NSA Menyimpan Rahsia Panggilan Verizon: Laporan -
Rumah Putih Panggilan Program 'Critcal' White House berkata maklumat itu adalah
"alat penting dalam melindungi negara." (NSA Secretly Storing Verizon
Calls: Report - White House Calls Program 'Critcal'The White House says such
information is a "critical tool in protecting the nation)."

Photo: AP pengguna Facebook Operasi Keselamatan
pekerja Team melihat ulasan di ibu pejabat Facebook di Menlo Park, California
The Washington Post dan The Guardian melaporkan Khamis Jun 6, 2013, kewujudan
program yang digunakan oleh NSA dan FBI yang ‘scours’ yang syarikat-syarikat
Internet utama negara, audio mengekstrak, video, gambar, e-mel, dokumen dan log
sambungan untuk membantu penganalisis mengesan pergerakan dan hubungan
seseorang.
Photo:
AP A Facebook User Operations Safety Team worker looks at reviews at Facebook
headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. The Washington Post and The Guardian
reported Thursday, June 6, 2013, the existence of a program used by the NSA and
FBI that scours the nation's main Internet companies, extracting audio, video,
photographs, emails, documents and connection logs to help analysts track a
person's movements and contacts.
Adakah Data Besar
menjadikan kerajaan Amerika Syarikat menjadi 'Big Brother?
by MadaMadyan | Suara Rakyat@1WORLDCommunity
TINJAUAN 1WC’sChannel
2013: SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Dengan setiap panggilan telefon mereka membuat dan setiap lawatan web yang
mereka ambil, orang yang meninggalkan jejak data digital mendedahkan yang boleh
dikesan oleh keuntungan-mencari syarikat-syarikat dan pegawai-pegawai kerajaan memburu
pengganas.
Ayat-ayat
yang Agensi Keselamatan Negara perusing berjuta-juta rekod telefon pelanggan Amerika
Syarikat di Verizon Communications dan pengintipan pada komunikasi digital yang
disimpan oleh perkhidmatan sembilan Internet utama menggambarkan bagaimana
agresif data peribadi yang dikumpul dan dianalisis.
Verizon
menyerahkan metadata yang dipanggil, petikan dari berjuta-juta rekod pelanggan
Amerika Syarikat, untuk NSA di bawah suatu perintah yang dikeluarkan oleh Perisikan
rahsia Asing Pengawasan Mahkamah, menurut satu laporan dalam akhbar British The
Guardian. Laporan itu mengesahkan Khamis oleh Senator Dianne Feinstein,
D-Calif., Yang mempengerusikan Jawatankuasa Perisikan Senat.
Bekas
pekerja NSA William Binney memberitahu Associated Press bahawa dia
menganggarkan agensi mengumpul rekod 3 bilion panggilan telefon setiap hari.
NSA dan FBI kelihatan pemutus yang bersih lebih luas di bawah program sulit
kod-dinamakan "PRISM" yang datang kepada cahaya dalam cerita yang
disiarkan lewat Khamis oleh The Washington Post.
PRISM
memberikan akses kerajaan Amerika Syarikat untuk e-mel, dokumen, audio, video,
gambar-gambar dan data lain yang kepercayaan orang kepada beberapa
syarikat-syarikat yang terbaik di DUNIA yang diketahui, menurut The Washington
Post.
Akhbar
itu berkata, ia dikaji semula jadual sulit syarikat dan perkhidmatan yang
mengambil bahagian dalam PRISM. Syarikat-syarikat termasuk AOL Inc, Apple Inc,
Facebook Inc, Google Inc, Microsoft Corp, Yahoo Inc, Skype, YouTube dan
Paltalk.
Dalam
penyata, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft dan Yahoo berkata, mereka hanya
menyediakan kerajaan dengan data pengguna yang dikehendaki di bawah
undang-undang. (Google YouTube berjalan dan Microsoft memiliki Skype.) AOL dan
Paltalk tidak segera bertindak balas kepada pertanyaan daripada The Associated
Press.
NSA
tidak mendapat nama-nama pelanggan atau kandungan perbualan telefon di bawah
perintah mahkamah Verizon, tetapi itu tidak bermakna maklumat itu tidak boleh
terikat kepada data yang lain yang datang melalui program PRISM untuk melihat
ke dalam kehidupan orang ramai, mengikut pakar-pakar (according to experts).
Seperti
keping teka-teki, bit dan bytes ketinggalan daripada interaksi elektronik rakyat
boleh bersama-sama berbatu-batu untuk membuat kesimpulan tentang tabiat mereka,
persahabatan dan keutamaan menggunakan formula perlombongan data dan komputer
semakin kuat.
Ia
adalah sebahagian daripada fenomena yang dikenali sebagai "Data
Besar," kata-kata hikmah yang semakin digunakan untuk menggambarkan sains
menganalisis jumlah besar maklumat yang dikumpul melalui peranti mudah alih,
pelayar web dan daftar keluar. Penganalisis menggunakan komputer yang berkuasa
untuk mengesan trend dan mewujudkan dossiers digital mengenai orang.
Pentadbiran
Obama dan penggubal undang-undang mengambil bahagian dengan pengawasan NSA itu
tidak berkata apa-apa tentang koleksi rekod pelanggan luar Verizon bahawa ia
adalah demi kepentingan keselamatan negara. Perintah mahkamah yang luas
meliputi rekod Verizon setiap panggilan telefon mudah alih dan talian tetap
dari 25 April hingga 19 Julai, menurut Guardian.
Kemungkinan
rekod telefon Verizon sedang dipadankan dengan set data yang lebih luas,
berkata Forrester Research penganalisis Fatemeh Khatibloo. "Rasa saya
adalah mereka mencari corak rangkaian," katanya. "Mereka akan mencari
yang disambung kepada siapa dan sama ada mereka boleh meletakkan apa-apa tempoh
masa bersama-sama. Mereka juga mungkin cuba untuk mengenal pasti lokasi di mana
ianya orang memanggil dari mana."
Di
bawah perintah mahkamah, rekod Verizon termasuk tempoh setiap panggilan dan
lokasi panggilan telefon mudah alih, menurut Guardian. Maklumat lokasi amat
berharga untuk operasi jubah-mata seperti yang sedang berjalan NSA, kata Cindy
Cohn, pengarah undang-undang untuk Frontier Foundation elektronik, kumpulan hak
digital yang telah berjuang koleksi rekod kerajaan telefon peribadi sejak 2006.
Yayasan
itu kini menyaman lebih koleksi kerajaan komunikasi rakyat Amerika Syarikat
'dalam kes yang bermula sejak pentadbiran Presiden George W. Bush.
"Ia
sangat invasif," kata Cohn. "Ini adalah akibat daripada hakikat
bahawa kita mempunyai begitu banyak pihak yang ke-3 yang telah mengumpul
maklumat penting tentang kehidupan seharian kita."
Ianya
seperti urat yang kaya dengan maklumat bahawa syarikat-syarikat Amerika
Syarikat dan lain-lain organisasi kini membelanjakan lebih daripada $ 2 bilion
setiap tahun untuk mendapatkan data pihak ke-3 mengenai individu, menurut
Forrester Research.
Data
yang membantu perniagaan pelanggan sasaran yang berpotensi. Kebanyakan maklumat
ini dijual oleh broker data kononnya yang di kata, seperti Acxiom Corp, Little
Rock, syarikat Bahtera yang mengekalkan fail luas mengenai aktiviti-aktiviti
online dan offline lebih daripada 500 juta pengguna di seluruh DUNIA.
Floodgates
digital telah membuka sepanjang dekad yang lalu sebagai kemudahan dan tarikan
internet dan telefon anggun pintar-telah membuat ia lebih mudah dan lebih
menyeronokkan untuk orang ramai untuk terus berhubung di mana sahaja mereka
pergi.
"Saya
tidak fikir terdapat perubahan laut dalam kaedah analisis sebanyak telah
berlaku perubahan dalam jumlah, halaju dan pelbagai maklumat dan kuasa komputer
untuk memproses segala-galanya," kata penganalisis Gartner Douglas Laney.
Dalam
tanda penentuan NSA untuk vakum sehingga seberapa banyak data yang mungkin,
agensi itu telah membina sebuah pusat data di Bluffdale, Utah yang 5 kali lebih
besar daripada Capitol- Amerika Syarikat semua untuk menapis melalui Data
Besar.
$ 2
bilion pusat telah diberi persepsi bahawa sesetengah puak kerajaan Amerika
Syarikat berazam untuk membina pangkalan data semua panggilan telefon, carian
Internet dan e-mel di bawah nama keselamatan negara.
Pendedahan
The Washington Post bahawa kedua-dua NSA dan FBI mempunyai keupayaan untuk
menggali ke dalam komputer perkhidmatan Internet utama mungkin akan
meningkatkan kebimbangan bahawa Data Besar kerajaan Amerika Syarikat adalah
mewujudkan sesuatu yang serupa dengan ‘Big Brother’ yang sentiasa berjaga-jaga
Besar dalam "1984" novel George Orwell.
"Hakikat
bahawa kerajaan boleh memberitahu semua pembawa telefon dan pembekal
perkhidmatan Internet untuk menyerahkan semua jenis data ini memberi mereka
kekuasaan penuh untuk membina profil orang yang mereka menyasarkan dengan cara
yang sangat berbeza daripada mana-mana syarikat boleh," kata Khatibloo.
Dalam
kebanyakan kes, syarikat-syarikat Internet seperti Google Inc, Facebook Inc dan
Yahoo Inc mengambil apa yang mereka belajar daripada permintaan carian, klik
pada butang "seperti", aktiviti melayari laman web dan pengesanan
lokasi pada peranti mudah alih untuk memahami apa yang setiap pengguna mereka
suka dan ketuhanan di mana mereka berada.
Ini
semua bagi membantu pengguna menunjukkan iklan tentang produk mungkin
menyinggung perasaan minat mereka pada masa yang tepat. Syarikat-syarikat
mempertahankan jenis perlombongan data ini sebagai manfaat pengguna.
Google
cuba untuk mengambil perkara satu langkah lagi. Ia mengasah analisis data dan
formula carian dalam usaha untuk menjangka apa yang individu mungkin
tertanya-tanya mengenai atau mahu.
Syarikat-syarikat
Internet yang lain juga menggunakan Data Besar untuk meningkatkan perkhidmatan
mereka. Video langganan perkhidmatan Netflix mengambil apa yang ia belajar dari
keutamaan setiap penonton yang mengesyorkan filem dan rancangan TV. Amazon.com
Inc melakukan sesuatu yang serupa apabila ia menonjolkan produk tertentu kepada
pembeli yang berbeza melawat tapak itu.
Kerajaan
persekutuan mempunyai potensi untuk mengetahui lebih lanjut mengenai orang-orang
kerana ia mengawal di DUNIA data bank terbesar, kata David Vladeck, seorang
Georgetown University profesor undang-undang yang baru-baru ini meletak jawatan
sebagai pengarah perlindungan pengguna Suruhanjaya Perdagangan Persekutuan.
Sebelum
meninggalkan FTC tahun lepas, Vladeck memulakan siasatan ke dalam amalan Acxiom
dan broker data lain kerana dia takut maklumat yang sedang disalah tafsir dalam
cara yang orang tidak adil stereotaip. Sebagai contoh, seseorang mungkin
diklasifikasikan sebagai risiko kesihatan yang berpotensi hanya kerana mereka
membeli produk yang dikaitkan dengan peluang yang meningkat daripada serangan
jantung. Siasatan FTC ke broker data masih terbuka.
"Kami
mempunyai kebimbangan sebenar tentang kebolehpercayaan bagi data dan rawatan
yang tidak adil oleh algoritma," kata Vladeck.
Vladeck
menegaskan dia tidak mempunyai sebab untuk mempercayai bahawa NSA adalah
memutarkan data yang ia kumpulkan mengenai warga swasta. Beliau mendapati
beberapa keselesaan dalam laporan The Guardian bahawa perintah tersebut Verizon
telah ditandatangani oleh Perisikan Asing Pengawasan Hakim Mahkamah Ronald
Vinson.
NSA
"berbeza daripada perusahaan komersial dalam erti kata bahawa terdapat
pemeriksaan dalam sistem kehakiman dan di Kongres," kata Vladeck.
"Jika anda percaya dalam cara kerajaan kita sepatutnya untuk bekerja, maka
anda perlu mempunyai beberapa kepercayaan bahawa pemeriksaan mereka adalah
bermakna. Jika anda ragu-ragu mengenai kerajaan, maka anda mungkin tidak
berfikir bahawa jenis pengawasan bermakna apa-apa."

Photo: AP Vic Gundotra, Google Naib Presiden Kejuruteraan Kanan, ceramah tentang Google Plus pada persidangan Google I/O di San
Francisco. The Washington Post dan The Guardian melaporkan Khamis Jun 6, 2013,
kewujudan program yang digunakan oleh NSA dan FBI yang scours syarikat Internet
utama negara, mengekstrak audio, video, gambar, e-mel, dokumen dan log
sambungan untuk membantu penganalisis trek pergerakan seseorang dan kenalan.
Photo:
AP Vic Gundotra, Google Senior Vice President of Engineering, talks about
Google Plus at the Google I/O conference in San Francisco. The Washington Post
and The Guardian reported Thursday, June 6, 2013, the existence of a program
used by the NSA and FBI that scours the nation's main Internet companies,
extracting audio, video, photographs, emails, documents and connection logs to
help analysts track a person's movements and contacts.

Photo: AP Pandangan udara Utah Pusat Data NSA di
Bluffdale, Utah, Khamis, 6 Jun, 2013. Kerajaan sedang diam-diam mengumpul telefon
rekod berjuta-juta pelanggan Amerika Syarikat Verizon bawah perintah mahkamah
rahsia, menurut pengerusi Jawatankuasa Perisikan Senat. Pentadbiran Obama
mempertahankan keperluan Agensi Keselamatan Negara untuk mengumpul rekod,
tetapi pengkritik memanggil ia lebih-jangkauan yang besar.
Photo:
AP An aerial view of the NSA's Utah Data Center in Bluffdale, Utah, Thursday,
June 6, 2013. The government is secretly collecting the telephone records of
millions of U.S. customers of Verizon under a top-secret court order, according
to the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. The Obama
administration is defending the National Security Agency's need to collect such
records, but critics are calling it a huge over-reach.
Is Big Data turning US
government into 'Big Brother?'
REVIEW 1WC’sChannel
2013: SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
With every phone call they make and every Web excursion they take, people are
leaving a digital trail of revealing data that can be tracked by profit-seeking
companies and terrorist-hunting government officials.
The
revelations that the National Security Agency is perusing millions of U.S.
customer phone records at Verizon Communications and snooping on the digital
communications stored by nine major Internet services illustrate how
aggressively personal data is being collected and analyzed.
Verizon
is handing over so-called metadata, excerpts from millions of U.S. customer
records, to the NSA under an order issued by the secretive Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court, according to a report in the British newspaper The
Guardian. The report was confirmed Thursday by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.,
who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Former
NSA employee William Binney told the Associated Press that he estimates the
agency collects records on 3 billion phone calls each day. The NSA and FBI
appear to be casting an even wider net under a clandestine program code-named
"PRISM" that came to light in a story posted late Thursday by The
Washington Post.
PRISM
gives the U.S. government access to email, documents, audio, video, photographs
and other data that people entrust to some of the world's best known companies,
according to The Washington Post.
The
newspaper said it reviewed a confidential roster of companies and services
participating in PRISM. The companies included AOL Inc., Apple Inc., Facebook
Inc., Google Inc., Microsoft Corp., Yahoo Inc., Skype, YouTube and Paltalk.
In
statements, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Yahoo said they only provide
the government with user data required under the law. (Google runs YouTube and
Microsoft owns Skype.) AOL and Paltalk didn't immediately respond to inquiries
from The Associated Press.
The
NSA isn't getting customer names or the content of phone conversations under
the Verizon court order, but that doesn't mean the information can't be tied to
other data coming in through the PRISM program to look into people's lives,
according to experts.
Like
pieces of a puzzle, the bits and bytes left behind from citizens' electronic
interactions can be cobbled together to draw conclusions about their habits,
friendships and preferences using data-mining formulas and increasingly
powerful computers.
It's
all part of a phenomenon known as a "Big Data," a catchphrase
increasingly used to describe the science of analyzing the vast amount of
information collected through mobile devices, Web browsers and check-out
stands. Analysts use powerful computers to detect trends and create digital
dossiers about people.
The
Obama administration and lawmakers privy to the NSA's surveillance aren't
saying anything about the collection of the Verizon customers' records beyond
that it's in the interest of national security. The sweeping court order covers
the Verizon records of every mobile and landline phone call from April 25
through July 19, according to The Guardian.
It's
likely the Verizon phone records are being matched with an even broader set of
data, said Forrester Research analyst Fatemeh Khatibloo. "My sense is they
are looking for network patterns," she said. "They are looking for
who is connected to whom and whether they can put any timelines together. They
are also probably trying to identify locations where people are calling
from."
Under
the court order, the Verizon records include the duration of every call and the
locations of mobile calls, according to The Guardian. The location information
is particularly valuable for cloak-and-dagger operations like the one the NSA
is running, said Cindy Cohn, a legal director for the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, a digital rights group that has been fighting the government's
collection of personal phone records since 2006.
The
foundation is currently suing over the government's collection of U.S.
citizens' communications in a case that dates back to the administration of
President George W. Bush.
"It's
incredibly invasive," Cohn said. "This is a consequence of the fact
that we have so many third parties that have accumulated significant
information about our everyday lives." It's such a rich vein of
information that U.S. companies and other organizations now spend more than $2
billion each year to obtain third-party data about individuals, according to
Forrester Research.
The
data helps businesses target potential customers. Much of this information is
sold by so-called data brokers such as Acxiom Corp., a Little Rock, Ark.
company that maintains extensive files about the online and offline activities
of more than 500 million consumers worldwide.
The
digital floodgates have opened during the past decade as the convenience and
allure of the Internet - and sleek smartphones - have made it easier and more
enjoyable for people to stay connected wherever they go.
"I
don't think there has been a sea change in analytical methods as much as there
has been a change in the volume, velocity and variety of information and the
computing power to process it all," said Gartner analyst Douglas Laney.
In a
sign of the NSA's determination to vacuum up as much data as possible, the
agency has built a data center in Bluffdale, Utah that is five times larger
than the U.S. Capitol - all to sift through Big Data.
The
$2 billion center has fed perceptions that some factions of the U.S. government are determined to
build a database of all phone calls, Internet searches and emails under the
guise of national security.
The
Washington Post's disclosure that both the NSA and FBI have the ability to
burrow into computers of major Internet services will likely heighten fears
that U.S. government's Big Data is creating something akin to the ever-watchful
Big Brother in George Orwell's "1984" novel.
"The
fact that the government can tell all the phone carriers and Internet service
providers to hand over all this data sort of gives them carte blanche to build
profiles of people they are targeting in a very different way than any company
can," Khatibloo said.
In
most instances, Internet companies such as Google Inc., Facebook Inc. and Yahoo
Inc. are taking what they learn from search requests, clicks on
"like" buttons, Web surfing activity and location tracking on mobile
devices to figure out what each of their users like and divine where they are.
It's
all in aid of showing users ads about products likely to pique their interest
at the right time. The companies defend this kind of data mining as a consumer
benefit.
Google
is trying to take things a step further. It is honing its data analysis and
search formulas in an attempt to anticipate what an individual might be
wondering about or wanting. Other Internet companies also use Big Data to
improve their services.
Video
subscription service Netflix takes what it learns from each viewer's
preferences to recommend movies and TV shows. Amazon.com Inc. does something
similar when it highlights specific products to different shoppers visiting its
site.
The
federal government has the potential to know even more about people because it
controls the world's biggest data bank, said David Vladeck, a Georgetown
University law professor who recently stepped down as the Federal Trade
Commission's consumer protection director.
Before
leaving the FTC last year, Vladeck opened an inquiry into the practices of
Acxiom and other data brokers because he feared that information was being
misinterpreted in ways that unfairly stereotyped people. For instance, someone
might be classified as a potential health risk just because they bought
products linked to an increased chance of heart attack. The FTC inquiry into
data brokers is still open.
"We
had real concerns about the reliability of the data and unfair treatment by
algorithm," Vladeck said. Vladeck stressed he had no reason to believe
that the NSA is misinterpreting the data it collects about private citizens. He
finds some comfort in The Guardian report that said the Verizon order had been
signed by Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court Judge Ronald Vinson.
The
NSA "differs from a commercial enterprise in the sense that there are
checks in the judicial system and in Congress," Vladeck said. "If you
believe in the way our government is supposed to work, then you should have
some faith that those checks are meaningful. If you are skeptical about
government, then you probably don't think that kind of oversight means
anything."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.