Don’t Listen To Google And Facebook: The Public-Private Surveillance Partnership Is Still Going Strong
And real corporate security is still impossible.
If you’ve been reading the news recently, you might think that corporate America is doing its best to thwart NSA surveillance.
Google just announced that it is encrypting Gmail when you access it from your computer or phone, and between data centers. Last week, Mark Zuckerberg personally called President Obama to complain about the NSA using Facebook as a means to hack computers, and Facebook's Chief Security Officer explained to reporters that the attack technique has not worked since last summer. Yahoo, Google, Microsoft, and others are now regularly publishing "transparency reports," listing approximately how many government data requests the companies have received and complied with.
On the government side, last week the NSA's General Counsel Rajesh De seemed to have thrown those companies under a bus by stating that—despite their denials—they knew all about the NSA's collection of data under both the PRISM program and some unnamed "upstream" collections on the communications links.
- Tags:
- Barak Obama
- Bullrun
- corporate security
- data mining
- Eric Schmidt
- Executive Order 12333
- Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)
- Gmail
- internet cryptography
- Lavabit
- Mark Zuckerberg
- Microsoft
- MUSCULAR
- National Security Agency (NSA)
- National Security Letters
- NSA PRISM
- NSA Surveillance
- Patriot Act of 2001
- QUANTUMHAND
- Rajesh De
- Skype
- South by Southwest (SXSW)
- Tailored Access Operations (TAO)
- Yahoo
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