Newly published NSA documents show agency could grab all Skype traffic | Ars Technica

2014.12.31

The full capture of voice traffic began in February of 2011 for “Skype in” and “Skype out” calls—calls between a Skype user and a land line or cellphone through a gateway to the public switched telephone network (PSTN), captured through warranted taps into Microsoft’s gateways. But in July of 2011, the NSA added the capability of capturing peer-to-peer Skype communications—meaning that the NSA gained the ability to capture peer-to-peer traffic and decrypt it using keys provided by Microsoft through the PRISM warrant request.

via Newly published NSA documents show agency could grab all Skype traffic | Ars Technica.

Holder urges tech companies to leave device backdoors open for police – The Washington Post

2014.10.01

Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. said on Tuesday that new forms of encryption capable of locking law enforcement officials out of popular electronic devices imperil investigations of kidnappers and sexual predators, putting children at increased risk.

via Holder urges tech companies to leave device backdoors open for police – The Washington Post.

 

TL;DR: “we need to snoop on everything, for the kids”. Shameless, spineless, embarassing.

Categories : News  News  Privacy

The Criminal Indictment That Could Finally Hit Spyware Makers Hard | WIRED

2014.10.01

The indictment this week of the man behind an app designed for surreptitiously monitoring cellphone activity is only the second federal case filed against someone involved in the commercial sale of so-called spyware and stalkingware. But the case could have negative implications for others who make and sell similar snooping tools, experts hope.

The case involves StealthGenie, a spy app for iPhones, Android phones and Blackberry devices that until last week was marketed primarily to people who suspected their spouse or lover of cheating on them but it also could be used by stalkers or perpetrators of domestic violence to track victims. The app secretly recorded phone calls and siphoned text messages and other data from a target’s phone, all of which customers of the software could view online until the government succeeded to temporarily close the Virginia-based site (.pdf) that hosted the stolen data.

via The Criminal Indictment That Could Finally Hit Spyware Makers Hard | WIRED.

Categories : News  News  Privacy