AT&T secretly helped Spy agency, suggests new NSA leaked documents

Pierluigi Paganini August 19, 2015

The US National Security Agency has utilized an exceptional, decades-old association with AT&T to snoop on Internet utilization, as per recently uncovered reports spilled by Edward Snowden.

The archives gave by the previous NSA foreman and checked on by The New York Times and ProPublica portrayed a “profoundly synergistic” telecom titan that showed a “great ability to offer assistance.”

The Times said it was misty whether the projects are still operational in the same way today. The archives were dated from 2003 to 2013.

AT&T conceded the NSA access to billions of messages that went through its household arranges and helped the spy gun wiretap every single online correspondence at United Nations central command, the archives show.

AT&T has given the Internet line to the world body’s base camp.

Organization representative Brad Burns demanded that “we do not provide information to any investigating authorities without a court order or other mandatory process other than if a person’s life is in danger and time is of the essence.”

“Case in point (for example), in a seizing circumstance we could give assistance finding called numbers to help law implementation,” he told AFP.

In the archives, AT&T and different organizations are not distinguished by name but instead codenamed.

One of the most seasoned projects, Fairview, was dispatched in 1985 and includes AT&T, the Times and ProPublica said, refering to many intelligence officials from the past.

A Fairview fiber optic link harmed amid in the 2011 Japan seismic tremor, for instance, was repaired on the same date as an AT&T link.

The system kept an eye (spied in other words) on the UN base camp Internet line because of a request made by the US Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the records show.

Washington has subsequent to told the UN it would not gather information on its correspondences.

Earns AT&T

Verizon and the previous MCI – which Verizon acquired in 2006 – are a piece of another project, codenamed Stormbrew.

AT&T started giving call recordings of almost 1.1 billion users to the NSA a day in 2011, after a “push to get this stream operational before the tenth commemoration of 9/11,” the recently discharged leak demonstrated.

That same year, the NSA burned through $188.9 million on Fairview, more than double the sum on the following biggest corporate project, Stormbrew ($66.8 million).

Knowledge authorities had at first said that the telephone calls the NSA had gathered were for the most part from landline, not cell, telephone records, after Snowden initially uncovered the wiretapping project.

Written by: Ali Qamar, Founder/Chief Editor at SecurityGladiators.com

Author Bio:
Ali Qamar is an Internet security research enthusiast who enjoys “deep” research to dig out modern discoveries in the security industry. He is the founder and chief editor at Security Gladiators, an ultimate source for cyber security. To be frank and honest, Ali started working online as a freelancer and still shares the knowledge for a living. He is passionate about sharing the knowledge with people, and always try to give only the best. Follow Ali on Twitter @AliQammar57

Pierluigi Paganini

(Security Affairs – NSA , AT&T)



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