EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- The Bill of Rights Exists: An Open Letter to Dianne Feinstein
- Major Loss to Organic Farmers as Court Rules in Favor of Monsanto
- NSA Whistleblower Revealed: Q&A with Edward Snowden
- One American Who Isn't For Sale
- 'Reprehensible, Reckless, Illegal': Washington Officials Slam Heroic NSA Surveillance Leaker
Popular content
Today's Top News
How the US Government Secretly Reads Your Email
Secret orders forcing Google and Sonic to release a WikiLeaks volunteer's email reveal the scale of US government snooping
Somewhere, a US government official is reading through a list of those who sent or received an email from Jacob Appelbaum, a 28-year-old computer science researcher at the University of Washington who volunteered for WikiLeaks. Among those listed will be my name, a journalist who interviewed Appelbaum for a book about the digital revolution.
Appelbaum is a spokesman for Tor, a free internet anonymizing software that helps people defend themselves against internet surveillance. He's spent five years teaching activists around the world how to install and use the service to avoid being monitored by repressive governments. It's exactly the sort of technology Secretary of State Hilary Clinton praised in her famous "Internet Freedom" speech in January 2010, when she promised US government support for the designers of technology that circumvented blocks or firewalls. Now, Appelbaum finds himself a target of his own government as a result of his friendship with Julian Assange and the fact WikiLeaks used the Tor software.
Appelbaum has not been charged with any wrongdoing; nor has the government shown probable cause that he is guilty of any criminal offense.
That matters not a jot, because, as the law stands, government officials don't need a search warrant to access our digital data. Searching someone's home requires a warrant that can only be obtained by proving probable cause, but digital searches require no such burden of proof. Instead, officials essentially "self-certify" to a judge that the information they seek is, in their opinion, relevant to an ongoing criminal investigation. On this basis, Google and a small ISP called Sonic were made to hand over to the government all Appelbaum's email headers from the past two years.
Most people are not aware of the ease with which governments – free, open and so-called democratic – can access and peruse our private communications. This is because these court orders are commonly sealed. What is uncommon is for internet service providers to request the orders be unsealed so they can inform their customers, as Sonic and Google did in Appelbaum's case.
Privacy researcher Chris Soghoian estimates there are likely tens of thousands of these 2703(d) orders made annually by the federal government under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act. He bases this on the number of pen registers granted to the federal government annually: 12,000. These allow officials to intercept telephone and internet meta-data in real time.
"There's far more data to be had after the fact, so probably these 2703(d) orders are even more common," Soghoian says.
The fourth amendment of the US Constitution should protect against unwarranted search and seizure. Its inclusion in the Bill of Rights was a result of colonialists' anger at abuse suffered at the hands of British officials using writs of assistance. Writs were general warrants issued by the British Parliament to allow customs officials to search for smuggled goods, but in the American colonies, they were used by agents of the British state to interrogate people and raid their homes on the pretext of searching and seizing any "prohibited and uncustomed goods", which often meant "seditious" publications that criticized government policies or the King.
The colony of Massachusetts banned these general warrants in 1756 and when the governor overturned the ban, it was one of the sparks for the American Revolution. It's ironic then to see how, under the guise of "patriotism", these court orders have stripped away fourth amendment protections and granted to US officials the same unlimited powers of search and seizure that so aggravated the American revolutionaries.
Today, the privacy law surrounding our emails is woefully outdated, as it is based on the technology of the first email services of the 1980s. Back then, people dialed up their provider to download email onto their home computer. Mail left for over 180 days was considered in storage, so was not subject to the wiretap protections which were for information in transmission. This means email older than 180 days doesn't require a warrant whereas anything newer does. Now, with cloud services and extensive storage available through services such as Gmail, our primary archive of email is held more or less indefinitely. Ironically, this means the most important or sensitive emails receive the lowest legal protections. (The law is also weighted to protect unread mail over read mail so, strangely, spam that remains unopened because it goes straight to your junk folder has more privacy protections than read mail in your archives.)
Few citizens of the world will be adequately clued up on US surveillance laws, yet information stored on Facebook, Twitter, Google or any other American companies is subject to them. Unwarranted search and seizure by the government officials was unacceptable to the American revolutionaries. Shouldn't it be unacceptable in the digital age, too?
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...



61 Comments so far
Show AllTara Stone posted: "'patriotism is the last refuge to which the scoundrel clings.' - Bob Dylan."
Dylan may have put that into a song, but he's not the source...he lifted it from:
"Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel." - Samuel Johnson
In Jerusalem, on 22 February 2006, it was revealed that Israel had asked Microsoft to hand over all the details of Mordechai Vanunu/Israeli Nuclear Whistle blower's Hotmail account before a court order had been obtained, while eluding that Vanunu was being investigated for espionage.
Vanunu wrote:
"Microsoft obeyed the orders and gave them all the details…three months before I was arrested and my computers were confiscated. It is strange to ask Microsoft to give this information before obtaining the court order to listen to my private conversations. It means they wanted to go through my emails in secret, or maybe, with the help of the secret services, the Shaback, Mossad.
"The State came to the court with two special secret Government orders; Hisaion [documents or information that are deemed confidential by the government and kept from the court, the defendant, and lawyers.] This allows the prosecution to keep documents related to my court hearing secret. One was from the Minister for Interior Security and one from the Minister of Defense.
"The policeman did not have any answers and said that he brought all the evidence to the court. When Sfard asked him again about any material related to the espionage [charge] Peterburg had no answers.
"Sfard proved that the police had misled the judges who gave the orders to arrest me: to search my room, to go through my email, to confiscate my computers and [that they] misled Microsoft to believe they are helping in a case of espionage."-
http://www.wearewideawake.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1969&Itemid=242
Although released from prison in April 2004, after 18 years in jail for telling the truth and providing the photographic proof of Israel's WMD facility, Vanunu remains under 24/7 surveillance of all his communications, movements, meetings, denied the right to leave the state in the name of SECURITY!
Eileen Fleming, A Citizen of Conscience for House of Representatives
Founder of WeAreWideAwake.org
Staff Member of Salem-news.com
A Feature Correspondent for Arabisto.com
Producer "30 Minutes with Vanunu" and "13 Minutes with Vanunu"
Author of "Keep Hope Alive" and "Memoirs of a Nice Irish American 'Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory" and "BEYOND NUCLEAR: Mordechai Vanunu's FREEDOM of SPEECH Trial and My Life as a Muckraker: 2005-2010"
Sorry, double post
It is a well-known secret that the USG has software programs that monitor both the internet and the airwaves for certain key words like the proverbial *bomb* and when they detect those, they go for the kill. I've heard them fuzzing in my phone time and again. I've also had my e-mail hacked. I participate in protests in favor of the Palestinians while helicopters are hoovering over and taking pix of everyone in the crowd. I was also (ironically) contacted a few years back to translate for the DEA as they listen on the phone to international conversations looking for drug deals/dealers...~wink, wink~
So, yeah, I know, I know...
H*Comment deleted by site administrators as spam: identical, repetitive comments posted on multiple articles*
see: http://www.commondreams.org/comment-policy
*Comment deleted by site administrators as spam: identical, repetitive comments posted on multiple articles*
see: http://www.commondreams.org/comment-policy
Resistance is futile!
Brought to you by the Ministry of Information -and think yourself lucky you have not (yet) been charged with retrieval costs!
Remember, we are all in this together.
I agree with the author and most if not all of the comments.The Patriot Act takes it to another level of magnitude but I'd just like to point out that Echelon has been in effect for decades and taps into all satellite, cable etc. communication and presumably Internet routers. The USA, Canada, UK, Australia and New Zealand (of all people!) are all in it under the UKUSA Agreement:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UKUSA_Agreement
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECHELON
There was an incredily well researched and detailed book by Nicky Hager back in the 90's and if I am not mistaken (I may be) I believe Julian Assange had comments about it at around that same time. Certainly I was reading his (Assange's)_research on IT security around this time.
I just don't give a shit anymore about what list I'm on or not on. What I do give a shit about is not being afraid and working for change without being obstructed by fear.
I'm with you on this. If my ranting about the government is so damned important why don't they just come to my living room and listen to what I really have to say.
Fear is what they want us to have...well...fear this... --!-- well, something like that...supposed to be the bird in computer speak...
I'm on the FBI list and have been since 1967...they really don't care. They just want us to think they do. Oh, gotta go, there's a bunch'a black Hummers in the drive...ooo and they got guns...runMartharun
When I was young, which was a long time ago. The grandfather of a friend of mine told her when she was running her mouth off: "Think before you speak, because someone will always remember what you said. And you really don't want something remembered, that you wish you hadn't said." The older I get the more sense that makes.
I enjoy communicating on boards like this and through email. But I always stop myself before I push send or save and think about those words of wisdom first. And I am well aware that email has never been totally private anymore than written letters, oral conversations or phone calls ever were. This new ever-connected world should pay attention to the old man's words of wisdom.