IFEX
The latest Snowden document revelation, which shows how the GCHQ and the
NSA are conducting broad, real-time monitoring of YouTube, Facebook,
and Blogger using a program called "Squeaky Dolphin," is the most recent
demonstration of the immense interception capabilities of intelligence services.
Despite the program's cute name, "Squeaky Dolphin" is shocking in
its ability to intercept raw data, which includes sensitive personal and
location information, and keep tabs on people across the world who are
simply uploading videos or 'liking' the links on their friends' Facebook
walls. Such massive, unrestrained capabilities are no way consistent
with international law, as their capabilities and execution are clearly
neither necessary nor proportionate. Because of this, Privacy
International has litigation underfoot to challenge the legality of GCHQ's surveillance activities
on the grounds that they fly in the fact of the UK's human rights
obligations. Operations like Squeaky Dolphin are yet another
manifestation of GCHQ's disregard for privacy rights, and starkly
illustrate the problem of secret, unaccountable intelligence gathering.
Frighteningly, the capabilities demonstrated by Squeaky Dolphin -
the combination of tapping IP networks and the construction of that with
sources such as Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and other services - are
not the exclusive preserve of the NSA and GCHQ. Privacy International's Surveillance Industry Index
shows that surveillance companies are marketing and selling these
services right off the shelf, giving willing governments anywhere the
ability to intercept huge amounts of raw data, monitor social networks
in real time, and analyse the information obtained to create profiles on
specific individuals and targets.
Analysing and intercepting
Shortly after news broke about the Squeaky Dolphin program, surveillance researcher Dr Ben Hayes drew attention
to Wire-X's "Content-based Social Network Analysis" and its
similarities to GCHQ's Squeaky Dolphin. Wire-X's brochure, which is
subtitled "Facing Social Networks", grabs attention with its heading
"Good guys, Bad guys...They are all socializing online."
Named AQWIREX, the product "automatically intercept(s) and
analyze(s) in real time the major social networks and extract all the
relevant data including profile information, friends, feeds, and posts
in order to provide a clear visualization of the entity and a mapping of
all the target connections". The marketing material also says that the
surveillance system can analyse emails, forums, and chats in real time,
providing "real time packet analyse" and the ability to scale
interception "from tactical to nationwide."
Through our Surveillance Industry Index, we have identified a
similar technique being sold by surveillance companies, such as Israel's
Nice Systems and their Horizon Insight product.
Nice's Horizon Insight "Intercepts, formats and stores billions of
telephony and IP events per data at a rate of thousands of data records
per second" and performs integration with "all legacy sources with newly
acquired sources in telephony, IP and open source fields to perform
fusion of all intercepted data". The attempt to combine both the model
of Open Source Intelligence gathering with mass surveillance and
analysis of that material is illustrated in a diagram showing the pulling collation of disparate sources to form a stream of information able to be understood by an individual analyst or operator.
Sophisticated filtering provided within interception platforms can
also lead to the targeting of particular websites. Italy's IPS sell a
network interception platform called GENESI which centralises monitoring
of IP networks, performing "real-time interception of different types
of Internet Content and Services ( i.e. email messages, Web accesses,
Chat sessions)". This capability is combined with content filtering that
can focus on content in the protocol header such as URL, which can then
allow focus on particular services such as Facebook and YouTube.
What's more, IPS provides an analytics tool designed specifically
for Facebook, implying a definite focus on the analysis of the kinds of
services and websites that the GCHQ programme Squeaky Dolphin is using.
Glimmerglass, a California company specialising in physical fibre
optic taps, advertises its probes as a way to intercept massive amounts
of information travelling to social networks. In a presentation entitled
"Paradigm Shifts" it displayed its physical probes and management
system as a source of real time interception for particular
communication sources. By selecting particular sources, the system
intercepts traffic related to the particular "Communications Source," be
it Facebook, Google, or Twitter. It would also appear to use IPS's
Facebook analysis tool as an example of the mapping and reconstruction
of a person's digital life that can be done using the traffic
intercepted by Glimmerglass' tools.
Interception vs. Open Source
It is important to remember that these types of technologies,
similar to Squeaky Dolphin, are not simply analysing publicly available
information, or open-source intelligence (as it is called in the
surveillance community). While the acquisition of information from
publicly available sources is problematic, it is distinctly different
from the practice of GCHQ in its Squeaky Dolphin programme, which
focuses on the interception through physically tapping cables as the
data is travelling across them, or gaining access through a third-party
database.
The documents outlining Squeaky Dolphin come from 2010, before many
social networks including Google and Facebook used https to encrypt user
traffic across their sites. These latest revelations illuminate the
serious need for all communications to be properly secured in order to
protect users, including by implementing https. However, encryption is
no silver bullet, as https only mitigates interception in transit and
intelligence agencies are always seeking ways to crack the latest
security measures. But at the very least these tools can help to better
protect users' privacy and reduce their risk of exposure to agencies
that seem determined to record and analyse every facet of our lives.
The contents of an individual's phone calls, emails and the websites
they visit is information that is highly private in nature. So as the
ambitious private surveillance market keeps pace with GCHQ and the NSA,
we need effective laws in place to protect our privacy from
surveillance, both by our governments and those abroad.