Hi Lib Tech

Some of you may be interested in my Globe and Mail commentary on some of the 
issues bearing on Canada around the NSA revelations.
It will appear in tomorrow's print edition.

Cheers
Ron


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/spy-agencies-have-turned-our-digital-lives-inside-out-we-need-to-watch-them/article12455029/

Spy agencies have turned our digital lives inside out. We need to watch them

Ronald Deibert

Published Monday, Jun. 10, 2013 02:27PM EDT
Last updated Monday, Jun. 10, 2013 03:59PM EDT
Social networking, cloud computing and mobile connectivity have together 
fundamentally transformed our world, but they come with a dark side. As we move 
about our daily lives, we secrete a constant stream of data, a digital 
electronic cloud of bits and bytes that follows us around indefinitely. Some of 
this comes from activities over which we have direct control: texting, 
emailing, surfing, shopping, communicating. But a lot of it comes incidentally, 
without our awareness, largely as a byproduct, a kind of electronic envelope to 
each and every digital transaction called “metadata.”

Until this week, very few North Americans probably ever heard of metadata. They 
should get to know it better.

What is metadata? Take my mobile phone. Even when I’m not using it, when it’s 
just sitting in my pocket or on my desk, it emits an electronic pulse every few 
seconds to the nearest wifi router or cellphone tower that includes a kind of 
digital biometric tag: the model of the phone, its operating system, the 
geolocation of the phone (and by extension all of my movements). Meanwhile, 
metadata of the phone in use could include the number I’m calling, the length 
and time of the call, the IP addresses of websites I visit, etcetera. All of 
this metadata doesn’t just evaporate, either; it moves through the filters and 
chokepoints of the Internet, and sits indefinitely, there to be mined, on the 
servers of the companies that own and operate the infrastructure: the 
telecommunications and Internet service Providers like AT&T and Verizon in the 
United States, and Bell, Telus, and Rogers here in Canada.

Which brings us to the National Security Agency flap in the United States – an 
issue that, not surprisingly, is spilling across the border into Canada. In 
both countries, reports have emerged suggesting that the U.S. and Canadian 
signals intelligence agencies, NSA and Communications Security Establishment 
Canada (CSEC) respectively, are gathering large swathes of metadata in 
collusion with telecommunications companies.

Although CSEC refuses to say much at all about the matter, U.S. officials 
justify it on the basis that metadata is not content (and thus not subject to 
the same safeguards as the latter), allowing President Barack Obama to coyly 
remark that “no one is listening in on your phonecalls.” Probably true, but 
they’re most definitely monitoring your metadata, and voraciously so. The NSA’s 
enormous new $1.2-billion complex in Utah will be able to handle and process 
five zettabytes of data, which former NSA technical director (and now 
whistleblower William Binney) estimates to be on the order of 100 years worth 
of all of the world’s communications.

Think metadata is trivial compared to content? Think again. MIT researchers who 
studied 15 months of anonymized cellphone metadata of 1.5 million people found 
four “data points” were all they needed to figure out a person’s identity 95 
per cent of the time. In 2010, German Green Party politician Malte Spitz and 
Germany’s Die Zeit newspaper requested all of the metadata from Mr. Spitz’s 
phone carrier, Deuthsche Telekom. The company sent back a CD containing 35,830 
lines of code. “Seen individually, the pieces of data are mostly 
inconsequential and harmless,” wrote Die Zeit, “[but] taken together, they 
provide what investigators call a profile – a clear picture of a person’s 
habits and preferences, and indeed, of his or her life.”

Access to metadata, when combined with powerful computers and algorithms, can 
also allow entire social networks to be mapped in space and time with a degree 
of precision that is extraordinarily unprecedented, and extraordinarily 
powerful. Once analyzed, metadata can pinpoint not only who you are, but with 
whom you meet, with what frequency and duration, and at which locations. And 
it’s now big business for that very reason. A growing complex of top secret 
data analysis companies orbit the law enforcement, military, and intelligence 
communities offering Big Data analysis, further driving the need for yet more 
data.

For both Americans and Canadians, the flap offers a timely opportunity to ask 
big questions about the appropriate checks and balances of security agencies in 
a liberal democratic society as we undergo such a profound Big Data revolution. 
Until this week, very few Canadian citizens had even heard of CSEC – this, in 
spite of the fact that its enormous budget and wide-sweeping powers. Born in 
the Cold War, CSEC operates in the shadows. Its new nearly $900-million 
headquarters (once described as “Taj Mahal” by John MacLennan, the head of the 
Union of National Defence Employees) doesn’t even show up on Google maps, even 
though it’s been under construction for several years and is plainly visible 
from the parking lot of its sister agency, CSIS (which does show up).

CSEC routinely punts back freedom of information requests with entire sections 
blacked out. Its pat non-answers on the latest headlines trivialize the scope 
of what’s at stake, and are, frankly, unacceptable given the resources 
Canadians bestow on the agency to do its job.

To be sure, the world is a nasty place. We do need law enforcement, defence, 
and national intelligence agencies. But in the world of Big Data, in which we 
are turning our digital lives inside out, should we be entrusting power and 
authority to agencies that barely acknowledge their own existence? It’s time to 
open up the black box, lift the lid on cyberspace, and impose accountability on 
those whom we entrust with access to our intimate digital lives. It’s time to 
watch the watchers.

Ronald Deibert is Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto, 
where he is Director of the Canada Centre for Global Security Studies and the 
Citizen Lab at the Munk School of Global Affairs, and author of Black Code: 
Inside the Battle for Cyberspace (Random House, 2013).

Ronald Deibert
Director, the Citizen Lab 
and the Canada Centre for Global Security Studies
Munk School of Global Affairs
University of Toronto
(416) 946-8916
PGP: http://deibert.citizenlab.org/pubkey.txt
http://deibert.citizenlab.org/
twitter.com/citizenlab
[email protected]



--
Too many emails? Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing 
moderator at [email protected] or changing your settings at 
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech

Reply via email to