The NSA watches you poop.

chthonic-anemos

bitchute.com/video/EvyOjOORbg5l/
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Arbitrary

Tranny Chaser
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Executive orders are a strange thing in general. That making laws part of the government is very plainly carved out as being the responsibility of the legislative branch.
 

chaos

Buzzfeed Editor
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It isn't vague, a bunch of infosec people I know were freaking out over the order and it's like they didn't even read it. It has fuck all to do with Snowden or what he did, and it is aimed very specifically at non-US attackers and their US-based assets.
 

dizzie

Triggered Happy
2,509
3,937
Just finished reading this book:

Countdown to Zero Day: Stuxnet and the Launch of the World Social Sciences Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.

Was a fascinating read regarding Stuxnet and more recent stuff like duqu and flame. Really nicely written for a layman as it goes into a fair amount of technical detail without being over the top and gives decent explanations. The stuff the big players code is absolutely amazing and is so surgically placed to target individual sites or persons. Alot of it is still a mystery as they have the files but the payloads are in uncrackable encryption. Anyway its a pretty interesting read.
 

Big Phoenix

Pronouns: zie/zhem/zer
<Gold Donor>
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Fucking morons. Guys running it in those departments must be just as smart as the people paying.
 

chaos

Buzzfeed Editor
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This is the silliest thing i've read mostly because the ransomers only asked for $500 it makes it seem so petty and hilarious.

Controversies - Illinois and Massachusetts Police Pay Bitcoin Ransom to Hackers - AllGov - News
It isn't as if they targeted them, it's just malware. 500 bones x however many people they manage to nab = a whole lot of money. The article is stupid and makes it seems as if they were targeted, that isn't how this works.

idk, if you have a shitty backup strategy this is what happens.
 

fanaskin

Well known agitator
<Silver Donator>
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U.S. secretly tracked billions of calls for decades

The data collection began in 1992 during the administration of President George H.W. Bush, nine years before his son, President George W. Bush, authorized the NSA to gather its own logs of Americans' phone calls in 2001. It was approved by top Justice Department officials in four presidential administrations and detailed in occasional briefings to members of Congress but otherwise had little independent oversight, according to officials involved with running it.

The DEA used its data collection extensively and in ways that the NSA is now prohibited from doing. Agents gathered the records without court approval, searched them more often in a day than the spy agency does in a year and automatically linked the numbers the agency gathered to large electronic collections of investigative reports, domestic call records accumulated by its agents and intelligence data from overseas.

The result was "a treasure trove of very important information on trafficking," former DEA administrator Thomas Constantine said in an interview.

The extent of that surveillance alarmed privacy advocates, who questioned its legality. "This was aimed squarely at Americans," said Mark Rumold, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "That's very significant from a constitutional perspective."

Holder halted the data collection in September 2013 amid the fallout from Snowden's revelations about other surveillance programs. In its place, current and former officials said the drug agency sends telecom companies daily subpoenas for international calling records involving only phone numbers that agents suspect are linked to the drug trade or other crimes - sometimes a thousand or more numbers a day.
The government hides surveillance programs just because people would freak out | Trevor Timm | Comment is free | The Guardian

MassPrivateI: DHS is influencing America's TV shows, movies, electric cars and much more!

Want to See Domestic Spyings Future? Follow the Drug War | WIRED
 

chthonic-anemos

bitchute.com/video/EvyOjOORbg5l/
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Spy agencies target mobile phones, app stores to implant spyware - Canada - CBC News
The so-called Five Eyes intelligence alliance - the spy group comprising Canada, the U.S., Britain, Australia and New Zealand - specifically sought ways to find and hijack data links to servers used by Google and Samsung's mobile app stores, according to the document obtained by Snowden.

smartphone spilling data snowden doc

An illustration from the top-secret Five Eyes document shows a smartphone spilling all sorts of data that the spy agencies could take advantage of.

Over the course of several workshops held in Canada and Australia in late 2011 and early 2012, a joint Five Eyes tradecraft team tried to find ways to implant spyware on smartphones by intercepting the transmissions sent when downloading or updating apps.
 

chthonic-anemos

bitchute.com/video/EvyOjOORbg5l/
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FBI admits Patriot Act snooping powers didnt crack any major terrorism cases - Washington Times
FBI agents can?t point to any major terrorism cases they?ve cracked thanks to the key snooping powers in the Patriot Act, the Justice Department?s inspector general said in a report Thursday that could complicate efforts to keep key parts of the law operating.

Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz said that between 2004 and 2009, the FBI tripled its use of bulk collection under Section 215 of the Patriot Act, which allows government agents to compel businesses to turn over records and documents, and increasingly scooped up records of Americans who had no ties to official terrorism investigations.

The FBI did finally come up with procedures to try to minimize the information it was gathering on nontargets, but it took far too long, Mr. Horowitz said in the 77-page report, which comes just as Congress is trying to decide whether to extend, rewrite or entirely nix Section 215.

Backers say the Patriot Act powers are critical and must be kept intact, particularly with the spread of the threat from terrorists. But opponents have doubted the efficacy of Section 215, particularly when it?s used to justify bulk data collection such as in the case of the National Security Agency?s phone metadata program, revealed in leaks from former government contractor Edward Snowden.

The new report adds ammunition to those opponents, with the inspector general concluding that no major cases have been broken by use of the Patriot Act?s records-snooping provisions.

?The agents we interviewed did not identify any major case developments that resulted from use of the records obtained in response to Section 215 orders,? the inspector general concluded ? though he said agents did view the material they gathered as ?valuable? in developing other leads or corroborating information.

The report said agents bumped their number of bulk-data requests under Section 215 from seven in 2004 to 21 in 2009 as a result of technological advances and legislative changes that the intelligence community believed expanded the reach of the law.

Increasingly, that meant scooping up information on those who weren?t targets of a terrorism investigation, Mr. Horowitz said. He said that while Section 215 authority allows the government to do that, the FBI needed more checks to make sure it was using the power properly.

?While the expanded scope of these requests can be important uses of Section 215 authority, we believe these expanded uses require continued significant oversight,? he concluded.

The report was an update to a previous study done in 2008 that urged the department to figure out ways to minimize the amount of data it was gathering on ordinary Americans even as it was targeting terrorists.

In Thursday?s report Mr. Horowitz said the administration finally came up with procedures ? five years later. He said it never should have taken that long but that he considers that issue solved.

The report was heavily redacted, and key details were deleted. The entire chart showing the number of Section 215 requests made from 2007 through 2009 was blacked out, as was the breakdown of what types of investigations they stemmed from: counterintelligence, counterterrorism, cyber or foreign intelligence investigations.

Section 215 of the Patriot Act is slated to expire at the end of this month. The House, in an overwhelming bipartisan vote, passed a bill to renew it but also to limit it so the government could no longer do bulk collection such as the NSA phone data program. That legislation is known as the USA Freedom Act.

But Senate Republican leaders have balked, insisting the NSA program and Section 215 should be kept intact as is.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who is leading the fight to protect the NSA program, is counting on his opponents not being able to muster the 60 votes needed to pass the bill, leaving them with the choice of either extending Section 215 or seeing all of the powers expire ? including those that would go after specific terrorist suspects. Mr. McConnell believes that, faced with that choice, enough of his colleagues will vote to extend all of the powers.

FBI Director James B. Comey asked Congress this week to make sure Section 215 and two other parts of the Patriot Act, also slated to expire at the end of the month, are preserved. Those other powers include the ability to target lone wolf actors and to switch wiretaps if suspects switch their phones.

As for Section 215, Mr. Comey said Congress should at least preserve the power to go after individuals? records.

?If we lose that authority, which I don?t think is controversial with folks, that is a big problem,? he said Wednesday at a forum at the Georgetown University Law Center.

But most of the Section 215 debate has revolved around bulk collection. Earlier this month a federal appeals court ruled that the Patriot Act does not envision the kind of phone program the NSA has been running, which gathers and stores five years? worth of records of the numbers, dates and durations of calls made in the U.S.

For anti-bulk surveillance advocates, Thursday?s report further undermines Section 215.

?This report adds to the mounting evidence that Section 215 has done little to protect Americans and should be put to rest,? said American Civil Liberties Union Staff Attorney Alex Abdo.

Bulk data collection creates false leads, ties up investigative resources and, essentially, undermines national security, said Stephen Kohn, an attorney at Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto, LLP and advocate for government whistleblowers. Also, increased FBI dependency on that bulk data collection indicates that the agency is lacking the appropriate resources for conducting successful counterterrorism operations, Mr. Kohn said.

?They have a large amount of agents who are working counterterrorism that have no human resources, no leads, no infiltrations, so they have nothing else to do,? he said. ?In other words, when they staffed up and made [counterterrorism] a major priority, these agents need to do something. And they?re doing what they know to do, and that?s electronic surveillance.?

But former FBI agents said opponents wanted to callously cripple one of the government?s investigative agencies by depriving it of a critical data collection tool at a time of new terror threats.

?ISIS is singing a siren song, calling people to their death to crash on the rocks ? and it?s the rocks that ISIS will take credit for,? said Ron Hosko, president of Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund and former assistant director of the FBI. ?They?re looking for those who are disaffected, disconnected and willing to commit murder. So if we?re willing to take away tools, OK, congressman, stand behind it [and] take the credit for putting the FBI in the dark.?
 

Malakriss

Golden Baronet of the Realm
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I at least hope the Russian and Chinese spies they are actually tracking instead of terrorists have quality taste in porn.