OFF THE WIRE
Steve Watson
Infowars.com
February 27, 2014
The latest revelation concerning mass government spying confirms an
issue that Infowars has been covering for close to a decade. British and
American governments are spying on people in their own homes via web
cams, laptop microphones and devices such as the X-box.
The London Guardian has the details in a report based on information leaked by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
The British surveillance agency GCHQ, with help from the NSA,
actively spied on nearly 2 million Yahoo users via webcams built into
their computers. The documents show that the agency intercepted millions
of images as part of a secret program codenamed OPTIC NERVE.
The report also states that Americans were almost certainly targeted
as part of the bulk collection of data, and that there is no law to
prevent such activity in Britain.
The documents show that images were collected from webcams at regular
intervals, one image every five minutes, and were used by the spy
agency to trial automated facial recognition programs.
The Guardian describes the process as “eerily reminiscent of the telescreens evoked in George Orwell’s 1984.”
The documents dub the practice as “bulk access to Yahoo webcam
images/events”, and spies working at GCHQ compared it to a police
database of mugshots. “Face detection has the potential to aid selection
of useful images for ‘mugshots’ or even for face recognition by
assessing the angle of the face,” the papers read. “The best images are
ones where the person is facing the camera with their face upright.”
Essentially, the spy agency appear to have been building a huge digital database containing the faces of Yahoo users.
The documents advise employees at GCHQ on how to use the system,
noting “[I]f you search for similar IDs to your target, you will be able
to request automatic comparison of the face in the similar IDs to those
in your target’s ID”.
In one presentation contained within the documents, more
technologically advanced systems, such as iris recognition cameras, are
discussed as potential surveillance tools. The paper even chillingly
states “think Tom Cruise in Minority Report”.
The documents state that Yahoo users were specifically singled out because “Yahoo webcam is known to be used by GCHQ targets”.
The papers also note that a large quantity of the data collected
contained nudity or sexually explicit imagery. The spy agency seemingly
made no effort to prevent the collection of such images.
Yahoo described the practice as “a whole new level of violation of
our users’ privacy,” and strenuously denied having any knowledge of the
program.
Infowars first reported in 2006,
EIGHT YEARS AGO, that innocent people were being spied on through their
computers. We specifically described the practice as Minority Report
style technology, as the GCHQ had done.
We have since covered the issue consistently, warning that “Hundreds of millions of Internet-active Americans will all be potential targets for secret surveillance.”
Of course, some quarters dismissed our reports as “conspiracy theories”, while worried internet users questioned whether the reports were accurate.
The GCHQ program was seemingly not limited to Yahoo user web cams
either. Another presentation within the leaked internal papers discusses
the capabilities of the Xbox 360′s Kinect camera, saying it generated
“fairly normal webcam traffic” and that it was being evaluated as a
potential surveillance tool.
We have also documented the potential use of Xbox for surveillance purposes, noting that Skype calls made on the devices can be intercepted. We have also warned
that the ‘always on’ camera of the new Xbox One, which is so powerful
it can see through clothing, is wide open to abuse by hackers and
government agencies.
According to the leaked documents, the OPTIC NERVE program began as a
prototype in 2008 and was still active in 2012. There is no indication
that the program has been deactivated.
Security expert Bruce Schneier writes that this latest revelation
highlights how there is no distinction between actively spying on a
person and what he called “Eavesdropping by algorithm”, in other words,
automated computer surveillance. The NSA and the Obama administration
have attempted to argue that what they are doing cannot be called
“spying” or even “collecting” data, because when the data is gathered, a
person is not looking at it. Director of National Intelligence James
Clapper still uses this explanation to claim he never lied to Congress
when he answered ‘no’ to the question “Does the NSA collect any type of
data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?”
The fallout from the OPTIC NERVE program, the creation of facial
recognition databases, and the fact that spooks provably looked at
images of people, even NAKED images of people, highlights the fact,
Schneier argues, that the “NSA’s definition of ‘collect’ makes no sense
whatsoever”, and that our governments are indeed actively spying on us.
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Steve Watson is the London based writer and editor for Alex Jones’ Infowars.com, and Prisonplanet.com.
He has a Masters Degree in International Relations from the School of
Politics at The University of Nottingham, and a Bachelor Of Arts Degree
in Literature and Creative Writing from Nottingham Trent University.