Security News
Two news stories caught my attention this weekend. The first, “Wider Spying Fuels Aid Plan For Telecom Industry,” [NyTimes.com] is a great article describing the state of the NSA wiretapping investigation. Most of my readers will have heard of the secret room at AT&T’s San Franscisco offices, which was built to mirror ALL of the data going into and out of AT&T. But the reporter for this excellent article turns up a ton of new information.
The N.S.A.’s reliance on telecommunications companies is broader and deeper than ever before, according to government and industry officials, yet that alliance is strained by legal worries and the fear of public exposure.
To detect narcotics trafficking, for example, the government has been collecting the phone records of thousands of Americans and others inside the United States who call people in Latin America…. The program dates to the 1990s, according to several government officials, but it appears to have expanded in recent years.
Terror, the government’s (not very good) excuse for renegigng on the 4th amendments promises of personal security, has nothing to do with drug trafficking.
In addition the article points to some further previously unknown facets of the government’s spying. A dedicated fiber optic cable mirroring all of Verizon’s traffic appears to have been uncovered during lawsuit depositions.
[what the accusing Verizon employee saw] “was decisive evidence that within two weeks of taking office, the Bush administration was planning a comprehensive effort of spying on Americans’ phone usage.”
The same lawsuit accuses Verizon of setting up a dedicated fiber optic line from New Jersey to Quantico, Va., home to a large military base, allowing government officials to gain access to all communications flowing through the carrier’s operations center. In an interview, a former consultant who worked on internal security said he had tried numerous times to install safeguards on the line to prevent hacking on the system, as he was doing for other lines at the operations center, but his ideas were rejected by a senior security official.
It doesnt say why his safeguards were rejected, but if the government is viewing all our telecommunications, that is bad enough - if they are negligently making that information available hackers, that is an even grater cause of concerns.
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