Also, Snowden Derangement Syndrome and Andrea Merkel’s Phone
I have an article in the current subscription-only CounterPunch
magazine on the NSA encryption follies.
The takeaway from the article is that, thanks to fiddling by
the NSA and its corporate partners, Internet security is a jury-rigged omnishambles. It’s as if the National Transportation Safety
Board, with the garages and auto parts suppliers playing along, had undermined
the safety standards for brakes and facilitated the insertion of multiple
points of failure in the braking system, and then encouraged everybody to drive
down the Information Superhighway at 120 miles per hour in order to give more
business to the auto repair industry.
With the powers vested in me by the Internet, I command
everyone to subscribe…now! Here’s the
link.
The piece has a different take on the NSA’s surveillance
excesses than what readers are probably accustomed to.
Edward Snowden’s core concern, and the basis of a lot of the
coverage, is anxiety over the massive scope of NSA surveillance. It looks like the US government never
abandoned the goal of Total Information Awareness, articulated during the
George W. Bush era by John Poindexter, and simply decided to implement it
clandestinely. NSA wants it all:
metadata, unencrypted data, encrypted data, the correlations, whatever.
Even for those of us who have “nothing to hide and nothing
to fear” a.k.a. nobody, this raises the specter of the Panopticon state, where
the hidden eye may be everywhere and anywhere, and the subject is pre-emptively
cowed into compliance by the fear of being observed.
I have to admit I already feel that way, to a degree. I look at the computer on my desk and see it
as a window in—to me—as well as a window out onto the WWW.
Not just for the US government which, quite frankly, I don’t
think devotes a lot of time to worrying about me. Also for Google. For instance, the web ads aren’t mass
advertising like TV commercials; they are targeted ads based on my Google
searches. Instead of telling me what’s
out there, they are trying to get inside me and push my buy buttons based on
what they think what’s in there. Instead
of surfing the web, I’m getting enmeshed in my personalized web of
preconceptions and plans, spun courtesy of Google, Facebook, etc. And for botnets. I assume I’ve got one. Maybe just one. I hope so.
Recently, the FBI and Microsoft took down a botnet infecting 2 million
computers. I look at my computer as a
device on loan to me from the botnet when it isn’t using the CPU cycles for its
own nefarious ends.
The NSA and the US IT industry have a shared interest in
exploiting me as a data asset. The information,
services, and connectivity benefits of the Internet is just the honey pot that
lures us in. Just like newspapers and
magazines are advertising circulars with just enough journalism and
entertainment to get us to crack open the pages.
If we want to restore our digital privacy, it’s going to
take a new network: new hardware, new software, new protocols, and billions of
dollars (without any government and corporate subvention!).
Good luck with that.
Short of that, enhanced transparency and accountability from
the entities degrading the security functionality of the Internet might help.
It looks like the only way we’re going to get that is via
whistleblowers.
When the Edward Snowden revelations hit, my first reaction
was Wow. Somebody’s really stuck it to
the Man.
However, on some liberal and conservative sections of the
Intertubes, something that I call Snowden Derangement Syndrome erupted. It was as if Snowden had posted dirty
pictures of him having sex with mom. Some
seemed to take the position of Don’t you understand? We’re the Man. Edward Snowden is sticking it to us!
Well, my general take is that Edward Snowden is a
whistleblower, not a spy. It’s not my
job to help the Man sideline, discredit, silence, or incarcerate whistleblowers
in order to make His job easier.
Of course, there has been a persistent bubbling of efforts
to discredit Snowden along the lines of naif/narcissist/traitor. Things quieted down when the carefully
managed revelations of NSA domestic surveillance undercut the Snowden as
hysterical dingbat narrative, but hotted up again with the reports on US spying
on allies. You know, hurts American
interests, old news, everybody does it and, in Mike Rogers’ iteration, Europe
should be grateful because Nobody Does It Better than the US of A.
These people obviously lost the Lord Acton memo about the corrupting
nature of power—including the power bestowed on the NSA by an open-ended and
generously funded mandate, secrecy, and sufficient legal impunity to initiate
and perpetuate massive, compounded clusterfucks beyond the reach of
congressional oversight.
Consider this revelation about the bugging of Andrea Merkel’s
phone:
The Economic Times writes the “high-ranking” NSA official spoke to Bild am Sonntag on the condition of anonymity, saying the president, “not only did not stop the operation, but he also ordered it to continue.”
The Economic Times also reports the official told Bild am Sonntag that Obama did not trust Merkel, wanted to know everything about her, and thus ordered the NSA to prepare a dossier on the politician.
I don’t think that’s Edward Snowden talking. Maybe it’s the Acela Babbler, Michael Hayden,
passing on third-hand tittle-tattle.
Maybe Keith Alexander is sticking the boot in as he stomps off into
retirement.
In any case, that high level gossip, my friends, is probably
more damaging to US diplomacy than the Snowden revelations, and also an
indication of the culture of impunity and malice that seems to permeate the
upper levels of the NSA and is now directed at President Obama for his
equivocal defense of the agency.
Angela Merkel is probably seriously pissed that the NSA
tapped her phone--and bragging about it. In July, Merkel, an
East German native who has tried to draw a clear, bright line between the
security excesses of East Germany and practices in the West, had defended NSA
surveillance as qualitatively different from the Stasi since the NSA was
interested in protecting American security.
By that reading, Merkel has been considered a security risk for over a
decade.
The revelation has done Germany the favor of alerting it to
the fact that its communications security technology—in which it has reposed a
high level of confidence—has been compromised.
As discussed in this article from Spiegel, German government
communications were supposedly protected by world-class non-USA encryption and
security products delivered by ex-Stasi technicians rolled into a company
called Rohde & Schwarz. The
implication of the bugging of Merkel’s phone is that the US government has
suborned and compromised Germany’s own data security apparatus. Since Rohde & Schwarz is also a NATO
supplier, perhaps the prospect of NATO contracts might have enticed them to
hand over the goodies. Or maybe the NSA
hacked and fiddled its way in without corporate assistance from R&S.
For whatever reason, one can speculate that the NSA has done
as good a job of fucking up German and NATO secure communications as it has
done with overall Internet security.
3 comments:
So that's what happened to Michael Hastings' Mercedes!
This is a good article to the extent that it identifies the structure of the internet as the core problem. It's not just the NSA, it's all the commercial data miners, the Chinese, etc.
I've used Kaspersky anti virus for a few years now, and I recommend this product to all you.
Post a Comment