NSA
masqueraded as Google to spy on web users - report
The
NSA used ‘man in the middle’ hack attacks to impersonate Google
and fool web users, leaks have revealed. The technique circumvents
encryption by redirecting users to a copycat site which relays all
the data entered to NSA data banks.
RT,
14
September, 2013
Brazilian
television network Globo News released a report based on classified
data divulged by former CIA worker Edward Snowden on Sunday. The
report itself blew the whistle on US government spying on Brazilian
oil giant Petrobras, but hidden in amongst the data was information
the NSA had impersonated Google to get its hands on user data.
Globo
TV showed slides from a 2012 NSA presentation explaining how the
organization intercepts data and re-routes it to NSA central. One of
the convert techniques the NSA uses to do this is a ‘man in the
middle’ (MITM) hack attack.
This
particular method of intercepting internet communications is quite
common among expert hackers as it avoids having to break through
encryption. Essentially, NSA operatives log into a router used by an
internet service provider and divert ‘target traffic’ to a
copycat MITM site, whereupon all the data entered is relayed to the
NSA. The data released by Edward Snowden and reported on by Globo
News suggests the NSA carried out these attacks disguised as Google.
When
the news broke about the NSA gathering information through internet
browsers, tech giants such as Google and Yahoo denied complicity,
maintaining they only handover data if a formal request is issued by
the government.
"As
for recent reports that the US government has found ways to
circumvent our security systems, we have no evidence of any such
thing ever occurring. We provide our user data to governments only in
accordance with the law," said Google spokesperson Jay Nancarrow
to news site Mother Jones.
Google,
along with Microsoft, Facebook and Yahoo, has filed a lawsuit against
the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISA) to allow them to
make public all the data requests made by the NSA.
“Given
the important public policy issues at stake, we have also asked the
court to hold its hearing in open rather than behind closed doors.
It's time for more transparency," Google’s director of law
enforcement and information security, Richard Salgado, and the
director of public policy and government affairs, Pablo Chavez, wrote
in a blog post on Monday.
The
tech giants implicated in NSA’s global spying program have denied
criticism that they could have done more to resist NSA spying.
Marissa Mayer, CEO of Yahoo, claimed that speaking out about the
NSA’s activities would have amounted to ‘treason’ at a press
conference in San Francisco on Wednesday.
In
Yahoo’s defense, she argued that the company had been very
skeptical of the NSA’s requests to disclose user data and had
resisted whenever possible. Mayer concluded that it was more
realistic to work within the system,” rather than fight against it.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.