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Unredacted User Manuals Of Stingray Device Show How Accessible Surveillance Is (theintercept.com)

The Intercept has today published 200-page documents revealing details about Harris Corp's Stingray surveillance device, which has been one of the closely guarded secrets in law enforcement for more than 15 years. The firm, in collaboration with police clients across the U.S. have "fought" to keep information about the mobile phone-monitoring boxes from the public against which they are used. The publication reports that the surveillance equipment carries a price tag in the "low six figures." From the report:The San Bernardino Sheriff's Department alone has snooped via Stingray, sans warrant, over 300 times. Richard Tynan, a technologist with Privacy International, told The Intercept that the "manuals released today offer the most up-to-date view on the operation of" Stingrays and similar cellular surveillance devices, with powerful capabilities that threaten civil liberties, communications infrastructure, and potentially national security. He noted that the documents show the "Stingray II" device can impersonate four cellular communications towers at once, monitoring up to four cellular provider networks simultaneously, and with an add-on can operate on so-called 2G, 3G, and 4G networks simultaneously.

6 of 95 comments (clear)

  1. Everyone should be forced to obey the law. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is the beginning of the end for society as a whole if no one cares if the police obey the law. The Sheriff of San Bernadino should face charges for unlawful surveillance.

  2. I would love to meet the product developers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...and ask them whether they regard themselves as activists against the principles of their country's Constitution, or whether they believe they're only following orders, i.e. that the known way in which their product will be put to use is "not my dept.".

  3. Handy guide for law enforcement. by jcr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you have a warrant, issued by a neutral magistrate, specifically identifying the party that you wish to spy upon, which you obtained by swearing out a truthful affidavit that you have reason to believe a crime has been committed?

    If yes: you're good to go. If no: fuck you, you're committing wire fraud, you son of a bitch.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  4. And it's fine because they're cops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    For anyone else using this sort of device it would be an illegal wiretap, an FCC violation for unauthorized use of spectrum, interfering with a public utility, copyright violation, DMCA violation, vandalism, reckless endangerment (hey, 911 doesn't work when this is on y'know), interfering with emergency services, intent to commit identity fraud, computer misuse and a unauthorized use of computer equipment violation. Possibly even terrorism...sure, let's throw terrorism in there for good measure. Total sentence: 5x Infinity years, served consecutively. No chance of parole. Leave your human rights at the door.

    For the cops?...they switch this on before breakfast each morning. Assuming they didn't forget to switch it off the night before.

  5. Technical Controls by watermark · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If police can do it, so can "the bad guys". Why aren't there better technical barriers in place to prevent this sort of thing? If this snooping is illegal, that's a great first step, but why are these devices even able to work? Are the mobile carriers working with law enforcement to enable these devices, or just indifferent to it?

    When it came to light that law enforcement was abusing their power by indiscriminately snooping on internet traffic, we started to see more websites use encryption (birth of Let's Encrypt). When it came to light that law enforcement was abusing their power regarding accessing information stored on a phone, we started to see widespread use of device encryption (Android and iOS now encrypt by default). Is StringRay abuse the precursor to the next iteration of mobile security?

  6. Re:Slippery Slope by saloomy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No. We are way past calling this a slippery slope. Look up, theres the cliff we fell off.

    How about unreasonable search and seizure? How about due process? How about manufactured evidence? Is using the spectrum like this even legal? Aren't they violating the licensing laws of the spectrum?

    If they went to get a warrant, and asked the cell companies to give them the data, that would be legal. We can't allow them to trample on our freedoms and liberties because its inconvenient for them to go through the process the american people have approved. There is no consent of the governed here.