FBI Admits It Uses Stingrays, Zero-Day Exploits (arstechnica.com)
An anonymous reader writes: Amy Hess, the head of the FBI's science and technology division has admitted that the FBI sometimes exploits zero-day vulnerabilities and uses stingrays to catch bad guys. Ars reports: "The admission came in a profile published Tuesday of Amy Hess, the FBI's executive assistant director for science and technology who oversees the bureau's Operational Technology Division. Besides touching on the use of zero-days—that is, attack code that exploits vulnerabilities that remain unpatched, and in most cases are unknown by the company or organization that designs the product—Tuesday's Washington Post article also makes passing mention of another hot-button controversy: the FBI's use of stingrays."
first.
also who didn't already know this? no tinfoil hat necessary to understand this crap happens
Comes as no surprise. Diffrence is, now we know for certain.
I guess they figure the ends justify the means.
Enjoy science fiction? "Turing Evolved" - AI, Mecha, Androids and rail-gun battles. What more could you want?
I'm sure they get the proper warrants and everything for doing this. After all, these things should be considered wiretaps.
I'm sure the FBI would never violate anyone's civil rights. *bleeding sarcasm intended*
"Amy Hess, the head of the FBI's science and technology division has admitted that the FBI sometimes exploits zero-day vulnerabilities and uses stingrays to catch bad guys"
That assumes they are guilty. Whole reason for the Bill of Rights is to stop the state from going on fishing expeditions through the drawers of the state's critics (remember Thomas Drake?) or people on the wrong side of powerful business interests (remember Citizens United?) So once you drop the presumption of guilt from OP's byline, it takes on a whole new meaning:
"Amy Hess, the head of the FBI's science and technology division has admitted that the FBI sometimes exploits zero-day vulnerabilities and uses stingrays to spy on citizens who may not have done anything wrong, because "If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him""
The FBI has a long history of keeping an eye on bad guys. Martin Luther King, Jr., political protesters, Black Lives Matter, ...
Lacking <sarcasm> tags,
Going into tin-hat territory here, how much of this "evidence" is then used in parallel construction, where revealing the way the evidence was collected would get the case thrown out of court.
is here: https://www.washingtonpost.com...
And where are all those wonderful encryption and decentralisation technologies that you've been working on for the last decade oh collective computer nerddom? Oh I forgot. You spent the last 10 years jumping on the App/Tablet/Social-Media hypetrain, making fart buttons and twitter integrators and leaving fundamental issues in end user network security and privacy not only unresolved, but in an actively worse state than they were in to begin with.
The last major contribution of the collective security community to network security was its support for the destroying self-signed certs. Says it all really.
"to catch guys and girls".
Thanks for telling us what we already knew.
Seriously, this is somewhat interesting but hardly qualifies as "news".
The only news in this admission is that they're admitting to doing it, not that they're doing it.
Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
-- Steve Irwin (RIP)
Have gnu, will travel.
The FBI better have a god damn warrant, otherwise the American people can and WILL obstruct you in your criminal acts.
Local police admit that they routinely violate traffic laws in order to catch bad speeders.
Have the Feds ever discouraged tech companies from fixing software bugs, so their own exploits will continue to work?
American Government continues to spin the fuck out of control.
It's citizens, more educated on these abuses then ever in the last decade, does nothing. Continues tradition of troop worship and believing that voting "changes anything".
news at 11.