Privacy Groups Release Congressional Scorecard on NSA Spying

Dianne Feinstein gets an "F." So does John Boehner.

Patrick Leahy, Ron Wyden, and Justin Amash each earned an "A."

At least that's according to a new congressional scorecard from privacy and civil-liberties groups measuring how lawmakers stand on government spying, an issue that continues to slowly gain traction more than a year after Edward Snowden's leaks exposed classified bulk-data surveillance programs at the National Security Agency.

The scorecard, developed by reddit, the Sunlight Foundation, Demand Progress and others,grades lawmakers from "A" to "F," depending on their votes or sponsorship of certain pieces of recent surveillance legislation. Its release coincides with the liftoff of a Greenpeace blimp this morning that hovered above the NSA's data center in Utah and displayed the message "Illegal spying below."

The letter grades are meant to add clarity to a muddled reform process concerning the proper scope of government surveillance of phone and Internet data, said Rainey Reitman, activist director with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, one of the organizing groups.

"Congress has been struggling with what they're going to do about surveillance reform, and for the general public, this has been a very confusing debate," Reitman said. "Because, often there are going to be bills that imply they are going to help with surveillance issues when, in fact, they are fake reforms that would merely entrench the spying."

In the House, points were awarded for support of the Surveillance State Repeal Act, introduced last year by Rep. Rush Holt (who gets an "A"), and the original USA Freedom Act, which was authored by Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (also an "A") and sought to end the NSA's bulk collection of U.S. phone metadata.

But points were subtracted if a House member voted for the "watered-down" version of the Freedom Act, which passed the chamber 303-121 in May. Powerful tech companies such as Google and Facebook and privacy advocates dropped their support of that bill as eleventh-hour negotiations among House leadership, intelligence officials, and the White House altered the language of key sections of the bill.

In the Senate, points were awarded for sponsorship of the original USA Freedom Act, introduced by Sen. Patrick Leahy, and points were deducted for cosponsorship of Sen. Dianne Feinstein's FISA Improvements Act, which civil-liberties groups have routinely lambasted as codifying the current powers of the NSA and other intelligence agencies. Even Feinstein has acknowledged that her bill likely does not have a path forward, however.

Several high-profile senators remain unranked in the scorecard for not being "significantly involved" in the debate on NSA spying. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, and Republican Sens. Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, and Marco Rubioa trio of potential GOP presidential candidates in 2016are all listed with a question mark.

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Privacy Groups Release Congressional Scorecard on NSA Spying

German Official: U.S. Spying ‘Biggest Strain’ in Relations Since Iraq War

As U.S. and German officials meet this week to discuss privacy and security in the cyber realm, a German official is calling recent revelations of NSA spying on his country the biggest strain in bilateral relations with the U.S. since the controversy surrounding the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Actually, he said, its bigger than Iraq.

Iraq was a disagreement of a foreign policy, the official, who requested anonymity, told WIRED. This is a disagreement of a relationship between two allies.

The U.S. State Department did not respond to a request for comment.

Last year, the German news weekly Der Spiegel reported that the NSA had been eavesdropping on German Chancellor Angela Merkels mobile phone. The CIA and NSA reportedly maintained a listening station at the U.S. embassy in Berlin that it used to monitor German government communications.

The German government, outraged by the spying, has reportedly ended a contract with the U.S.-based telecom Verizon out of concern that the company might be cooperating with the NSA in its eavesdropping activities. The government has also sent lists of questions to the U.S. government inquiring about its surveillance against German citizens. But, according to Der Spiegel, although the NSA promised to send relevant documents in responsein an effort to re-establish transparency between the two governmentsit failed to do so.

The spying scandal has come at a particularly delicate time, as the U.S. is faced with mobilizing support to address issues like the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the rise of the militant group ISIS in Iraq. But the German official says the scandal has caused some to call into question existing perceptions about the legitimacy of U.S. interests in such matters. Even if governments agree with the U.S. position, its more difficult [for them] to defend that position to their electorates now, he says.

The German official notes that not all European governments share a dim view of the U.S. in the aftermath of the revelations. Countries like Germany with a recent history of authoritarianism are more sensitive to the surveillance issue than those with a longer history of democracy, he says, because they have a greater wariness of state institutions and control.

They distrust the state [in general] and they want to make sure that they control the state and not that the state controls them, he says. In all of Europe, with the exception of Belarus, you have solid democracies. But in some of those, you have relatively recent authoritarianism.

Another European official told WIRED the spying is likely to affect international commerce, particularly trade agreements, going forward. European countries that have other issues with regard to trade negotiations with the United States likely will use the spying as leverage to gain an upper hand in those negotiations, he says.

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German Official: U.S. Spying ‘Biggest Strain’ in Relations Since Iraq War

NSA spying protest takes to the skies in Utah

Greenpeace

A team of anti-surveillance activists from Greenpeace, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and the Tenth Amendment Center came together to protest the US government's mass surveillance programs on Friday by flying an airship over a National Security Agency data center in Utah.

Early this morning, the 135-foot-long thermal airship emblazoned with the words "NSA illegal spying below" flew above the massive data center. The pilots of the airship tweeted from the @EFF account, "Best place on earth to watch a sunrise: from an airship over the Utah NSA data center, with a big banner demanding an end to mass spying."

A link to StandAgainstSpying.org was also displayed on the side of the airship. The website was launched Friday by the three participating groups in conjunction with a broader coalition of grassroots organizations and Internet companies. According to Greenpeace, the site will grade members of Congress on their performance in privacy and security issues in relation to the sweeping powers of the NSA.

The EFF is representing 22 organizations, including Greenpeace, in a lawsuit against the NSA for violating the their First Amendment rights by illegally collecting call records. At the heart of the case, First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles v. NSA, is the NSA's bulk collection of phone records, a program the government legally justified under section 215 of the Patriot Act.

The NSA's bulk collection of phone "metadata," which includes numbers dialed and call duration, was revealed by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden last summer. In March, President Obama proposed legislation to reform the program, which would see phone companies hold onto records and require the NSA and other government agencies to obtain a court order to access records.

The House last month passed the Freedom Act to end the program, but the reform legislation continues to work its way through the Senate. In the meantime, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court last Thursday renewed an order allowing the NSA to continue its collection of phone records.

"Given that legislation has not yet been enacted, and given the importance of maintaining the capabilities of the Section 215 telephony metadata program, the government has sought a 90-day reauthorization of the existing program, as modified by the changes the President announced earlier this year," the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the Department of Justice said in a joint statement. "Consistent with prior declassification decisions, in light of the significant and continuing public interest in the telephony metadata collection program, the Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, has declassified the fact that the government's application to renew the program was approved yesterday by the FISC ."

The court order, which must be renewed every 90 days, expires on September 12.

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NSA spying protest takes to the skies in Utah

Germany Fires Verizon Over NSA Spying

Verizon Wireless retail store in Saugus, Massachusetts (Photo: Wikimedia Creative Commons / Anthony92931)Germany announced Thursday it is canceling its contract with Verizon Communications over concerns about the role of U.S. telecom corporations in National Security Agency spying.

The links revealed between foreign intelligence agencies and firms after the N.S.A. affair show that the German government needs a high level of security for its essential networks, declared Germany's Interior Ministry in a statement released Thursday.

The Ministry said it is engaging in a communications overhaul to strengthen privacy protections as part of the process of severing ties with Verizon.

The announcement follows revelations, made possible by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, that Germany is a prime target of NSA spying. This includes surveillance of German Chancellor Angela Merkels mobile phone communications, as well as a vast network of centers that secretly collect information across the country.

Yet, many have accused Germany of being complicit in NSA spying, in addition to being targeted by it.

The German government has refused to grant Snowden political asylum, despite his contribution to the public record about U.S. spying on Germany.

Verizon, which has provided services to many of Germany's governmental agencies since, will be replaced by Deutsche Telekom, which was formerly run by the German state.

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Germany Fires Verizon Over NSA Spying

Kristov Atlas: Anonymous Bitcoin, Cryptography and Online Safety – #203 – Video


Kristov Atlas: Anonymous Bitcoin, Cryptography and Online Safety - #203
Anonymous Bitcoin, Cryptography and Online Safety Pt. 1 An Interview with Kristov Atlas #203 Links: Gnostic Media: http://www.gnosticmedia.com Kristov Atlas is a network security and privacy researche...

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Kristov Atlas: Anonymous Bitcoin, Cryptography and Online Safety - #203 - Video

Fusing physics, cryptography to solve a nuclear inspection paradox

The solution to ridding nations of nuclear warheads may come from a simple puzzle involving marbles.

That, at least, is what lies at the core of a warhead verification protocol designed by a Princeton University team, published this week in the journal Nature.

Physicist Alexander Glaser, who has one foot in the public policy school and the other in the engineering faculty at Princeton, was puzzling over an apparent paradox: How can you authenticate something without revealing anything about it? After all, nobody wants a foreign inspector seeing how a warhead is made.

The standard answer thus far has been to design an electronic gizmo to mask the classified information but still spit out a yes/no answer. Such information screens, however, could be hacked.

Glaser happened to vent his frustration to the right people: mathematicians who tinkered with zero-knowledge proofs.

I said, the challenge is to do it without learning anything, and they said, what about what we call zero-knowledge proofs?

Glaser hadnt heard of such a thing. He reached out to Boaz Barak, a former Princeton associate professor working for MicrosoftResearch, and fellow Princeton plasma physicist Robert Goldston. The trio set out to take zero-knowledge proofs into the nuclear age.

Personally, I just find its a fascinating and counterintuitive statement, that I can prove something is true without revealing why something is true, said Glaser.

A classic zero-knowledge proof involves a secretive marble owner. He has two cups holding the same number of marbles, between 1 and 100, and wants to prove they are equal. But he doesnt want to pour out the marbles for counting. So, the secretive marble owner strikes a deal: Hell prepare two buckets, each holding 100 marbles minus the number of marbles he has in each cup, and then allow an inspector to randomly match an unseen cup and an unseen bucket.

The owner then pours the contents of the chosen cup into the chosen bucket, and hands over the bucket for counting. It should add up to 100. So should the other bucket with the other cup's contents.The inspector has verified what the marble hoarder claimed, but still does not know how many marbles he had.

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Fusing physics, cryptography to solve a nuclear inspection paradox