Daily Archives: December 27, 2014

Julian Assange on Being Placed on NSA Manhunting List and Secret Targeting of WikiLeaks Supporters 1 – Video

Posted: December 27, 2014 at 7:52 pm


Julian Assange on Being Placed on NSA Manhunting List and Secret Targeting of WikiLeaks Supporters 1
You give get on this canalize info around warlike bomb such as bombers and shielded aircraft and chief traveling interest, personnel vehicles specified as tanks, stylish developments on naval...

By: Robin Roberts

Follow this link:
Julian Assange on Being Placed on NSA Manhunting List and Secret Targeting of WikiLeaks Supporters 1 - Video

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on Julian Assange on Being Placed on NSA Manhunting List and Secret Targeting of WikiLeaks Supporters 1 – Video

NSA employees spied on spouses, collected data on Americans – Video

Posted: at 7:52 pm


NSA employees spied on spouses, collected data on Americans
On Christmas Eve, the National Security Agency released a trove of documents detailing 12 years #39; worth of illegal activity by the spy agency. Included in the files are stories of employees...

By: RT America

More here:
NSA employees spied on spouses, collected data on Americans - Video

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on NSA employees spied on spouses, collected data on Americans – Video

NSA declassifies trove of documents

Posted: at 7:52 pm

In a separate 2013 document, the agency identified several instances where data was mishandled by unknown personnel. According to the entry, a file with "raw [signal intelligence] was improperly uploaded. Many of the breaches were attributed to lackadaisical data security, or unclear instructions that resulted in U.S. citizens accidentally having their privacy violated by the agency's acts.

In a lengthy preamble, the NSA took pains to state any monitoring of U.S. citizens was the result of "unintentional technical or human error."

The agency added that in those cases where a breach was intentional, "a thorough investigation is completed, the results are reported to the IOB and the Department of Justice as required, and appropriate disciplinary or administrative action is taken."

Still, the disclosures are unlikely to alleviate concerns about civil liberties that have reached a boil since last year, when NSA contractor Edward Snowden exposed a sprawling network of classified surveillance activities.

Read MoreSnowden a 'traitor': Andreessen

Snowden's whistleblowing stoked a debate over government intelligence gathering and information privacy.

Read the rest here:
NSA declassifies trove of documents

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on NSA declassifies trove of documents

NSA Christmas gift: 12 yrs of surveillance data

Posted: at 7:52 pm

In a separate 2013 document, the agency identified several instances where data was mishandled by unknown personnel. According to the entry, a file with "raw [signal intelligence] was improperly uploaded. Many of the breaches were attributed to lackadaisical data security, or unclear instructions that resulted in U.S. citizens accidentally having their privacy violated by the agency's acts.

In a lengthy preamble, the NSA took pains to state any monitoring of U.S. citizens was the result of "unintentional technical or human error."

The agency added that in those cases where a breach was intentional, "a thorough investigation is completed, the results are reported to the IOB and the Department of Justice as required, and appropriate disciplinary or administrative action is taken."

Still, the disclosures are unlikely to alleviate concerns about civil liberties that have reached a boil since last year, when NSA contractor Edward Snowden exposed a sprawling network of classified surveillance activities.

Read MoreSnowden a 'traitor': Andreessen

Snowden's whistleblowing stoked a debate over government intelligence gathering and information privacy.

Read more from the original source:
NSA Christmas gift: 12 yrs of surveillance data

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on NSA Christmas gift: 12 yrs of surveillance data

Highlights From Newly Released NSA Oversight Reports Reveal Bumbling Ineptitude But No Evidence Of Systemic Abuse

Posted: at 7:52 pm

A few hours before Christmas Eve, the National Security Agency released more than a decades worth of damning reports on its website. The reports, which had been submitted by the NSA to the Presidents Intelligence Oversight Board from 2001 to 2013, purport to cover any activity that could be considered unlawful or contrary to government policy. They included incidents in which individual employees abused their security clearances to target a current or former romantic partner as well as dozens of breaches that resulted from overly broad database queries, along with a lack of rigor in determining whether a foreign intelligence target had entered the United States or held US citizenship or permanent resident status. There were also numerous breaches related to poor data security.

In the documents, which were released in response to a FOIA lawsuit brought by the ACLU, NSA analysts are revealed to be all-too-human bumblers, mistakenly searching on their own information, improperly using colleagues credentials, sending highly classified information to the wrong printer, and mistyping email addresses.

There is no evidence in the reports of systematic lawbreakingnot a surprise considering the reports author. Instead, the NSA attributes most of its lapses to unintentional human error or technical mistakes. In a handful of cases, the agency points out, investigations have led to discipline or administrative action. Even so, the reports raise serious questions about the NSAs ability to protect the vast amount of personal data that is vacuumed up by its surveillance apparatus.

Courtesy: Cory Grenier

I became interested in the NSA spying program almost a decade ago when I learned about a large order AT&T had placed for Narus Semantic Traffic Analyzers. The equipment made it possible to inspect Internet traffic in real time, which made it a great tool for spying. A source had told me that the analyzers had been deployed in secret rooms around the country on behalf of the NSA. I looked into the story, but ultimately my editors chose not to pursue it. Even if I could prove it, they werent sure anyone would be interested in the specific details of how telecoms like AT&T were cooperating with the NSA. It was an era of limited newsroom resources, and we had other stories to pursue.

There was also a key question that I wasnt sure I could answer even if I confirmed my tip. Had any Americans been hurt by NSA spying? This is a concern that comes up again and again. Its raised by judges presiding over lawsuits brought by public advocates and civil libertarians. The lack of an affirmative answer is used to justify ongoing surveillance.

Yet, we still dont know if any individual has been hurt or what potential exists for someone to be hurt in the future. A lot depends on what the NSA does with information it collects on those it refers to as US Persons, or USPs, and most of that information is withheld from the public. The NSA claims it takes great pains to comply with the U.S. Constitution, as well as U.S. laws and regulations. The Christmas Eve reports are interesting because they showed where the agency, in its own opinion, has fallen short.

The agencys reports, which emphasize incidents in which US persons were improperly targeted, dont appear at first to correlate with a cache of 160,000 intercepted communications that the Washington Post obtained via Edward Snowden. The Post reporters claimed ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targeted foreigners in the communications intercepted by theNational Security Agency. The story, published in July, raised new questions about the collateral harm to privacy from NSA surveillance.

Here is the original post:
Highlights From Newly Released NSA Oversight Reports Reveal Bumbling Ineptitude But No Evidence Of Systemic Abuse

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on Highlights From Newly Released NSA Oversight Reports Reveal Bumbling Ineptitude But No Evidence Of Systemic Abuse

NSA has been spying on Americans, new documents reveal

Posted: at 7:52 pm

After something of a disastrous 2014 as far as public relations goes, the NSA chose Christmas Eve to release a pile of incriminating reports forced out into the open by a Freedom of Information request from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). The heavily redacted documents reveal evidence of illegal surveillance and staff errors, and the National Security Agency itself admits that analysts deliberately ignored restrictions on their authority to spy on Americans multiple times in the past decade.

The ACLU say the released reports show the potential dangers of the NSAs surveillance policies and the ease with which data can be misused. The government conducts sweeping surveillance under this authority surveillance that increasingly puts Americans data in the hands of the NSA, Patrick C. Toomey, staff attorney with the ACLUs National Security Project, told Bloomberg. Despite that fact, this spying is conducted almost entirely in secret and without legislative or judicial oversight.

Related:NSAs Auroragold program spies on carriers to break into cell networks

The ACLU is calling for greater oversight for all three branches of government, originally filing the suit to bring to light the implications of an intelligence gathering executive order first issued by President Ronald Reagan in 1981. Since then, it has undergone a variety of modifications, and gives the NSA the ability to gather information about U.S. citizens as a consequence of overseas data monitoring. By law, the agency cannot deliberately intercept messages from Americans, but these messages are often hauled in together with communications captured outside the country

For the NSAs part, it says that any data it shouldnt have is deleted as soon as its spotted. In its executive summary, the agency goes on to say that where illegal spying occurred it was largely due to a mistake on the part of one of its analysts rather than deliberate rule-breaking: The vast majority of compliance incidents involve unintentional technical or human error, reads the summary. NSA goes to great lengths to ensure compliance with the Constitution, laws and regulations.

One 2012 case, for example, shows an NSA analyst searching through her spouses personal telephone directory without his knowledge to obtain names and telephone numbers for targeting; that analyst has been advised to cease her activities, says the report. In another case an analyst mistakenly requested surveillance of himself rather than an individual identified through a foreign intelligence target report.

In another incident from 2012 an analyst ordered surveillance on a U.S. organization that he wasnt authorized to carry out. The analyst incorrectly believed that he was authorized to query [the data] due to a potential threat, reads the report, though nothing came of the surveillance. Any potential violations of NSA regulations are required to be reported to an oversight board as well as the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and its reports to the latter office from 2001 to 2013 that have now been made public.

Excerpt from:
NSA has been spying on Americans, new documents reveal

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on NSA has been spying on Americans, new documents reveal

NSA, GCHQ spied on WikiLeaks, says Julian Assange

Posted: at 7:52 pm

"The NSA and its UK accomplices show no respect for the rule of law": Julian Assange. Photo: AFP

Britain's intelligence-gathering agency spied on people who contacted WikiLeaks, the whistleblowing website's founder Julian Assange claims.

Assange says new documents reveal the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) was engaged in "hostile monitoring" of the publisher's website.

Information from national security whistleblower Edward Snowden detailed the spying efforts against WikiLeaks undertaken by GCHQ and the US National Security Agency (NSA), he said.

A document dated 2012 revealed GCHQ spied on WikiLeaks and its readers, said Assange, who has been living at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London since the summer of 2012 for fear of being extradited to the US.

Advertisement

"WikiLeaks strongly condemns the reckless and unlawful behaviour of the National Security Agency," Assange said. "We call on the Obama administration to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the extent of the NSA's criminal activity against the media including WikiLeaks and its extended network.

"News that the NSA planned these operations at the level of its Office of the General Counsel is especially troubling. No less concerning are revelations that the US government deployed 'elements of state power' to pressure European nations into abusing their own legal systems, and that the British spy agency GCHQ is engaged in extensive hostile monitoring of a popular publisher's website and its readers.

"The NSA and its UK accomplices show no respect for the rule of law."

WikiLeaks said it was surprised at the "sweeping" scale of the monitoring as well as the "blatant" way information was gathered.

Read the original here:
NSA, GCHQ spied on WikiLeaks, says Julian Assange

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on NSA, GCHQ spied on WikiLeaks, says Julian Assange

Ho, ho, ho! NSA reports on its spying naughtiness

Posted: at 7:52 pm

In response to an ACLU lawsuit, the agency on Christmas Eve releases heavily redacted reports detailing privacy violations between 2001 and 2013.

Grassroots groups fly an airship over an NSA data center in June to protest its mass surveillance program. Greenpeace

The National Security Administration gave its critics a Christmas gift this year: a treasure trove of reports on the agency's spying wrongdoings.

Though hardly a gift of the heart -- the NSA released the heavily redacted reports Christmas Eve in response to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit from the ACLU -- the reports do detail privacy violations that took place amid an overly broad surveillance net cast after the attacks of September 11, 2001.

The quarterly and annual reports, filed with the president's Intelligence Oversight Board, cover NSA activities from 2001 to 2013. They cite examples of information on Americans being emailed to unauthorized recipients, stored in unsecured computers and retained after it was supposed to be destroyed, according to Bloomberg, which first noticed the reports as others awaited Santa's arrival.

The NSA maintains that the majority of the compliance incidents "involve unintentional technical or human error" and that in the "very few cases" involving intentional misuse, a thorough investigation was completed and reported, and appropriate disciplinary action was taken.

"By emphasizing accountability across all levels of the enterprise, and transparently reporting errors and violations to outside oversight authorities, NSA protects privacy and civil liberties while safeguarding the nation and our allies," the agency said in a statement.

In one example of intentional misuse, highlighted by Bloomberg, an analyst reported in 2012 that "during the past two or three years, she had searched her spouse's personal telephone directory without his knowledge to obtain names and telephone numbers for targeting." In a 2009 incident, a "US Army sergeant used an NSA system 'to target his wife,' also a soldier," according to The Wall Street Journal. That led to a reduction in his rank to specialist.

Much of the NSA's mission stems from a 1981 executive order that legalized the surveillance of foreigners living outside of the US. The agency's actions have come under increased scrutiny following the leak of documents in 2013 by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. Some of those pointed to alleged surveillance violations similar in nature to ones the NSA detailed in its Wednesday release.

Patrick Toomey, a staff attorney with the ACLU's National Security Project, said the new documents "shed more light on how these spying activities impact Americans, and how the NSA has misused the information it collects. They show an urgent need for greater oversight by all three branches of government."

Read more from the original source:
Ho, ho, ho! NSA reports on its spying naughtiness

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on Ho, ho, ho! NSA reports on its spying naughtiness

Man shot by police gets part of claim dismissed

Posted: at 7:52 pm

CHEYENNE - A federal judge earlier this month dismissed part of a claim filed by a local man who was shot by police in 2011.

The claim, filed in September, said Matthew Carabajal's Fourth Amendment protection from unreasonable seizures and excessive force protections were violated during the incident.

Carabajal's minor son, who was an infant in the car with him when shots were fired, also was named as a plaintiff.

The lawsuit names the city of Cheyenne and its police department as defendants along with officers Pat Johnson, Joshua Thornton, Matthew Colson and Michael Sutton in their individual capacities.

The defendants in October filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.

U.S. District Judge Scott Skavdahl granted part of the defendants' motion on Dec. 15 and denied the rest.

The judge dismissed without prejudice Carabajal's claim against the city, an alternative claim alleging 14th Amendment violations and all claims filed on behalf of his son.

Dismissing the claims without prejudice means they could be refiled at a later date.

The defense had argued that the claim as it related to Carabajal's son should be dismissed because he was not injured or deprived of any constitutionally protected right.

Carabajal's response to the motion to dismiss, filed last month, noted the alternative 14th Amendment claim, which was dismissed, was included in the lawsuit "for precautionary purposes only ... in case, for some reason, the court dismisses plaintiffs' Fourth Amendment claims."

Continued here:
Man shot by police gets part of claim dismissed

Posted in Fourth Amendment | Comments Off on Man shot by police gets part of claim dismissed

Sage Dynamics:a Second Amendment conversation – Video

Posted: at 7:52 pm


Sage Dynamics:a Second Amendment conversation
Stepping off the range, Sage #39;s Aaron Cowan discusses some of his views on the Second Amendment, Law Enforcement, training and the shooting community as a whole.

By: SageDynamics

More:
Sage Dynamics:a Second Amendment conversation - Video

Posted in Second Amendment | Comments Off on Sage Dynamics:a Second Amendment conversation – Video