Ad End 1 February 2024
Ad Ends 13 January 2025
ad End 25 April 2025
Ad Ends 20 January 2025
Ad expire at 5 August 2024
banner Expire 25 April 2025
What's new
banner Expire 15 January 2025
banner Expire 20 October 2024
UniCvv
adv exp at 23 August 2024
casino
swipe store
Carding.pw carding forum
BidenCash Shop
Kfc CLub

Details on NSA/FBI Eavesdropping

File_closed07

TRUSTED VERIFIED SELLER
Staff member
Joined
Jun 13, 2020
Messages
7,515
Reaction score
916
Points
212
Awards
2
  • trusted user
  • Rich User
Details on NSA/FBI Eavesdropping


We're starting to see Internet companies talk about the mechanics of how the US government spies on their users. Here, a Utah ISP owner describes his experiences with NSA eavesdropping:

We had to facilitate them to set up a duplicate port to tap in to monitor that customer's traffic. It was a 2U (two-unit) PC that we ran a mirrored ethernet port to. [What we ended up with was] a little box in our systems room that was capturing all the traffic to this customer. Everything they were sending and receiving.


Declan McCullagh explains how the NSA coerces companies to cooperate with its surveillance efforts. Basically, they want to avoid what happened with the Utah ISP.
Some Internet companies have reluctantly agreed to work with the government to conduct legally authorized surveillance on the theory that negotiations are less objectionable than the alternative -- federal agents showing up unannounced with a court order to install their own surveillance device on a sensitive internal network. Those devices, the companies fear, could disrupt operations, introduce security vulnerabilities, or intercept more than is legally permitted. "Nobody wants it on-premises," said a representative of a large Internet company who has negotiated surveillance requests with government officials. "Nobody wants a box in their network...[Companies often] find ways to give tools to minimize disclosures, to protect users, to keep the government off the premises, and to come to some reasonable compromise on the capabilities."
Precedents were established a decade or so ago when the government obtained legal orders compelling companies to install custom eavesdropping hardware on their networks.


And Brewster Kahle of the Internet Archive explains how he successfully fought a National Security Letter.
 
Ad End 1 February 2024
Top