Death of Privacy: Lync in PRISM, Intel Dodges Questions on Back Doors, WhatsApp Joins PRISM, Censorship/Surveillance
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2014-02-21 15:49:17 UTC
- Modified: 2014-02-21 15:49:17 UTC
Summary: News about mass surveillance and privacy, collected over the past 24 hours
Wintelligence
-
Microsoft's Lync communications platform gathers enough readily analyzable data to let corporations spy on their employees like the NSA can on U.S. citizens, and it's based on the same type of information - call details.
-
One day last summer – a short while after Edward Snowden revealed himself as the source behind the momentous leak of classified intelligence – the Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger got in touch. Would I write a book on Snowden's story and that of the journalists working with him? The answer, of course, was yes. At this point Snowden was still in Hong Kong. He was in hiding. He had leaked documents that revealed the US National Security Agency (NSA) and its British equivalent GCHQ were surveilling much of the planet.
[...]
By September the book was going well – 30,000 words done. A Christmas deadline loomed. I was writing a chapter on the NSA's close, and largely hidden, relationship with Silicon Valley. I wrote that Snowden's revelations had damaged US tech companies and their bottom line. Something odd happened. The paragraph I had just written began to self-delete. The cursor moved rapidly from the left, gobbling text. I watched my words vanish. When I tried to close my OpenOffice file the keyboard began flashing and bleeping.
-
One Redditer asked the Intel chief how the NSA revelations have impacted how Intel looks at hardware security, another asked for a response to questions of the security level of Intel processors. Krzanich issued no response to either question.
Lawsuits
-
The legal fight against National Security Agency surveillance is shaping up to be a titanic clash, with pugilistic litigants trading charges and countercharges of bad faith and misinformation.
-
A recent report that the National Security Agency spied on Mayer Brown LLP has stoked fears that client communications and data at a host of law firms may be vulnerable to prying eyes, leaving attorneys susceptible to lawsuits claiming they failed to take reasonable steps to protect sensitive information.
-
Call it the law of unintended consequences: Lawsuits brought forth by National Security Agency spying revelations may actually prompt the agency to expand its controversial program — at least in the short term.
PR
-
While many Americans are still reeling from several controversies surrounding the federal government, a top-ranking official stopped by the Sooner State to provide his view on some of the incidents.
FBI Director James Comey spoke with the media about some of the skepticism surrounding the government.
-
Seventeen years before Edward Snowden began releasing secret documents on U.S. electronic spying, an analyst with the National Security Agency foresaw just such a threat.
-
The original members of the NSA are seen below in this photograph from 1935. At the time the organisation was called the U.S. Army Signal Intelligence Service and was responsible for Army communications security.
Paranoia
-
AT&T this week released for the first time in the phone company’s 140-year history a rough accounting of how often the U.S. government secretly demands records on telephone customers. But to those who’ve been following the National Security Agency leaks, Ma Bell’s numbers come up short by more than 80 million spied-upon Americans.
AT&T’s transparency report counts 301,816 total requests for information — spread between subpoenas, court orders and search warrants — in 2013. That includes between 2,000 and 4,000 under the category “national security demands,” which collectively gathered information on about 39,000 to 42,000 different accounts.
There was a time when that number would have seemed high. Today, it’s suspiciously low, given the disclosures by whistleblower Edward Snowden about the NSA’s bulk metadata program. We now know that the secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court is ordering the major telecoms to provide the NSA a firehose of metadata covering every phone call that crosses their networks.
-
In 1999, after the Furby craze put tons of these talking toys beneath American Christmas trees, the NSA issued a memo banning them from its offices in Fort Meade. Because the commercials advertised Furbies as "learning" English over time, the folks in charge believed that Furbies contained an internal recording device, and they feared the toys would spill secrets in their cutesy voices. According to a 1999 BBC News article, anyone who came across a Furby on NSA premises was instructed to "contact their Staff Security Office for guidance."
Politics
-
Europe must ensure that fears of NSA-style government snooping do not disrupt its multi-stakeholder Internet governance model.
That's the verdict from this year's FTTH Conference in Stockholm, as Sweden's minister for information technology and energy, Anna-Karin Hatt, spoke candidly about the importance of securing a democratic future for the web.
"We are all stakeholders in the development of the Internet, with legitimate interests and points-of-view that we want to - and need to - be able to pursue and protect," she said.
Hatt added: "The only logical way to continue developing the Internet is to protect and develop the multi-stakeholder model of decision-making we already have – a model that has been tried and proven to work."
"The revelations of the capacities and activities of the NSA is not a reason to abandon our multi-stakeholder model."
-
Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., isn’t pleased with a bill pending in her state’s legislature that would prohibit state and local support for the National Security Agency.
The legislation was proposed Feb. 6 by eight Republicans in the 141-member Maryland House of Delegates and would deny the NSA “material support, participation or assistance in any form” from the state, its political subdivisions and companies with state contracts.
New PRISM Additions
Induced Censorship
-
For the last month, Venezuela has been caught up in widespread protests against its government. The Maduro administration has responded by cracking down on what it claims as being foreign interference online. As that social unrest has escalated, the state's censorship has widened: from the removal of television stations from cable networks, to the targeted blocking of social networking services, and the announcement of new government powers to censor and monitor online.
Recent Techrights' Posts
- Not a Security Expert If You Cannot Manage to Keep Online a Simple Two-User Mastodon Instance Somebody Else Built
- From uptime of ~99% to maybe 80%
- Microsoft Has All the Symptoms of a Dying Company (Mass Layoffs of the People Who Built the Company)
- the company's debt is going through the ceiling
- For Effective 'Finlandisation' (Not Digital Sovereignty) to Be Replaced by Autonomy Finland Needs to Think Like GNU (Software Freedom), Not Linux (Openwashing Source, Plus LLM Slop and Killswitches)
- What is 'Finlandisation'?
- IBM's Kyndryl in Trouble: Mass Layoffs, Payroll Problems, Buybacks (in Company Whose Debt is Almost Twice Its Total Value), and Soon $9 Per Share (Down Over 80%)
- Kyndryl is done. Stick a fork in it.
- ICYMI: GNU/Linux Did Not Start in Finland
- If we're honest/true to ourselves, we need to recognise history for what it is, not what some corporations (like GAFAM) want it to be
- Codecs and Software Patents - Part VII - Entering Phase II, the Battle Against Companies That Normalise Taxed (by Patents on Mathematics) Codecs
- In the next few part we'll deal with the impact on Free software, including the GNU Project
-
- LLM Slop is Not Reliable, Constitutes No Process of 'Thinking'; There's No Thought Process at All, No Grasp or Understanding, Let Alone Context
- Lies have become the "business model" [...] More people ought to talk about it and explain to other people what LLMs really are
- Focus is Important, Focus is Everything
- We are still running 6 multi-part series in tandem
- Guest Post on False Marketing and PR Blitzes by Anthropic
- A lot of people my age are just tired of the nonsense
- Links 15/05/2026: UK antitrust regulator is officially investigating Microsoft Office, Anthropic’s Fraudulent Lies About Mythoslop Don't Withstand Scrutiny
- Links for the day
- IBM is Googlebombing the Media With Fake Numbers to Promote Fake Technology
- a classic example of why much of today's media cannot be trusted (anymore)
- Up to 10,000 Microsoft Layoffs in a Couple of Months
- Many ways to skin a cat
- Truth Hurts. People Hurt by Truth Aren't Entitled to Compensation.
- Family members aren't exempt
- SLAPP Censorship - Part 77 Out of 200: They Never Knew How to Handle Women (Except to Attack Them)
- The case against us was really quite simple
- Update on Sirius Open Source in 2026 (When Your Former Employer Commits Crimes and Nobody is Held Accountable)
- I did not envision myself spending several years (even 4 years after leaving that company) challenging the system for tolerating and even covering up corruption
- The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XXIII - Cocaine Use at the EPO's Top-Level Management "Adds Up" and Worsens Things "Over Time"
- "cocaine use knocks the IQ down permanently a tiny bit with each use. Over time that adds up."
- Gemini Links 15/05/2026: Slop Fatigue and Banning LLM Use
- Links for the day
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Thursday, May 14, 2026
- IRC logs for Thursday, May 14, 2026
- Links 14/05/2026: Health Science, Cheeto Meets Pooh, and Facebook Staff Loathing the CEO
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 14/05/2026: Early Morning Practice and Number to Roman Numeral Converter
- Links for the day
- FSF Advertises the Father of Software Freedom Giving a Talk in Germany (a Digital Sovereignty Interest Hub, Sponsor of Free Software)
- Free Software vs malware and the need for reverse engineering
- Cybershow (UK) Shaping Up to be a Neat and Very Large Gemini Capsule
- If only more platforms did the same, plenty of energy would be spared, "old" machines would be totally suitable (even with 20 tabs open), as we'd focus on substance, not bells and whistles
- SLAPP Censorship - Part 76 Out of 200: The Problem With the United Kingdom Allowing Americans to File Lawsuits by Proxy (Relayed by "Hired Guns")
- Solicitors in UK warned not to act as ‘hired guns’ to silence critics of super-rich
- When Microsoft's LinkedIn Goes Offline All Your Fake Friends/Connections and Manufactured 'Status' Will be Gone
- Many people quit social control media because they recognise it for what it truly is
- Major Setback for IBM in the Courtroom, the Demolition of IBM is Proving Costly
- Kyndryl is a sign of how IBM ("mother ship") is run and where IBM is heading
- Links 14/05/2026: Willful Ignorance and Mass Layoffs at Microsoft
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 14/05/2026: Rewatching V for Vendetta, JPEG XL, and Platform Migrations
- Links for the day
- The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XXII - What the Science Says About Cocaine in the Workplace (EPO President, Mr. Campinos, Please Take Note)
- What the science says
- European Patent Office (EPO) President, Mr. Campinos, Ignoring Its Staff While Protecting His Friends
- the President is covering up cocaine use while ignoring his own workers
- Slop Cannot Replace Everybody (the Story of Perl and Universities)
- Quantity where abundance exists is without merit; quality is what people opt for as they have limited time and patience
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, May 13, 2026
- IRC logs for Wednesday, May 13, 2026
- Links 13/05/2026: Sudan War Enters Fourth Year and Strait of Hormuz Leaves Safe Passage a Gamble
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 13/05/2026: Useless Protests and Foofaraw on Geminispace
- Links for the day
- Mainstream Media: Microsoft Says No Layoffs. Microsoft: OK, There Are Layoffs.
- Where is Waggener Edstrom/Frank Shaw now?
- IBM's Kyndryl Down Almost 20% in 5 Days, IBM Down 35% in About 6 Months, Further 'Staff Reductions' at Red Hat (Problems Paying Salaries!)
- Will this year's festivities be Krishna's last?
- More Mass Layoffs at Microsoft, Only Weeks After the "Buyout" Nonsense (Glorified Severance to Highest-Paid American Staff)
- Next up it is LinkedIn
- IBM is in a Freefall, When Will IBM's CEO Fall on His Sword?
- Since he controls the Board, is anyone in a position to fire him?
- At GitLab, "AI" is "All India"
- It says "as much as 30%," but they also hire and it's clear what demography is targeted
- Verified Accounts of Microsoft Offering 'Retirement' (Layoffs) to People in Their 40s, Over Two Decades Earlier Than Retirement Age
- It's not even about performance, it's about age (or "cost" as well as location; they cheapen the labour)
- Links 13/05/2026: Slop Turns Into 2008-Style Subprime Bubble, Mass Layoffs at Starbucks
- Links for the day
- They Don't Like the Layoffs, So They Are Rebranding Them
- Layoffs are layoffs
- IBM Downgraded as the Shares Sink to New Lows
- The current strategy of IBM is financial engineering, wage reductions, and mass layoffs that the corporate media refuses to even write about
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Tuesday, May 12, 2026
- IRC logs for Tuesday, May 12, 2026
- Gemini Links 13/05/2026: TUIs and Internet Radio
- Links for the day
- How the European Patent Office Became a Crime and Corruption Hub, One of Europe's Biggest
- incomplete outline