NSA spying scandals continue | Dear Kitty. Some blog

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Tech company transparency reports reveal massive NSA spying

5 February 2014

Major US telecommunications companies released figures this week showing that the National Security Agency has requested data relating to tens of thousands of customer accounts in just the first half of last year. The release of the transparency reports was part of an agreement reached with the Obama administration allowing limited disclosures of information about the massive police-state spying apparatus.

The accounts spied on were targeted as part of the NSAs PRISM surveillance program, which has been in operation since 2007. Using PRISM, the spy agency obtains orders from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to require telecommunications companies to turn over information. PRISM came to the attention of the public as a result of documents provided by NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden.

Slides released by Snowden show that PRISM collects email, chat (voice and video), video, photos, stored data, file transfers, video conference data, notifications of target activity and online social networking details from a range of providers including Microsoft, Google, Yahoo, Facebook, PalTalk, YouTube, Skype, AOL, and Apple.

Yahoo said it turned over information on between 30,000 and 30,999 accounts between January and June 2013. Facebook reported 5,000-5,999 requests. Microsoft reported 15,000 to 15,999, and Google reported 9,000-9,999. The figures released by the company show a steady increase over the past several years.

These figures cover only a small aspect of the convoluted network of spy programs. The information released is subject to a six-month delay imposed by the government on all disclosures of data requests.

Despite claims to be increasing transparency, there is in fact very little information included in the reports aside from aggregate figures. The fact that the information reveals spying on the order of tens of thousandsas opposed to the hundreds of millions of records obtained through other programsis also aimed at downplaying the extent of the unconstitutional intrusion into the privacy of citizens and non-citizens alike.

Emma Woollacott, writing for Forbes, noted that the transparency reports do little to improve knowledge of just how much data is being accessed by the NSA. Theyve been described as a tech company PR stuntbut, in fact, they are far more of a PR coup for the government. Permission to release these figures means the government looks more open, a set of comparatively small numbers captures the headlines and attention is diverted away from other types of snooping.

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NSA spying scandals continue | Dear Kitty. Some blog

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