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GCHQ taps fibre-optic cables for access to world's comms 
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pcernie wrote:
Amnesia10 wrote:
pcernie wrote:
GCHQ data-tapping claims nightmarish, says German justice minister

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23017108

I wonder what the EU will make of it all.

They will do what they are told. Will they like the world to know about their sexual peccadilloes? :twisted:


I doubt Germany will let it go so easily, for one. All it will take is even a claim on the filtering of data and more questions will be asked.

I do hope so. The UK is among the most monitored nations on the planet and there are still terrorist incidents. The terrorists and the paedo's are just the tip of the iceberg. They are worried that the rest of us might not put up with this crap for much longer. A case in point being the excessive police investigations into green activists, over the construction of a power station. We have lost the right to protest, unless the police give us permission.

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Sat Jun 22, 2013 10:55 pm
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pcernie wrote:
Amnesia10 wrote:
pcernie wrote:
GCHQ data-tapping claims nightmarish, says German justice minister

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23017108

I wonder what the EU will make of it all.

They will do what they are told. Will they like the world to know about their sexual peccadilloes? :twisted:


I doubt Germany will let it go so easily, for one. All it will take is even a claim on the filtering of data and more questions will be asked.

That Germany, has lived through two surveillance societies in the last century, they are very sensitive about such things.

What happened to the 'good old days', where we knew there were terrorists and just got on with living our lives?

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Sun Jun 23, 2013 7:31 am
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MI5 feared GCHQ went 'too far' over phone and internet monitoring

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"The point is that this is an island," the source said. "Everything comes and goes – nearly everything – down fibre-optic cables. You make a mobile phone call, it goes to a mast and then down into a fibre-optic cable, under the ground and away. And even if the call is UK to UK, it's very likely – because of the way the system is structured – to go out of the UK and come back in through these fibre-optic channels."

Internet traffic is also liable to be routed internationally even if the message is exchanged between two people within the UK. "At one point, I was told that we were getting 85% of all UK domestic traffic – voice, internet, all of it – via these international cables."


Quote:
The UK source challenges the official justification for the programme; that it is necessary for the fight against terrorism and serious crime: "This is not scoring very high against those targets, because they are wise to the monitoring of their communications. If the terrorists are wise to it, why are we increasing the capability?

"The answer is that you can't stop it. It is a self-fulfilling prophecy. The more we develop communications technology, the more they develop technology to intercept it. There was MS Chat – easy. Then Yahoo chat – did that, too. Then Facebook. Then Skype. Then Twitter. They keep catching up. It is good for us, but it is bad for us."


http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/jun/2 ... nt-too-far

All that data and it didn't stop the two loons who killed Drummer Rigby, the marathon bombing, bomb and gun attacks in my own country... :roll:

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Sun Jun 23, 2013 11:32 am
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pcernie wrote:
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Internet traffic is also liable to be routed internationally even if the message is exchanged between two people within the UK.

Yeah. This bit isn't actually true. If either the source or destination IP is international, then it'll go through seafloor fibre (or possibly up via sat link, depends on the load at the time). If the source and destination are both domestic, do you really think any ISP is going to pay to send those packets down expensive trans-national cables only to see them come straight back again? The fact is the majority of UK net traffic goes down those wires because the majority of traffic goes to Google (inc. youtube), Apple, Microsoft and Netflix, all of whome operate outside the UK. But the idea the people running transatlantic fibres don't understand basic network routing is bordering on silly.


Sun Jun 23, 2013 4:09 pm
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pcernie wrote:

All that data and it didn't stop the two loons who killed Drummer Rigby


All that proves is that it is not 100% effective, it does not prove that it is ineffective.


Sun Jun 23, 2013 4:18 pm
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leeds_manc wrote:
All that proves is that it is not 100% effective, it does not prove that it is ineffective.

Fair point, but (playing devil's advocate for a mo) you could suggest that, if the price is the loss of privacy this represents, then it better had be pretty near 100% effective.


Sun Jun 23, 2013 4:23 pm
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jonbwfc wrote:
leeds_manc wrote:
All that proves is that it is not 100% effective, it does not prove that it is ineffective.

Fair point, but (playing devil's advocate for a mo) you could suggest that, if the price is the loss of privacy this represents, then it better had be pretty near 100% effective.


This, and the quoting was a bit selective :P ;)

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Sun Jun 23, 2013 5:22 pm
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There has't been a terrorist attack in the UK since 7/7, the killing of Lee Rigby was an attack on one person, motivated by Islam in the mind of a delusional social outcast, terrorism here is a euphemism for religious attack. As the "war on terror" is a euphemism for "the war on militant Islam".

So if I was being selective, you certainly were being selective by not quoting those attacks that the government intelligence agencies have foiled.

When we leave the house our neighbours watch us, they look at our behaviour and judge us for acting anti-socially. Is that an invasion of our privacy? What if they were cameras. Ah now suddenly that's different.

How exactly? A proxy for neighbours' eyes, with a record function.

If a policeman is patrolling in a park, looking for signs of any illegal activity. He sees innocent people who aren't aware they are being watched, and he ignores them. It is OK if they ignore innocent behaviour. So monitoring in itself is not necessarily bad, it is not inherently corrupt. And to be effective, to actually catch criminals, it has to be somewhat secretive, hence why you can always tell if the local police have "sent the noobs out" because they will go to a disturbance with their sirens on, and they won't catch anyone.

I don't actually give a [LIFTED], and I don't subscribe to that guilt-trip, usually accompanied by a Lincoln or Orwell quote, that says something along the lines of "ooh it's OK until they come knocking for you". As if I'm being purely selfish and ignorant, when really I'm adopting a "stand back and monitor the situation and watch out for lines being crossed" attitude.

And by crossed lines, I mean the criteria for criminal behaviour, not the monitoring tactics themselves, but the reaction to detecting a "crime". If I agree it's a crime, then *shrug* don't really care how it was seen, how it was detected.


Sun Jun 23, 2013 6:04 pm
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I was only joking with the selectiveness bit, I tried to make that clear with the Smilies.

My perspective is most of us here know how quickly technology advances - you're talking about an ability to electronically monitor billions of people, eventually, by those who are traditionally money, knowledge and power mad. The sort of people who used my country, part of the United Kingdom, as a training and killing ground against innocents and terrorists alike.

Snowden seemed to have a very cushy life (intelligent, extremely well paid job, stripper girlfriend) and seems far from naive, yet at the age of 29 he risks everything. That's either the world's most deranged ego, or someone who couldn't live with the knowledge of what was coming. That's my guess.

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Sun Jun 23, 2013 6:33 pm
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leeds_manc wrote:
There has't been a terrorist attack in the UK since 7/7, the killing of Lee Rigby was an attack on one person, motivated by Islam in the mind of a delusional social outcast, terrorism here is a euphemism for religious attack. As the "war on terror" is a euphemism for "the war on militant Islam".

So if I was being selective, you certainly were being selective by not quoting those attacks that the government intelligence agencies have foiled.

We only have one other case that went to court. So we have to take their word that there were other cases. In the US the majority of cases were instigated by the FBI as agent provocateurs. The terrorists will have changed tactics and GCHQ are impotent against such tactics.

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Sun Jun 23, 2013 7:13 pm
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This is an example of when they cross the line:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/jun/2 ... ice-smears

Disgusting.


Sun Jun 23, 2013 11:41 pm
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jonbwfc wrote:
leeds_manc wrote:
All that proves is that it is not 100% effective, it does not prove that it is ineffective.

Fair point, but (playing devil's advocate for a mo) you could suggest that, if the price is the loss of privacy this represents, then it better had be pretty near 100% effective.


I'll counter that with an American President:

Benjamin Franklin wrote:
"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."

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Mon Jun 24, 2013 3:55 am
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leeds_manc wrote:
This is an example of when they cross the line:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/jun/2 ... ice-smears

Disgusting.

And why the police will find it very hard to get rid of that racist smear.

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Mon Jun 24, 2013 8:50 am
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Germany seeks UK surveillance assurances

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23048259

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Tue Jun 25, 2013 11:41 pm
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jonbwfc wrote:
pcernie wrote:
Quote:
Internet traffic is also liable to be routed internationally even if the message is exchanged between two people within the UK.

Yeah. This bit isn't actually true. If either the source or destination IP is international, then it'll go through seafloor fibre (or possibly up via sat link, depends on the load at the time). If the source and destination are both domestic, do you really think any ISP is going to pay to send those packets down expensive trans-national cables only to see them come straight back again? The fact is the majority of UK net traffic goes down those wires because the majority of traffic goes to Google (inc. youtube), Apple, Microsoft and Netflix, all of whome operate outside the UK. But the idea the people running transatlantic fibres don't understand basic network routing is bordering on silly.

Mine does, at least twice. My main email address was originally in San diego but is now in Manilla. That is a forwarding account and that is forwarded to my mac.com account which runs through the NSA prism pickup.

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Wed Jun 26, 2013 10:33 am
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