After seeing this
latest report from Bloomberg on how thousands of U.S. businesses are providing the NSA and other national intelligence agencies with access to sensitive data of their customers without even so much as a court order, it's hard to imagine that anything stored in electronic format is safe from the government's prying eyes today. These latest disclosures are far more reaching than anything exposed by NSA contract employee Edward Snowden:
Thousands of technology, finance and manufacturing companies are working
closely with U.S. national security agencies, providing sensitive information
and in return receiving benefits that include access to classified intelligence,
four people familiar with the process said.
These programs, whose
participants are known as trusted partners, extend far beyond what was revealed
by Edward Snowden, a computer technician who did work for the National Security
Agency. The role of private companies has come under intense scrutiny since his
disclosure this month that the NSA is collecting millions of U.S. residents’
telephone records and the computer communications of foreigners from Google Inc (GOOG).
and other Internet companies under court order.
Many of these same Internet and telecommunications companies voluntarily
provide U.S. intelligence organizations with additional data, such as equipment
specifications, that don’t involve private communications of their customers,
the four people said.
Makers of hardware and software, banks, Internet security providers,
satellite telecommunications companies and many other companies also participate
in the government programs. In some cases, the information gathered may be used
not just to defend the nation but to help infiltrate computers of its
adversaries.
Along with the NSA, the Central Intelligence
Agency (0112917D), the Federal Bureau of Investigation and branches of the
U.S. military have agreements with such companies to gather data that might seem
innocuous but could be highly useful in the hands of U.S. intelligence or cyber
warfare units, according to the people, who have either worked for the
government or are in companies that have these accords.
Some U.S. telecommunications companies willingly provide intelligence
agencies with access to facilities and data offshore that would require a
judge’s order if it were done in the U.S., one of the four people said.
In these cases, no oversight is necessary under the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act, and companies are providing the information voluntarily.
The extensive cooperation between commercial companies and intelligence
agencies is legal and reaches deeply into many aspects of everyday life, though
little of it is scrutinized by more than a small number of lawyers, company
leaders and spies. Company executives are motivated by a desire to help the
national defense as well as to help their own companies, said the people, who
are familiar with the agreements.
Most of the arrangements are so sensitive that only a handful of people in a
company know of them, and they are sometimes brokered directly between chief
executive officers and the heads of the U.S.’s major spy agencies, the people
familiar with those programs said . . .
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