stufffer an hour ago

If a local police department wants phone records they have to go through the company's legal compliance department.

The disturbing revelation here is that it sounds like the federal government has direct backdoor access to all these records without having to show any warrants.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_641A

ungreased0675 4 hours ago

If true, this is a catastrophic cybersecurity failure. I’m feeling more like a Luddite every week. Systems like that maybe shouldn’t exist.

  • floydnoel 3 hours ago

    time to start the Butlerian jihad

bananapub 3 hours ago

Building and having exist these mass targeted surveillance creates a risk that is pretty hard to mitigate - they’re meant to be secret even to most of the people operating the comms networks. It’s also creates a blame arbitrage risk - at least in the US, the reputation of all telcos is so in the garbage that they don’t have a huge incentive to keep things tight when doing things the government forces them to do.

Another related case was in the mid 2000s where someone did the same thing to Vodafone’s mobile network: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_wiretapping_case_2004%E2...

Circumstantial evidence suggests it was the US in that case.