Slashdot Mirror


US Internet Company Refused To Participate In NSA Surveillance, Documents Reveal (zdnet.com)

Zack Whittaker reports via ZDNet: A U.S. company refused to comply with a top-secret order that compelled it to facilitate government surveillance, according to newly declassified documents. According to the document, the unnamed company's refusal to participate in the surveillance program was tied to an apparent expansion of the foreign surveillance law, details of which were redacted by the government prior to its release, as it likely remains classified. It's thought to be only the second instance of an American company refusing to comply with a government surveillance order. The first was Yahoo in 2008. It was threatened with hefty daily fines if it didn't hand over customer data to the National Security Agency. The law is widely known in national security circles as forming the legal basis authorizing the so-called PRISM surveillance program, which reportedly taps data from nine tech titans including Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and others. It also permits "upstream" collection from the internet fiber backbones of the internet. Any guesses as to which company it may be? The company was not named in the 2014-dated document, but it's thought to be an internet provider or a tech company.

6 of 95 comments (clear)

  1. I know the company by 110010001000 · · Score: 4, Funny

    MySpace. And you know what happened to them!

  2. limited possibilities by muphin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There are only a few large companies out there that could refuse and make it more difficult for the government.
    Giving the history with Apple refusing the decrypt data I would go with them, NSA probably wanted to tap into the iMessaging service.

    --
    It's not a typo if you understood the meaning!
    1. Re:limited possibilities by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A large company with good lawyers who were not interested in the corrupt money and contracts being provided, who knew full well that those utterly bullshit secret laws would fail in the high court no matter how corrupt those judges are because approving those corrupt laws would disrupt the US legal system and would have to be struck down.

      The surveillance had nothing to do with terrorism and everything to do with extreme political ideological corruption in the deep state (well all to shallow partnership in crime between corrupt corporations and corrupt elected officials and the corrupt political appointees they corruptly placed into the system). The sole purpose attack and silence political activism and any threat to the extremely profitable corruption, even though that corruption is destroying the US at every level, from overseas relations and trade to infrastructure collapse to collapsing education system to abusive law enforcers and prisons to a for profit military, all preying upon US society to it's ultimate collapse and they do not care as long as they are rich and can evacuate to another country with the money they fraudulently gain.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    2. Re:limited possibilities by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 4, Informative

      When I got a notice from Cox for my "business-level connection" they specifically wrote that as this was a business service I was allowed per my contract to share out my signal via unauthenticated wifi and they therefor assumed that was how the infringement happened. At that point, I tweaked utorrent to only share back up to 120% and then stop seeding, and never got another notification. So yes, they do really put their customer first in this.

  3. I bet it was Qwest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Probably Qwest. That was covered extensively here back in the day. Their CEO was jailed for "insider trading" because the government didn't pay its contracts as leverage and it tanked the company.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qwest

  4. Seconded by ArchieBunker · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just going to say Qwest. If you don't play ball with Uncle Sam then business suddenly becomes more difficult.

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard