Friday, December 13, 2013
NSA has ability to decode phone conversations, texts
(RT) The NSA easily breaks the privacy technology popularized by encryption services throughout the world, meaning the intelligence agency can subvert such security tactics and sift through the billions of private texts and calls that are transmitted each day.
Observers have long known that military and law enforcement officials are capable of hacking into a suspect’s mobile phone, yet a report from the Washington Post based on documents provided by whistleblower Edward Snowden indicate that the NSA’s power may in fact be more expansive because of the global signals intelligence, or SIGINTs, techniques it employs.
Current US law makes it illegal for the NSA to monitor phone conversations between American citizens without a court order, yet these documents reveal that the agency is capable of overriding encryption and listening in on international citizens. The Post warned that the intelligence agencies of other nations likely have the same technology, and may even listen in on American phone calls.
This method of surveillance has made headlines recently because of the reported NSA tap on world leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Security experts have admonished telecommunications companies for years for failing to upgrade past the most popular system, known as A5/1. These Snowden documents indicate that the NSA “can process encrypted A5/1,” including at times when intelligence analysts are not in possession of the encryption keys, which would typically be necessary to decipher a message.
Read full article here.
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