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From: Lynn Surgalla
[mailto:lasurg@...]
Sent: Thursday, July 09, 2009 2:00 PM
To: 'President Barack Obama'; ASKDOJ; 'OTP.InformationDesk@...';
ACLU Online; American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee; Subject: FW:
Big Brother is Watching You: Pervasive Surveillance Under Obama / NSA Used City
Police as Trackers / We-The-People want the criminals responsible for these
DOMESTIC WARCRIMES PROSECUTED NOW.
THANK YOU, Dannie !!!!!!!!!
From: Dannie Moore [mailto:dmoore113@...]
Sent: Wednesday, July 08, 2009 10:09 PM
Subject: Big Brother is Watching You: Pervasive Surveillance Under Obama
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http://http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14249
Big Brother is Watching You: Pervasive Surveillance Under Obama
The DHS-NSA-AT&T "Cybersecurity" Partnership
By Tom Burghardt
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Under the rubric of cybersecurity, the Obama administration is
moving forward with a Bush regime program to screen state computer traffic on
private-sector networks, including those connecting people to the Internet, The Washington Post revealed July 3.
That project, code-named "Einstein," may very well be related to
the much-larger, ongoing and highly illegal National Security Agency (NSA)
communications intercept program known as "Stellar Wind," disclosed in 2005 by The New York Times.
There are several components to Stellar Wind, one of which is a massive
data-mining project run by the agency. As USA
Today revealed in 2006, the "National Security
Agency has been secretly collecting the phone call records of tens of
millions of Americans, using data provided by AT&T, Verizon and
BellSouth."
Under the current program, Einstein will be tied directly into giant
NSA data bases that contain the trace signatures left behind by cyberattacks;
these immense electronic warehouses will be be fed by information streamed to
the agency by the nation's telecommunications providers.
AT&T, in partnership with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and
the NSA will spearhead the aggressive new initiative to detect malicious
attacks launched against government web sites--by continuing to monitor the
electronic communications of Americans.
This contradicts President Obama's pledge announcing his administration's
cybersecurity program on May 29. During White House remarks Obama said that
the government will not continue Bush-era surveillance practices or include
"monitoring private sector networks or Internet traffic."
Called the "flagship system" in the national security state's cyber
defense arsenal, The Wall
Street Journal reports that Einstein is "designed to
protect the U.S. government's computer networks from cyberspies." In
addition to cost overruns and mismanagement by outsourced contractors, the
system "is being stymied by technical limitations and privacy
concerns." According to the Journal,
Einstein is being developed in three stages:
Einstein 1: Monitors Internet traffic flowing in and out of
federal civilian networks. Detects abnormalities that might be cyber attacks.
Is unable to block attacks.
Einstein 2: In addition to looking for abnormalities, detects viruses and
other indicators of attacks based on signatures of known incidents, and
alerts analysts immediately. Also can't block attacks.
Einstein 3: Under development. Based on technology developed for a National
Security Agency program called Tutelage, it detects and deflects security
breaches. Its filtering technology can read the content of email and other
communications. (Siobhan Gorman, "Troubles Plague Cyberspy
Defense," The Wall
Street Journal, July 3, 2009)
As readers of Antifascist Calling are well aware, like other telecom grifters, AT&T
is a private-sector partner of NSA and continues to be a key player in the
agency's driftnet spying on Americans' electronic communications. In 2006,
AT&T whistleblower Mark Klein revealed in a sworn affidavit, that the firm's
Internet traffic that runs through fiber-optic cables at the company's Folsom
Street facility in San Francisco was routinely provided to the National
Security Agency.
Using a device known as a splitter, a complete copy of Internet traffic that
AT&T receives--email, web browsing requests and other electronic
communications sent by AT&T customers, was diverted onto a separate
fiber-optic cable connected to the company's SG-3 room, controlled by the
agency. Only personnel with NSA clearances--either working for, or on behalf
of the agency--have access to this room.
Klein and other critics of the program, including investigative journalist
James Bamford who reported in his book, The Shadow Factory,
believe that some 15-30 identical NSA-controlled rooms exist at AT&T
facilities scattered across the country.
Einstein: You Don't Have to Be a Genius to Know They're Lying
But what happens next, after the data is processed and catalogued
by the agency is little understood. Programs such as Einstein will provide
NSA with the ability to read and decipher the content of email messages, any and all messages in real-time.
While DHS claims that "the new program will scrutinize only data going
to or from government systems," the Post reports that a debate has been
sparked within the agency over "uncertainty about whether private data
can be shielded from unauthorized scrutiny, how much of a role NSA should
play and whether the agency's involvement in warrantless wiretapping during
George W. Bush's presidency would draw controversy."
A "Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) for EINSTEIN 2"
issued by DHS in May 2008, claims the system is interested in "malicious
activity" and not personally identifiable information flowing into
federal networks.
While DHS claims that "the risk associated with the use of this computer
network security intrusion detection system is actually lower than the risk
generated by using a commercially available intrusion detection system,"
this assertion is undercut when the agency states, "Internet users have
no expectation of privacy in the to/from address of their messages or the IP
addresses of the sites they visit."
When Einstein 3 is eventually rolled-out, Internet users similarly will
"have no expectation of privacy" when it comes to the content of their communications.
DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano told reporters, "we absolutely intend to
use the technical resources, the substantial ones, that NSA has."
Seeking to deflect criticism from civil libertarians, Napolitano claims
"they will be guided, led and in a sense directed by the people we have
at the Department of Homeland Security."
Despite protests to the contrary by securocrats, like other Bush and Obama
"cybersecurity" initiatives the Einstein program is a backdoor for
pervasive state surveillance. Government
Computer News reported in December 2008 that Marc
Rotenberg, the executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information
Center (EPIC) said that "the misuse or exposure of sensitive
data from such a program [Einstein] could undermine the security arguments
for surveillance."
And with Internet Service Providers routinely deploying deep packet
inspection tools to "siphon off requested traffic for law
enforcement," tools with the ability to "inspect and shape every
single packet--in real time--for nearly a million simultaneous
connections" as Ars
Technica reported, to assume that
ISPs will protect Americans' privacy rights from out-of-control state
agencies is a foolhardy supposition at best.
The latest version of the system will not be rolled-out for at least 18
months. But like the Stellar Wind driftnet surveillance program,
communications intercepted by Einstein 3 will be routed through a
"monitoring box" controlled by NSA and their civilian contractors.
Under a classified pilot program approved during the Bush
administration, NSA data and hardware would be used to protect the networks
of some civilian government agencies. Part of an initiative known as Einstein
3, the plan called for telecommunications companies to route the Internet
traffic of civilian agencies through a monitoring box that would search for
and block computer codes designed to penetrate or otherwise compromise
networks. (Ellen Nakashima, "Cybersecurity Plan to Involve NSA,
Telecoms," The
Washington Post, July 3, 2009)
However, investigative journalist Wayne Madsen reported last September "that the Bush
administration has authorized massive surveillance of the Internet using as
cover a cyber-security multi-billion dollar project called the 'Einstein'
program."
While some researchers (including this one) question Madsen's overreliance on
anonymous sources and undisclosed documents, in fairness it should be pointed
out that nine months before The New York Times described the NSA's secret e-mail collection
database known as Pinwale, Madsen had already identified and broken the
story. According to Madsen,
The classified technology being used for Einstein was developed
for the NSA in conducting signals intelligence (SIGINT) operations on
email networks in Russia. Code-named PINWHEEL, the NSA email surveillance
system targets Russian government, military, diplomatic, and commercial email
traffic and burrows into the text portions of the email to search for
particular words and phrases of interest to NSA eavesdroppers. According to
NSA documents obtained by WMR, there is an NSA system
code-named "PINWALE."
The DNI and NSA also plan to move Einstein into the private sector by
claiming the nation's critical infrastructure, by nature, overlaps into the
commercial sector. There are classified plans, already budgeted in so-called
"black" projects, to extend Einstein surveillance into the dot (.)
com, dot (.) edu, dot (.) int, and dot (.) org, as well as other Internet
domains. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff has budgeted $5.4
billion for Einstein in his department's FY2009 information technology
budget. However, this amount does not take into account the "black"
budgets for Einstein proliferation throughout the U.S. telecommunications
network contained in the budgets for NSA and DNI. (Wayne Madsen,
"'Einstein' replaces 'Big Brother' in Internet Surveillance," Online Journal, September 19,
2008)
A follow-up article published in February, identified the
ultra-spooky Booz Allen Hamilton firm as the developer of Pinwale, an illegal
program for the interception of text communications. According to Madsen,
"the system is linked to a number of meta-databases that contain e-mail,
faxes, and text messages of hundreds of millions of people around the world
and in the United States."
In other words both classified programs, Pinwale and Einstein, are sophisticated
electronic communications surveillance projects that most certainly will
train the agency's formidable intelligence assets on the American people
"using as cover a cyber-security multi-billion dollar project called the
'Einstein' program," as Madsen reported.
AT&T:
"No Comment"
An AT&T spokesman refused to comment on the proposals and is seeking
legal protection from the state that it will not be sued for privacy breaches
as a result of its participation in the new program. "Legal certification"
the Post reports, "has been held up for
several months as DHS prepares a contract."
NSA's involvement is critical proponents claim, because the agency has a
readily-accessible database of computer codes, or signatures "that have
been linked to cyberattacks or known adversaries. The NSA has compiled the
cache by, for example, electronically observing hackers trying to gain access
to U.S. military systems," the Post averred.
Calling NSA's cache "the secret sauce...it's the stuff they have that
the private sector doesn't," is what raises alarms for privacy and civil
liberties' advocates. Known as Tutelage, NSA's classified program can detect
and automatically decide how to deal with malicious intrusions, "to
block them or watch them closely to better assess the threat," according
to the Post. "The
database for the program would also contain feeds from commercial firms and
DHS's U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team, administration officials
said."
Jeff Mohan, AT&T's executive director for Einstein, was more forthcoming
earlier this year. He told Federal News Radio:
"With these services, we will provide a secure portal from the agency's infrastructure,
or Intranet to the public internet. There is a technical aspect, which is
routers, firewalls and that sort of thing that applies these security
capabilities across that portal and looks a Internet traffic that comes from
public Internet to Intranet and vice versa."
The "technical aspect" will also provide federal agencies the
ability to capture, sort, read and then store Americans' private
communications in huge data bases run by NSA.
Mohan said that AT&T will provide the state with "optional services
such as scanning e-mail and placing filters on agency networks to keep
malicious e-mail off the network as well as forensic and storage capabilities
also are available through MTIPS [Managed Trusted Internet Protocol
Services]."
In addition to AT&T, other private partners awarded contracts under the
General Services Administration's MTIPS which has a built-in "Einstein
enclave" include: Sprint, L3 Communications, Qwest, MCI, General
Dynamics and Verizon, according to multiple reports published by Federal Computer Week.
Claiming that the state is "looking for malicious content, not a love
note to someone with a dot-gov e-mail address," a former unnamed
"senior Bush administration official" told the Post "what we're interested in is
finding the code, the thing that will do the network harm, not reading the
e-mail itself."
Try selling that to the tens of millions of Americans
whose private communications have been illegally spied upon by the Bush and
Obama administrations or leftist dissidents singled-out for "special
handling" by the national security state's public-private surveillance
partnership!
An Electronic Spider's
Web
As the "global war on terror" morphs into an endless war on our
democratic rights, the NSA is expanding domestic operations by
"decentralizing its massive computer hubs," The Salt Lake Tribune revealed.
The agency "will build a 1-million-square-foot data center at Utah's
Camp Williams," the newspaper disclosed July 1. The new facility would
be NSA's third major data center. In 2007, the agency announced plans to
build a second data center in San Antonio, Texas after the Baltimore Sun reported
that NSA had "maxed out" the electric capacity of the Baltimore
area's power grid.
The San Antonio Current reported in December, that the NSA's Texas
Cryptology Center will cost "upwards of $130 million." The 470,000
square-foot-facility is adjacent to a similar center constructed by software
giant Microsoft. Investigative journalist James Bamford told the Current that under current law "NSA
could gain access to Microsoft's stored data without even a warrant, but
merely a fiber-optic cable."
A follow-up article by The Salt Lake Tribune reported that
the facility will cost upwards of $2 billion dollars and that funds have
already been appropriated by the Obama administration for NSA's new data
center and listening post.
The secretive agency released a statement Thursday acknowledging
the selection of Camp Williams as a site for the new center and describing it
as "a specialized facility that houses computer systems and supporting
equipment."
Budget documents provide a more detailed picture of the facility and its
mission. The supercomputers in the center will be part of the NSA's signal
intelligence program, which seeks to "gain a decisive information
advantage for the nation and our allies under all circumstances" according
to the documents. (Matthew D. LaPlante, "New NSA Center Unveiled in
Budget Documents," The
Salt Lake Tribune, July 2, 2009)
Not everyone is pleased with the announcement. Steve Erickson, the director
of the antiwar Citizens Education Project told the Tribune, "Finally, the
Patriot Act has a home."
While the total cost of rolling-out the Einstein 3 system is classified, The Wall Street Journal reports that "the price tag was
expected to exceed $2 billion." And as with other national security
state initiatives, it is the American people who are footing the bill for the
destruction of our democratic rights.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Subject: NSA Used City
Police as Trackers / We-The-People want the criminals responsible for these
DOMESTIC WARCRIMES PROSECUTED NOW.
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Thursday, July 09, 2009
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Published
on Friday, January 13, 2006 by the Baltimore Sun (Maryland)
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NSA Used City
Police as Trackers
Activists
monitored on way to Fort Meade war protest, agency memos show
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by
Douglas Birch
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The National Security Agency used law enforcement
agencies, including the Baltimore Police Department, to track members of
a city anti-war group as they prepared for protests outside the sprawling
Fort Meade facility, internal NSA documents show.
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Max J. Obuszewski, a peace activist, says protesters have been trying
to publicize the NSA documents since August 2004. (Sun photo by
Algerina Perna)
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The
target of the clandestine surveillance was the Baltimore Pledge of
Resistance, a group loosely affiliated with the local chapter of the
American Friends Service Committee, whose members include many veteran
city peace activists with a history of nonviolent civil disobedience.
Under various names, the activists have staged protests at the NSA campus
off the Baltimore-Washington Parkway every year since 1996.
Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, members of the group say, their
protests have come under increasing scrutiny by federal and local law
enforcement officials working on behalf of the NSA.
An internal NSA e-mail, posted on two Internet sites this week, shows how
operatives with the "Baltimore Intel Unit" provided a
minute-by-minute account of Pledge of Resistances' preparations for a
July 3, 2004, protest at Fort Meade. An attorney for the demonstrators
said he obtained the document through the discovery process from NSA.
"****UPDATE: 11:55 HRS. S/A V------- ADVISED THE PROTESTORS LEFT
4600 YORK ROAD EN ROUTE TO THE NSA CAMPUS ... S/A V----- REPORTED FIVE OR
SIX PEOPLE IN A BLUE VAN WITH BLACK BALLOONS, ANTI-WAR SIGNS AND A
POSSIBLE HELIUM TANK," reported an internal NSA e-mail.
Later, those shadowing the peace group reported on their arrival at the
NSA's Fort Meade headquarters.
"****UPDATE: 1300 HRS. THE SOC WAS ADVISED THE PROTESTORS WERE
PROCEEDING TO THE AIRPLANE MEMORIAL WITH THREE HELIUM BALLOONS ATTACHED
TO A BANNER THAT STATED "THOSE WHO EXCHANGE FREEDOM FOR SECURITY
DESERVE IT, NEITHER WILL ULTIMATELY LOSE BOTH," the NSA's somewhat
garbled account of the event reported.
Ellen E. Barfield, a veteran peace activist from Hampden, was one of
three Pledge members detained and cited that afternoon, charged with
creating a "disturbance." The charges were later dropped.
Barfield called the effort law enforcement agencies put into monitoring
this act of civil disobedience "totally absurd."
"We have a history of nonviolence," she said. "We are
absolutely no threat to anyone, and they know it. And they're wasting
tons of money and tons of time doing this."
An agency spokesman said protests are routinely monitored by the NSA
Police, who are responsible only for the installation's security, not the
code breakers and eavesdroppers who monitor international electronic
communications.
The only reference to technical information-gathering in the three public
NSA documents -- two e-mails and an internal "Action Plan" --
is a reference in to an NSA employee's effort to check on the protesters'
plans by browsing the Web.
"Security at NSA serves to protect the agency and its
employees," NSA spokesman Don Weber said in a statement. "Like
any security force, they maintain documentation to include activity logs
and action plans used in response to potential activities impacting the
agency.
"Furthermore, they partner with state, local and federal law
enforcement agencies to assess these activities and the potential impact
on the agency and its personnel," Weber continued. "All these
activities are conducted in a lawful manner. The allegations that NSA is
spying on local peace groups is simply not true."
James Bamford, a lawyer and journalist who has written two acclaimed
books about the NSA, said the agency has a right to protect itself from
external threats. "But it would be an entirely separate thing if the
NSA tried to monitor communications" from the Baltimore anti-war
group, using the agency's sophisticated technology.
There is no evidence this happened. But the documents have surfaced at a
critical time for the NSA.
The New York Times reported in December that after Sept. 11, the NSA
began monitoring the electronic communications of Americans suspected of
contacts with terrorists, without first obtaining court orders. President
Bush authorized the program in 2002 and has defended it as necessary to
protect the nation.
Some legal analysts and administration critics say the agency's actions
violate the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
In some ways, Independence Day weekend protests by members of the
Baltimore Pledge of Resistance have become an annual ritual.
Every year, protesters demand to talk with NSA officials. Some try to
slip in one of the entrances and get arrested. Even before Sept. 11,
Bamford said, the NSA overreacted, "considering the scale of the
protest."
An NSA e-mail contained in court files shows that before the Pledge of
Resistance's Oct. 4, 2003, protest, which coincided with the agency's
annual "family day" picnic, NSA relied on a detective working
for the Baltimore Police Department's Criminal Intelligence Unit to
monitor the demonstrators' movements.
That unit handles some of the city's most politically sensitive
investigations, including threats to public officials.
The city detective, the 2003 e-mail said, "advised that they will
have someone working this weekend who will scope out their departure from
the American Friends Service Committee 4806 York Rd. Govans. The
Baltimore City PD counterpart will give [name of an NSA official blacked
out] a heads up as to the numbers departing from the Govans
location."
The NSA e-mail regarding the July 2004 protest does not make clear who
conducted that day's surveillance on the agency's behalf. While it refers
to the "Baltimore Intel Unit," the chief of the city's Criminal
Intelligence Unit, Major David Engel, said he had no record that any of
his officers participated.
"We have absolutely nothing in our files related to it," he
said, referring to the protest in 2004.
Max J. Obuszewski, a veteran Baltimore anti-war activist who works for
the American Friends Service Committee, said protesters have been trying
to publicize the two documents since they were released in Federal
District Court in August 2004.
The NSA July 2004 e-mail and the NSA's "Action Plan" for the
October 2003 protest were finally publicized this week by Kevin B. Zeese,
a candidate for the U.S. Senate from Maryland, on the Web sites
"rawstory.com" and "democracyrising.us."
The NSA disclosed them as part of the discovery process in the
prosecution of two Baltimore Pledge of Resistance members, Cynthia H.
Farquhar and Marilyn Carlisle. Both were detained during the October 2003
protest and convicted of failing to obey a police officer's orders. They
were fined $250, according to federal court records.
Copyright © 2006, The Baltimore Sun
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Qui, 9 de Jul de 2009 6:17 pm
"Lynn Surgalla" <lasurg@...>
starmother1
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