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Eavesdropping on its citizens, and then.....

If this report "How Israel helps eavesdrop on US citizens" on The Electronic Intifada is correct, it is extremely troubling:

"After the 11 September 2001 attacks, the United States government launched a massive program to spy on millions of its own citizens. Through the top secret National Security Agency (NSA), it has pursued "access to billions of private hard-line, cell, and wireless telephone conversations; text, e-mail and instant Internet messages; Web-page histories, faxes, and computer hard drives." In his new book, The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA from 9/11 to the Eavesdropping on America author James Bamford casts light on this effort, including a detailed account of how spying on American citizens has been outsourced to several companies closely linked to Israel's intelligence services.

It is well-known that the two largest American telecom companies AT&T and Verizon collaborated with the US government to allow illegal eavesdropping on their customers. The known uses to which information obtained this way has been put include building the government's massive secret "watch lists," and "no-fly lists" and even, Bamford suggests, to deny Small Business Administration loans to citizens or reject their children's applications to military colleges.

What is less well-known is that AT&T and Verizon handed "the bugging of their entire networks -- carrying billions of American communications every day" to two companies founded in Israel. Verint and Narus, as they are called, are "superintrusive -- conducting mass surveillance on both international and domestic communications 24/7," and sifting traffic at "key Internet gateways" around the US."

Comments

Anonymous said…
i was so offended by the complicity and cooperation of telephone companies, verizon specifically, that as soon as i was able, i upgraded my internet service with a small, local ISP from dialup to DSL with VoIP and cancelled my verizon account. who do i thank for the legislation that made this possible?

the money saved by dumping the verizon land line pays for the cell phone which i was then able to use doing phonebanking for obama because of the free weekend minutes.

i dumped comcast in november 2004 because they refuse to provide C-Span access at the "broadcast basic" level, requiring me to fork over $50/month for the "privilege" of televised coverage of my government. i look forward to "going dark" in february 2009. anything relevant to see is available on the intertubes. ABC, CBS and NBC are not worth the price of a box and certainly not worth the price of a new tv.

i look forward to this mess being cleaned up.

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