Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Thursday, December 05, 2013
NSA tracking cellphone locations worldwide, Snowden documents show
The National Security Agency is gathering nearly 5 billion records a day on the whereabouts of cellphones around the world, according to top-secret documents and interviews with U.S. intelligence officials, enabling the agency to track the movements of individuals — and map their relationships — in ways that would have been previously unimaginable. The records feed a vast database that stores information about the locations of at least hundreds of millions of devices, according to the officials and the documents, which were provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. New projects created to analyze that data have provided the intelligence community with what amounts to a mass surveillance tool. The NSA does not target Americans’ location data by design, but the agency acquires a substantial amount of information on the whereabouts of domestic cellphones “incidentally,” a legal term that connotes a foreseeable but not deliberate result. In scale, scope and potential impact on privacy, the efforts to collect and analyze location data may be unsurpassed among the NSA surveillance programs
that have been disclosed since June. Analysts can find cellphones
anywhere in the world, retrace their movements and expose hidden
relationships among the people using them. The NSA has no reason to suspect that the movements of the
overwhelming majority of cellphone users would be relevant to national
security. Rather, it collects locations in bulk because its most
powerful analytic tools — known collectively as CO-TRAVELER — allow it to look for unknown associates of known intelligence targets by tracking people whose movements intersect. Still,
location data, especially when aggregated over time, is widely regarded
among privacy advocates as uniquely sensitive. Sophisticated
mathematical techniques enable NSA analysts to map cellphone owners’
relationships by correlating their patterns of movement over time with
thousands or millions of other phone users who cross their paths.
Cellphones broadcast their locations even when they are not being used
to place a call or send a text message. CO-TRAVELER
and related tools require the methodical collection and storage of
location data on what amounts to a planetary scale. The government is
tracking people from afar into confidential business meetings or
personal visits to medical facilities, hotel rooms, private homes and
other traditionally protected spaces. “One of the key components
of location data, and why it’s so sensitive, is that the laws of physics
don’t let you keep it private,” said Chris Soghoian,
principal technologist at the American Civil Liberties Union. People
who value their privacy can encrypt their e-mails and disguise their
online identities, but “the only way to hide your location is to
disconnect from our modern communication system and live in a cave.” The
NSA cannot know in advance which tiny fraction of 1 percent of the
records it may need, so it collects and keeps as many as it can — 27
terabytes, by one account, or more than double the text content of the
Library of Congress’s print collection...more
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