Snowden
leak: NSA secretly accessed Yahoo, Google data centers to collect
information
Despite
having front-door access to communications transmitted across the
biggest Internet companies on Earth, the National Security Agency has
been secretly tapping into the two largest online entities in the
world, new leaked documents reveal.
RT,
30
October, 2013
Those
documents, supplied by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden and
obtained by the Washington Post, suggest that the US intelligence
agency and its British counterpart have compromised data passed
through the computers of Google and Yahoo, the two biggest companies
in the world with regards to overall Internet traffic, and in turn
allowed those country’s governments and likely their allies access
to hundreds of millions of user accounts from individuals around the
world.
“From
undisclosed interception points, the NSA and GCHQ are copying entire
data flows across fiber-optic cables that carry information between
the data centers of the Silicon Valley giants,”
the Post’s Barton Gellman and Ashkan Soltani reported on Wednesday.
The
document providing evidence of such was among the trove of files
supplied by Mr. Snowden and is dated January 9, 2013, making it among
the most recent top-secret files attributed to the 30-year-old
whistleblower.
Gen.
Keith Alexander, the head of the NSA, told reporters Wednesday
afternoon, "I don't know
what the report is,"
according to Politico, and said his agency is "not
authorized"
to tap into Silicon Valley companies. When asked if the NSA tapped
into the data centers, Alexander said, "Not
to my knowledge."
Director
of the National Security Agency Gen. Keith Alexander (AFP Photo /
Alex Wong)
Earlier
this year, separate documentation supplied by Mr. Snowden disclosed
evidence of PRISM, an NSA-operated program that the intelligence
company conducted to target the users of Microsoft, Google, Yahoo,
Facebook, PalTalk, YouTube, Skype, AOL and Apple services. When that
program was disclosed by the Guardian newspaper in June, reporters
there said it allowed the NSA to “collect
material including search history, the content of emails, file
transfers and live chats”
while having direct access to the companies’ servers, at times with
the “assistance of
communication providers in the US.”
According
to the latest leak, the NSA and Britain’s Government Communications
Headquarters are conducting similar operations targeting the users of
at least two of these companies, although this time under utmost
secrecy.
“The
infiltration is especially striking because the NSA, under a separate
program known as PRISM, has front-door access to Google and Yahoo
user accounts through a court-approved process,”
the Post noted.
And
while top-brass in the US intelligence community defended PRISM and
said it did not target American Internet users, the newest program —
codenamed MUSCULAR — sweeps up data pertaining to the accounts of
many Americans, the Post acknowledged.
The
MUSCULAR program, according to Wednesday’s leak, involves a process
in which the NSA and GCHQ intercept communications overseas, where
lax restrictions and oversight allow the agencies access to
intelligence with ease.
“NSA
documents about the effort refer directly to ‘full take,’ ‘bulk
access’ and ‘high volume’ operations on Yahoo and Google
networks,”
the Post reported. “Such
large-scale collection of Internet content would be illegal in the
United States, but the operations take place overseas, where the NSA
is allowed to presume that anyone using a foreign data link is a
foreigner.”
National
Security Agency (NSA) at Fort Meade, Maryland (AFP Photo / Jim
Watson)
To
do as much, the NSA and GCHQ rely on capturing information being sent
between company data centers around the globe, intercepting those
bits and bytes in transit by tapping in as information is moved from
the “Public Internet” to the private “clouds” operated by the
likes of Google and Yahoo. Those cloud systems involve the linking of
international data centers, each processing and containing huge
troves of user information for potentially millions of customers.
Intelligence officers who can sneak through the cracks when
information is decrypted — or never encrypted in the first place —
can then see the information sent in real time as take “a
retrospective look at target activity,”
according to documents seen by the Post.
“Because
digital communications and cloud storage do not usually adhere to
national boundaries, MUSCULAR and a previously disclosed NSA
operation to collect Internet address books have amassed content
and metadata on a previously unknown scale from US citizens and
residents”
Barton and Soltani reported.
“Data
are an essentially global commodity, and the backup processes of
companies often mean that data is replicated many places across the
world,”
The Post’s Andrea Peterson added in a separate report. “So
just because you sent an e-mail in the US, doesn't mean it will
always stay within the nation's borders for its entire life in the
cloud.”
As
data goes into those facilities outside of the US, the NSA and GCHQ
have more tactics to deploy in order to obtain private
communications. Additionally, Yahoo has not nor do they now have any
plans to deploy encryption technology to secure communications,
suggesting the data of their millions of users was passed
in-the-clear through international data centers, ripe to be
intercepted by the intelligence community.
Satellite
dishes are seen at GCHQ's outpost at Bude, close to where
trans-Atlantic fibre-optic cables come ashore in Cornwall, southwest
England (Reuters / Kieran Doherty)
“Google
and Yahoo generally connect their data centers over privately owned
or leased fiber-optic cables, which do not share traffic with other
Internet users and companies, to enable the tasted connections and
keep information secure,”
Gellman added in a separate article authored alongside the Post’s
Todd Linderman. “Unit
recently, these internal data networks were not encrypted. Google
announced in September, however, that it is moving quickly to encrypt
those connections. Yahoo’s data center links are not encrypted.”
“It’s
an arms race,”
Eric Grosse, Google’s vice president for security engineering, told
the Post last month. “We see
these government agencies as among the most skilled players in this
game.”
After
hearing ot the MUSCULAR program by the Post, Google said in a
statement that they were “troubled
by allegations of the government intercepting traffic between our
data centers, and we are not aware of this activity.”
“We
have long been concerned about the possibility of this kind of
snooping, which is why we continue to extend encryption across more
and more Google services and links,”
the company said.
“We
have strict controls in place to protect the security of our data
centers, and we have not given access to our data centers to the NSA
or to any other government agency,"
insisted Yahoo.
Only
hours before the latest Snowden leak was made public, NSA Director
Keith Alexander told a Congressional panel that the illegal,
unconstitutional revelations helped terrorist intent on killing
Americans. Answering a question from Rep. Michele Bachmann
(R-Minnesota) about the effect of the leaks on national security,
Alexander and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper both
said the disclosure have and will continue to cause major damage to
the US.
At
that same hearing, Alexander admitted that the NSA “compels”
telecommunication companies to provide the government with user
intelligence.
"Nothing
that has been released has shown that we’re trying to do something
illegal or unprofessional,”
Alexander added.
See the Washington Post article HERE
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