Disaster The US Is Openly Stockpiling Dirt on All Its Citizens - "THE UNITED STATES government has been secretly amassing a “large amount” of “sensitive and intimate information” on its own citizens" "the government believes it can “persistently” track the phones of “millions of Americans” without a warrant"


A newly declassified report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence reveals that the federal government is buying troves of data about Americans.

THE UNITED STATES government has been secretly amassing a “large amount” of “sensitive and intimate information” on its own citizens, a group of senior advisers informed Avril Haines, the director of national intelligence, more than a year ago.

The size and scope of the government effort to accumulate data revealing the minute details of Americans' lives are described soberly and at length by the director's own panel of experts in a newly declassified report. Haines had first tasked her advisers in late 2021 with untangling a web of secretive business arrangements between commercial data brokers and US intelligence community members.

What that report ended up saying constitutes a nightmare scenario for privacy defenders.

“This report reveals what we feared most,” says Sean Vitka, a policy attorney at the nonprofit Demand Progress. “Intelligence agencies are flouting the law and buying information about Americans that Congress and the Supreme Court have made clear the government should not have.”

In the shadow of years of inaction by the US Congress on comprehensive privacy reform, a surveillance state has been quietly growing in the legal system's cracks. Little deference is paid by prosecutors to the purpose or intent behind limits traditionally imposed on domestic surveillance activities. More craven interpretations of aging laws are widely used to ignore them. As the framework guarding what privacy Americans do have grows increasingly frail, opportunities abound to split hairs in court over whether such rights are even enjoyed by our digital counterparts.

“I’ve been warning for years that if using a credit card to buy an American’s personal information voids their Fourth Amendment rights, then traditional checks and balances for government surveillance will crumble,” Ron Wyden, a US senator from Oregon, says.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) did not immediately respond to a request for comment. WIRED was unable to reach any members of the senior advisory panel, whose names have been redacted in the report. Former members have included ex-CIA officials of note and top defense industry leaders.

Wyden had pressed Haines, previously the number two at the Central Intelligence Agency, to release the panel's report during a March 8 hearing. Haines replied at the time that she believed it “absolutely” should be read by the public. On Friday, the report was declassified and released by the ODNI, which has been embroiled in a legal fight with the digital rights nonprofit the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) over a host of related documents.


“This report makes it clear that the government continues to think it can buy its way out of constitutional protections using taxpayers’ own money," says Chris Baumohl, a law fellow at EPIC. “Congress must tackle the government’s data broker pipeline this year, before it considers any reauthorization of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,” he said (referring to the ongoing political fight over the so-called “crown jewel” of US surveillance).

The ODNI's own panel of advisers makes clear that the government’s static interpretations of what constitutes “publicly available information” poses a significant threat to the public. The advisers decry existing policies that automatically conflate being able to buy information with it being considered “public.” The information being commercially sold about Americans today is “more revealing, available on more people (in bulk), less possible to avoid, and less well understood” than that which is traditionally thought of as being “publicly available.”

Perhaps most controversially, the report states that the government believes it can “persistently” track the phones of “millions of Americans” without a warrant, so long as it pays for the information. Were the government to simply demand access to a device's location instead, it would be considered a Fourth Amendment “search” and would require a judge's sign-off. But because companies are willing to sell the information—not only to the US government but to other companies as well—the government considers it “publicly available” and therefore asserts that it “can purchase it.”

It is no secret, the report adds, that it is often trivial “to deanonymize and identify individuals” from data that was packaged as ethically fine for commercial use because it had been “anonymized” first. Such data may be useful, it says, to “identify every person who attended a protest or rally based on their smartphone location or ad-tracking records.” Such civil liberties concerns are prime examples of how “large quantities of nominally ‘public’ information can result in sensitive aggregations.” What's more, information collected for one purpose “may be reused for other purposes,” which may “raise risks beyond those originally calculated,” an effect called “mission creep.”

Most Americans have at least some idea of how a law enforcement investigation unfolds (if only from watching years of police procedurals). This idea imagines a cop whose ability to surveil them, turn their phone into a tracking device, or start squeezing records out of businesses they frequent, are all gated behind evidentiary thresholds, like reasonable doubt and probable cause.

These are legal hurdles that no longer bother an increasing number of government agencies.

Access to the most sensitive information about a person was once usually obtained in the course of a “targeted” and “predicated” investigation, the report says. Not anymore. “Today, in a way that far fewer Americans seem to understand, and even fewer of them can avoid, [commercially available information] includes information on nearly everyone,” it says. Both the “volume and sensitivity” of information the government can purchase has exploded in recent years due to “location-tracking and other features of smartphones,” and the “advertising-based monetization model” that underlies much of the internet, the report says.

“In the wrong hands,” the ODNI’s advisers warn, the same mountain of data the government is quietly accumulating could be turned against Americans to “facilitate blackmail, stalking, harassment, and public shaming.” Notably, these are all offenses that have been committed by intelligence agencies and White House administrations in the past. What constraints do exist on domestic surveillance activities are all a direct response to that history of political sabotage, disinformation, and abusive violations of Americans' rights.

The report notes: “The government would never have been permitted to compel billions of people to carry location tracking devices on their persons at all times, to log and track most of their social interactions, or to keep flawless records of all their reading habits. Yet smartphones, connected cars, web tracking technologies, the Internet of Things, and other innovations have had this effect without government participation.”

The government must appreciate that all of this unfettered access can quickly increase its own power “to peer into private lives to levels that may exceed our constitutional traditions or other social expectations,” the advisers say, even if it can't blind itself to the fact that all this information exists and is readily sold for a buck.
 
What about you 'reward' the feds with some trolling? Pretend to be a drug dealer on failbook - get friends as 'customers' to help you out. Make cryptic phone calls about delivering 'that' and how much you'll be getting. The possibilities are endless.
Sounds like a good way to troll yourself into a few decades in prison. Claiming it was all a big joke to screw with the government doesn't seem like it would end well for you in court
 
But that's the point I'm making, that so much of this depraved shit has become so normalized that it makes me wonder what they could even have on most people.
Trump donation receipts. Sacrament celebrations. Family pictures. Nu-Metal, and other depraved shit that the institutions of our time deem foul.
Just having Nu-Metal alone will probably require 10 gigs of child smut for you to even out.
 
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One reason why I turn on my smartphone only when I plan to use it and turn it off when done. One reason why no appliances in the house are connected to the Internet. One reason why I now use a VPN. Nothing is perfect but plan to make them work for what they get.

Yes, El Comandante also keeps my phone turned off overnight, also has different browsers on my laptop for different sites and purposes, and is also careful what I search for on my phone since it's an Android and the only browser it supports is Google Chrome (of course) and we all know that Google is basically a giant vacuum cleaner hoovering up every breath you take with your phone and handing it to the military. Also, I have my laptop turned off and the lid closed whenever I'm not using it, and for extra points I turn off the power with a "line switch" aka a power strip. If they want to take me down, I'm gonna force them to jump through as many hoops as I possibly can until some glownig says "fuck, is this Marcos autist worth the trouble?" Anybody who buys and uses any appliance that is connected to the internet 24/7 is by definition a fucktard who needs to be minecrafted with a gigantic clue-by-four.
 
Its a good thing we have the fourth amendment so government can't spy on us! Quick, lets go buy new tech toys that spy on us and sell the data to the government! Nobody look at those tech companies to see the revolving-door incest between government and the corporate world, though. That's just a conspiracy theory! And definitely don't look at the patents involved in 5g & wifi remote sensing, The corporations need to know when you masturbate and how much toiler paper is left in your home, because reasons! And besides, those perfectly verifiable and freely available documents are akshually full of evil nazi conspiracy theories and lies. Just because we created it and patented it, doesn't mean we would ever do it! Trust us, we're the good guys!
 
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This has been done since 2002 with the PATRIOT Act. Boomercons at the time were bellowing “I got nothin’ to hide” because they never actually thought they’d be targeted by the three letter agencies they’ve been simping for all their lives. It’s now supposedly an issue when those boomercons found out what those agencies actually think of us. You can’t have it both ways. Think about that the next time your local congresscuck tells you how you need to give up freedoms to stick it to Russia and China.
 
involved in 5g & wifi remote sensing, The corporations need to know when you masturbate and how much toiler paper is left in your home, because reasons! And besides, those perfectly verifiable and freely available documents are akshually full of evil nazi conspiracy theories and lies. Just because we created it and patented it, doesn't mean we would ever do it!
Okay, I haven't heard that one. Can you fill me in?
 
But that's the point I'm making, that so much of this depraved shit has become so normalized that it makes me wonder what they could even have on most people.
I remember when Milo got bad press from romanticising when he was raped as a child by an older boy, but that Star Trek Asian got standing ovation for the same thing.
 
Okay, I haven't heard that one. Can you fill me in?
I'm well into my Saturday, which means working on my house and some libations, and the ensuing laziness that follows, so I'm not gonna go crawling for it. I stopped bookmarking shit like that years ago when it became abundantly clear no1curr. But search out some of those 5g and newer wifi standards, check out the patents. Embrace the coming techno-dystopia.
 
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Yes, El Comandante also keeps my phone turned off overnight, also has different browsers on my laptop for different sites and purposes, and is also careful what I search for on my phone since it's an Android and the only browser it supports is Google Chrome (of course) and we all know that Google is basically a giant vacuum cleaner hoovering up every breath you take with your phone and handing it to the military. Also, I have my laptop turned off and the lid closed whenever I'm not using it, and for extra points I turn off the power with a "line switch" aka a power strip. If they want to take me down, I'm gonna force them to jump through as many hoops as I possibly can until some glownig says "fuck, is this Marcos autist worth the trouble?" Anybody who buys and uses any appliance that is connected to the internet 24/7 is by definition a fucktard who needs to be minecrafted with a gigantic clue-by-four.
I guess I'm glad Nuul forced us onto Tor in a way. The last few months on the farms have been like running in a silent submarine; not completely untraceable with enough manpower, but the amount of effort for the glowies to look through every retard's shit and fuck with them is overkill.
 
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I guess I'm glad Nuul forced us onto Tor in a way. The last few months on the farms have been like running in a silent submarine; not completely untraceable with enough manpower, but the amount of effort for the glowies to look through every retard's shit and fuck with them is overkill.
You do know that TOR's development was heavily funded by U.S intelligence agencies and is all but confirmed to have multiple backdoors right?
 
You do know that TOR's development was heavily funded by U.S intelligence agencies and is all but confirmed to have multiple backdoors right?
It depends on how hard they can be arsed to use them. They seem more focused on locking people up on 4chan that bully that sherrif in florida than superhacking everyone that posts here
 
Are you serious mate? this isn't a news at all, everybody already know about this :roll:.

You do know that TOR's development was heavily funded by U.S intelligence agencies and is all but confirmed to have multiple backdoors right?
well yes there are backdoors, the thing is... the tor network is the most secure and reliable Network we currently have and to say that it is useless to use tor network because there are few backdoors is just foolish.
 
The glowiez mainly use Tor to do shit like run shell accounts on BomberBay and cajole retards in the Deep South into buying dynamite and percocet, then the glowsquad shows up and drags them into the night. The point is to eventually take down BomberBay and toss the owner into Florence ADX. The fact that two or three more identical sites will pop up is ok because it means more work to justify next year's budget increase.

In the real world, all the screeching by Jew Defenders Of Teh Marginalized about how laughing at genetically fucked basement dwelling autistfaggots is the absolute most horrible illegal thing on the internetz and that Evul Farmz needs to be destroyed and the posters tossed in Florence doesn't mean jack shit to the hard core glownig commanders who have to pick and choose who to fuck over. It's really all about press releases and looking good on CNN, and the current unpersons are White Supremacists and TRUE and HONEST 15 year old ISIS recruits.

The average midmanagement office droid has never heard of us unless she comes across a stray article on CNN about Chris or Nikocado that mentions us twice. There's simply no publicity in taking us down, except for the random autist like SIGSEGV who makes a passing threat to shoot up the Lincoln Memorial. At least being on the darknet makes it harder for our targets to find us and then pay a low end Russian botnet op to DDoS us for a few days after the SSI checks arrive.
 
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You do know that TOR's development was heavily funded by U.S intelligence agencies and is all but confirmed to have multiple backdoors right?
If there are "backdoors," they can't use them openly without revealing to the world they definitely exist, thus destroying the usefulness of TOR as a honeypot. In that scenario they would have to come up with other explanations for their busts, leaving plausible deniability for how they accomplished the busts.

Personally, I think TOR probably has unpatched exploits (like all programs) which they use, perhaps with early knowledge of those exploits, and then that list of unpatched exploits is always changing because they're being patched constantly. The people doing the patching probably give them early knowledge of the exploits.
 
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