1
0

NSA engaged in economic espionage, cyberterrorism, and other crimes


               
2013 Sep 10, 4:19pm   7,636 views  46 comments

by Dan8267   follow (4)  

New Snowden Documents Show NSA Deemed Google Networks a "Target"

The 13-minute news segment focused on the revelation that, according to the leaked files, the NSA apparently targeted Brazil's state-run Petrobras oil producer for surveillance—undermining a recent statement by the agency that it “does not engage in economic espionage in any domain.”

Perhaps big business, afraid of losing intellectual property and trade secrets, will be the downfall of the NSA.

#crime

Comments 1 - 30 of 46       Last »     Search these comments

1   lostand confused   @   2013 Sep 10, 9:57pm  

Dan8267 says

Perhaps big business, afraid of losing intellectual property and trade secrets, will be the downfall of the NSA.

Haha!

2   Heraclitusstudent   @   2013 Sep 11, 3:59am  

Dan8267 says

Perhaps big business, afraid of losing intellectual property and trade secrets, will be the downfall of the NSA.

I would think big US companies don't care about US spying.

However big US tech companies probably care that they will lose billions in sales abroad:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-10/nsa-spying-seen-risking-billions-in-u-s-technology-sales.html

3   freak80   @   2013 Sep 11, 4:15am  

Hey, it's only a crime if it's illegal!

4   FortWayne   @   2013 Sep 11, 4:57am  

freak80 says

Hey, it's only a crime if it's illegal!

It's only crime if it's committed by those who are not in charge.

5   Dan8267   @   2013 Sep 11, 7:50am  

freak80 says

Hey, it's only a crime if it's illegal!

It is illegal under the highest law of our land, the Constitution. We need to start enforcing that law again with criminal prosecutions.

6   freak80   @   2013 Sep 11, 8:49am  

Lol...since when did the constitution matter? Money is the highest law of our land!

7   bob2356   @   2013 Sep 11, 11:38am  

Dan8267 says

freak80 says

Hey, it's only a crime if it's illegal!

It is illegal under the highest law of our land, the Constitution. We need to start enforcing that law again with criminal prosecutions.

Do you still believe in Santa Claus also? The highest law of our land is money.

8   thomaswong.1986   @   2013 Sep 11, 12:50pm  

Dan8267 says

NSA engaged in economic espionage, cyberterrorism, and other crimes

you mean counter-espionage and counter-cyperterrorism...

when criminals / terrorists started using the internet, libs like you looked the other way.. when law enforcement started loging on and arresting them for crimes you call it crimes.

laughable... i guess you wouldnt allow highway patrols either to stop speeders and narco-runners.

9   thomaswong.1986   @   2013 Sep 11, 12:52pm  

Dan8267 says

It is illegal under the highest law of our land, the Constitution. We need to start enforcing that law again with criminal prosecutions.

No its not !

10   thomaswong.1986   @   2013 Sep 11, 12:58pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

I would think big US companies don't care about US spying.

However big US tech companies probably care that they will lose billions in sales abroad:

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-10/nsa-spying-seen-risking-billions-in-u-s-technology-sales.html

You gotta hand it to journalist.. the article should point out why its better to build
telecom products in the USA and not in China. Just another toxic product coming out of China.

Your better off having the NSA stopping state sponsored hackers in North Korea, Iran, China, Russia and other unfriendly nations than allowing these to continue to exist.

As i said a few months now, USA made telecom may be more expensive but at least it wont be hacked.

11   upisdown   @   2013 Sep 12, 1:48am  

Dan8267 says

Perhaps big business, afraid of losing intellectual property and trade
secrets, will be the downfall of the NSA.

That's why they(NSA) do it.

Remeber the good ole days when........if you aren't doing anything wrong, then you have nothing to worry about

12   Dan8267   @   2013 Sep 12, 2:48am  

bob2356 says

Do you still believe in Santa Claus also? The highest law of our land is money.

Where you and I differ is that I would advocate changing that.

13   bob2356   @   2013 Sep 12, 5:26am  

Dan8267 says

bob2356 says

Do you still believe in Santa Claus also? The highest law of our land is money.

Where you and I differ is that I would advocate changing that.

I actively advocated changing that for 30 years by being involved in the election process as a volunteer and party supporter. Then George Bush got elected. This made me realize that there was no hope whatsoever, the system is broken and the unstoppable course of decay just has to work it's way through until some major event resets the system. I do hold other citizenships now just in case things really go to crap fast and I have to bail totally.

Remind me much time you've spent trying to make change? Running you mouth on patnet doesn't count.

14   freak80   @   2013 Sep 12, 5:39am  

Dan8267 says

I would advocate changing that.

So would everyone. But how will that ever happen? Everybody likes money!

15   Heraclitusstudent   @   2013 Sep 12, 6:03am  

thomaswong.1986 says

the article should point out why its better to build

telecom products in the USA and not in China. Just another toxic product coming out of China.

Right. You're thinking like all that matters is the US.

What do you think countries like Germany, France, India, Brazil, Russia will do now?

Will they continue to buy Microsoft OSs, Cisco routers, Apple or Google phones and be happy to be spied on at will by the NSA?

No. They will spend money to develop their own NSA proof products. And then sell these products. They may well be inferior products, but when you have state and trade secrets, you do what you have to to protect them.

This will represent many billions in lost sales for US companies. As well as new competitors.

16   Heraclitusstudent   @   2013 Sep 12, 6:11am  

bob2356 says

Then George Bush got elected. This made me realize that there was no hope whatsoever, the system is broken and the unstoppable course of decay just has to work it's way through until some major event resets the system.

An alternative is just a question of organization.
I think a majority of people would agree with a simple sets of reforms regarding 2 parties duopoly, political financing, lobbying and other aspects of the current political system.

17   bob2356   @   2013 Sep 12, 10:21am  

Heraclitusstudent says

I think a majority of people would agree with a simple sets of reforms regarding 2 parties duopoly, political financing, lobbying and other aspects of the current political system.

That would be nice but the people who would actually be changing the system benefit the most from the system. The amount of money involved in running for office has increased to the point where the only realistic source is large corporations and organizations (trial lawyers, public unions, etc.). The last thing they would want is any type of reform that decreases their influence on law makers. I see no way reform is possible other than a breakdown of the system.

18   Heraclitusstudent   @   2013 Sep 12, 10:41am  

bob2356 says

That would be nice but the people who would actually be changing the system benefit the most from the system.

It's a matter of people grouping together to do it.
Obviously you can't rely on existing groups.

19   Dan8267   @   2013 Sep 12, 11:08am  

bob2356 says

Remind me much time you've spent trying to make change? Running you mouth on patnet doesn't count.

Spreading good ideas is the best, and possibly only, way the typical American citizen can make a positive material change to our country. Good ideas must be discussed openly and often so that they can gain widespread support. Only then, do such ideas stand a chance of trickling up to those who actually hold power.

A good idea can go viral, and if it does, it stands a chance of becoming a movement and then a reform. But the only way that can happen is if people with good ideas run their mouths often.

There are over 300 million Americans today. Other than coming up with and spreading good ideas, there is damn little, if anything, the typical American can do to make great change.

Here's some examples of my good ideas. Spread them like herpes.

20   Heraclitusstudent   @   2013 Sep 12, 11:31am  

You need to do 2 things:
1 - bring people together around a clear idea that shares wide support. (let's say stop NSA spying of Americans)
2 - get people to donate, hire lobbyists and buy politicians to do it.

One could easily create an Internet start-up to do these things.

21   thomaswong.1986   @   2013 Sep 12, 2:31pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

What do you think countries like Germany, France, India, Brazil, Russia will do now?

Will they continue to buy Microsoft OSs, Cisco routers, Apple or Google phones and be happy to be spied on at will by the NSA?

had they been manufactured in USA or in their own country.. YES !

no need to mfg in China.

22   thomaswong.1986   @   2013 Sep 12, 2:39pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

No. They will spend money to develop their own NSA proof products. And then sell these products. They may well be inferior products, but when you have state and trade secrets, you do what you have to to protect them.

Like Euro tech makers such as Philips Semi, STMicroelectronics, which also had its products hacked by the Chinese Military.. These guys have already been making chips that go into American products.

The NSA isnt the problem here...

MI6 and MI5 'refuse to use Lenovo computers' over claims Chinese company makes them vulnerable to hacking

Lenovo - the largest PC producer in the world - is indirectly backed by the Chinese state

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/mi6-and-mi5-refuse-to-use-lenovo-computers-over-claims-chinese-company-makes-them-vulnerable-to-hacking-8737072.html

Britain’s intelligence agencies, including MI6 and MI5, have allegedly banned the use of computers manufactured by Chinese company Lenovo due to concerns that the machines come hardwired with a vulnerability to hacking.

Machines produced by the state-backed technology company, which is the largest PC producer in the world, are claimed to have been found in tests by MI5 and GCHQ to have modifications in their circuitry which could allow remote access to the devices without the owners’ knowledge.

The discovery has led to a written banning order being issued among the “Five Eyes” alliance of British, American, Australian, Canadian and New Zealand eavesdropping agencies, including the US National Security Agency, according to the respected Australian Financial Review.

23   thomaswong.1986   @   2013 Sep 12, 2:41pm  

Chinese hackers 'steal blueprints for Australian spy HQ'
Hackers traced to China stole floorplans of the new A$630m base for the Australia Security Intelligence Organisation, according to ABC news

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/chinese-hackers-steal-blueprints-for-australian-spy-hq-8633757.html

hinese hackers have stolen the blueprints of a new multi-million-dollar Australian spy headquarters as part of a growing wave of cyber attacks against business and military targets in the close US ally, an Australian news report said.

The hackers also stole confidential information from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, which houses the overseas spy agency the Australian Secret Intelligence Service, Australia's ABC Television said late yesterday.

The ABC report said Chinese hackers had targeted Australia-based companies more aggressively than previously thought, including steel-manufacturer Bluescope Steel, and military and civilian communications manufacturer Codan Ltd.

24   thomaswong.1986   @   2013 Sep 12, 2:44pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

You need to do 2 things:

1 - bring people together around a clear idea that shares wide support. (let's say stop NSA spying of Americans)

2 - get people to donate, hire lobbyists and buy politicians to do it.

Stupid idea.. how do you know the person on the internet is American citizen to begin with ? Could be a Chinese hacker, Colombian narc-smuggler, or Arab terrorists.

25   Heraclitusstudent   @   2013 Sep 12, 3:21pm  

thomaswong.1986 says

Stupid idea.. how do you know the person on the internet is American citizen to begin with ? Could be a Chinese hacker, Colombian narc-smuggler, or Arab terrorists.

You ask for an id.

26   freak80   @   2013 Sep 13, 12:25am  

Dan8267 says

Here's some examples of my good ideas. Spread them like herpes.

That's a long list. Which is highest priority? Do the numbers indicate priority?

It seems like our #1 problem is wealth (and therefore power) concentration. Money buys politicians and therefore money buys laws.

27   Dan8267   @   2013 Sep 13, 12:28am  

The numbers are just used for organization, not priority.

freak80 says

It seems like our #1 problem is wealth (and therefore power) concentration.

Agreed. And no matter what you do, those with the money and power will resist. So you just have to chip away at their parasitic strongholds.

28   MisdemeanorRebel   @   2013 Sep 14, 11:57am  

Interesting forum thread by cryptonerds about WHAT the NSA cracked.
http://www.metzdowd.com/pipermail/cryptography/2013-September/017031.html

Looks like there is a belief , based on what I can decipher (no pun intended) is that it is RSA that has been rendered insecure. Others disagree.

Another interesting piece in the same thread about what (not) to do if you end up in unsolicited possession of information:
http://www.metzdowd.com/pipermail/cryptography/2013-September/017228.html

I found the part where the guy found top secret documents in his public library that the NSA insisted be destroyed quite funny.

Update: This article says it's RC4, which is apparently behind HTTPS and most VPN.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/09/06/nsa_cryptobreaking_bullrun_analysis/

29   MisdemeanorRebel   @   2013 Sep 14, 12:16pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

No. They will spend money to develop their own NSA proof products. And then sell these products. They may well be inferior products, but when you have state and trade secrets, you do what you have to to protect them.

Bingo. The BRICS may very well develop their own OS, software, and protocols for their own security, to create their own IT power (their new prop systems will be powered by domestic knowhow, which has the added benefit of creating middle class jobs), and eventually exporting it as a safer, more secure alternative to NSA backdoor-vulnerability riddled spyware from various US Multinationals.

BTW, anybody realize the sick humor - and the real target - behind the names of the US/UK programs, both named after the respective country's Civil War battles. These programs ain't called "Falafel" or "Tafiq", they aren't targeted at foreign religious nuts, but at US targets.

30   thomaswong.1986   @   2013 Sep 14, 12:20pm  

thunderlips11 says

Bingo. The BRICS may very well develop their own OS, software, and protocols for their own security, to create their own IT power (their new prop systems will be powered by domestic knowhow, which has the added benefit of creating middle class jobs), and eventually exporting it as a safer, more secure alternative to NSA backdoor-vulnerability

you do realize they (BRIC) already export the such products which have been hacked by Russian and Chinese secret services at the factory level. Not even the US named mfg were aware of the changes made to their products.

So ... you rather have compromised systems from the other nations vs USA made which have NOT been compromised ?

Comments 1 - 30 of 46       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   users   suggestions   gaiste