A report says the National Security Agency has been tracking the website use of anyone they consider having a “radical view” with the intent of releasing the information to discredit them.
A document released by fugitive NSA leaker Edward Snowden shows the agency tracking two Muslims with “radical beliefs” and marking websites they visited that are not in line with strict Islamic teachings.
Online privacy advocates Privacy International said the revelations from Snowden of the NSA’s activities should cause major concern.
“This is not the first time we’ve seen [United] States use intimate and private information of an individual who holds views the government doesn’t agree with, and exploit this information to undermine an individual’s message,” the group said in a statement to the BBC.
None of the men listed in the report as being tracked by the NSA were accused of being directly involved in terrorism or with a terrorist group.
In an attempt to find federal workers who were cheating the government, U.S. agencies ended up examining people who had no direct connection to the U.S. government and had only purchased books on an alert list.
Federal investigators reportedly gathered a list of 4,904 people from the records of two men who were being examined for teaching people how to pass lie detector tests. The officials then gave the list to 30 federal agencies including the IRS, CIA, NSA and Food & Drug Administration. The government hoped to find employees or applicants who tried to use techniques to beat lie detector tests required for security clearances.
McClatchy News Service reports that many of the people investigated by the government agencies after the release of the list had only bought books or DVDs from one of the men being investigated and received no one-on-one training from the suspects.
A source says that federal agencies are under increasing pressure from the White House to find “insider threats” in the wake of the Edward Snowden NSA scandal.
After coming out as one of the harshest critics of the United States National Security Agency’s spying revelations, reports have surfaced that Brazil was actively carrying out counter-intelligence activities against the U.S. and others.
Brazil’s justice minister said that his spies were acting in a lawful manner when they followed around diplomats from the U.S., Russia and other nations while they were engaging in daily activities.
Jose Eduardo Cardoso took great pains to say the situations in his nation and the actions taken by the NSA were not the same.
“I see completely different situations. What happened in relation to Brazil and other countries was a violation. Emails and phone calls were violated, which is an affront to Brazilian sovereignty,” Cardoso told a press conference.
The U.S. State Department said the discovery reported in Brazil’s Folha de S. Paulo newspaper proves what they’ve been saying all along regarding all nations conducting spy activity on diplomats of other nations.
The National Security Agency recorded information from more than 124 billion phone calls during a 30-day period earlier this year including more than 3 billion calls from sources inside the United States.
Top-secret documents released to various media outlets show details of the NSA’s “Boundless Informant” program. The software permits a user to select any country on a world map and access all of the information regarding calls captured in that region.
European newspapers such as the U.K. Guardian and Der Spiegel showed screenshots of the program highlighting where most of the calls were captured during a 30-day time frame.
Afghanistan led the way with almost 22 billion calls captured followed by Pakistan’s 13.76 billion. The middle east was also a hot spot for captures with 1.74 billion traced to Iran and 1.64 from Jordan.
The NSA also captured more than 6.28 billion calls from India.
The most disturbing part of the program was that along with spying on calls from inside their own country, the NSA was spying on allies including 61 million calls tracked from Spain and more than 70 million in France.