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#1051 2016-11-13 16:52:54

Anybody that knows Java, and the security classes can write a program to generate their own self-signed certificate.

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#1052 2016-11-13 17:13:01

Baywolfe wrote:

Anybody that knows Java, and the security classes can write a program to generate their own self-signed certificate.

Of course. But the secret with this one is that they got the browsers to accept their root authority, so by design they then trust all of the ones the root authority signs.

The system was originally broken. In order to set up an https site you need a certificate that is sourced from a root. The original idea was to prevent some "secure" site from pretending to be fazebook.com, taking your login and pw, then kicking you out to the real site, harvesting your info. But only if you required https, like everyone should be doing all the time. But to issue you the certificate you had to submit business paperwork and pay a huge fee, when all they do is generate the certificate with their magic key.

But now I guess we aren't as worried about impersonation of banks or whatnot. You just need a plain certificate, accepted by all browsers, that allows you and the web server to sign communications to each other.

But it begs the question. If you can get an easily acceptable key for nothing with no background check, what's the use of a signed certificate chain? Why not just have the browser not care about the root certificate in the chain? (They all currently show a scary message and make you click a couple of times to get around it.) It would be easier to program and it effectively allows the same thing. An easy config change in Chrome or Firefox would create the same "security" to the communication.

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#1053 2016-11-17 01:51:41

Last edited by XregnaR (2016-11-13 16:55:57)

Stinker, figures you'd retool the header but leave the typo. Here's hoping the deplorables rebrand the White House for the high stakes casino/brothel it always was.

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#1054 2016-11-17 09:37:42

I'd buy that for a dollar.

Last edited by XregnaR (2016-11-17 09:37:54)

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#1055 2016-11-17 15:24:38

https://cruelery.com/sidepic/james.clapper.dni.png


~ Clapper Resigns ~

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

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#1056 2016-11-18 00:03:38

Was hoping you'd post that story with the tag "Clap Off."

Looking forward to some nasty intelligence and Attorney General appointments.  Not that Hillary's would have been much better.

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#1057 2016-11-18 01:14:37

Across the pond, the Snooper's Charter goes in.

The law will force internet providers to record every internet customer's top-level web history in real-time for up to a year, which can be accessed by numerous government departments; force companies to decrypt data on demand -- though the government has never been that clear on exactly how it forces foreign firms to do that that; and even disclose any new security features in products before they launch.

Not only that, the law also gives the intelligence agencies the power to hack into computers and devices of citizens (known as equipment interference), although some protected professions -- such as journalists and medical staff -- are layered with marginally better protections.

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#1058 2016-11-18 01:17:13

Think Apple has your back?  Hope you don't use the cloud.

Russian digital forensics firm Elcomsoft has found that Apple's mobile devices automatically send a user's call history to the company's servers if iCloud is enabled -- but the data gets uploaded in many instances without user choice or notification.

"You only need to have iCloud itself enabled" for the data to be sent, said Vladimir Katalov, CEO of Elcomsoft.

The logs surreptitiously uploaded to Apple contain a list of all calls made and received on an iOS device, complete with phone numbers, dates and times, and duration. They also include missed and bypassed calls. Elcomsoft said Apple retains the data in a user's iCloud account for up to four months, providing a boon to law enforcement who may not be able to obtain the data either from the user's phone, if it's encrypted with an unbreakable passcode, or from the carrier. Although large carriers in the U.S. retain call logs for a year or more, this may not be the case with carrier outside the US.

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#1059 2016-11-18 06:08:31

square wrote:

Across the pond, the Snooper's Charter goes in.

The law will force internet providers to record every internet customer's top-level web history in real-time for up to a year, which can be accessed by numerous government departments; force companies to decrypt data on demand -- though the government has never been that clear on exactly how it forces foreign firms to do that that; and even disclose any new security features in products before they launch.

Not only that, the law also gives the intelligence agencies the power to hack into computers and devices of citizens (known as equipment interference), although some protected professions -- such as journalists and medical staff -- are layered with marginally better protections.

It's scripting time.

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#1061 2016-11-19 02:29:01

square wrote:

Looking forward to some nasty intelligence and Attorney General appointments.

Aaaaaand we're off and running with huge fans of surveillance with a side serving of torture.

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#1062 2016-11-19 03:13:49

Wishful thinking from someone coopted by the Bush and Obama intelligence apparatus.  Sorry, but Obama - and you - missed your chance to dismantle the surveillance state over the past eight years.

I have argued that the Snowden reforms forced the NSA to become "more transparent, more accountable, more protective of privacy--and more effective."

Still, we delude ourselves if we think they have made the NSA tyrant-proof. In Snowden's first interview from Hong Kong, warned against "turnkey tyranny." One day, he said, "a new leader will be elected" and "they'll find the switch." With Donald Trump's election, it is important that this warning not be proved prophetic. While the United States has a robust system of intelligence oversight--the strongest in the world--it still largely depends on the good faith of Executive Branch officials.

Are there ways to prevent Trump from turning that key, or at least to make it a little harder?

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#1064 2016-11-28 12:26:10

Interesting.  When using Chrome with HTTPS, the video doesn't load.  There is a little icon in the URL bar that when you roll over gives a message about loading unsafe scripts.  Allow it and the video shows up.

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#1065 2016-12-01 00:49:18

square wrote:

Wishful thinking from someone coopted by the Bush and Obama intelligence apparatus.  Sorry, but Obama - and you - missed your chance to dismantle the surveillance state over the past eight years.

Called it.  Looks like Obama wants to go all in for some reason.

In all the outrage about the unhinged things Donald Trump keeps tweeting and saying, there's been almost zero criticism at the fact that Obama will be partly responsible for the extraordinary scope of powers Trump inherits. The Obama administration has not only done nothing to curtail the slew of extreme national security and war powers that Trump is about to acquire since the election - the White House is actively expanding them. . . .

Now, the Obama administration has warped the AUMF [Authorization for Use of Military Force] even further. As the New York Times reported on Monday, the White House is claiming it can use the 2001 law to go after al-Shabaab in Somalia, another group that didn't exist in 2001, which the Times openly states in its lead paragraph "will strengthen President-elect Donald J Trump's authority" to wage war when he enters office. . . .

Also this weekend, in another story that was overlooked while Donald Trump was tweeting nonsense that held everyone's attention, the Washington Post reported that Obama dramatically expanded the power of the secretive Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), the secretive military unit that gained notoriety during the Osama bin Laden raid, "to track, plan and potentially launch attacks on terrorist cells around the globe" - even far away from battlefields.

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#1066 2016-12-01 10:46:20

First rule of politics: Never take advantage of an action that you don't want your opponent to use as well. The AUMF, executive signing statements, etc. are all constitutional overreach and often dirty tricks. But that never stopped a politician from crying foul from a position of hypocrisy.

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#1067 2016-12-09 02:07:14

Barbie's not the only toy that rats on you - Cayla's got a lot of friends in dark suits.

According to a coalition of consumer-interest organizations, the makers of two "smart" kids toys -- the My Friend Cayla doll and the i-Que Intelligent Robot -- are allegedly violating laws in the U.S. and overseas by collecting this sort of voice data without obtaining consent.

In a complaint filed this morning with the Federal Trade Commission, the coalition -- made up of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood (CCFC), the Center for Digital Democracy (CDD), and our colleagues at Consumers Union -- argue that Genesis Toys, a company that manufactures interactive and robotic toys, and Nuance Communications, which supplies the voice-parsing services for these toys, are running afoul of rules that protect children's privacy and prohibiting unfair and deceptive practices. . . .

Nuance is a giant company best-known -- to consumers, at least -- for its Dragon-branded suite of speech-to-text dictation software. The company also has a significant presence in healthcare dictation, and is -- like more large corporations than you'd think -- a defense contractor that sells products, including "voice biometric solutions," to military, intelligence, and law enforcement agencies.

In case that's not invasive enough, how about making closer contact?

The maker of an Internet-connected, remote-controlled vibrator was sued in federal court for being a little too connected to its users: the company tracked various app settings such as vibration level and "temperature" without customer consent.

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#1068 2016-12-09 02:12:32

It's not just your seatmate who's listening.

"What do the President of Pakistan, a cigar smuggler, an arms dealer, a counterterrorism target, and a combatting proliferation target have in common? They all used their everyday GSM phone during a flight."

This riddle appeared in 2010 in SIDtoday, the internal newsletter of the NSA's Signals Intelligence Directorate, or SID, and it was classified "top secret." It announced the emergence of a new field of espionage that had not yet been explored: the interception of data from phone calls made on board civil aircraft. In a separate internal document from a year earlier, the NSA reported that 50,000 people had already used their mobile phones in flight as of December 2008, a figure that rose to 100,000 by February 2009. The NSA attributed the increase to "more planes equipped with in-flight GSM capability, less fear that a plane will crash due to making/receiving a call, not as expensive as people thought." The sky seemed to belong to the agency.

In a 2012 presentation, Government Communications Headquarters, or GCHQ, the British equivalent of the NSA, in turn disclosed a program called "Southwinds," which was used to gather all the cellular activity, voice communication, data, metadata, and content of calls on board commercial aircraft.

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#1069 2016-12-18 02:02:00

Some members of the intelligence community aren't in lockstep with the "collect it all" attitude of the leadership, though many are.

But soon after [Director of National Intelligence James] Clapper's post [to an internal blog], it became clear he did not actually speak for "all of the women and men" in the intelligence community. While the blog is only available to people with proper security clearance, Clapper does welcome commenters. The first two intelligence people to comment on his post took Clapper, and his "constituent," to the woodshed. "I think it was inappropriate for DNI Clapper to respond in a way that indicates he agrees with the premise of the writer's letter, namely, that government must expand its domestic "watching" and the people must give up "some 'rights' in the interest of the greater good," one IC commenter posted. "The head of the US Intelligence Community -- the business of which is foreign intelligence -- should not be taking sides on matters of domestic intelligence policy."

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#1070 2016-12-18 02:16:29

Why didn't Snowden report wrongdoing through "proper channels?" Because these are the sort of people who occupy those channels.

Then last May, after eight months of inquiry and deliberation, a high-level Intelligence Community panel found that [NSA Inspector General George] Ellard himself had previously retaliated against an NSA whistleblower, sources tell the Project On Government Oversight. Informed of that finding, NSA's Director, Admiral Michael Rogers, promptly issued Ellard a notice of proposed termination, although Ellard apparently remains an agency employee while on administrative leave, pending a possible response to his appeal from Secretary of Defense Ash Carter.

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#1071 2016-12-30 11:29:08

“The Art of Deception: Training for Online Covert Operations.”

https://firstlook.org/wp-uploads/sites/1/2014/02/deception_p12.png

https://firstlook.org/wp-uploads/sites/1/2014/02/deception_p24.png

Of all the stock images they "appropriated" for this slideshow from 2014, I'm sure Teller would not be happy that they used his for the closing arguments

https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/1021430/pages/the-art-of-deception-training-for-a-new-p50-large.gif

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#1074 2017-01-08 12:35:17

Fighting back on the municipal level.

A local privacy committee has sent a proposed surveillance oversight ordinance to the city council. This is a rare example of a major American city set to impose stricter controls on the acquisition, use, and evaluation of spy gear. . . .

In Oakland, for example, the police acquired cell-site simulators (commonly known as stingrays) in 2007, but there won't be a public policy for their use until later this year. The new law creates a mechanism to evaluate future surveillance technologies and to evaluate old ones through a "Surveillance Impact Report."

As specifically defined under the proposed law, such a report must contain a slew of information, including:

a) A description of how the surveillance technology was used, including the quantity of data gathered or analyzed by the technology;

b) Whether and how often data acquired through the use of the surveillance technology was shared with outside entities, the name of any recipient entity, the type(s) of data disclosed, under what legal standard(s) the information was disclosed, and the justification for the disclosure(s);

c) Where applicable, a breakdown of what physical objects the surveillance technology software was installed upon; for surveillance technology software, a breakdown of what data sources the surveillance technology was applied to;

d) Where applicable, a breakdown of where the surveillance technology was deployed geographically, by individual census tract as defined in the relevant year by the United States Census Bureau

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#1075 2017-01-13 09:58:59

Sharing is caring.

On Thursday The New York Times reported that the Obama administration had recently finalized rules to give the National Security Agency (NSA) more leeway in sharing its vast trove of intercepted communications with the 15 other government agencies that make up the Intelligence Community.

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#1076 2017-01-13 10:31:30

Wasn't that the whole point of the bloated bureaucracy that is Homeland Security?

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#1077 2017-01-14 17:45:56

National Security Letter (NSL) gag orders distort public policy making.

The gag order not only impacted our transparency report and our ability to talk about the sealed case, but Cloudflare has been involved in public policy discussions related to the Internet and matters of electronic communications both in Congress and in the public sphere more broadly since the early days of the company. . . .

One personal experience is particularly telling about the gag order's negative impact on our policy advocacy efforts. In early 2014, I met with a key Capitol Hill staffer who worked on issues related to counter-terrorism, homeland security, and the judiciary. I had a conversation where I explained how Cloudflare values transparency, due process of law, and expressed concerns that NSLs are unconstitutional tools of convenience rather than necessity. The staffer dismissed my concerns and expressed that Cloudflare's position on NSLs was a product of needless worrying, speculation, and misinformation. The staffer noted it would be impossible for an NSL to issue against Cloudflare, since the services our company provides expressly did not fall within the jurisdiction of the NSL statute. The staffer went so far as to open a copy of the U.S. Code and read from the statutory language to make her point.

Because of the gag order, I had to sit in silence, implicitly confirming the point in the mind of the staffer. At the time, I knew for a certainty that the FBI's interpretation of the statute diverged from hers (and presumably that of her boss).

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#1078 2017-01-25 07:32:12

Now Amazon's #1 Best Seller! No Joke.

https://cruelery.com/sidepic/1984-versionAfront.jpg


~ click ~

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/ … tive-facts

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

Last edited by choad (2017-01-25 07:40:54)

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#1079 2017-01-25 15:30:35

Trump and his adoring mob sneer at you "Readers."

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

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#1080 2017-01-26 01:41:16

George Orr wrote:

Trump and his adoring mob sneer at you "Readers."

LOL. I choked on my tea.

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#1081 2017-01-26 02:39:49

We can't have the proles reporting the news; Ignorance is Strength.  Surprisingly, even Putin's buddies get swept up.

A documentary producer, a photojournalist, a live-streamer and a freelance reporter were each charged with the most serious level of offense under Washington DC's law against rioting, after being caught up in the police action against demonstrators.

The Guardian learned of their arrests after reporting on Monday that the journalists Evan Engel of Vocativ and Alex Rubinstein of RT America had also been arrested and charged with felonies while covering the same unrest on Friday morning.

All six were arraigned in superior court on Saturday and released to await further hearings in February and March, according to court filings. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said late on Tuesday that charges against journalists who were covering the protests should be dropped.

Also, the title of this topic officially becomes valid - Obama's war on whistleblowers continues under Trump.

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#1082 2017-01-26 05:11:56

...and the Nobel Peace Prize went to the first US president at war every day of his administration. Again not a Trump fan,
but Obama was culpable in the murder of hundreds of thousands of human beings.  Unless my math is way off, Trump is responsible for zero deaths...so far.

Don't forget these gems:  Patriot Act...Affordable Care Act.  Talk about doublespeak.

All things considered, Progs setting aside Lena Dunham and catching up on the Orwell can't be all that bad.

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

Last edited by JetRx (2017-01-26 05:32:36)

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#1083 2017-01-29 19:45:13

This topic has hundreds of posts cataloging Obama's fondness for surveillance, war on whistleblowers, and lack of government transparency.  Only someone with a lobotomy would have expected a vote for Trump or Clinton to reduce any of these.

Given that it has to be explained to Trump why torture isn't a great idea, we probably won't have to wait long for the body count to accumulate.

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#1084 2017-02-01 16:37:47

Is nothing sacred?

Just leave me where I fall, do not call an ambulance, do not make me better than I was before, better, stronger, faster. I'll pass.

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#1085 2017-02-07 00:10:57

JetRx wrote:

Unless my math is way off, Trump is responsible for zero deaths...so far.

Well, that didn't take long.

Back on topic, all the more reason to care about SCOTUS appointments.

Can the US government demand that it be able to reach into the world's servers with the tech sector's assistance? International relations issues aside, the answer to that legally thorny question depends on which US court is asked.

Consider that a federal magistrate judge in Philadelphia answered that question Friday in the affirmative, ordering Google to comply with US warrants and transfer e-mail stored overseas to the US so the FBI could examine it as part of a criminal probe. Yet just two weeks ago, a New York-based federal appeals court let stand its highly publicized July decision that allowed Microsoft to quash a US court warrant for e-mail stored on its servers in Dublin, Ireland.

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#1086 2017-02-07 12:33:34

Vizio To Pay Millions After Secretly Spying On Customers, Selling Viewer Data

“Consumers didn’t know that while they were watching their TVs, Vizio was watching them.”

Vizio has agreed to pay $2.2 million to settle a lawsuit with the Federal Trade Commission after the television manufacturer was caught gathering customer data without permission for years.

According to a complaint filed by the FTC and the attorney general of New Jersey, Vizio began making TVs in 2014 that automatically tracked what people were watching. Older devices were retrofitted remotely through software updates, and all of the data was gathered without telling consumers and without their consent.

Vizio eventually accumulated “as many as 100 billion data points a day from millions of TVs,” which it then sold to advertisers...

For the rest of the article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/viz … 84f27e534?

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#1087 2017-02-07 13:25:29

$2.2mil = getting away with it.

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#1088 2017-02-07 16:54:32

George Orr wrote:

$2.2mil = getting away with it.

I agree; 11 million TV sets were involved. The fine works out to be twenty cents per set.

"Oh stop, please, I can't take anymore punishment like this."

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#1089 2017-02-08 23:37:07

Don't piss off your neighbors - their unverified complaints could give the FBI an excuse to rummage through your life.

Assessments allow agents to look into tips or leads that don't meet the standard for opening an investigation, which requires specific information or allegations of wrongdoing -- an "articulable factual basis" for suspicion, as FBI rules put it. In an assessment, by contrast, an agent just needs to give an "authorized purpose" for their actions. Agents can open assessments "proactively," in order to evaluate potential informants, collect intelligence about threats surrounding public events, study a field office's geographical area, or gather information about a general phenomenon of interest to the bureau. . . .

The Intercept is publishing in full for the very first time the Domestic Investigations and Operations Guide, or DIOG, which governs FBI operations. The DIOG's rules for assessments, which were previously released with significant redactions, make clear that the FBI can follow up on a tip or complaint by probing government records and conducting interviews. The bureau need not necessarily keep a record of this search. But if agents decide to dig deeper by opening an assessment, they are allowed to have informants collect information, and they can also physically surveil the subject -- including by airplane. In some cases, they can issue grand jury subpoenas. If the purpose of an assessment is to evaluate someone as a potential informant, agents can give polygraph tests, dig through trash, and use fake identities in the course of their research.

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#1090 2017-02-09 00:00:44

Customs and Border Protection looking to amp up its likes.

"We want to get on their social media, with passwords: What do you do, what do you say?" [Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly] told the House Homeland Security Committee. "If they don't want to cooperate then you don't come in."

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#1091 2017-02-09 11:58:51

square wrote:

Customs and Border Protection looking to amp up its likes.

"We want to get on their social media, with passwords: What do you do, what do you say?" [Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly] told the House Homeland Security Committee. "If they don't want to cooperate then you don't come in."

We can't get the President's tax returns but they want private passwords?  War is Peace, Ignorance is Strength, Freedom is Slavery.

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#1092 2017-02-14 02:02:18

No matter how paranoid you are, it's probably not paranoid enough.  Note that all tracking described in this article is done without cookies.

State-of-the-art fingerprinting techniques are highly effective at identifying users when they use browsers with default or commonly used settings. For instance, the Electronic Frontier Foundation's privacy tool, known as Panopticlick, found that only one in about 77,691 browsers had the same characteristics as the one commonly used by this reporter. Such fingerprints are the result of specific settings and customizations found in a specific browser installation, including the list of plugins, the selected time zone, whether a "do not track" option is turned on, and whether an adblocker is being used.

Until now, however, the tracking has been limited to a single browser. This constraint made it infeasible to tie, say, the fingerprint left behind by a Firefox browser to the fingerprint from a Chrome or Edge installation running on the same machine. The new technique--outlined in a research paper titled (Cross-)Browser Fingerprinting via OS and Hardware Level Features--not only works across multiple browsers. It's also more accurate than previous single-browser fingerprinting.

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#1093 2017-02-15 01:33:21

Meet the new bosses...

http://www.politico.com/story/2017/02/d … ncy-234879

After Trump grew infuriated by disclosures of his confrontational phone calls with foreign leaders, an investigation was launched into the source of the leaks, according to one White House aide. National Security Council staffers have been instructed to cooperate with inquiries, including requests to inspect their electronic communications, said two sources familiar with the situation. It's not clear whether the investigation is a formal proceeding, how far along it is or who is conducting it.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/201 … ournalists

The [British] government's legal advisers have been accused of launching a "full-frontal attack" on whistleblowers over proposals to radically increase prison sentences for revealing state secrets and prosecute journalists. . . .

"It's the mere handling of documents that becomes a criminal offence on the basis of the risk handling those documents causes, not that you actually hand them to a foreign state," he said. "So spying becomes possession of secret information. This is not what any of us would recognise as the definition of spying. It's spying as China might define it."

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#1095 2017-02-25 19:22:07

Germany: Cayla is not your friend.

Under German law, it is illegal to sell or possess a banned surveillance device. A breach of that law can result in a jail term of up to two years, according to German media reports.

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#1096 2017-02-25 19:27:25

The Dutch get in on the act with mass surveillance.

On Tuesday February 14, 2017 the bill for the new Intelligence and Security Services Act was passed by the Dutch lower house. Despite being met with serious opposition from experts, regulators, civil society, political parties and citizens, the revised bill passed virtually unchanged from the proposal submitted to the lower house. . . .

Most importantly, the controversial new law will allow intelligence services to systematically conduct mass surveillance of the internet. The current legal framework allows security agencies to collect data in a targeted fashion. The new law will significantly broaden the agencies' powers to include bulk data collection. This development clears the way for the interception of the communication of innocent citizens.

Last edited by square (2017-02-25 19:28:26)

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#1097 2017-02-25 19:47:17

At least someone still believes in the Fourth Amendment.

A federal magistrate judge in Chicago recently denied the government's attempt to force people in a particular building to depress their fingerprints in an attempt to open any seized Apple devices as part of a child pornography investigation. . . .

In a 14-page opinion and order . . . Judge M. David Weisman wrote that while investigators did have probable cause to search a particular home, "these limitations do impact the ability of the government to seek the extraordinary authority related to compelling individuals to provide their fingerprints to unlock an Apple electronic device."

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#1098 2017-02-25 20:22:28

The surveillance-industrial complex continues to thrive.

Trump's vast preference for private sector expertise and new strategic friendship with Silicon Valley billionaire investor Peter Thiel, whose controversial (and opaque) company Palantir has long sought to sell governments an unmatched power to sift and exploit information of any kind. Thiel represents a perfect nexus of government clout with the kind of corporate swagger Trump loves. The Intercept can now reveal that Palantir has worked for years to boost the global dragnet of the NSA and its international partners, and was in fact co-created with American spies. . . .

It's hard to square [Palantir's] purported commitment to privacy with proof, garnered from documents provided by Edward Snowden, that Palantir has helped expand and accelerate the NSA's global spy network, which is jointly administered with allied foreign agencies around the world. Notably, the partnership has included building software specifically to facilitate, augment, and accelerate the use of XKEYSCORE, one of the most expansive and potentially intrusive tools in the NSA's arsenal.

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#1099 2017-02-25 20:25:23

Hope you enjoy having your data sold to all comers.

The Federal Communications Commission plans to halt implementation of a privacy rule that requires ISPs to protect the security of its customers' personal information.

The data security rule is part of a broader privacy rulemaking implemented under former Chairman Tom Wheeler but opposed by the FCC's new Republican majority. The privacy order's data security obligations are scheduled to take effect on March 2, but Chairman Ajit Pai wants to prevent that from happening. . . .

The most well-known portion of the privacy order requires ISPs to get opt-in consent from consumers before sharing Web browsing data and other private information with advertisers and other third parties.

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#1100 2017-02-28 03:32:37

square wrote:

Germany: Cayla is not your friend.

Thought this was just a theoretical concern?  Oops.

A maker of Internet-connected stuffed animal toys has exposed more than 2 million voice recordings of children and parents, as well as e-mail addresses and password data for more than 800,000 accounts.

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