President Obama responds to PRISM concerns, clarifies scope of snooping

If you’ve missed the news on PRISM and the hugely disconcerting allegations that the NSA is basically tracking everything you do on the internet and every call you make on your cellphone, we’re guessing that’s because you’re stuck in a cave that has access to neither technology. The allegations are incredibly troubling to say the least, and President Obama this afternoon took the time to address them — albeit briefly. For one thing, he clarified that “nobody is listening to your phone calls,” indicating that people are looking at metadata about those calls (destinations, length, etc.) rather than the calls themselves. Additionally, he clarified the internet side of the program thusly: “Internet monitoring is only for those outside United States; we have to balance keeping America safe with privacy concerns.” That’s great for Americans, but perhaps a bit troubling for everyone else.

This more or less echoes the statements made yesterday by James Clapper, Director of National Intelligence. President Obama also reminded that this program predates his taking office, and that he himself was skeptical but has come around to the program, stating that this is something “Americans should feel comfortable about.” Well, then, how comfortable do you feel? Let us know in comments.

Update: The Wall Street Journal has a full transcript of President Obama’s comments.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: The Washington Post, CNBC (Twitter)

Report: UK security agency also gathering secrets through PRISM

The United Kingdom’s main security agency, the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), is apparently working with the United States’ Prism intelligence program to gather data on various internet companies, The Guardian reports. Documents given to the UK news outlet indicate that GCHQ was able to retrieve “personal material such as emails, photos and videos” from internet companies operating outside the UK, and the GCHQ employed 197 intelligence reports in 2012 alone. This allows the UK government to circumvent red tape that would otherwise tie up the process of acquiring information from companies located outside of its own region.

Apparently the GCHQ’s been working with the US Prism service since “at least June 2010,” and it’s unknown how that’s impacted UK citizens in the past several years — a GCHQ representative wouldn’t comment on how long the two agencies have been working together. Though the GCHQ didn’t directly confirm the collaboration, the agency issued a statement to The Guardian stating it, “takes its obligations under the law very seriously.”

The PRISM system is said to enable access to records held by the nine largest internet companies, from Apple and Google to Skype and even Engadget’s parent company, AOL.

Comments

Source: The Guardian

Internet Companies Deny Knowing PRISM Program

Honesty is the best policy, but do these companies allegedly affected by NSA’s PRISM program concur?

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Washington Post: NSA, FBI tapping directly into servers of 9 leading internet companies (update)

Washington Post NSA, FBI tapping directly into servers of 9 leading internet companies

On the heels of yesterday’s revelation that the NSA is bulk collecting call logs from Verizon Business customers, the Washington Post is reporting tonight on another initiative, code named PRISM. According to the report, it gives the FBI and NSA access to “audio, video, photographs, e-mails, documents and connection logs” from the central servers of Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL (parent company of Engadget), Skype, YouTube and Apple. Another program called BLARNEY sniffs up metadata as it streams past “choke points” on the internet, continuing the theme of bulk scooping of data most would think is private. The Post’s knowledge of these programs comes from PowerPoint slides (like the one shown above) provided by a “career intelligence officer” driven to expose how deep it goes.

So what can the project allegedly see? Analysts based at Fort Meade use search terms to determine at least 51 percent confidence in a subject’s “foreignness” before pulling data, which can include that of people found in a suspect’s inbox. On Facebook, they can utilize the service’s built in search and surveillance capabilities, monitor audio, video, chat and file transfers or access activity on Google’s mail, storage, photo and search services. So… are you still logged in?

Update 4: Now we’ve come full circle, as the original Washington Post article has been expanded to include the various company’s responses and denials (listed after the break). Another element that has changed is the mention of another classified report that suggests these companies may not be knowingly participating, and the NSA’s access may not be as direct as originally claimed. Claiming the difference may be the result of “imprecision” by the NSA author, the arrangement is now described as “collection managers [to send] content tasking instructions directly to equipment installed at company-controlled locations.”

Filed under: , , , ,

Comments

Source: Washington Post, Office of the Director of National Intelligence

Luminogeist 3D iPhone Displays: Prism Power

People love their smartphones, and it’s hard to remember how we actually managed to get anything done in the past with only our dumbphones. Check out this interesting digital art installation from Japan that highlights smartphones.

luminogeist yuri endo art installation smartphone

Japanese designer Yuri Endo developed Luminogeist as the final phase in his thesis project at IDAS. The installation uses glass prisms which reassemble 3D image components from the mobile displays below. The prisms allow the extraction what’s being shown on the smartphone’s screen, making them look almost like floating holograms. Check it out, it’s pretty cool:

I wonder if this technique could be used with tablets or flat panel TVs to display floating images inside of even larger prisms.

luminogeist yuri endo art installation smartphone close

luminogeist yuri endo art installation smartphone detail

[via designboom]