It has been the strangest of days today.
My computer has been acting up for some time. I would start the day with everything working OK, but after some time everything would stall and the only way I could continue was to restart the computer.
It was worse than ever this morning and after doing a couple of items the internet went off line and I was unable to do anything. This was part of a day when I FELT harassed because nothing was working for me.
I took my computer along to a "whizz" along the road. He plugged into their broadband and the computer was faster than it has been for many weeks, despite the fact they are not on super-fast broadband like me.
I brought everything back home: the internet was back up and the computer was working at full speed, despite having done nothing except disconnect and reconnect to the Wi-Fi.
I am left wondering whether to pay my $200 to break my agreement with Vodophone and hook up with another NZ-owned, non-corporate one (endorsed by none other than Kim Dotcom).
It could all be down to a faulty connection - but I am not a great believer in the theory of endless coincidence.
This is not the first time I've had something interesting happen with my provider, Vodophone. See HERE.
In the meantime here is an article about Vodophone who recently bought Telstra CLEAR (which itself had bought out the NZ-owned CLEAR). It turns out that our corporate friends are great friends with GCHQ and the NSA (and presumably with the GCSB here in NZ as well)
BT
and Vodafone among telecoms companies passing details to GCHQ
Fears
of customer backlash over breach of privacy as firms give GCHQ
unlimited access to their undersea cables
2 August, 2013
Some
of the world's leading telecoms firms, including BT and Vodafone, are
secretly collaborating with Britain's spy agency GCHQ, and are
passing on details of their customers' phone calls, email messages
and Facebook entries, documents leaked by the whistleblower Edward
Snowden show.
BT,
Vodafone Cable, and the American firm Verizon Business – together
with four other smaller providers – have given GCHQ secret
unlimited access to their network of undersea cables. The cables
carry much of the world's phone calls and internet traffic.
In
June the Guardian revealed details of GCHQ's ambitious data-hoovering
programmes, Mastering the Internet and Global Telecoms Exploitation,
aimed at scooping up as much online and telephone traffic as
possible. It emerged GCHQ was able to tap into fibre-optic cables and
store huge volumes of data for up to 30 days. That operation,
codenamed Tempora, has been running for 20 months.
On
Friday Germany's Süddeutsche newspaper published the most highly
sensitive aspect of this operation – the names of the commercial
companies working secretly with GCHQ, and giving the agency access to
their customers' private communications. The paper said it had seen a
copy of an internal GCHQ powerpoint presentation from 2009 discussing
Tempora.
The
document identified for the first time which telecoms companies are
working with GCHQ's "special source" team. It gives top
secret codenames for each firm, with BT ("Remedy"), Verizon
Business ("Dacron"), and Vodafone Cable ("Gerontic").
The other firms include Global Crossing ("Pinnage"), Level
3 ("Little"), Viatel ("Vitreous") and Interoute
("Streetcar"). The companies refused to comment on any
specifics relating to Tempora, but several noted they were obliged to
comply with UK and EU law.
The
revelations are likely to dismay GCHQ and Downing Street, who are
fearful that BT and the other firms will suffer a backlash from
customers furious that their private data and intimate emails have
been secretly passed to a government spy agency. In June a source
with knowledge of intelligence said the companies had no choice but
to co-operate in this operation. They are forbidden from revealing
the existence of warrants compelling them to allow GCHQ access to the
cables.
Together,
these seven companies operate a huge share of the high-capacity
undersea fibre-optic cables that make up the backbone of the
internet's architecture. GCHQ's mass tapping operation has been built
up over the past five years by attaching intercept probes to the
transatlantic cables where they land on British shores. GCHQ's
station in Bude, north Cornwall, plays a role. The cables carry data
to western Europe from telephone exchanges and internet servers in
north America. This allows GCHQ and NSA analysts to search vast
amounts of data on the activity of millions of internet users.
Metadata – the sites users visit, whom they email, and similar
information – is stored for up to 30 days, while the content of
communications is typically stored for three days.
GCHQ
has the ability to tap cables carrying both internet data and phone
calls. By last year GCHQ was handling 600m "telephone events"
each day, had tapped more than 200 fibre-optic cables and was able to
process data from at least 46 of them at a time.
Each
of the cables carries data at a rate of 10 gigabits per second, so
the tapped cables had the capacity, in theory, to deliver more than
21 petabytes a day – equivalent to sending all the information in
all the books in the British Library 192 times every 24 hours.
This
operation is carried out under clandestine agreements with the seven
companies, described in one document as "intercept partners".
The companies are paid for logistical and technical assistance.
The
identity of the companies allowing GCHQ to tap their cables was
regarded as extremely sensitive within the agency. Though the Tempora
programme itself was classified as top secret, the identities of the
cable companies was even more secret, referred to as "exceptionally
controlled information", with the company names replaced with
the codewords, such as "GERONTIC", "REMEDY" and
"PINNAGE".
However,
some documents made it clear which codenames referred to which
companies. GCHQ also assigned the firms "sensitive relationship
teams". One document warns that if the names emerged it could
cause "high-level political fallout".
Germans
have been enraged by the revelations of spying by the National
Security Agency and GCHQ after it emerged that both agencies were
hoovering up German data as well. On Friday the Süddeutsche said it
was now clear that private telecoms firms were far more deeply
complicit in US-UK spying activities than had been previously
thought.
The
source familiar with intelligence maintained in June that GCHQ was
"not looking at every piece of straw" but was sifting a
"vast haystack of data" for what he called "needles".
He
added: "If you had the impression we are reading millions of
emails, we are not. There is no intention in this whole programme to
use it for looking at UK domestic traffic – British people talking
to each other." The source said analysts used four criteria for
determining what was examined: security, terror, organised crime and
Britain's economic wellbeing."The vast majority of the data is
discarded without being looked at … we simply don't have the
resources."
Nonetheless,
the agency repeatedly referred to plans to expand this collection
ability still further in the future.
Once
it is collected, analysts are able to search the information for
emails, online chats and browsing histories using an interface called
XKeyscore, uncovered in the Guardian on Wednesday. By May 2012, 300
analysts from GCHQ and 250 NSA analysts had direct access to search
and sift through the data collected under the Tempora program.
Documents
seen by the Guardian suggest some telecoms companies allowed GCHQ to
access cables which they did not themselves own or operate, but only
operated a landing station for. Such practices could raise alarm
among other cable providers who do not co-operate with GCHQ
programmes that their facilities are being used by the intelligence
agency.
Telecoms
providers can be compelled to co-operate with requests from the
government, relayed through ministers, under the 1984
Telecommunications Act, but privacy advocates have raised concerns
that the firms are not doing enough to challenge orders enabling
large-scale surveillance, or are co-operating to a degree beyond that
required by law.
"We
urgently need clarity on how close the relationship is between
companies assisting with intelligence gathering and government,"
said Eric King, head of research for Privacy International. "Were
the companies strong-armed, or are they voluntary intercept
partners?"
Vodafone
said it complied with the laws of all the countries in which its
cables operate. "Media reports on these matters have
demonstrated a misunderstanding of the basic facts of European,
German and UK legislation and of the legal obligations set out within
every telecommunications operator's licence … Vodafone complies
with the law in all of our countries of operation," said a
spokesman.
"Vodafone
does not disclose any customer data in any jurisdiction unless
legally required to do so. Questions related to national security are
a matter for governments not telecommunications operators."
A
spokeswoman for Interoute said: "As with all communication
providers in Europe we are required to comply with European and local
laws including those on data protection and retention. From time to
time we are presented with requests from authorities. When we receive
such requests, they are processed by our legal and security teams and
if valid, acted upon."
A
spokeswoman for Verizon said: "Verizon continually takes steps
to safeguard our customers' privacy. Verizon also complies with the
law in every country in which we operate."
BT
declined to comment.
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