A set of nearly 300 documents that the document-leaking Web site published today reveals how extensive and privacy-invasive the secretive multi-billion dollar industry devoted to surveillance technology has become.
"We are in a world now where not only is it theoretically possible to record nearly all telecommunications traffic out of a country, all telephone calls, but where there is an international industry selling the devices now to do it," Assange said in a video interview today.
What WikiLeaks has dubbed the "Spy Files" is a collection of marketing and technical documents, including previously-unreleased presentations from companies that showed up at government-only conferences like ISS World Europe, billed as a gathering in 2008 for "telecom operators, law enforcement," and employees of spy agencies.
Amesys, a unit of French technology firm Bull SA, boasts in a leaked document how it can aid governments in moving from eavesdropping on one person to "full country traffic monitoring," including automatic translation and mapping of real-world social networks based on who's talking to who.
Amesys's presentation offers a one-stop shop for nationwide monitoring, including GSM cell phone communications, satellite signals, Internet communications, and phone calls. The company boasts of a "huge range of sensors and analyzing probes" and -- in an echo of what the former East German secret police attempted decades earlier -- a "centralized intelligence system gathering all information."
There were hints about the extent of Amesys' surveillance apparatus before, including in an August article in the Wall Street Journal that described a room used by Moammar Gadhafi's secret police to monitor Internet traffic in Libya. The room sported Amesys logos, manuals, and posters, the article said.
But the WikiLeaks' new leaks, which resume a dry spell for the group when it effectively halted disclosures after a series of U.S. Defense Department and State Department documents, are likely to draw more attention to the surveillance-industrial complex and could lead to more legal oversight and reform efforts.
Amesys did not immediately respond to a request for comment from CNET. It did distribute a statement in September that it sold "analysis hardware" to Libya to help it fight terrorism, and included a vague threat of legal action against anyone who damages its "image or reputation."
Not all of the documents in WikiLeaks' archive are actual leaks. An HP brochure describing "technology that supports global law enforcement" is publicly available (PDF) on the company's Web site.
Earlier this week, an attorney representing Bradley Manning, WikiLeaks' alleged source for the U.S. government files who is now facing criminal charges, suggested that the megabytes of classified data his client allegedly turned over didn't truly harm national security. Manning, an Army private, was charged last July with sending a military video to a person not authorized to receive it and with obtaining "more than 150,000 diplomatic cables" from the State Department. A preliminary hearing in Manning's case has been scheduled for later this month.
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Just after noon on Friday, July 21, Adamo Bove -- head of security at
Telecom Italia, the country's largest telecommunications firm -- told
his wife he had some errands to run as he left their Naples apartment.
Hours later, police found his car parked atop a freeway overpass. Bove's
body lay on the pavement some 100 feet below.
Bove was a master at detecting hidden phone networks. Recently,
at the direction of Milan prosecutors, he'd used mobile phone records to
trace how a "Special Removal Unit" composed of CIA and SISMI (the
Italian CIA) agents abducted Abu Omar, an Egyptian cleric, and flew him
to Cairo where he was tortured. The Omar kidnapping and the alleged
involvement of 26 CIA agents, whom prosecutors seek to arrest and
extradite, electrified Italian media. U.S. media noted the story, then
dropped it.
The first Italian press reports after Bove's death said the
42-year-old had committed suicide. Bove, according to unnamed sources,
was depressed about his imminent indictment by Milan prosecutors. But
prosecutors immediately, and uncharacteristically, set the record
straight: Bove was not a target; in fact, he was prosecutors' chief
source. Bove, prosecutors said, was helping them investigate his own
bosses, who were orchestrating an illegal wiretapping bureau and the
destruction of incriminating digital evidence. One Telecom executive had
already been forced out when he was caught conducting these illicit
operations, as well as selling intercepted information to a business
intelligence firm.
About 16 months earlier, in March of 2005, Costas Tsalikidis, a
38-year-old software engineer for Vodaphone in Greece had just
discovered a highly sophisticated bug embedded in the company's mobile
network. The spyware eavesdropped on the prime minister's and other top
officials' cell phone calls; it even monitored the car phone of Greece's
secret service chief. Others bugged included civil rights activists,
the head of Greece's "Stop the War" coalition, journalists and Arab
businessmen based in Athens. All the wiretapping began about two months
before the Olympics were hosted by Greece in August 2004, according to a
subsequent investigation by the Greek authorities.
Tsalikidis, according to friends and family, was excited about
his work and was looking forward to marrying his longtime girlfriend.
But on March 9, 2005, his elderly mother found him hanging from a white
rope tied to pipes outside of his apartment bathroom. His limp feet
dangled a mere three inches above the floor. His death was ruled a
suicide; he, like Adamo Bove, left no suicide note.
Source: Mother Jones
Technology-enabled psychopathocracy ain't.no.joke....,
Might make a good script for Godfather_4...
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Oh nice, thanks for share!
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