熱點

【】

字号+作者:囫圇吞棗網来源:焦點2024-11-22 01:29:18我要评论(0)

A UK company sold surveillance tools to authoritarian governments that could be used to stamp out si

A UK company sold surveillance tools to authoritarian governments that could be used to stamp out signs of dissent.

BAE Systems, according to an investigation conducted by the BBC and the Danish newspaper Dagbladet Information, began shopping surveillance tools to governments in the Middle East after they bought a Danish company called ETI, which built a surveillance system known as "Evident."

That purchase happened in January 2011, around the same time of popular uprisings in several Middle Eastern nations that came to be collectively known as the "Arab Spring."

SEE ALSO:The NSA's massive surveillance operation is now just a little less massive

The system is reportedly designed to determine a target's location via cellphone data, recognize voices, track a person's internet activity, and crack encrypted messages, all on a giant scale.

The governments of Algeria, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates have all reportedly bought the system, though a telling bit of information came from a Tunisian intelligence official quoted by the BBC.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

Under former President Ben Ali -- ousted in January 2011 -- the Tunisian government used the system to track anyone it viewed as an enemy. The intelligence official described to the BBC what amounts to a giant search system.

Type in the name of someone the government doesn't like, and a list of their social media handles, websites, and other bits of information pops up. From there, the government can follow a person's online activity across platforms.

BAE Systems is not alone among British technology companies who sell surveillance equipment to foreign governments, according to Motherboard. They, along with others such as CellXion, Cobham, ComsTrac, and Domo Tactical Communications, have sold governments a device known as "stingrays."

Stingrays, which are also used by law enforcement in the United States, act as fake cellphone towers to capture cell data.

All of this technology allows oppressive governments to spy on their citizens, but it may also allow officials from those countries to gather information on conversations happening in the UK. These governments, of course, have embassies in the UK, and it wouldn't be hard for officials to set up surveillance at those embassies and let the technology do what it's supposed to.

Oh the irony.


Featured Video For You

TopicsCybersecurityPrivacy

1.本站遵循行业规范,任何转载的稿件都会明确标注作者和来源;2.本站的原创文章,请转载时务必注明文章作者和来源,不尊重原创的行为我们将追究责任;3.作者投稿可能会经我们编辑修改或补充。

相关文章
  • Give your kitchen sponge a rest on this adorable bed

    Give your kitchen sponge a rest on this adorable bed

    2024-11-22 01:08

  • India's Reliance Jio is already the world's biggest data carrier

    India's Reliance Jio is already the world's biggest data carrier

    2024-11-22 00:35

  • The story of Otto, the creator of Uber's self

    The story of Otto, the creator of Uber's self

    2024-11-22 00:17

  • Listen to Lady Gaga's ludicrously catchy new song, 'A

    Listen to Lady Gaga's ludicrously catchy new song, 'A

    2024-11-21 23:45

网友点评