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Author Topic: The NSA Is Targeting Users of Privacy Services, Leaked Code Shows  (Read 893 times)
Wilikon (OP)
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July 04, 2014, 12:40:20 AM
 #1



The NSA Is Targeting Users of Privacy Services, Leaked Code Shows


If you use Tor or any of a number of other privacy services online or even visit their web sites to read about the services, there’s a good chance your IP address has been collected and stored by the NSA, according to top-secret source code for a program the NSA uses to conduct internet surveillance.

There’s also a good chance you’ve been tagged for simply reading news articles about these services published by Wired and other sites.

This is according to code, obtained and analyzed by journalists and others in Germany, which for the first time reveals the extent of some of the wide-spread tracking the NSA conducts on people using or interested in using privatizing tools and services—a list that includes journalists and their sources, human rights activists, political dissidents living under oppressive countries and many others who have various reasons for needing to shield their identity and their online activity.

The source code, for the NSA system known as XKeyscore, is used in the collection and analysis of internet traffic, and reveals that simply searching the web for privacy tools online is enough to get the NSA to label you an “extremist” and target your IP address for inclusion in its database.

But the NSA’s analysis isn’t limited to tracking metadata like IP addresses. The system also conducts deep-packet inspection of emails that users exchange with the Tor anonymizing service to obtain information that Tor conveys to users of so-called Tor “bridges.”

Legal experts say the widespread targeting of people engaged in constitutionally protected activity like visiting web sites and reading articles, raises questions about the legal authority the NSA is using to track users in this way.

“Under [the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act] there are numerous places where it says you shouldn’t be targeting people on the basis of activities protected by the First Amendment,” says Kurt Opsahl, deputy general counsel for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “I can’t see how this activity could have been properly authorized under FISA. This is suggesting then that they have come up with some other theory of authorizing this.”

The findings also contradict NSA longstanding claims that its surveillance targets only those suspected of engaging in activity that threatens national security.

“They say ‘We’re not doing indiscriminate searches,’ but this is indiscriminate,” Opsahl notes. “It’s saying that anyone who is looking for those various [services] are suspicious persons.”

He notes that the NSA actions are at clear odds with statements from former U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and others in the government about the importance of privacy services and tools to protect First Amendment freedoms.

“One hand of the govnerment is promoting tools for human rights advocates and political dissidents to be able to communicate and is championing that activity,” he says. “While another branch of the government is determining that that activity is suspicious and requires tracking. This may intimidate people from using these very important tools and have a chilling effect that could undermine the free expression of ideas throughout the world.”

The findings were uncovered and published by Norddeutscher Rundfunk and Westdeutscher Rundfunk—two public radio and TV broadcasting organizations in Germany. An English-language analysis of the findings, along with parts of the source code for the XKeyscore program—was also published by Jacob Appelbaum, a well-known American developer employed by the Tor Project, and two others in Germany who play significant roles in Tor.


http://www.wired.com/2014/07/nsa-targets-users-of-privacy-services/

kuroman
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July 04, 2014, 12:51:25 AM
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Well, this is obvious, they'll try to target people that use a privacy services as they are according to NSA logic are suspicious (you use such services to hide stuff) not out of concern because some organization is sniffing around and reaching foreign countries, and I'm sure that this bullshit will push more people to considerer privacy services to protect their rights
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July 04, 2014, 01:17:05 AM
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I have always suspected that the TOR bridges were a bad idea. They create a choke point for mass monitoring. Most TOR users wont use them though because TOR does not come pre-configured with bridges ( last time i checked ).

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July 04, 2014, 01:21:52 AM
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The NSA thinks Linux Journal is an “extremist forum”?


The National Security Agency’s attempts to keep track of people outside the US who use encryption and anonymization software from the Tor Project also apparently captured the traffic of anyone reading a wide range of articles on Linux Journal, according to documents published by the German public television broadcaster ARD and provided by security researchers (and Tor contributors) Jacob Appelbaum, Aaron Gibsom, and Leif Ryge. The documents—which include what appears to be search rules for the NSA’s XKeyscore Internet surveillance system, indicate that the NSA also gathered up data on visitors to articles on the Linux Journal website.
In the Das Erste article, Appelbaum et al wrote that the rule “records details about visits to a popular Internet journal for Linux operating system users called ‘The Linux Journal—the Original Magazine of the Linux Community’" and called it an "extremist forum."

Included in the code is the following block of instructions:



// START_DEFINITION

/*These variables define terms and websites relating to the TAILs (The Amnesic Incognito Live System) software program, a comsec mechanism advocated by extremists on extremist forums. */

$TAILS_terms=word('tails' or 'Amnesiac Incognito Live System') and word('linux' or ' USB ' or ' CD ' or 'secure desktop' or ' IRC ' or 'truecrypt' or ' tor ');

$TAILS_websites=('tails.boum.org/') or ('linuxjournal.com/content/linux*');

// END_DEFINITION


 
The pattern matches one particular article on Linux Journal, posted in August of 2011: “Linux Distro: Tails—You Can Never Be Too Paranoid.” It’s not clear from the document whether the NSA was referring to Linux Journal itself as an extremist forum. However, other rules targeted specific servers running Tor bridges and other anonymizing software, including servers in Germany, as well as individuals using Tor.

http://arstechnica.com/security/2014/07/the-nsa-thinks-linux-journal-is-an-extremist-forum/

taylortyler
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July 04, 2014, 03:51:41 AM
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It's safe to say that every person on this forum is on their deep investigation list.
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July 04, 2014, 05:44:54 AM
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It's safe to say that every person on this forum is on their deep investigation list.

Libertarians and Anarchist are probably quite high there indeed...

Too bad USA has so much international power, otherwise following all this would be great fun.

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July 04, 2014, 09:45:29 AM
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Quote
The source code, for the NSA system known as XKeyscore, is used in the collection and analysis of internet traffic, and reveals that simply searching the web for privacy tools online is enough to get the NSA to label you an “extremist” and target your IP address for inclusion in its database.

The NSA attempts to collect everyone's data for XKeyscore. XKeyscore can be used as a search engine. But they do have some problems with "connecting the dots", as in, linking the data from various sites/applications together.

Quote
Libertarians and Anarchist are probably quite high there indeed...

The forum also has many tech interested people, businessman and few others. Nevertheless, agents are watching the forum.. maybe they are even participating in signature advertising during work hours  Grin


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July 04, 2014, 06:23:52 PM
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ProXPN is one of the better anonymizing services out there and logs you out of the Netherlands. Something to check out.
InwardContour
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July 05, 2014, 03:30:45 AM
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Privacy services like TOR have been so widely reported by the MSM that almost everyone has likely read about and/or researched these kinds of services that this kind of database would be of little use.
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