Stanford's MetaPhone Project: Crowdsourcing Metadata To Challenge the NSA
An anonymous reader writes "'When the first NSA surveillance story broke in June,' writes Dennis Fisher at Threatpost, 'most people likely had never heard the word metadata before. Even some security and privacy experts weren't sure what the term encompassed.' The NSA and its supporters have, of course, emphasized that phone records collection is 'not surveillance.' Researchers at Stanford are now crowdsourcing data to incontrovertibly establish just how much the NSA knows. 'Phone metadata is inherently revealing,' says a study author. 'We want to rigorously prove it—for the public, for Congress, and for the courts.' If you have an Android phone and a Facebook account, you can grab the MetaPhone app on Google Play."
Nice try, NSA
Why would you give it out to anyone else?
I understand their point, but uh no.
This post titled Using Metadata to Find Paul Revere is very insightful (and very basic in terms of collected data compared to phone metadata):
http://kieranhealy.org/blog/archives/2013/06/09/using-metadata-to-find-paul-revere/
There's a previous and more mathematically detailed analysis of the same data here (the author above didn't know about this analysis until after publishing, but the link above is a much easier read):
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/polisci/faculty/chwe/ps269/han.pdf
BlameBillCosby.com
Hi all,
/.!
I'm one of the Stanford researchers working on the MetaPhone project. Way cool that we made
Some additional details are available at metaphone.me. I would be glad to answer questions.
Best,
Jonathan
I have a HTC One X, and a facebook account, yet it says its incompatible?
The claim isn't that metadata isn't revealing. Of course it's revealing. That's why they're gathering it.
The assertion is that metadata isn't private in the same sense that the name and address on an envelope aren't private. If you leave one out on the table, anybody can read it. They can't read what's inside the envelope without opening it, but the addressee and return address are plain as day.
Whether that argument holds legal water is up to lawyers, legislators, judges, and (ultimately) voters. But nobody needs to convince the NSA that it's revealing; they're well aware of it. And so, I assume, is everybody reading this site. What the Congress and the Courts know... honestly, I wouldn't even begin to imagine, but I suspect that they're unlikely to change their mind on it based on this. I can't imagine that "install this data-gathering app and we'll show you that we can gather a lot of data" comes as a surprise to anybody.
Well, it's GIS map info, the Google app tracking of your searches, the cell phone tracking devices in all US cities that geolocate you downtown, the traffic camera feeds with license plate matches, the credit or debit card transactions at every store, the answers you gave to what you thought was a cute girl online but was actually a fake harvesting bot.
All of that plus your digitized walking stride, your clothing selections, and everyone you talked to and were within 3 feet of.
Congratulations!
You live in a Police State that makes the Stasi look like pikers ...
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
What we really need is for someone to get a hold of some pro-dragnet surveillance politico's, like Diane Feinstein's, metadata and publish a nice analysis of that.
Then she could get up there and tell us how innocent the collection is.
-- I have monkeys in my pants.
My proposal is that if Everyone, Everywhere started inserting words that we all suspect the Govt is searching for ... into all of our online email, sms, etc as just a random insertion of a word here or there then their search algorithms will just become useless.
Example... if every email and SMS in the world had the word "jihad" inserted into it then they would have Billions of captures everyday that they would find are really useless to them and a waste of time/compute/storage.
I'll take this as a nail in the coffin for metadata -- that it's not really meta. But the real reason is it would have been misused by England to feel out the Founding Fathers' networks, and hence the FF would have intended it to be forbidden sans warrant.
Remember, they just need to get a warrant to go leapfrogging a step (no more without Congress specifying a Bacon leap number) from known, warrantable bad guys. That is all we are saying.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
Somewhere near you, there is a community college offering Remedial Reading 101. You should check it out.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
It's data. It happens not to be complete - there's more, namely the audio of the call.
Intelligence agencies have been doing traffic analysis on this sort of data -- just who is
communicating with whom - for at least 70 years. For NSA to refer to it as "only metadata"
is the height of hypocrisy.
The link was awesome for those of us who can read. I just sent it to my immediate family. Excellent illustrations, humorous writing style, and informative content. A+