Seven ISPs Take Legal Action Against GCHQ
mrspoonsi (2955715) writes with this excerpt from the BBC: ISPs from the U.S., UK, Netherlands, and South Korea have joined forces with campaigners Privacy International to take GCHQ to task over alleged attacks on network infrastructure. It is the first time that GCHQ has faced such action. The ISPs claim that alleged network attacks, outlined in a series of articles in Der Spiegel and the Intercept, were illegal and "undermine the goodwill the organizations rely on."
The complaint (PDF).
Good luck with that.
At least tell us what the acronyms mean in the summary shithead.
From the article, it seems like the only ISP that was named in the Snowden leaks as being a target of NSA/GCHQ data collection was Belgacom, a Belgian ISP. I'm not sure how the law works in the UK, but in the US, all of the suits against the NSA so far have failed because the NSA can refuse to provide evidence. The only ISP they have direct evidence for is Belgacom, which does not appear to be a plaintiff in this lawsuit. If GCHQ can withhold evidence, how do they plan to prove that they were targeted?
"We're GCHQ and are therefore free to act in any way we see fit."
Of course none of these attacks would occur if the endusers didn't use Microsoft Windows ..
I wish them the best of luck. Even if they get nowhere with this lawsuit, eventually someone will.
Maybe these companies and others can start filing lawsuits naming the actual techs who work for these agencies. That might put a kink in things.
It isnt the dinosaurs in charge that are doing so much damage to the infrastructure, it is the 16-40 year old "I always wished I was james bond" type techs that are enabling it.
So, guys, any of you want to give your take on this?
Go on - present your case on its merits.
Thought not.
==chlamydia
Government Chlamydia Headquarters.
Finally, that country/administration/system is being seen as it truly is..
That's what they bring/have brought/continue to bring to the world, and like any chlamydia-ridden foot-eater, they're proud of it.
Why is the UK going after their own agency? You would think they are okay with what GCHQ does. I mean, the US is okay with the NSA snooping on pretty much everyone across the Earth...
Buck Feta. You know what to do.
Countries have had to spy on each other for centuries. Can't see how that can go away suddenly or become completely legal. It's a difficult choice because of course the FSB and various other people mostl likely love any discomfort that GHCQ experiences.
One of the ISPs mentioned is Mango in Zimbabwe - wow - that bastion of freedom. So the problem is that you either have to get spied on by your government or by other people's.
Nice strawman. Oh, and nice strawman. /. record.
Two strawpersons in three lines. Must be a
It could end up like the Zircon affair http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z... with a former employee of the GCHQ and four unnamed defence officials in the UK press.
Once the information had spread to the public, further feeding a political crisis by going to court was seen as unproductive by the UK gov.
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
It hurts the cool Cool Britannia image so carefully cultivated. Within the UK establishment exists a diverse set of feelings on helping the NSA with nothing positive to show for it long term.
The UK knows the USA can turn off the shared sites over any military or political issues at any time. The US has only agreed to share its methods and hardware for UK sites. That gives the no UK leverage if it really faces a conflict the USA has no interest in or wants a different outcome - Falkland, Diego Garcia.
Deep down the smarter people in the UK know the US has and will turn off the global US supplied information flow and the UK is then left lost in a very complex world.
So different factions in the UK gov want more UK only methods, less sharing and better exports from the UK to the world without always stopping due to US foreign policy.
UK staff at shared sites are serving two masters long term and over time the UK gov knows they cannot function if the US says no.
Events like this give a few very smart people in the UK gov and mil the option to reshape the total UK dependance on the US.
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"