Wednesday, July 31, 2013

It's This Easy for the NSA to Spy on Your Entire Internet Life

It's This Easy for the NSA to Spy on Your Entire Internet Life

It's This Easy for the NSA to Spy on Your Entire Internet Life

Reuters
Rebecca Greenfield 10:51 AM ET
We already knew the NSA has potential access to most of the Internetting Americans do through PRISM and other programs, but the latest Edward Snowden leak reveals just how easy it is for the government to access and analyze a whole lot of information. Through a program called XKeyscore, analysts can easily sift through what the NSA calls "nearly everything a typical user does on the internet," per more documents and slides revealed to The Guardian's Glenn Greenwald. "The quantity of communications accessible through programs such as XKeyscore is staggeringly large," he adds.
And analyzing all of it is incredibly easy, too. With a simple e-mail query or selection from a pull-down menu, for example, the database can pull up more than just metadata, including the contents of a message. An analyst just has to fill out this form with a "query name" and a "justification":

Despite the field for a justification, the "request is not reviewed by a court or any NSA personnel before it is processed," says Greenwald. Then, this next screen pops up and "the analyst then selects which of those returned emails they want to read by opening them in NSA reading software," explains Greenwald.

Further slides reveal that the NSA can do this with all sorts of other communications, like Facebook chat, and presumably the other tech companies the government works with, like Microsoft, which owns Skype:

For these other communications, the NSA doesn't even need an e-mail address, but can search using other keywords and queries.
As with all of these leaks, the NSA alleges that it only uses these systems for "legitimate foreign intelligence targets," the agency said in a statement to The Guardian. If the NSA wants to surveil Americans it needs FISA court permission — unless, of course, those people have ever had contact with one of these "legitimate foreign intelligence targets" or "two or three hops" from those people. "The government inevitably sweeps up the communications of many Americans," said the ACLU's deputy legal director, Jameel Jaffer.
Legal or not, it's technically very easy for the government to do. Snowden said he could "wiretap anyone, from you or your accountant, to a federal judge or even the president, if I had a personal email." And despite that little "justification" box, his searches were rarely questioned, he said. "Even when we are, it's usually along the lines of: 'let's bulk up the justification.'"
Want to add to this story? Let us know in comments or send an email to the author at rgreenfield@theatlantic.com. You can share ideas for stories on the Open Wire.
 
end quote from:

It is better if you just assume that every time you make love, go to the bathroom or go on Facebook that there is a PERMANENT record of that somewhere or more likely Many Somewheres. IN thinking about life in this way now you are being more realistic than in thinking you actually have privacy about anything in your lives. However, once you start thinking this way and just accept it the way you accept mosquitoes, traffic on the freeway, alligators, Grizzly Bears and everything else we have to deal with in life you can survive it. It is when you are naive about all this that is when it can and will destroy your lives in regard to ever getting a job, in regard to ever getting into a college or having a career and in regard to staying alive worldwide. Being Forewarned is being forearmed for your survival in a world not of your own making. 

Also, maybe you and your friends might be able to change all this if you get together sometime in the future and decide to harness your votes and all your friends votes to change all this to something better.

If Grizzly bears or Raccoons were destroying your homes 100 or 200 years ago what would you do? Cry?

No comments: