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Thread: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

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    Default Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    By Jennifer Martinez - 11/13/12 01:50 PM ET
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    Google received more requests from the U.S. government to hand over user data during the first half of this year than from any other country, according to the search company's biannual "Transparency Report" released on Tuesday.


    From January to June, Google received nearly 8,000 requests for user data from the U.S. government. The search company said it "fully or partially" compiled with roughly 90 percent of them. That's up from the 5,950 requests for user data that Google received from the U.S. government during the same period a year ago.








    More than 16,000 Google accounts were specified in the U.S. government's user data requests, according to the report.

    However, the search company cautioned that the total number of U.S. government requests for user data also tallied requests "issued by U.S. authorities on behalf of other governments pursuant to mutual legal assistance treaties and other diplomatic mechanisms."

    Still, that number dwarfs the requests from other countries: India and Brazil came after the U.S. with 2,319 and 1,566 requests for user data, respectively, during the first half of 2012.

    "This is the sixth time we’ve released this data, and one trend has become clear: Government surveillance is on the rise," said Dorothy Chou, senior policy analyst at Google, in a company blog post.

    Overall, Google received 20,938 requests for user data from government officials worldwide in the first half of this year, which targeted roughly 34,614 accounts. That's up from the 18,257 government requests for user data that Google received during the same period a year ago, around a 15 percent rise.

    In addition, Google saw a notable spike in the number of requests it received from government officials to remove content from YouTube and its other services during the first half of 2012. The search company said it received 1,791 requests from government officials to remove 17,746 pieces of content during the first half of this year — a 70 percent rise from the number of content-removal requests it received a same period a year ago.

    Turkey topped the list of countries that sent the most content-removal requests, a total of 501 requests from January to June, according to the report. The requests were focused on removing YouTube videos, blogs and other content that was critical of the government.

    The U.S. came in second with 273 requests to remove content, an increase of "46% compared to the previous reporting period," the report said.

    "The number of government requests to remove content from our services was largely flat from 2009 to 2011," Chou said. "But it’s spiked in this reporting period."
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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    Big Brother is watching us.
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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    Google Confirms: ‘Government Surveillance Is On The Rise’

    By Rat on December 23, 2012 • ( 9 )

    REPORT REVEALS SHARP INCREASE IN REQUESTS FOR PERSONAL DATA



    Overshadowed by the interest in David Petraeus’s affair and subsequent Benghazigate testimony was the probability that the former CIA Director’s dalliances may very well have escaped the public eye were it not for the FBI snooping into Paula Broadwell’s private email account.

    Moreover, the snooping occurred simply because U.S. military groupie Jill Kelly intimated to a pal in the FBI that Broadwell was harassing her with “threatening” emails. Hardly the kind of stuff you’d expect the FBI to jump on, huh? Nevertheless, jump on it did.

    As a matter of a fact, it turns out that the federal government has jumped on a whole lot of private emails, Twitter accounts and other social media sites at a record pace in 2012.

    Google recently published its latest analysis of requests for access to private accounts from governments around the globe, and the data shows that in Obama’s America, it’s hardly just the inboxes of Patraeus, Broadwell and Kelly that get the attention of the Regime; the U.S. government sought access to nearly 8,000 Google and Gmail accounts during just the first six months of this year.

    From January through June, the government filed more than 16,000 requests for user data from Google on as many as 7,969 individual accounts, the report shows.

    “This is the sixth time we’ve released this data, and one trend has become clear: Government surveillance is on the rise,” Google acknowledged in a blog post published Tuesday, November 13.

    Of the 20,938 user data requests from governments around the globe, the U.S. came in first at 7,969 – with India a distant second at 2,319 requests. Moreover, the U.S. government’s success rate in terms of receiving the information it requests trumps that of every other country. How fortunate that O and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt are BFFs, huh?

    The report also reveals it’s more than just surveillance of individual users that is on the rise. The U.S. has also been adamant about censoring the Web – asking Google five times between January and June to take down YouTube videos critical of government, law enforcement or public officials. To its credit, Google says, “We did not remove content in response to those requests.”

    According to NSA whistleblower Bill Binney, the government is “pulling together data about virtually every citizen in the country and assembling that information; building communities that you have relationships with; knowledge about you; what your activities are; what you’re doing.”

    While surveillance by the government necessarily increased after 9/11, the escalation in recent years – not to mention some of the reasons for it – is troubling at the very least. Although, what should be expected from a regime that launched AttackWatch.com?

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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    I would love to see the title list of the videos that was requested for removal from youtube. Could be quite telling.

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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'


    IRS High-Tech Tools Track Your Digital Footprints

    April 5, 2013

    The Internal Revenue Service is collecting a lot more than taxes this year--it's also acquiring a huge volume of personal information on taxpayers' digital activities, from eBay auctions to Facebook posts and, for the first time ever, credit card and e-payment transaction records, as it expands its search for tax cheats to places it's never gone before.

    The IRS, under heavy pressure to help Washington out of its budget quagmire by chasing down an estimated $300 billion in revenue lost to evasions and errors each year, will start using "robo-audits" of tax forms and third-party data the IRS hopes will help close this so-called "tax gap." But the agency reveals little about how it will employ its vast, new network scanning powers.

    Tax lawyers and watchdogs are concerned about the sweeping changes being implemented with little public discussion or clear guidelines, and Congressional staff sources say the IRS use of "big data" will be a key issue when the next IRS chief comes to the Senate for approval. Acting commissioner Steven T. Miller replaced Douglas Shulman last November.

    "It's well-known in the tax community, but not many people outside of it are aware of this big expansion of data and computer use," says Edward Zelinsky, a tax law expert and professor at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and Yale Law School. "I am sure people will be concerned about the use of personal information on databases in government, and those concerns are well-taken. It's appropriate to watch it carefully. There should be safeguards." He adds that taxpayers should know that whatever people do and say electronically can and will be used against them in IRS enforcement.

    IRS's big data tracking


    Consumers are already familiar with Internet "cookies" that track their movements and send them targeted ads that follow them to different websites. The IRS has brought in private industry experts to employ similar digital tracking--but with the added advantage of access to Social Security numbers, health records, credit card transactions and many other privileged forms of information that marketers don't see.

    "Private industry would be envious if they knew what our models are," boasted Dean Silverman, the agency's high-tech top gun who heads a group recruited from the private sector to update the IRS, in a comment reported in trade publications. The IRS did not respond to a request for an interview.

    In trade presentations and public documents, the agency has said it will use a massively parallel computer system that can analyze data from different networks to find irregularities and suspicious activities.

    Much of the work already has been automated to process and analyze electronic tax returns in current "robo-audits" that flag unusual behavior patterns. With IRS audit staff reduced by budget cuts this year, the agency will be forced to rely on computer-generated audits more than ever.

    The agency declined to comment on how it will use its new technology. But agency officials have been outlining plans at industry conferences, working with IBM, EMC and other private-sector specialists. In presentations, officials have said they may use the big data for:

    -- Charting and analyzing social media such as Facebook

    -- Targeting audits by matching tax filings to social media or electronic payments

    -- Tracking individual Internet addresses and emailing patterns

    -- Sorting data in 32,000 categories of metadata and 1 million unique "attributes"

    -- Machine learning across "neural" networks

    -- Statistical and agent-based modeling

    -- Relationship analysis based on Social Security numbers and other personal identifiers

    Officials have said much of the data will be used only for research. The agency's economic forecasts and data are a key part of Washington's budget infrastructure. Former commissioner Douglas Shulman said in an IRS statement that the technology will employ "billions of pieces of data" to target enforcement and to "detect and combat noncompliance."

    U.S. Tax Court records show that information gathered from Facebook and eBay postings have been used by the IRS in defending tax challenges. Under a Freedom of Information Act disclosure obtained by privacy advocates at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the group published the IRS's 38-page manual used to train auditors to search Internet addresses, Facebook postings and other social media to back audit enforcements.

    In practice, the third-party data has been used only if the irregular returns merit more attention. In one much-cited example, IRS officials talk about prisoners who were filing false claims for energy tax credits for window replacements.

    The agency, wary of public opinion about invasive audit practices, has pulled back from using so-called "social audits," which, for example, might single out horse-racing enthusiasts or sailboaters for special attention. But by screening existing data for one million unique attributes, the agency can quietly create a DNA-like code to understand the economic behavior of any individual.

    The IRS last year used a profiling test model to study 1,500 tax preparers with histories of reporting deficiencies and managed to recover $200 million. It cited the experience as proof that its data analysis works. Early this year, however, a new set of rules it developed for tax preparers was thrown out by a federal court who said the agency had overstepped its mandate. The IRS would not comment on whether the rules were based on its new screening tools.

    Lots of computing power, for what?


    The agency's computers can now load all U.S. tax returns in just 10 hours, compared with the four months it took just eight years ago, Jeff Butler, IRS director of research databases told the IBM TechAmerica conference last November. That leaves a lot of time for other uses. The IRS says it expects 80 percent of its tax returns to be filed electronically this year. That makes a total of 250 million returns filed, with $2 trillion in revenue.

    But processing those returns uses only a fraction of the agency's computing power. An entire year of tax returns amounts to 15 terabytes, or just 1.5 percent of the IRS storage of 1.2 petabytes (one quadrillion bits of information), based on public data from IRS presentations. The agency has expanded its data capacity by 1,000 percent in the past six years.

    It also recently assembled $350 million in high-tech tools to do a lot of auditing, tracking and analyzing what people do on the Internet. The agency has used social media and other third-party sources in the past, but it has now increased its capability to so from its own growing database of networks.

    Congressional staffers on the House Ways and Means Committee and the Joint Committee on Taxation, both of which oversee the IRS, say they have been occupied by more pressing issues related to the budget crisis, and Congress gave the tax officials leeway to use technology to solve the growing problem of identity theft. But they said they will look at the possibility of errors in robo-audits as well as the storage of data on millions of taxpayers.

    The IRS is guarded about how its audits are triggered, tax experts say, because too much information on what they do might help tax cheats. Major accounting firms have been given little information on the changes and were reluctant to comment, although some said privately that they are aware of the new IRS tools but it is too early to tell how they will be used. Taxpayer advocacy groups also say they are waiting to see how the IRS manages its technology upgrade, and are holding out hope that it will make taxes more fair and efficient and force tax evaders to pay their share of the overall burden.

    While many applaud the effort to update government technology with private-sector tools, they say the agency needs to conform to higher standards.

    "I don't really see strong legal regulation in place to manage something of this magnitude," says Paul Schwartz, University of California law professor and co-director of the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology. The IRS is working with the same kind of oversight and rules that were developed in the paper tax-return era, says Schwartz. But with the technology it now has, the agency can "see into people's lives" as never before.

    Tax returns are like narratives of how people spent their money, and tax audits have been guided by "reasonable" interpretations of allowable credits and deductions by the IRS agents who manage audits. "Social media can make people testify against themselves," Schwartz says. "They provide a counter-narrative." He cites as an example a businessperson going to Florida for five meetings over a week who also visits family in Miami. A casual Google+ posting to friends online about "visiting my mother in Florida" could paint a different picture than the deduction taken on the tax form.

    "It will be interesting to see what the IRS does with all of their new tools. They will have to be very careful," says Schwartz. So, too, will taxpayers.


    Gee, what's easier, having a giant and overbearing government agency surveilling your every move or reforming the tax code with the FairTax or a flat tax. But then again, I guess that's not the point...

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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    wait... track this. FUCK YOU IRS
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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    Google: Don't Expect Privacy



    Tuesday, 13 Aug 2013 11:41 PM
    By Matthew Auerbach


    Share:








    Users of Google’s Gmail service should not expect the emails they send or receive to stay private, Business Insider reports.

    According to a motion filed in July by Google in hopes of having a class action complaint dismissed, lawyers representing the Internet company said anyone who turns over any information to a third party has no right to expect that information to stay private.

    The motion was based on Smith vs. Maryland, the 1979 Supreme Court case in which the majority decision stated that “a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties.”

    The brief, obtained by the Consumer Watchdog web site, claims that Google employs automated processes to sift through email for the purposes of providing spam filters, advertising relevant to its users and other features of the Gmail service.

    According to the Huffington Post, the class action complaint accuses Google of infringing on the privacy of its users by searching their personal messages for information that will aid in the placement of targeted ads it displays.

    The suit calls for Google to make full disclosure of precisely what information it's taking from emails, and to pay damages for these alleged privacy violations.

    Google has finally admitted they don’t respect privacy,” said John M. Simpson, Consumer Watchdog’s Privacy Project director.

    “People should take them at their word; if you care about your email correspondents’ privacy don’t use Gmail.”

    The company’s viewpoint is consistent with a statement made in 2009 by Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, in which he made clear Google is simply following the terms laid out by the Patriot Act.

    “If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place,” Schmidt said.

    “But if you really need that kind of privacy, the reality is that search engines, including Google, do retain this information for some time.

    And ... we're all subject, in the United States, to the Patriot Act, and it is possible that that information could be made available to the authorities.”


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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    Kinda shoots some big holes in that concept of "The cloud"

    "Send it to the cloud!" the commercial blares...what it really should say is "Send it to an anonymous data center that will review it and determine if there is any money to be made by exploiting it"
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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    Pretty much.

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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    High-end prostitute accused of murder of Google executive

    By Stephen Baxter, Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Posted: 07/09/2014 06:19:41 AM PDT9 Comments
    Updated: 07/09/2014 06:22:20 AM PDT

    Click photo to enlarge


    Alix Tichelman





    SANTA CRUZ - Police arrested a 26-year-old high-priced call girl from Georgia on Friday after she shot heroin into a Santa Cruz tech executive on his yacht and fled when he overdosed.
    Alix Catherine Tichelman and 51-year-old Forrest Timothy Hayes found each other online and had met a few times before their Nov. 26 encounter on Hayes' 50-foot yacht, Escape, at the Santa Cruz Small Craft Harbor, said Santa Cruz Deputy Police Chief Steve Clark.
    Tichelman provided heroin for Hayes, a Google executive, while they were inside the yacht, police said. A surveillance video from the boat shows that Hayes was "suffering medical complications" and lost consciousness, Clark said. She made no effort to help him, and instead gathered her belongings and even gulped a glass of wine before she drew a window blind and left, the video shows.


    Hayes was discovered dead the next morning by the boat's captain, police said.
    "She showed no regard for him. She was just trying to cover her tracks," Clark said Tuesday.
    After police identified Tichelman from the video, they tracked her down in Folsom and lured her back to Santa Cruz County in a prostitution sting at a lavish hotel, police said.
    Tichelman was arrested Friday on suspicion of second-degree murder, destruction of evidence and transporting and providing narcotics, police said.
    Asked if Tichelman was trying to kill Hayes or if the overdose was accidental, Clark said the evidence showed a level of guilt that reached second-degree murder rather than involuntary manslaughter.
    "It's an amazing case," said Clark.
    Hayes, originally from Dearborn, Michigan, worked in the auto industry early in his career. He lived in Santa Cruz for years and worked at technology giants such as Sun Microsystems, Apple and Google, according to his friends and family. He is survived by his wife of 17 years and his five children.
    "Forrest will be remembered above all as a loving husband and father. More than anything else he enjoyed spending time with his family at home and on his boat," according to a January obituary that his family wrote for the Sentinel. "His brilliant mind, contagious smile and warm embrace will be missed and cherished in memories by his friends and family."
    Family man
    Hayes' co-workers and friends described him as intelligent, a family man with a great sense of humor with a penchant for impulse buys.
    Hayes once vented to a co-worker on a Friday about his 40-minute commute to Google in Mountain View and he said he wished he could use the carpool lane. By Monday, Hayes had bought a Chevy Volt hybrid to do just that.
    "We all know Forrest, he is a very practical guy, yet impatient to fix the issue," wrote Mahesh Krishnaswamy, on a memorial website in Hayes' honor. "He always came up with fairly simple and elegant solutions -- very candid in his opinion, yet reasonable in his judgment and caring with his interactions."
    Another friend said he sent Hayes a picture of a yacht for sale. Days later, Hayes had bought it.
    Police declined to say when Hayes and Tichelman first crossed paths.
    Authorities said they met on SeekingArrangement.com, which according to the website is, "for sugar daddies and sugar babies seeking mutually beneficial relationships and arrangements."
    Tichelman attended high school in Atlanta, according to her Facebook page. She describes herself on Facebook and Twitter as an aspiring model, makeup artist, writer, exotic dancer and a "hustler." In January 2013, she posted on Facebook that "life is great, a great boyfriend, nice house, monkeys, loving family ... doesn't get any better than this i don't think."
    She wrote that she attended a beauty school and also studied journalism at Georgia State University.
    One of her Facebook pages contains an alias, AK Kennedy, and her social media posts range from poems about heroin to a love of the TV show "Dexter," about a blood spatter technician who is also a serial killer. Pursed-lipped selfies show her posing with dyed red hair, tattoos and black lingerie. Police initially said her name was Tichleman.
    "My eyes are red red red ... combination of the glitter eyeliner and the medical grade I've been smokin' on," she tweeted in May 2013 -- her last post.
    After her November 2013 encounter with Hayes, Santa Cruz police combed Hayes' yacht for evidence. Clark, the deputy police chief, said it was a challenge because Tichelman destroyed evidence or took it with her.
    "She did some cleaning. She took some evidence from the scene," Clark said.
    Police discovered there were surveillance cameras inside and outside the yacht, yet the boat captain did not want to give the video to investigators because of the lurid nature of the case, authorities said.
    Crime images
    Eventually, Santa Cruz police obtained a judge's order to get the video recordings, which were stored on a cloud server, authorities said. The images helped them identify Tichelman, Clark said.
    By then, Tichelman was living in Folsom. Santa Cruz police learned of another similar death outside California that Tichelman allegedly was involved with, which further piqued investigators' interest, Clark said. She has not been charged in that case, and authorities declined to say where it was.
    In recent months, Santa Cruz police tried to lure Tichelman back to Santa Cruz County by setting up a modeling gig, but "it was going to take us too long to make it a believable scenario," said Clark.
    Police were concerned that she might leave the state, so investigators essentially convinced her that a rich client would pay her more than $1,000 for sex. She arranged to rendezvous with the fictitious wealthy man at a high-end hotel in Santa Cruz County on the Fourth of July, police said. Authorities declined to name the hotel.
    Police met her there, arrested her and took her to the Santa Cruz police station for questioning. After extensive interviews, Tichelman was linked to Hayes' homicide, Clark said.
    She remained in Santa Cruz County Jail on Tuesday in lieu of $1.5 million bail, according to jail records. She is expected to be arraigned in Santa Cruz County Superior Court on Wednesday, according to court records.
    Clark said Tichelman supplied drugs to Hayes and was responsible for his death.
    "She showed absolutely no regard for this person she injected with heroin," Clark said.
    "She had a responsibility to provide some lifesaving effort."
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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    If you're banging hookers and shooting heroin at 51, you shouldn't be surprised if you encounter fatal "medical complications"
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
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    Default Re: Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

    5 MILLION ‘COMPROMISED’ GOOGLE ACCOUNTS LEAKED

    Posted on by Tom Fernandez




    5 million Google account login and password pairs leaked to Russian cyber security internet forum



    A database of what appears to be some 5 million login and password pairs for Google accounts has been leaked to a Russian cyber security internet forum. It follows similar leaks of account data for popular Russian web services.


    The text file containing the alleged compromised accounts data was published late on Tuesday on the Bitcoin Security board. It lists 4.93 million entries, although the forum administration has since purged passwords from it, leaving only the logins.


    The accounts are mostly those of Google users and give access to Gmail mail service, G+ social network and other products of the US-based internet giant. The forum user tvskit, who published the file, claimed that 60 percent of the passwords were valid, with some users confirming that they found their data in the base, reports CNews, a popular Russian IT news website.


    Google Russia said it is investigating the alleged leak, adding that it advises customers to use strong passwords and enable two-step login verification to protect their accounts.


    The leak comes just days after similar leaks affected Mail.ru and Yandex, both popular Russian internet services. The previous leaks contained 4.66 and 1.26 million accounts respectively.


    Both companies said that an overwhelming majority of the accounts listed were either obsolete, suspended for suspicious behavior or non-existent. They insisted that their own databases were not compromised and suggested that the leaked data was accumulated over years through phishing and other forms of hacking attacks on users.
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