From Spy to Spied On: The U.S. Complex Relationship with Tech and Espionage – Morning Brew

Sean Connery-era James Bond would envy the spying opportunities offered by modern technology, while other anonymizing tools would have saved Jason Bourne a lot of trouble. But before we get into this year's top snooping imbroglios, let's look back.

In the late 1900s, Crypto AG was a prolific supplier of industrial-grade encryption machines and cipher devices. The Swiss firm hawked its wares to governments for spies, diplomats, and political leaders in over 120 countries and was saying "crypto" before Satoshi was born.

Plot twist: In 1970, the CIA and West Germanys spy agency bought Crypto AG together, the WaPo revealed in a bonkers story Tuesday. They worked in cahoots until 1993, when the German intelligence agency sold its stake to the CIA.

Crypto AG customers ranged from Iranian mullahs to papal nuncios. During the firm's heyday, the Soviet Union and China suspected that something was rotten. They didn't buy from Crypto AG, weary about its Western links.

In what the CIA dubbed "the intelligence coup of the century," spooks in Langley eavesdropped on sensitive communications of Crypto AG customers. A former CIA and NSA senior official told the WaPo he had no regrets from the operation, codenamed "Thesaurus" and then "Rubicon."

The CIA and NSA didn't build backdoors into Crypto AG per se, but massaged the encryption algorithms to make decryption easier. As strong encryption became more commonplace in the 21 century, Crypto AG's influence faded. Rubicon's cloak-and-dagger run ended two years ago, when the CIA liquidated Crypto AG's assets. But as Edward Snowden knows, the U.S. still fields state-of-the-art spying tools.

The U.S. thinks Huawei is a modern version of Crypto AG operating in plain sight. U.S. officials say they have proof that since at least 2009, Huawei has been able to secretly access mobile network backdoors in its equipment around the world, the WSJ reported Wednesday.

Let's clear something up: Authorized employees of network operators and law enforcement can legally tap equipment and intercept communications, in accordance with host country laws. But manufacturers up the supply chain stream shouldn't have that capability.

Why now? Washington is losing its fight to firewall global 5G networks from Huawei gear. The Chinese company has essentially said put up or shut up, asking the U.S. repeatedly to reveal a smoking gun. Washington's latest claim could be those pocket aces.

With all this snooping, it's no wonder Facebook and Apple want to lock down their products with end-to-end encryption. "For all of human history, people have been able to communicate privately with each other...and we don't think that should go away in a modern society," WhatsApp boss Will Cathcart told the WSJ.

But these encryption measures, which the feds call the "going dark" problem, can obstruct investigations. Officials say uncrackable cryptographic measures provide cover for terrorists, pedophiles, and human trackers. So the government wants the ability to access backdoors in hardware, software, comms equipment, and networking gear.

Many tech companies, privacy advocates, and cryptographic experts say that access compromises security. They think if you build it (backdoors for good guys), they will come (bad guys wanting to exploit a vulnerability). Big Tech is also justifiably worried about surveillance dragnets from U.S. and foreign governments.

Spies gonna spy. The U.S. has spied on Germany, its former Crypto AG partner in crime. And the NSA has hacked Huawei, among many other targets.

But Washington frets that Huawei backdoors give China an unfair advantage in espionage. At the same time, it wants backdoors into U.S. tech firms for law enforcement. Confused? Me too. Tech companies too.

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From Spy to Spied On: The U.S. Complex Relationship with Tech and Espionage - Morning Brew

Roan @ the Gates traces the consequences of whistleblowing – Chicago Reader

"You're a traitor to me." Everything about Roan @ the Gates, the magnificent show by playwright Christina Telesca Gorman, directed by Lexi Saunders, hangs on the way Nat (Jasmine Bracey) chooses to inflect that line.

Nat speaks it to Roan (Brenda Barrie), a dissident NSA whistleblower and Nat's wife. Much like Edward Snowden, Roan makes a series of revelations about American intelligence so damning that she has to secure emergency asylum in Russia. Nat, marooned stateside, communicating with Roan over glitchy encrypted video calls, could be saying: "You're a traitor to mejust like the news, the feds, and everybody else says you are."

But she isn't saying it like that. Nat, a public interest lawyer, believes in Roan's cause and wants nothing more than to help out. Her love is clumsy, all-assertive. Bracey crafts her role into a many-sided study in what intimacy means: she's a believer in touch, in deep private understanding between souls. She knows, for instance, that Roan only cries to one song ("The Star-Spangled Banner"). But Roan's selfless patriotismher "grand gesture," as Nat puts itcomes at the cost of shutting Nat out completely. Having never agreed to be anyone's sacrifice to the public good, Nat stakes everything on her refusal to let Roan's heroism drown out her hurt. "You're a traitor," she announces, fully aware of how self-righteous it sounds, "to me."

This American Blues Theater production thrives in that hopelessly messy space between public and private responsibility, and should be seen by anyone who's ever been trapped there, as we all have.v

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Roan @ the Gates traces the consequences of whistleblowing - Chicago Reader

2014 Bloomberg Hoped the NSA Was Reading Every Email – The Intercept

In October 2014, on a stage in San Francisco in front of a live audience, Katie Couric asked Mike Bloomberg whether he had ever sexted on Snapchat. The former New York City mayor, speaking alongside Snapchat co-founder Evan Spiegel at the Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit, joked that he couldnt answer the question. But the question prompted Bloomberg to describe his views on data collection, and a personal Richard Nixon lesson about record-keeping.

What followed was a lighthearted discussion of digital privacy, in which Bloomberg, nowa candidate in the Democratic presidential race,praised the National Security Agency and said he doesnt have a problem with apps selling users personal data, as long as consumers understand what is happening.

Look, if you dont want it to be in the public domain, dont take that picture, dont write it down. In this day and age, youve got to be pretty naive to believe that the NSA isnt listening to everything and reading every email, Bloomberg said. And incidentally, given how dangerous the world is, we should hope they are, because this is really serious, whats going on in the world.

Bloombergs comments in 2014 came more than a year after the first disclosures of documents by NSA contractor Edward Snowden, but before a federal appeals court ruled that the bulk collection of Americans phone records was illegal. Bloomberg did not describe any specific NSA program or form of data collection in detail, but the lighthearted conversation contains insights into his views on digital privacy.

Bloomberg mentioned Snowden by name, saying that because hackers or whistleblowers can obtain and leak records, he joked that he has a rule against keeping records. And when you write something, you take a picture and somebody leaks it, Bloomberg said. How many times does that have to happen before you realize its gonna happen again and it could happen to you? And so whether its Snowden or some hacker or something, its what I call the Richard Nixon lesson: Dont record it.

I think we are trading our privacy and personal freedoms for convenience and pleasure, Bloomberg continued, We always worry about the NSA I hate to come back to them knowing what were doing. Everything youre doing with every app is recorded, and those companies try to sell that information and profit from it, and then they say Oh, isnt it terrible that the NSA has been looking at you. Come on. Theyre doing the same thing themselves. The NSA at least can say, Were doing it to try to save everybodys lives. The other, theyre doing it because they want to make money. I dont have a problem with it, but I think you should understand whats happening.

The Bloomberg campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

In recent days, Bloomberg has come under fire for his dramatic expansion of the NYPDs stop and frisk policy. In audio unearthed from a 2015 speech, Bloomberg can be heard saying that 95 percent of murders, murderers, and murder victims were young male minorities, saying, You can just take the description, Xerox it, and pass it out to all the cops. He later tweeted that he apologized for taking too long to understand the impact of the policy and misleadingly said that he cut it back by 95 percent.

Bloombergs record on issues of civil liberties and surveillance is also coming under criticism. Bloomberg was elected mayor shortly after the September 11 attacks, and under his administration, New York City became a testing ground for surveillance and predictive policing technology in the name of counterterrorism. In the course of a few years, for example, the NYPD built a network of 3,000 smart surveillance cameras around downtown and midtown Manhattan informally known as the Ring of Steel, which could reportedly detect dropped bags within minutes.

In 2007, during a visit to London a city also known for ubiquitous surveillance cameras Bloomberg said, In this day and age, if you think that cameras arent watching you all the time, you are very naive. We live in a dangerous world, and people want to have security cameras.

During Bloombergs mayoral tenure, the NYPD used undercover informants to spy on a number of activist groups, including Occupy Wall Street. Most infamously, the NYPD ran a yearslong surveillance program of Muslims in the greater NYC area that involved undercover informants and other types of surveillance. A Pulitzer prize-winning series by the Associated Press revealed that the NYPDs Intelligence Division not only monitored numerous mosques, it also had a Demographics Unit that mapped ancestries of interest.

During his last year in office, Bloomberg even went so far as to suggest that American laws and interpretation of the Constitution had to change to accommodate counterterrorism. Following the Boston Marathon bombing in April 2013, and the revelation that the bombers may have intended to strikeNew York CitysTimes Square as well, Bloomberg gave a press conference where he advocated for a shift away from privacy concerns.

The people who are worried about privacy have a legitimate worry, Bloomberg said. But we live in a complex world where youre going to have to have a level of security greater than you did back in the olden days, if you will. And our laws and our interpretation of the Constitution, I think, have to change.

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2014 Bloomberg Hoped the NSA Was Reading Every Email - The Intercept

Truth and justice have become strangers in Turkey – Amnesty International

In a scene that could have been lifted from a Hollywood thriller, dozens of police raid a hotel on a picturesque island near Istanbul, seize computers and phones and bundle 10 people into a van.

They and another man arrested earlier are arrested and are charged with terrorism offences.

But these 11 have committed no crime. They are prominent human rights activists and include my colleagues dil Eser and Taner Kl who, at that time, were the director and chair of Amnesty International Turkey.

That was back in the summer of 2017.

On Wednesday, after many months in jail and two-and-a-half years before the courts, a judge will pronounce a verdict. If convicted, they face jail terms of up to 15 years.

In a scene that could have been lifted from a Hollywood thriller, dozens of police raid a hotel seize computers and phones and bundle 10 people into a van

The prosecution alleges that the gathering in the hotel where they were arrested had been a secret meeting to organize a Gezi-type uprising in order to foment chaos in the country. In reality, it was a human rights workshop and it was anything but secret. Indeed, one of the participants had even posted aphotoof the hotel on her Instagram account. Where are you staying? a friend posted beneath the photo. At the Ascot Hotel she replied below.

And yet, it is no coincidence that when human rights are undermined in a country, the people who defend them come under attack. At times of greater repression, the job of human rights activists becomes more vital: and also more dangerous.

The activists in the dock this week, were aware of the risks. They had seen how standing up for human rights was being increasingly criminalized. And they knew that defending other peoples freedoms in Turkey could ultimately cost them their own.

From the moment they were charged back in 2017, it was clear that this was a prosecution aimed at silencing them and sending a powerful message to the rest of civil society: we can silence you too.

And so their ordeal began.

When human rights are undermined in a country, the people who defend them come under attack. At times of greater repression, the job of human rights activists becomes more vital: and also more dangerous

Over the course of 10 trial hearings, every aspect of the prosecutors case against them was been comprehensively disproven. The terrorism allegations have been repeatedly and categorically refuted, including by the states own evidence. The prosecutions attempt to present legitimate human rights activities as unlawful acts has failed absymally. And yet, despite the absence of credible evidence to substantiate the absurd charges, the judicial farce has continued.

The eleven are not alone. Indeed, the situation is emblematic of the wave of repression that has gripped Turkey for more than three years. On Tuesday, another landmark verdict is expected in the case of prominent civil society figure Osman Kavala and 15 others accused of conspiring to overthrow the government. Kavala has already spent almost 28 months in prison on pre-trial detention.

Despite failing to produce a shred of evidence to support their claim, the prosecution has nevertheless sought life imprisonment for three of the 16, including Osman Kavala. Even the European Court of Human Rights ruling that he must be released immediately in December has not been enough to secure his freedom.

It has been almost four years since the failed coup attempt, and the crackdown that followed it shows no sign of abating. Turkeys prisons are full, the courthouses flooded with cases and fear has become the new norm. The government has launched a sustained assault on civil society, closing down more than 1,300 non-governmental organizations and 180 media outlets. Independent journalism has been all but obliterated. An astonishing 130,000 public service workers have been arbitrarily dismissed.

It is easy to be overwhelmed by these numbers, but the experiences of these 11 human rights defenders offers a glimpse into the magnitude of the suffering wrought by this crackdown. Taner Kl spent more than 14 months in prison before his release on bail, and eight of the other defendants were jailed for almost four months each. For the last two-and-a-half years the threat of lengthy prison sentences has hung over all of them.

When it was a hard thing to do, Amnesty stood up for me. Now its time for us to stand up for them

One thing that has given them strength is the support that they have received from around the world. More than two million people have joined the call for justice for the 11, including politicians and renowned actors (Ben Stiller, Whoopi Goldberg, Catherine Deneuve, etc.), musicians (Sting, Peter Gabriel, Anglique Kidjo, Annie Lennox, etc.) and artists (Ai Weiwei, Anish Kapoor, etc.). When it was a hard thing to do, Amnesty stood up for me. Now its time for us to stand up for them, said US whistleblower Edward Snowden in a message for Taner, dil and their co-defendants recorded in 2017.

Next week the eyes of the world will be on the Istanbul central court for what is an acid test for the Turkish justice system. It is hoped that this prolonged saga of injustice will be ended with the acquittal of the 11 human rights defenders. But in Turkey, where truth and justice have become strangers, we will have to wait and see.

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Truth and justice have become strangers in Turkey - Amnesty International

Will US Force Indias Hand On Huawei Ban During Trump Visit? – Inc42 Media

Ahead of Donald Trumps visit to India, US alleges Huawei has installed backdoors in all telecom equipment

The US is likely to put pressure on India to cut ties with Huawei as it has done with other trade allies

With India stuck in global negotiations over 5G and digital tax, will Trump use a ban on Huawei as a bargaining chip?

Things are not looking great for China at the moment the US and President Donald Trumps administration refuses to budge from its trade tariff hike, which has impacted major companies such as Huawei, Apple, Tesla and others, and now the Covid-19 or coronavirus threat has taken centre-stage. Amid all this, the US has thrown another bucket of allegations on Chinese electronics and networking giant Huawei to go with its ban in the US, just as Donald Trump prepares to visit India.

That the US administration is against Huawei is clear from the ban on Huawei in the consumer market as well as in software Huawei has had to break away from the Google-controlled Android and developed its own smartphone operating system in 2019 to sustain its smartphone business.

Cut to February 2020, US is saying that Huawei has used its global telecom networking contracts to install backdoors and spy on foreigners on behalf of the Chinese government.

If that tactic sounds familiar to anyone, thats because its straight out the US playbook. When Edward Snowden released his cache of documents pertaining to the spying and surveillance infrastructure controlled by the National Security Agency, USAs national-level intelligence agency, it mentioned Upstream and PRISM.

Huawei hit back with a long response pointing to the surveillance history of the US.

As evidenced by the Snowden leaks, the United States has been covertly accessing telecom networks worldwide, spying on other countries for quite some time, Huawei said in its statement.

It also referenced a recent Washington Post report on how the CIA bought a company called Crypto AG to spy on communications, which incidentally also spied on Indian telecom networks.

So we catch up to Donald Trumps visit. As can be expected, Its going to be big and bombastic. We all know the US President is going to inaugurate the worlds largest cricket stadium in Ahmedabad and will perhaps appreciate the hugeness of the thing as he has been known to do. We might even see a 3 am tweet in Hindi.

But behind closed doors, Trump is likely to be pushing hard for India to back off its friendly stance on Huawei. While the US has been managed to sway many allies including Australia towards its corner in the fight against Huawei, things have been pretty good for Huawei in India. Theres been no ban on Huawei phones or telecom participation in India. Huawei is working with major telcos on 5G trials, even though the 5G launch is a fair distance away. However, a report earlier this year suggested that the government may review its position in allowing Huawei to participate in 5G experiments.

India is the worlds fastest-growing smartphone market it will likely be the worlds largest 5G market in about a decade if the pace of mass 4G adoption (estimated to be over 600 Mn 4G subscribers in four years) is any indication. Huawei would not want to miss out on this market through a ban, after it has been already banned in many other countries.

The US state department has discussed Huawei security risks with India in the past and has tried to convince many other governments to also ban Huawei. The US state departments Morgan Ortagus had said that while 5G networks will play a crucial role in the coming times, the stakes are too high to allow Chinese companies, which are under the control of authoritarian regimes, to provide this technology. Ortagus added, All countries should adopt national security policies in order to prevent untrusted companies from misusing any part of their future 5G network plans.

If Donald Trump indeed wants to bait his voter base in the US with more manufacturing and technology growth domestically, a win in India over Huawei would be a big deal. Yes, one cannot forget that Trump would be up for re-election towards the end of this year. A big part of his pitch is US manufacturing and made-in-USA technology. While in terms of major telecom networking players that can compete with Huawei, the US has no real contenders, Qualcomm has expressed interest whereas Ericsson and Nokia are the other big players in this arena.

Will India bite Donald Trumps bait? Ultimately, it is nothing but a bait as India needs to win a few brownie points to pass some of its own plans stuck on the global negotiation table.

The Indian telecom standards body Telecommunications Standards Development Society, India (TSDSI) proposed a radio interface technology (RIT) to the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) as a new modification to the radio signal, which can enhance the signal transmission range of a base station. This suits Indias use-cases for rural connectivity and long-range transmission. Called Low Mobility Large Cell (LMLC), this tech could bring cheaper 5G access to the Indian market.

India wants this technology to be interoperable with global specifications set by the 3rd Generation Partnership Product, which is the basis of all chipsets, smartphones, base stations or modems manufactured. But within the 3GPP, some groups were not happy about TSDSIs new specification as it would involve revamping existing new 5G infrastructure.

The TSDSI is set to go back to the negotiation table in February after spending over two years doing the rounds and continuing to adapt its requirements. Will India push Trump to use the dominant position of the US in the telecom and 5G market to push through the TSDSI requirements in exchange for a Huawei ban?

Besides the 5G negotiations with the ITU, India is also at loggerheads with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) with its 134 member countries, over digital tax.

In the last meeting with the OECD in Paris, no consensus was found which could result in the delays in finalising the new digital tax structure on companies like Google, Netflix, Amazon, Facebook and Uber.

Among the issues raised by India in Paris were broadening the taxable scope of businesses, including the threshold for revenue generated globally as well as within the Indian jurisdiction in the taxable income and promoting the concept of a virtual company in case of no permanent establishment for certain tech giants within India.

In simpler words, India wants the whole business taxed and not just a single vertical, which is the case now, even though other verticals may be available in the form of products or services within India. This includes B2B and B2C versions of any product.

According to a Business Standard report, India also wanted residual profits distributed according to the value of users of each country and the demand for the tech product or service in the market.

While the OECD is a global organisation, the US is one of its 20 founding members. And for India, a bigger tax bill from the technology sector could be crucial in boosting its tax revenue and collections.

For the Narendra Modi government, another potential upside to ditching Huawei is the potential to develop an indigenous 5G technology network infrastructure, that can be geared towards Indias specific needs. But it needs investments, policy and technical expertise, which is lacking in the Indian context. Will Modi push Trump to back this project financially?

India has to think of another aspect as its data and tech economy has grown in the past half a decade so have incidents of cyberattacks, many of which have been known to be state-sponsored.

Of course, telecom infrastructure cannot grow in silos; it needs service providers as partners. In India, Airtel and Vodafone-Idea have partnered with Huawei, ZTE, Ericsson, and Nokia for 5G trials, while Reliance Jio has gone with Samsung. Among the private operators, Jio is best placed to capitalise on 5G due to its relatively better cash flow situation and the fact that Airtel and Vodafone-Idea are staring at a crippling tax bill. On the other hand, state-run Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited has signed a partnership with Nokia for 5G development.

Some might say that market leader Jio and the public sector company BSNL not siding with Huawei is a big indication of how things might play out for the Chinese telecom giant. Whether that means a ban on Huawei, we will find out in the next few days as Donald Trump becomes the centre of attention in India.

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Will US Force Indias Hand On Huawei Ban During Trump Visit? - Inc42 Media

Bill Barr Is Even Worse Than You Realize – The Nation

Attorney General William Barr in January. (Andrew Harnik / AP Photo)

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Attorney General William Barr promised he would do this. In a speech before the Federalist Society last November, Barr laid out his plans for a new, shockingly authoritarian form of governmentone he claimed wed actually been living under since the countrys founding. He recast the American Revolution as a desperate fight against parliamentary government and praised the framers for the miracle of creating a strong executive branch.Ad Policy

The Republicans in attendance, all members of a group which claims to honor the freedoms enshrined in our Constitution (unless youre black or a woman who desires medical care) did nothing. They didnt call the cops. They didnt call their congresspeople. They didnt rush home to their universities and raise the alarm about the despotic lunatic who had somehow cajoled his way into real legal power. They just sat there, politely clapping and probably daydreaming about new judges they could appoint. Everybody knew then what damage Barr was willing to do to the American rule of law, and nobody did anything to stop him.

Three months and one impeachment trial later, Barr is making good on his threats. While Donald Trump was declared king by the Republican Senate, its Barr who has been truly unleashed. Hes seemed to take acquittal as proof that his monarchal theory of executive power is right, or at the very least has correctly absorbed the information that there is no will in the Republican Party to stop him.

Since the end of impeachment, Barr has initiated a crackdown on sanctuary cities, filing three lawsuits trying to force the states to bow to Trumps xenophobia. Hes started the process of investigating Trumps political rivals (the presidents demand for an investigation into Hunter Biden, with the help of dirt dug up by Rudolph Giuliani, is now underway). And, over the past few days, he has intervened to try to spring Trumps cronies from punishments for crimes theyve already been convicted of.

Barr is the star of this newest low for the Trump regime, but the entire Republican Party, both inside and outside of government, owns this current assault on the rule of law. Every one of them. Including current darling Mitt Romney. They may furrow their brows and performatively despair, but every Republican is responsible for laying the infrastructure of bad faith and partisan hackery that is bringing the entire Department of Justice to its knees. Republicans crying about Barr now are the same ones who supported the legalized religious fanaticism of John Ashcroft, the legalized torture dreams of Alberto Gonzales, and the unwashed bigotry of Jeff Sessions. William Barr is not an outlier. He is the logical result of a Republican agenda decades in the making.Current Issue

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Republicans are gonna Republican. They will find a way to get to yes on any legal theory or assertion of power, anything at all, so long as the Federalist Society tells them that this is the one true way the founders intended for them to win. The Republicans have always used law and order merely as code for keeping women and minorities in check. So its not surprising to see a Republican administration discard the rule of law when they think doing so will advance their agenda. And nobody should be surprised that when Republicans lose power theyll go back to whining about the rules.

Republicans are to blame for this current abomination, but they had a lot of help. While Republicans have been working tirelessly to bring about one-party rule in this country, so-called institutionalists have stood by, clutched pearls, and myopically managed their little aisle of the store while the rest of the building burned. Now that their institutions are under attack, they wonder why theres nobody left to come to the rescue.

This week, four assistant US attorneys resigned, seemingly in protest of Barrs meddling in the Roger Stone prosecution. These people were veterans of the Robert Mueller investigation and dedicated public servants.

Their resignations are noted, but come too late in the game, with too little impact. The time to resign over William Barr was when William Barr was appointed. It was when Barr came into office on the wings of a 20-page memothe one in which he argued that the president of the United States could not be found guilty of obstruction of justicethat resignations might have shown real institutional resistance to this man. It was when Barr was allowed to put a stop to the Mueller investigation that the Mueller people should have spoken out. It was after the executive power speech in November that people of good faith and conscience should have publicly broken ranks with the man.

And youll note, its only the four guys who worked on this one Stone case who finally decided to quit rather than be part of the normalization of Barrs effort. There are around 5,300 assistant US Attorneys in this country, all under Barrs ultimate authority. Many of them understand that what Barr is doing is wrong. All of them could be employed with high-paying jobs at law firms, lobbying groups, or law schools by the time their next mortgage payment is due. En masse resignations from them might spark the public consciousness, or at least cripple the ability of their offices to do their work for a time.More from Mystal

But almost all of them are staying. Its the classic, useless, institutionalist response. Barr isnt directly threatening their work (today), so they shrug and stay and fiddle with their cases while the rest of the institution burns. Theyll tell themselves theyre the adults in the room. Theyll write books and give speeches (later) about all the really bad things they think theyre preventing from happening by staying. Oh, theyll take the lucrative job offer eventuallyputting kids through college is expensive, you knowjust not now, and not all at once, when their protest could mean something.

When Barr comes for one of their cases and undermines their work and Trump calls them out on Twitter, theyll find their courage. But not a moment before.

Its not just the lawyers. The Trump administration has exposed this kind of institutional rot throughout the government. Deep state, my ass. Our government is full of people who know better but choose to normalize this authoritarian regime.

It would be one thing if the people who stayed understood themselves to be saboteursdouble agents working behind the lines to actively destroy the regime at great personal risk.

But theyre not. And we know theyre not. We know because we havent seen any of the documents. Trumps tax returns remain a secret; Trumps conversations are apparently not recorded; Trumps internal machinations are never released unless Adam Schiff subpoenas them, and only then if the guy who has the texts isnt writing a book. Nobody wants to be the next Edward Snowden. Very few people even want to be Lt. Col. Alexander Vindmanespecially now.Barr Files

Opposition is what happens when you are willing to fight for something. Resistance is what happens when you are willing to die for something. Trump has faced near-constant opposition, but he has yet to face true resistance. The Republicans are complicit, the institutions are weak, and the Democrats we keep waiting for a savior (Barack! Bernie! Bloomberg!) who will swoop in and fix everything.

Barr knows this. He knows the only pushback hell receive will take the form of bitching and moaning. He knows the very institution he attacks will roll over for him. He knows that whenever his tenure is up, there will be a car waiting for him to take him to Fox News, not to jail.

Barr is happening because we let him happen. He is fueled by our slacktivism. I dont know how many thousands of protesters would have to demonstrate for how many weeks to grind the Justice Department to a halt and force Barr to resign and flee into exile in Ukraine. But I know our country is too decadent and weak to do that.

Barr knows it too.

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Bill Barr Is Even Worse Than You Realize - The Nation

Whatever happened to Edward Snowden? – Grunge.com

While working for the CIA and NSA, Snowden learned firsthand that Uncle Sam is scarily adept at tracking people. So when he stole somewhere between 200,000 and 1.7 million NSA documents, leaked them to journalists, admitted that he did it, and even showed his face on camera, it must have seemed inevitable that the U.S. would hunt him down like a high-tech bloodhound and throw him in prison for decades. Yet somehow Snowden outfoxed what's possibly the most advanced surveillance apparatus on the planet and flew to Russia before authorities could catch him. What's more, for three years almost no one knew how he did it.

The story of Snowden's escape starts in Hong Kong, where he shared highly classified information with the Washington Post's Barton Gellman, the Guardian's Glenn Greenwald, and filmmaker Laura Poitras. As Vice detailed, he initially stayed at a hotel, but once he turned himself into a walking bull's-eye, he needed to split like a frightened banana. Aided by a lawyer, he snuck into Hong Kong's slums and lived with refugees. According to Quartz, he shared a bedroom with two people and survived on a diet of McDonald's, cakes, and other junk food. After 12 days he was whisked away to Russia. Unfortunately for the refugees who helped Snowden, they've reportedly faced persecution by agencies meant to protect them.

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Whatever happened to Edward Snowden? - Grunge.com

As Vault 7 trial begins, Joshua Schulte’s attorneys will argue he’s a whistleblower – CyberScoop

Written by Jeff Stone Feb 3, 2020 | CYBERSCOOP

Nearly three years after WikiLeaks began publishing secret CIA hacking tools, the legal team for the former agency employee who allegedly stole those files will try to convince a jury he did so in order to reveal the governments methods for breaking into widely used consumer technology.

Based on the evidence, it will shape up to be a difficult argument.And thats before you consider the current environment, in which the U.S. justice system has taken a hard-line approach to those who go public with classified information.

Its also a fresh strategy for the defense. The U.S. has charged former CIA software engineer Joshua Schulte with transmitting files detailing the agencys arsenal of hacking tools, but until now his lawyers have given no indication that he acted out of conscience. Government prosecutors, meanwhile, will introduce evidence starting Monday that Schulte, now 31, was motivated by nothing more than revenge for what he perceived to be mistreatment by a colleague and management at the agency.

Unlike former U.S. National Security agency contractor Edward Snowden, who leaked details about NSA surveillance programs after complaining internally, Schulte has not demonstrated that he actually had any ethical concerns with the CIAs work. Government employees who follow the proper procedure for filing complaints can still be prosecuted if they go public with classified information. But pointing to a documented history of moral concerns could help a defendant portray themselves as a whistleblower motivated by his sense of morality, said Bradley Moss, an attorney specializing in national security whistleblowing at the Washington law firm Mark Zaid P.C.

During more than a year of pre-trial wrangling, Schultes defense team has given no indication that he allegedly provided CIA hacking tools to WikiLeaks for any reason other than that he did not get along with his boss.

Theyre throwing st at the wall, Moss said.

While much of the governments evidence hasnt been revealed, a series of courtroom maneuvers and legal filings have provided a glimpse into the case prosecutors will present when the trial begins.

As a CIA employee, Schulte is accused of abusing his access to start stealing classified documents during the spring of 2016. The files ultimately would make their way to WikiLeaks, which spent much of 2017 publishing the Vault 7 files, one of the largest ever disclosures of classified intelligence community information.

Publication of documents detailing the governments ability to spy on mobile operating systems, web browsers, smart TVs and an array of other systems immediately exposed U.S. adversaries like Russia and China to American cyber-warfare strategies, allowing them to take defensive measures, and making it possible for common hackers to replicate nation-state activities against any targets they chose.

The disclosure also came amid a digital arms race between nations as the U.S. government realized that hackers tied to the Russian government had stolen emails from the Democratic National Committee, then used WikiLeaks to boost Donald Trumps candidacy. All the while, prosecutors have said, Joshua Schulte was leaving clues about his role in the breach.

Schulte began to have significant problems as a CIA employee during the summer of 2015, prosecutors wrote in a long court filing made public in November. He began feuding with an unnamed employee, who complained to superiors that Schulte behaved in an abusive manner, including regularly making racist remarks.

Then, in February 2016, prosecutors wrote, Schulte grew agitated with managements decision to hire a contractor to do some of the work Schulte had been assigned. He forced his way into a meeting between a CIA manager and the contractor to suggest the contractor might jeopardize the security of CIA tools and operations.

After the meeting, Schulte sent emails complaining about the situation, and he told others that he was going to cause problems because of it, including by filing a complaint with the CIAs Inspector General, the filing states.

At roughly the same time, though, Schultes problems with his unnamed co-worker escalated. The co-worker convinced CIA management to reassign Schultes work to another employee, at which point Schulte responded by claiming the employee had threatened him. Schulte then accused management of being indifferent toward his claim, while an investigation was ongoing.

During this time, prosecutors wrote, Schulte was moved to an intern desk, while his co-worker had been moved to a prestigious desk with a window.

Within weeks, according to the government, CIA higher-ups revoked Schultes administrative privileges, and he moved forward with a plan to steal hacking tools.

Schulte was first arrested in August 2017 for allegedly possessing and transmitting thousands of pictures and videos depicting child pornography. The Justice Department waited until June 2018 to charge him with the theft and disclosure of classified material. Then, in October 2018, prosecutors alleged Schulte also was using contraband cell phones from behind bars at Manhattans Metropolitan Correctional Center.

In notebooks discovered in Schultes cell, law enforcement officials say they found a diary where Schulte detailed plans to provide WikiLeaks with more information, and carry out a covert Information War against the government. The journals include Schultes description of his motive, intent preparation and planning for a leak, the government has argued, and seem to include the equivalent of a written confession. (Days before trial, Judge Paul Crotty ruled the government will be allowed to introduce key elements parts of the notebooks to the jury.)

Schultes attorneys has spent much of the past year arguing that prosecutors have not provided the defense team with sufficient evidence, that too much of the evidence is classified and taken issue with the idea that current CIA officials who might be called as witnesses would testify under pseudonyms. The defense recently argued that Schulte should not be tried under the Espionage Act, calling it unconstitutional, and that they have not had enough time to prepare for trial, despite multiple delays.

Few of these tactics have been successful. Judge Paul Crotty of the Southern District of New York dismissed challenges to the constitutionality of the Espionage Act, for example, and did not appear sympathetic during a recent hearing when attorney Sabrina Shroff said the defense, with less than two weeks before trial, had not had the opportunity to research potential witnesses.

Moving forward, Schultes lawyers appear to be arguing that he nothing more than a concerned citizen. Shroff recently asked the court whether potential jurors might have an opinion on language like whistleblower or leaker, given the national headlines in recent months.

The trial comes after a court in 2018 sentenced Reality Winner, a former NSA translator who pleaded guilty to leaking a classified government report on Russian hacking, to more than five years in prison. At 26 years old, Winner was the first person to be sentenced under the Espionage Act during the Trump administration, though the Obama Justice Department pursued a number of similar investigations.

A former senior official in the Department of Treasury pleaded guilty on Jan. 13 to conspiring to unlawfully disclosing financial transactions that included information about the Trump presidential campaigns dealings with Russia.

Its a hot topic lately, Shroff said during a recent pre-trial hearing.

In order to qualify as a whistleblower under federal law, said Bradley Moss, government employees must submit a formal complaint to the relevant inspector general, which under the right circumstances would forward the complaint to congressional intelligence committees. Even if a government worker goes through that process, then makes classified information public, they are still breaking the law, he added.

The way this trial is going is the same way Snowdens would be going if he came back to the U.S., said Moss. He would throw up a bunch of pretrial motions about the Espionage Act, and it would lose every time.

The goal of a whistleblower defense, even if it doesnt meet the definition under the law, would be to sway a jurors in favor of jury nullification, Moss added. Depending on the jurisdiction, jurors may think a defendant is guilty of a crime, but find them not guilty because of jurors moral objections to the law.

Youre just doing what you can do, Moss said of the technique.

Continue reading here:
As Vault 7 trial begins, Joshua Schulte's attorneys will argue he's a whistleblower - CyberScoop

COLUMN: Licensed journalism happened before. It was called the Editor’s Law – Pipeline News

On Feb. 2, I saw, in horror, how Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault said the federal government should license the news media.

The next day, I saw the enormous snap back from the media and opposition parties. PostMedia columnist Brian Lilley called it, one of the fastest reversals of government policy that Ive ever seen.

There was plenty of talk about how a licensed press could never be free, and how dare they consider this?

Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer had ones of the best lines, saying George Orwells 1984 was supposed to be a cautionary tale, not an instruction manual.

My thoughts on all this were a little different, and I didnt see a reference to it in any of the other commentary.

You see, this has been tried before.

It was called the Editors Law.

And it was enacted very soon after the National Socialist German Workers Party (Nazi) came to power in the 1930s in Germany. Indeed, they didnt waste any time enacting it, putting it in place Oct. 4, 1933. This was nine months, four days after Adolf Hitler was appointed chancellor. But dont worry, the Nazis set up the Dachau concentration camp, outlawed other parties and started burning books before they got around to regulating the media.

This is how the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum website described it: The Editors Law (Schriftleitergesetz) forbids non-Aryans to work in journalism.

The German Propaganda Ministry(through its Reich Press Chamber)assumed control over the Reich Association of the German Press, the guild which regulated entry into the profession. Under the new Editors Law, the association kept registries of racially pure editors and journalists, and excluded Jews and those married to Jews from the profession. Propaganda Ministry officials expected editors and journalists, who had to register with the Reich Press Chamber to work in the field, to follow mandates and specific instructions handed down by the ministry. In paragraph 14 of the law, the regime required editors to omit from publication anything calculated to weaken the strength of the Reich abroad or at home.

What words in those last two sentences ring like a clarion call, when considered against what the Canadian federal Liberal government was considering?

Replace Propaganda Ministry with CRTC or Heritage Ministry, for instance. Doesnt had to register equate getting a federal licence?

The morning of Feb. 3 I was covering court, and one of the lawyers made joking comments that they didnt want me covering their clients. I countered that what this barrister truly didnt want is the alternative, where there isnt a free press monitoring what happens in the court, to those very clients.

All of this is very eerie, as Ive just finished a book called How America Lost its Secrets: Edward Snowden, the Man and the Theft, telling the tale of Edward Snowden in a very critical manner. I also just went through Snowdens own book, Permanent Record, talking about his motivations and criticisms of the persistent surveillance state.

What happens when we combine all this together? Courts that arent monitored, but people who are, and a suggestion by a federal minister, no less, that the news media under the heel of some sort of federal licensure and regulation? Thats a lot to digest in 24 hours.

During a break time in the courtroom I pointed out that every phone in that room was likely monitoring everything that was being said. A few people seemed incredulous, at least until I told the tale of how, a while back, I had a Facebook ad show up on my phone, in the passenger seat of my wifes truck, advertising transmission fluid. This was not three minutes after I had told my wife that I needed to change the tranny fluid on my SUV.

We are being monitored in every way, shape and form, from the security video cameras present not just in businesses, but traffic signals and photo radar. People are purposely putting smart speakers throughout their homes, which is, in fact, continual surveillance.

What happens when this level of persistent surveillance is combined with a government that wants to limit free expression? When a government wants to, oh, I dont know, regulate the free press?

How free are we then?

What if the people who, in 1933, started licensing editors, had the surveillance tools available to corporations and governments now?

This is precisely the type of stuff Snowden wrote about. And Im not entirely a big fan of a guy who sold out his country (and ours, and every other allied nation of the U.S. who shares intelligence with them) to the Russians and likely the Communist Chinese, too.

This Heritage Minister should be sacked, with cause. Im not one who believes in cancel culture. But youre damned right I would cancel a future Joseph Goebbels.

Im still wondering when theyre going to come for me.

Brian Zinchuk is editor of Pipeline News. He can be reached at brian.zinchuk@sasktel.net

Originally posted here:
COLUMN: Licensed journalism happened before. It was called the Editor's Law - Pipeline News

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham introduces bill that threatens end-to-end encryption – World Socialist Web Site

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham introduces bill that threatens end-to-end encryption By Kevin Reed 8 February 2020

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham is circulating a discussion draft bill that would use the enforcement of laws against distribution of child sex abuse material (CSAM) as a means of shutting down end-to-end encryption services provided by the big tech companies.

The bill, which is also reportedly being worked on by Senator Richard Blumenthal (Democrat of Connecticut), would create a 15-member bipartisan National Commission on Child Exploitation Prevention that would be responsible for establishing the rules and overseeing the removal of CSAM content from the internet. The law would make the Attorney General the chairman of the commission and give him or her the authority to modify any of its recommendations.

Called the Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies (EARN IT) Act of 2019, the bill would make technology companies liable for state prosecution and civil lawsuits for child abuse and exploitation content unless they follow best practices outlined by the commission.

On January 30, Bloomberg published a draft of the bill noting, The draft bill from Graham, the South Carolina Republican who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, mounts a double attack against encrypted services such as Apple Inc.s iCloud and Facebook Inc.s WhatsApp chat. It jeopardizes technology companies immunity to lawsuits by victims for violating child exploitation and abuse statutes and it lowers the standard to bring such cases.

At the heart of the proposed law is an attack on what is known as Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act which protects providers of computing devices, apps and internet services from liability for content copied or posted by users onto their products. Companies that refuse to follow the commissions best practices will lose their Section 230 protections for any content deemed to violate the content rules set by the commission.

Although the draft bill does not specify any of the rules, it is transparently obvious that it would require law enforcement immediate and unfettered access to devices, communications and cloud accounts. As has been explained by technology experts, the bills references to law enforcement identifying, categorizing, and reporting material related to child exploitation or child sexual abuse would be impossible to do on devices and services with end-to-end encryption.

End-to-end encryption is the popular method used by the consumer technology corporations of protecting electronic communications and data stored on computer devices by using cryptographic keys to block eavesdropping, surveillance and interception of information. The use of end-to-end encryption by the public, corporations and other organizations has been on the rise since the exposures by Edward Snowden in 2013 that the US government was capturing and storing the mobile phone and email communications of the entire population in a massive and illegal electronic dragnet.

Companies such as Apple and Facebook have been deploying end-to-end encryption in their products by default for several years now. Apple has battled publicly with the Justice Department several times since 2014 over demands by the FBI for back-door access to the encrypted iPhones of mass shooters.

In the most recent of these incidents, the shooting at the naval base in Pensacola, Florida, on December 6, it emerged that Apple had actually begun to cave into the demands from Attorney General William Barr and President Donald Trump for law enforcement access and a backdoor to encrypted data and communications.

As reported by Reuters at the time, Apple did in fact turn over the shooters iCloud backups in the Pensacola case, and said it rejected the characterization that it has not provided substantive assistance. Behind the scenes, Apple has provided the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation with more sweeping help, not related to any specific probe by dropping plans to offer consumers the ability to fully encrypt their iCloud backups.

Clearly, Senator Graham, the US Justice Department and others are attempting to exploit public fears and concerns about child sexual abuse as a means of pushing through their agenda for the abolition of encryption that has been underway for five years. As Riana Pfefferkorn of the Center for Internet and Society at Stanford Law School explained, This bill is trying to convert your anger at Big Tech into law enforcements long-desired dream of banning strong encryption. It is a bait-and-switch. Dont fall for it.

Gizmodo, the technology and science site, wrote on January 31, It doesnt take a genius to see where this is going. The federal government, and especially the DOJ, have wanted tech companies to build surveillance backdoors into their end-to-end encrypted messaging services for years. They insist that they are only interested in preventing major crimes like terrorism or sex trafficking, but in reality, building those backdoors would create a convenient pipeline for domestic surveillance.

The technique of exploiting the public disorientation caused by terrorist violence and other criminality by the state to attack fundamental democratic rights has been employed increasingly by the political, law enforcement and national intelligence establishment since the events of September 9, 2001.

The provisions of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act were adopted in 1996 (also known as Title V of the Telecommunications Act of 1996) which state, No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider. This section of the 1996 legislation was, in part, a response to the growth of the internet and has been frequently referred to as a key to the flourishing of the World Wide Web and sometimes as The Twenty-Six Words That Created the Internet.

The intensifying assault on end-to-end encryption is part of the ongoing drive by the state to censor and regulate content on the internet. Democrats, in particular, have led the campaign against big tech with Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts and candidate for the partys 2020 presidential nomination, campaigning since March 2019 for a break up of the tech monopolies.

There has also been a steady campaign conducted by the New York Times, under the guise of the fight against so-called surveillance capitalism, to utilize the egregious privacy violations carried out by the tech monopolies to mobilize the public behind government censorship of online content. Significantly, none of these initiatives warn the public about the role of the state and military-intelligence apparatus in utilizing artificial intelligence and the communications infrastructure to spy on the entire population.

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Republican Senator Lindsey Graham introduces bill that threatens end-to-end encryption - World Socialist Web Site