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friendly_iconoclast

(15,333 posts)
Wed Oct 26, 2016, 01:02 AM Oct 2016

Documents show AT&T secretly sells customer data to law enforcement

Reposted from LBN: http://www.democraticunderground.com/10141607262


http://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/oct/25/att-secretly-sells-customer-data-law-enforcement-hemisphere

Telecommunications giant AT&T is selling access to customer data to local law enforcement in secret, new documents released on Monday reveal.

The program, called Hemisphere, was previously known only as a “partnership” between the company and the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) for the purposes of counter-narcotics operations.

But according to internal company documents revealed Monday by the Daily Beast, Hemisphere is being sold to local police departments and used to investigate everything from murder to Medicaid fraud, costing US taxpayers millions of dollars every year even while riding roughshod over privacy concerns.

It accesses the trove of telephone metadata available to AT&T, who control a large proportion of America’s landline and cellphone infrastructure. Unlike other providers, who delete their stored metadata after a certain time, AT&T keeps information like call time, duration, and even location data on file for years, with records dating back to 2008.





The original Daily Beast article can be found at:

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/10/25/at-t-is-spying-on-americans-for-profit.html

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Documents show AT&T secretly sells customer data to law enforcement (Original Post) friendly_iconoclast Oct 2016 OP
Here's the Electronic Frontier Foundation's take on Hemisphere: friendly_iconoclast Oct 2016 #1
Yep. Once again, the primary purpose of the Patriot Act, etc. is to put pot smokers in prison. Warren DeMontague Oct 2016 #2
 

friendly_iconoclast

(15,333 posts)
1. Here's the Electronic Frontier Foundation's take on Hemisphere:
Wed Oct 26, 2016, 01:23 AM
Oct 2016
https://www.eff.org/cases/hemisphere

Hemisphere: Law Enforcement's Secret Call Records Deal With AT&T


For almost 10 years, federal and local law enforcement agencies across the country have engaged in a massive and secretive telephone surveillance program known as “Hemisphere.” Publicly disclosed for the first time in September 2013 by the New York Times, the Hemisphere program provides police access to a database containing call records going back decades, combined with a sophisticated analytical system. The program involves a private-public partnership with AT&T.

“Hemisphere” came to light amidst the public uproar over revelations that the NSA had been collecting phone records on millions of innocent people. However, Hemisphere wasn’t a program revealed by Edward Snowden’s leaks, but rather its exposure was pure serendipity: a citizen activist in Seattle discovered the program when shocking presentations outlining the program were provided to him in response to regular old public records requests.

But these documents only painted a partial portrait of the program, and since the New York Times’ initial reporting in 2013, EFF has filed its own Freedom of Information Act and state-level public records requests to learn more. The results have been frustrating, with various agencies providing highly and inconsistently redacted documents in what seems to be an attempt to further hide information from the public.

In July 2015, EFF had enough with the secrecy. We filed two separate lawsuits to force law enforcement agencies to release important information that would contribute to the public debate about the efficacy and legitimacy of the program. One lawsuit is against the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), while the other is against the California State Attorney General.
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