Australian authorities gathered more than 300,000 contact lists on a
single day from personal email and instant messaging accounts, on behalf
of the US National Security Agency, a new report has claimed.
The
previously undisclosed collection program intercepts email address
books and instant messaging "buddy lists" as they move across the global
data links. Online services often transmit those contacts when a user
logs on, composes a message or synchronises a computer or mobile device
with information stored on remote servers.
Rather than targeting
individual users, the NSA is gathering contact lists in large numbers
that amount to a sizable fraction of the world's email and instant
messaging accounts. Analysis of that data enables the agency to search
for hidden connections and map relationships within a much smaller
universe of foreign intelligence targets.
According to the Washington Post, on a single day last year, the
NSA's Special Source Operations branch collected 444,743 email address
books from Yahoo!, 105,068 from Hotmail, 82,857 from Facebook, 33,697
from Gmail and 22,881 from unspecified other providers. The figures are
contained in an internal top secret NSA PowerPoint presentation provided
by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. The "typical daily intake"
corresponds to a rate of more than 250 million address books per year.
The
newspaper claims Australia's NSA counterpart – the Defence Signals
Directorate (now the Australian Signals Directorate) – collected 311,113
address books as part of the program on a single day, naming it as the
designated "DS" code
in the leaked file. Another code, AUC, also attributed to Australia,
appears in another document.
Canberra has yet to confirm Australia is the culprit, and the
author of the
report has
himself left
open the
possibility of the DS
prefix belonging
to another country, however Australia has already been revealed to have
close ties with US and other international intelligence agencies.
In
late August, for example,
Fairfax Media revealed that the Australian Signals Directorate was in a partnership with
British, American and Singaporean intelligence agencies to tap undersea
fibre-optic telecommunications cables that link Asia, the Middle East
and Europe and carry much of Australia's international phone and
internet traffic.
Each day, the presentation said, the NSA
collects contacts from an estimated 500,000 buddy lists on live-chat
services as well as from the "inbox" displays of web-based email
accounts.
Washington Post reporter Barton Gellman, who helped
write the Post report, said he was able to identify "DS" as being an
Australian intelligence agency using "internal evidence plus one
source".
The collection depends on secret arrangements with
foreign telecommunications companies or allied intelligence services in
control of facilities that direct traffic along the internet's main data
routes.
Although the collection takes place overseas, two senior
US intelligence officials acknowledged that it sweeps in the contacts of
many Americans. They declined to offer an estimate but did not dispute
that the number is likely to be in the millions or tens of millions.
A
spokesman for the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence,
which oversees the NSA, said the agency "is focused on discovering and
developing intelligence about valid foreign intelligence targets like
terrorists, human traffickers and drug smugglers. We are not interested
in personal information about ordinary Americans".
The spokesman,
Shawn Turner, added that rules approved by the US attorney general
require the NSA to "minimise the acquisition, use, and dissemination" of
information that identifies a US citizen or permanent resident.
The
NSA's collection of nearly all US call records, under a separate
program, has generated significant controversy since it was revealed in
June. The NSA's director, General Keith Alexander, has defended "bulk"
collection as an essential counterterrorism and foreign intelligence
tool, saying "you need the haystack to find the needle".
Contact
lists stored online provide the NSA with far richer sources of data than
call records alone. Address books commonly include not only names and
email addresses but also telephone numbers, street addresses, and
business and family information. Inbox listings of email accounts stored
in the "cloud" sometimes contain content such as the first few lines of
a message.
Taken together, the data would enable the NSA, if
permitted, to draw detailed maps of a person's life, as told by
personal, professional, political and religious connections. The picture
can also be misleading, creating false "associations" with ex-spouses
or people with whom an account holder has had no contact in many years.
The
NSA has not been authorised by US Congress or the special intelligence
court that oversees foreign surveillance to collect contact lists in
bulk, and senior intelligence officials said it would be illegal to do
so from facilities in the United States. The agency avoids the
restrictions in the US Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act by
intercepting contact lists from access points "all over the world", one
official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a
classified program. "None of those are on US territory."
Because
of the method employed, the agency is not legally required or
technically able to restrict its intake to contact lists belonging to
specified foreign intelligence targets, he said.
When information
passes through "the overseas collection apparatus", the official added,
"the assumption is you're not a US person."
In practice, data from
Americans is collected in large volumes – in part because they live and
work overseas, but also because data crosses international boundaries
even when its American owners stay at home. Large technology companies,
including Google and Facebook, maintain data centres around the world to
balance loads on their servers and work around outages.
A senior
US intelligence official said that the privacy of Americans is
protected, despite mass collection, because "we have checks and balances
built into our tools".
NSA analysts, he said, may not search or
distribute information from the contacts database unless they can "make
the case that something in there is a valid foreign intelligence target
in and of itself".
In this program, the NSA is obliged to make
that case only to itself or others in the executive branch. With few
exceptions, intelligence operations overseas fall solely within the US
president's legal purview. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,
enacted in 1978, imposes restrictions only on electronic surveillance
that targets Americans or takes place on US territory.
By
contrast, the NSA draws on authority in the Patriot Act for its bulk
collection of domestic phone records, and it gathers online records from
US internet companies, in a program known as PRISM, under powers
granted by Congress in the FISA Amendments Act. Those operations are
overseen by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.
Senator
Dianne Feinstein, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in
August that the committee has less information about, and conducts less
oversight of, intelligence-gathering that relies solely on presidential
authority. She said she planned to ask for more briefings on those
programs.
"In general, the committee is far less aware of
operations conducted under 12333," said a senior committee staff member,
referring to Executive Order 12333, which defines the basic powers and
responsibilities of the intelligence agencies. "I believe the NSA would
answer questions if we asked them, and if we knew to ask them, but it
would not routinely report these things, and in general they would not
fall within the focus of the committee."
Because the agency
captures contact lists "on the fly" as they cross major internet
switches, rather than "at rest" on computer servers, the NSA has no need
to notify the US companies that host the information or to ask for help
from them.
"We have neither knowledge nor participation in any
mass collection of web mail addresses or chat lists by the government,"
said Google spokesman Niki Fenwick.
At Microsoft, spokesman Nicole
Miller said the company "does not provide any government with direct or
unfettered access to our customers' data", adding that "we would have
significant concerns if these allegations about government actions are
true".
Facebook spokesman Jodi Seth said "we did not know and did not assist" in the NSA's interception of contact lists.
It
is unclear why the NSA collects more than twice as many address books
from Yahoo! than the other big services combined. One possibility is
that Yahoo!, unlike other service providers, has left connections to its
users unencrypted by default.
Suzanne Philion, a Yahoo!
spokesman, said on Monday in response to an inquiry from The Washington
Post that, beginning in January, Yahoo! would begin encrypting all its
email connections.
Google was the first to secure all its email
connections, turning on "SSL encryption" globally in 2010. People with
inside knowledge said the move was intended in part to thwart
large-scale collection of its users' information by the NSA and other
intelligence agencies.
The volume of NSA contacts collection is so
high that it has occasionally threatened to overwhelm storage
repositories, forcing the agency to halt its intake with "emergency
detasking" orders. Three NSA documents describe short-term efforts to
build an "across-the-board technology throttle for truly heinous data"
and longer-term efforts to filter out information that the NSA does not
need.
Spam has proven to be a significant problem for NSA
– clogging databases with data that holds no foreign intelligence value.
The majority of all emails, one NSA document says, "are SPAM from
'fake' addresses and never 'delivered' to targets."
In late 2011,
according to an NSA presentation, the Yahoo! account of an Iranian
target was "hacked by an unknown actor", who used it to send spam. The
Iranian had "a number of Yahoo! groups in his/her contact list, some
with many hundreds or thousands of members".
The cascading effects
of repeated spam messages, compounded by the automatic addition of the
Iranian's contacts to other people's address books, led to a massive
spike in the volume of traffic collected by the Australian intelligence
service on the NSA's behalf.
After nine days of data-bombing, the
Iranian's contact book and contact books for several people within it
were "emergency detasked".
In a briefing from the NSA's Large
Access Exploitation working group, that example was used to illustrate
the need to narrow the criteria for interception of data. It called for a
"shifting collection philosophy": "Memorialise what you need" vs.
"Order one of everything off the menu and eat what you want."
with Barton Gellman, Ashkan Soltani and Julie Tate, Washington Post
theage.com.au 15 Oct 2013
The mass data collection has literally nothing to do with terrorism, but rather systematic profiling of every single person.
This data is then used to understand who knows what about the global political arena, and the 'enemy of the state', activists, protesters, politically aware people etc, are dealt with accordingly.