Jump to content

PRISM, meet Tempora: the British spy agency’s program


SnakeMasteR

Recommended Posts

SnakeMasteR

PRISM, meet Tempora: the British spy agency’s program to capture calls,
Facebook messages, emails, and more

gchq008q2k6g.jpg

Why go to Internet companies like Facebook, Google, and Yahoo for their data if you can just intercept
it on the world’s network of fiber-optic cables?

That, apparently, is what British spy agency GCHQ is doing, according to new revelations from NSA
whistleblower Edward Snowden. According to documents revealed by Snowden to the Guardian, GCHQ
has tapped 200 of the world’s fibre optic cables, is surveilling more than 600 million “telephone events”
a day, can intercept emails, check Internet users’ access of websites, and can see what people are
posting on Facebook.

It’s called the Tempora program, and the British agency’s sharing the data with 850,000 NSA employees
and private contractors.

According to the latest revelations, Britain actually has greater capabilities than the U.S. spy agencies
and few legal constraints, making it a leader among the “five eyes” intelligence community of the U.S.,
Britain, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand that is processing more metadata than the NSA.

Snowden’s documents indicate that GCHQ has built up this capability over five years by signing secret
agreements with data transmission companies to attach probes to the trans-Atlantic cables where they
hit British soil. As is the case with PRISM in the U.S., the companies are forbidden by law to either
decline to participate or to reveal the spying to their customers or the general public.

Realistically, much of what GCHQ is reportedly intercepting must be difficult to understand and use.
Internet traffic, of course, can be encrypted, and the massive flood of data — theoretically up to 21
petabytes a day — would be impossible to decrypt in any real-world useful time frame.

But much data is sent in the clear, like metadata about who is calling who, and often web browsing data
about what sites you’re visiting. Your Facebook activity, as well, can be sent unencrypted over ordinary
HTTP (hypertext transfer protocol), although a quick visit to Facebook’s security settings can enable
secure browsing to encrypt your Facebook sessions.

The British spy agency’s legal justification for the Tempora program, like the NSA’s, lies in an
interpretation of law that no one knew at the time would provide for such wide-scale surveillance. For the
NSA, it was the Patriot Act. In GCHQ’s case, it was the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA),
passed in 2000 … well before big data and massive Internet surveillance became technically possible.

When asked how many people the Tempora program has targeted, the agency’s lawyers replied that it
would be impossible to say because “this would be an infinite list which we couldn’t manage.” In other
words, something you’ve done is likely in a British agency’s server somewhere.

Source

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 1
  • Views 1.4k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

And they are able to reconstruct the metadata? If so, thats not a very good thing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...