Exclusive: Germany, Brazil Turn to U.N. to Restrain American Spies

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http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/p..._brazil_turn_to_un_to_restrain_american_spies

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Brazil and Germany today joined forces to press for the adoption of a U.N. General Resolution that promotes the right of privacy on the internet, marking the first major international effort to restrain the National Security Agency's intrusions into the online communications of foreigners, according to diplomatic sources familiar with the push.

The effort follows a German claim that the American spy agency may have tapped the private telephone of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and dozens of other world leaders. It also comes about one month after Brazilian leader Dilma Rousseff denounced NSA espionage against her country as "a breach of international law" in a General Assembly speech and proposed that the U.N. establish legal guidelines to prevent "cyberspace from being used as a weapon of war."

Brazilian and German diplomats met in New York today with a small group of Latin American and European governments to consider a draft resolution that calls for expanding privacy rights contained in the International Covenant Civil and Political Rights to the online world. The draft does not refer to a flurry of American spying revelations that have caused a political uproar around the world, particularly in Brazil and Germany. But it was clear that the revelation provided the political momentum to trigger today's move to the United Nations. The blowback from the NSA leaks continues to agonize U.S. diplomats and military officials concerned about America's image abroad.

"This is an example of the very worst aspects of the Snowden disclosures," a former defense official with deep experience in NATO, told The Cable, referring to former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. "It will be very difficult for the US to dig out of this, although we will over time. The short term costs in credibility and trust are enormous."

Although the U.N.'s ability to fundamentally constrain the NSA is nil, the mounting international uproar over U.S. surveillance has security experts fearful for the ramifications.



There are laws on the books domestically and it still does not stop rampant surveillance in the U.S. I don't know how well a UN measure will work to constrain the U.S. police state. If anything, it used against you like it was in the United States to give a false sense of security and safety that caused many victims to communicate openly.

The U.S. is looking for targets when it collects bulk data like this. Once you are targeted, there is nothing you can do, you are done. After you are targeted based on bulk surveillance and informants, they will gangstalk/bumper lock you based on even more intrusive surveillance.


After seeing all these revelations, I see why Michael Hastings ended up murder and burned alive.
 
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http://www.infowars.com/brics-countries-build-new-internet-to-avoid-nsa-spying/

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BRICS countries are close to completing a brand new Internet backbone that would bypass the United States entirely and thereby protect both governments and citizens from NSA spying.

In light of revelations that the National Security Agency hacked German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s phone, in addition to recording information about 124 billion phone calls during a 30-day period earlier this year, the fallout against the NSA has accelerated. Brazil is set to finalize a 34,000-kilometre undersea fiber-optic cable by 2015 that will run from Vladivostok, Russia to Fortaleza, Brazil, via Shantou, China, Chennai, India and Cape Town, South Africa.

According to the Hindu, the project will create, “a network free of US eavesdropping,” which via legislative mandates will also force the likes of Google, Facebook and Yahoo to store all data generated by BRICS nations locally, shielding it from NSA snooping.

“The BRICS countries have the muscle to pull this off,” notes Washington’s Blog. “Each of the BRICS countries are in the top 25 largest economies in the world. China has the world’s second largest economy, India is 3rd, Russia 6th, Brazil 7th, and South Africa 25th.”



The U.S. had all of Brazil traffic getting routed into some hub in Miami.

:lol::lol::lol:

If I logged onto a website in Brazil, from my understanding it would go to this hub in Miami than route back to Brazil. Emails would be stored on servers in the United States, rather than locally.

Damn, these companies and the government were designing spying from the start. Route your traffic through my hub on American soil, to "standardized the internet"


:lol::lol::lol:
 
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https://rally.stopwatching.us/

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The NSA is spying on everyone's personal communications. It’s operating without any meaningful oversight.

On October 26th, the 12th anniversary of the signing of the USA Patriot Act, we're holding the largest rally yet against NSA surveillance. We’ll be handing more than a half-million petitions to Congress to remind them that they work for us — and we won’t tolerate mass surveillance any longer.

A stellar group of whistleblowers, activists, researchers and others from both sides of the political spectrum will be speaking at this historic event. The list includes:
•Congressman Justin Amash
•Former Congressman Dennis Kucinich
•Bruce Schneier, internationally renowned security technologist
•Former senior NSA executive and whistleblower Thomas Drake
•Indie pop senation YACHT
•Former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson
•Lt. Dan Choi, LGBT advocate and U.S. veteran
•Laura Murphy, ACLU
•Rainey Reitman, EFF
•Craig Aaron, Free Press
•Social critic Naomi Wolf
•Kymone Freeman, Director of the National Black LUV Fest
•Khaliah Barnes, EPIC
•Shahid Buttar, Bill of Rights Defense Committee
•Malachi Byrd, DC Youth Poetry Slam Team
•Wafa Ben Hassine, writer and human rights advocate
•NOT4PROPHET, Hip Hop MC and community organizer
•Black Alley, DC-based soul-garage band

Location:
Marchers will gather in front of Union Station at 11:30 a.m. by the Christopher Columbus Memorial Fountain in Columbus Circle. Shortly after noon we’ll march to the National Mall at 3rd Street and Madison Dr. NW, in front of the Capitol Reflecting Pool, where there will be a stage set up for our rally speakers, musicians, and performers.
 
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Location:
Marchers will gather in front of Union Station at 11:30 a.m. by the Christopher Columbus Memorial Fountain in Columbus Circle. Shortly after noon we’ll march to the National Mall at 3rd Street and Madison Dr. NW, in front of the Capitol Reflecting Pool, where there will be a stage set up for our rally speakers, musicians, and performers.


a c k n o w l e d g e d​


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:lol::lol::lol:

What is scary that many of the companies that sell critical components for computers and smartphones, openly cooperated with the government. These products sell around the world, giving them extraordinary powers. They failed to take simple measures or develop standards to encrypt emails.

You got major companies working with the CIA and NSA, getting contracts with the government. Telecoms that were strong armed into cooperating and those that resisted had their contracts with the government terminated. A government dominated by corporate interest, many of the political appointees return back to lofty jobs in the private sector (IT).

We don't know how secure things are with the products we use, I am considering going back to the old ways, getting rid of all my gadgets.

I think there is more too it, than just government surveillance. I think this cross pollinated from the private sector into the government. Maybe we need to move to an open system that is decentralized from multiple countries.
 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/1382116/China-finds-spy-bugs-in-Jiangs-Boeing-jet.html


CHINA claims to have found almost 30 surveillance bugs, including one in the headboard of the presidential bed, on a Boeing 767 that had just been delivered from America to serve as President Jiang Zemin's official aircraft.

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The aircraft has been sitting on a military airstrip north of Beijing, unused with much of its upholstery and many of its fittings ripped out, since October when Chinese test pilots detected a strange and unfamiliar whine emanating from its body.
A search of the twin-engined aircraft, which was manufactured and fitted out in America, yielded 27 devices, according to Chinese officials, hidden in its seats, lavatory and panelling.

Beijing believes that the bugs were planted by the Central Intelligence Agency while the aircraft was undergoing conversion work in San Antonio, Texas.

The CIA refused to respond to the report. Bill Harlow, the spy agency's spokesman, said: "We never comment on allegations like these, as a matter of policy." The White House used almost identical words, saying: "We never discuss these types of allegations."

The aircraft was built by Boeing but was delivered to Delta Air Lines in June 2000 before being resold to China United Airlines, the air force-run airline that ordered the aircraft. It was customised for the Chinese president by the San Antonio-based company.

Members of a team of Chinese officials who supervised the construction of the aircraft have since been detained. A total of 22 people are being held in connection with the case and one senior air force official is believed to be under house arrest.
News of the discovery threatens to ignite an embarrassing controversy just as President George W. Bush prepares to visit China for a summit next month. Mr Jiang is reportedly furious and could use the incident to deflect attention from other issues, such as human rights or state persecution of Christians.

Bush administration officials had been quietly expressing delight that relations with China had thawed markedly since the two countries agreed on co-operation against terrorism after the September 11 attacks in America. There was talk of intelligence sharing between the CIA and its Chinese counterparts on Islamic terrorism.

The two men have, however, already held a cordial summit, in October, since the devices were found.

American espionage activity targeted at Chinese officials has become a persistent sore in bilateral relations, particularly since a US military spyplane made an emergency landing in Hainan Island last year after a collision with a Chinese aircraft.
Officials of the shadowy Third Department of the People's Liberation Army general staff believe that the devices, which are not available commercially, are capable of communicating with American military satellites.

One Western diplomat said that behind the outrage the Chinese were likely to view the devices as an intelligence windfall. Army scientists will now have the opportunity to "reverse engineer" the latest in American surveillance equipment.

The grounding of the aircraft has denied the Communist leadership the pleasure of using an aircraft so well-appointed that Mr Bush's Air Force One is said to be a "plain Jane" by comparison.
One hundred officials can be carried in comfort in its wide beige leather chairs, which fold out into beds for long-haul flights. In the presidential suite a bath was installed and a television with a 48-inch screen stood at the end of the bed.



We are still revisiting the same issues again. They even had one in his headboard! Total lack of respect.

Having your cell phone and email listened into is mild. If you live in the United States, and become targeted, this is the type of mentality that you have to deal with.

We need to move away from U.S centric IT products. When it comes to cars, I can get one from Europe and Asia, however, they won't even compete with IT products. They will build beautiful device, yet stick a U.S. piece of shit OS riddled with backdoors that the NSA has been given a heads up on. I am sick of driving a white Ford pickup truck when it comes to IT products, we need Honda, BMW type IT industry that is competitive.
 
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/1382116/China-finds-spy-bugs-in-Jiangs-Boeing-jet.html


CHINA claims to have found almost 30 surveillance bugs, including one in the headboard of the presidential bed, on a Boeing 767 that had just been delivered from America to serve as President Jiang Zemin's official aircraft.



U.S. Finally Opens Moscow Embassy / Building was
delayed 15 years after Russians riddled it with bugs



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The US Embassy building, under construction in
Moscow in 1988
. The tortured project took 27
years to complete. The building finally opened
in 2000. After years of denial, the Soviet
intelligence arm was admitting its role in one
of the most notorious espionage incidents of the
1980s: It had packed the new US Embassy office
building in Moscow with sophisticated listening
devices. The edifice’s structure was so riddled
with bugs that some US counterespionage experts
described it as nothing but a giant microphone.


Baltimore Sun
Kathy Lally
Published Saturday, July 8, 2000


2000-07-08 04:00:00 PDT Moscow -- The first time around, the new American Embassy building in Moscow was like a giant Soviet antenna, a monument to the ingenuity of the KGB and a constant and embarrassing reminder to the United States of a skirmish lost in the hard-fought Cold War.

On Thursday, however, U.S. Ambassador James Collins welcomed reporters to the second version of the building, finally open and operating 15 years after the first attempt had to be abandoned when it was discovered that the construction materials were loaded with Soviet listening devices.

"It's a symbol," Collins said. "We are entering a new era in our relations with the Russian Federation. It's permanent and very long-term. This building reflects a lot of what we're trying to do today."

The U.S. Embassy construction began in 1979, using supports built by Soviet workers. By 1985, U.S. officials discovered the supports had eavesdropping equipment embedded throughout.

The building was abandoned, a lonely red-brick box left standing at one end of the compound of townhouses built at the same time for American diplomats. The project had cost $136 million. The embassy offices remained in the old building up the block.

In retaliation, the United States refused to allow the Soviet Union to occupy its new embassy in Washington. By the time that embassy was opened, it was 1994 and the Soviet Union had died and been succeeded by Russia.


FULL STORY



 

Chinese `stole all nuclear secrets'


Espionage: Devastating report reveals that for 20 years
Peking agents stripped America of weapons technology



The Independent
Wednesday 26 May 1999



THE POLITICAL storm brewing over Washington since the first disclosures of Chinese spying six months ago broke yesterday with release of the Cox report, a 700-page catalogue of deceit and theft that said Peking's nuclear- weapons expertise is "on a par" with that of the US. Peking could begin testing the first of its advanced nuclear weapons as early as this year, with deployment by 2002.

The report said China engaged in systematic espionage over 20 years, culling top-secret information on all seven nuclear warheads in the US ballistic-missile arsenal and the neutron bomb, not yet deployed. Stolen secrets included the blueprint for the W-88 miniaturised warhead, which allows a missile to be armed with multiple warheads.

The report also said at least some of the 3,000 Chinese corporations operating in the US, some connected to the Chinese army, were a front for unauthorised technology exports. US companies may not be aware of the extent of Chinese spying and many "are generally unprepared for the reality of doing business in the People's Republic of China". China's "appetite for information and technology appears to be insatiable", the report concluded. The leader of the Republican majority in the Senate, Trent Lott, led critics of the Clinton administration in saying the thefts were the most damaging foreign espionage effort since the Second World War, if not in US history.

 
Many of the embassies are CIA satellite offices. Some of the embassies have this building panel that is a sophisticated antennae to collect signals. If you think they exists to grant visas, think again.

Venezuela kicked a couple of people out from the embassy they caught on camera meeting opposition groups, probably staging another coup. If I was Russia, I would try infiltrate the embassy to check out what is going.


In any event, you don't stick listening devices in the bedroom of a head of state, that is just wrong. Especially a country that you have strong economic ties with.

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Both Russia and the U.S. have strong counter intelligence activities in their country, they follow you around everywhere to shut you down.
 
Many of the embassies are CIA satellite offices. Some of the embassies have this building panel that is a sophisticated antennae to collect signals. If you think they exists to grant visas, think again.

I don't have to think, I know what they are. I would suggest to you, however, that domestic spying is one thing and foreign intelligence collection may be quite another. I don't believe that they can or should be treated or analyzed, the same.




In any event, you don't stick listening devices in the bedroom of a head of state, that is just wrong. Especially a country that you have strong economic ties with.


CHINA claims to have found almost 30 surveillance bugs, including one in the headboard of the presidential bed, on a Boeing 767 that had just been delivered from America to serve as President Jiang Zemin's official aircraft.


I didn't know that we were bed fellows with China. I thought we were international competitors with the Chinese, same as with the Russians.

 
Russia's Gift Goodie Bags Given to G20 Delegates
Found to Include "Trojan Horse" Spy Devices




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Thanks to Edward Snowden and his leaks of NSA secrets, much of the world has been focused on the United States' spying activities. But as it turns out, the U.S. isn't the only superpower seeking to sniff out state secrets of its allies and enemies. At the G20 conference held in St. Petersburg, Russia, last month where President Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin appeared to patch up their differences, Russian operatives gave goodie bags to world powers at the summit which included USB drives and phone charges that were secretly "Trojan Horses" designed to download information and send it back to Russia.

The Russian spy ploy was first reported on Tuesday by Italian media. Apparently, European Union President Herman Van Rompuy was the first to become suspicious of the gifts, which sported the red-and-blue "Russia G20" logo, and asked technical experts in Belgium and Germany to look into them.

German intelligence sources determined that the three-pronged mobile phone charges were able to tap into e-mails, text messages and phone calls, and just like the USB thumb drives Russia handed out, they were a "poisoned gift" from Putin.

A warning has since supposedly been sent out to all G-20 members about the dangerous devices, which Italian media says went out to all "delegates" at the September 5-6 gathering. It was not clear if any world leaders were given the gifts directly.

SOURCE

 
It is slimy, but at least it is targeted at a group of people and not an entire country that is an ally. I also have a problem with the U.S. because it tries to represents itself as freedom and democracy, Russia does not proclaim that to other people. It occupies other countries proclaiming to bring them freedom and democracy, removing the chains of tyranny from their people such as secret police and mass surveillance.

Unfortunately, the U.S. is bulk collecting calls all over the world, that many tyrannical government engage in. We have a secret police that kills reporters such as Michael Hastings or civil rights leaders for speaking out. We have rampant domestic surveillance based on bogus reasons. Finally, what is frightening when the U.S. engages in this activity with the private sector is that 95% of the world's computers run on U.S. based IT products, I don't use any products from Russia IT industry.

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It has become like a hoarder that needs psychological help like the Stasi. Germany should have brought a psychologist as part of its delegation to speak with the NSA. A hoarder sees a room stacked with crap to the ceiling as normal, while other people see that there is a problem. The UN needs to come in and clear the crap out, establish some type of structure or rules to stop this electronic eavesdropping warfare so that countries at peace can enjoy their lives.

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This is hoarding, mass collecting information that shuts down the grid because it is using so much power.
 


It is slimy, but at least it is targeted at a group of people and not an entire country that is an ally.

Bro, neither of us, you or I, really know how wide or how narrow any targeting might be. But, when YOU look out for what YOU deem to be in your best interest, YOU get to define whats best and oftentimes what YOU deem to be in your best interest may not be what your best friend believes is in his best interest. Same with nations.

The truth is ALL nations with the technological or human ability to do so, spy on or collect data, to some degree, against every other nation, friend or foe, if they believe there is a need to know. I believe the thoughts of Bernard Kouchner, the former French foreign minister, in this piece are on point:


"The second tier of Western surveillance expertise comprises Israel, Sweden, Germany, Finland, Norway, Italy and France.

All are proficient, say the professionals, and all spy on any target deemed to be in their national interest, whether related to security or commerce.

France has long been regarded as the most adept at stealing trade secrets.

So, "there's a lot of faux outrage out there" whenever a Snowden bomb drops, one contact says.

In fact, one of the few straightforward reactions amid all the indignation over the NSA spying came from Bernard Kouchner, the former French foreign minister (and founder of Doctors Without Borders): "Let's be honest, we eavesdrop too," he told an interviewer.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">"Everyone is listening to everyone else. But we don't have the same means as the United States, which makes us jealous."</span>



I also have a problem with the U.S. because it tries to represents itself as freedom and democracy, Russia does not proclaim that to other people. It occupies other countries proclaiming to bring them freedom and democracy, removing the chains of tyranny from their people such as secret police and mass surveillance.

I think the view is simplistic, though I follow. But, don't let the <s>smooth taste</s> rhetoric fool you.




Unfortunately, the U.S. is bulk collecting calls all over the world, that many tyrannical government engage in. We have a secret police that kills reporters such as Michael Hastings or civil rights leaders for speaking out. We have rampant domestic surveillance based on bogus reasons. Finally, what is frightening when the U.S. engages in this activity with the private sector is that 95% of the world's computers run on U.S. based IT products, I don't use any products from Russia IT industry.

This kind of goes all over the place -- but I can say that I believe we need to ensure that proper oversight is maintained over the intelligence apparatus -- and the proper balance and protections should be maintained, foreign and domestic.

 
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