Saturday, 7 December 2013

How US tracks hundreds of millions of mobile phones

Teacher shot dead in Benghazi

THE allegations that the United States Security Services have been spying on key political figures around the world may after all be true. The Washington Post reported yesterday that almost five billion mobile phone location records are logged by the United States National Security Agency (NSA), every day.


The data is said to help the NSA track individuals, and map who they know, to aid the agency's anti-terror work.


The 'dragnet surveillance' was condemned by digital rights groups who called for the NSA's snooping efforts to be reined in.


The news comes as Microsoft plans to use more encryption to thwart NSA spying on it and its customers.


Meanwhile, local officials say a teacher, believed to be an American national, has been shot dead in Libya's eastern city of Benghazi.


Reportedly from Texas, he taught chemistry at the international school, medical and security sources said.


The man, thought to be called Ronnie Smith, was gunned down earlier on Thursday as he was jogging in Fweihat district, local sources told the BBC.


There was no immediate statement from the US embassy in Libya. No group has said it carried out the attack.


The international school in Benghazi is a Libyan-owned institute that follows an American curriculum.


Director at the school, Adel al Mansouri, told Reuters: 'He was doing his morning exercise when gunmen just shot him. I don't know why. He was so sweet with everyone.'


Benghazi is one of Libya's most restive cities. Last week, nine people died in clashes between the Libyan army and an Islamist militia, Ansar al-Sharia.


The group is suspected of killing US ambassador Christopher Stevens in 2012.


Militias took part in the uprising that led to the fall of Col Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but have been told by the interim government to disband or join the army by the end of the year.


According to the BBC, the huge database built up by the NSA (National Security Agency) keeps an eye on 'hundreds of millions' of mobile phones, said the Post, adding that it let the agency map movements and relationships in ways that were 'previously unimaginable'.


It added that the vast programme potentially surpassed any other NSA project in terms of its impact on privacy. Information about the programme was in papers released to the Post by whistleblower Edward Snowden.


The spying agency is said to have accumulated so much data, about 27 terabytes according to leaked papers seen by the Post, that it was 'outpacing' the NSA's ability to analyse the information in a timely fashion.


The analysis, via a computer system called Co-Traveler, was necessary as only a tiny fraction of one per cent of the data gathered was actually useful in its anti-terror work, said the paper.


The analysis is so detailed that it can be used to thwart attempts to hide from scrutiny by people who use disposable phones or only use a handset briefly before switching it off.


The vast majority of the information gathered is said to come from taps installed on mobile phone networks and used the basic location-information that networks log as people move around. Analysing this data helps the NSA work out which devices are regularly in close proximity and, by implication, exposes a potential connection between the owners of those handsets.


The American Civil Liberties Union said it was 'staggering' that the NSA could mount such a vast location-logging system without any public debate. The 'dragnet surveillance' broke US obligations that require it to respect the privacy of foreigners and Americans.


'The government should be targeting its surveillance at those suspected of wrong-doing, not assembling massive associational databases that, by their very nature, record the movements of a huge number of innocent people,' it added.


The steady flow of information about the NSA's surveillance work has led Microsoft to take steps to protect itself and its customers from unwarranted scrutiny, it said in a blogpost.


Brad Smith, Microsoft legal counsel, said government snooping was now as much of a security problem as computer viruses and other cyber-attacks.


In response, Mr Smith said, Microsoft was expanding its use of encryption; would fight legal orders that stop it telling customers when their data is being sought and would allow a closer look at the code it develops to show there were no backdoors built in.


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