was monitoring what books they checked out of the library (with good reason is some cases). Man those were simpler times.
 

bmoxover

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The National Security Administration is secretly collecting phone record information for all calls on the Verizon network. “Under the terms of the blanket order, the numbers of both parties on a call are handed over, as is location data, call duration, unique identifiers, and the time and duration of all calls,” reports The Guardian, which broke the story of the top-secret project after it obtained record of a court order mandating Verizon hand over the information.

The contents of the call are not recorded and it is also not known whether Verizon is the only cell-phone carrier complying with the massive spying project. The court order concerns all calls to, from, and within the United States.

With this so-called “metadata,” the government knows “the identity of every person with whom an individual communicates electronically, how long they spoke, and their location at the time of the communication,” explains the Guardian.

The Senate’s tech-savviest member, Ron Wyden (CrunchGov Grade: A), has been discretely warning citizens of these kinds of secretive government projects. “There is now a significant gap between what most Americans think the law allows and what the government secretly claims the law allows,” wrote Wyden and Senator Mark Udall to embattled Attorney Eric Holder.

The order apparently draws from a 2001 Bush-era provision in the Patriot Act (50 USC section 1861). The revelation dovetails similar exposes on massive government spying projects, including one project to combine federal datasets and look for patterns on anything which could be related to terrorism.

Late last year, I wrote about a few actual harms that citizens should be worried about from these types of big-data spying programs. Blackmailing citizens critical of the government seemed like a distant hypothetical, until we learned that the IRS was auditing Tea Party groups and journalists were being wiretapped. Nefarious actors inside the government like to abuse national security programs for political ends, and that should make us all (even more) suspect of government spying.

:birdman::whoa::childplease:


:duck:
 

Kid McNamara

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Your texts, mobile browsing, and fukk, probably social media too.

:demonic:

:skip: Social media is the easiest target.

Essentially, the Government employs interns to write Python scripts that mine and collect social media data. Read Violent Python to learn more about the actual techniques, join a Government organization to actually perform said techniques.

You should be more worried about your browsing history and emails being monitored, stored, and mined to create an evolving profile on you. All of this individual data is aggregated and used to uniquely identify you, your history, connections, beliefs, preferences, purchasing habits, and so on.

:umad:
 

profound

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i find some of their ways fascinating, the rest boring. not sure if its as bad as some say, thats so just so much work/energy/money.

do i trust obama phones or smart phones? nah. am i careful about it? nothing to be careful about :yeshrug:
 

ltheghost

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If they are letting this information out now, imagine what they are able to do today. If you have any thing that is connected to the internet or has wifi they are probably watching and listening...welcome to the future.
 

Kid McNamara

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If they are letting this information out now, imagine what they are able to do today. If you have any thing that is connected to the internet or has wifi they are probably watching and listening...welcome to the future.

Or connected to a cell tower. If you walk around hitting different cell towers, folks can find out exactly where you are. If your phone has GPS enabled, folks can find out where you are and where you've been for the last year.
 
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The judge approved this less than a month before his term was finished. Ironically, he's also the very same judge who first declared the ACA unconstitutional.
 
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Before clicking on the topic I expected responses like, "Good, I got nothing to hide", "Well a little 1984 can't hurt. We got to stop dem terrowrist, dawg", etc.
 

Blackking

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The Obama administration on Thursday defended the secret surveillance of US citizens' phone calls, calling the practice "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats."

Although a senior Obama administration official defended the practice, the official did not confirm the specific report published by the Guardian. The official, whose comments were reported by Reuters and the Associated Press, asked to remain anonymous.

A secret intelligence court in the United States had ordered the telecommunications company Verizon to provide the National Security Agency (NSA) with the phone records of millions of Americans, according to a report published on the Guardian's website on Wednesday.

The Guardian obtained and published the top secret court order, which compelled Verizon to open its customers' phone records to the NSA on an "ongoing, daily basis."
 
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