8. The Extent of Tapping
When Snowden blew the lid on the NSA’s spying activities, everyone was outraged, but very few could grasp the sheer extent of this tapping. The NSA went as far as paying Britain’s GCHQ $100 million to “secure access to and influence over Britain’s intelligence gathering programs.” Some of the intel gathered and passed on reportedly caused GCHQ staff to express concern about “the morality and ethics of their work, given the level of deception involved.”
Using something called a man-in-the-middle attack, the NSA could intercept a message between two people and change the contents before delivery. While most people heard about XKEYSCORE, the program that analyzed emails, online chats and browsing histories, how many times did you hear aboutNosey Smurf? This program allowed listeners to take over your computer’s microphone and record conversations. What about Gumfish which takes over your webcam and can be used to record film or take photographs, or Grok which logged the keystrokes entered into a device.
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