04-23-2022, 09:46 PM
Ha, spies everywhere...Phone-tracking firm Anomaly Six has amassed so much app data it recently held an incredible closed-door demonstration: The company geofenced the CIA and NSA, tracked someone who had visited both sites around the country, and then de-anonymized them. Anomaly Six sales rep joked that their surveillance power is based on the fact that most people "probably don’t read" the fine print. Quite true.
To me, the real worry here isn't that American spies could be easily tracked, (except if you are spy of course) but that the locations of ordinary people around the world are for sale, (like credit card numbers) and can be effortlessly monitored using data they likely have no idea their phones are leaking 24/7. Everyone becomes a POI.
The sale of personal location data is nothing new and has been happening without oversight or regulation for many years. But companies like A6 show what's possible when you combine gigantic personal location datasets with an easy to use UI and turn that package into a product...similar to the Israeli Pegasus. Do you remember that scene at the end of 2008’s The Dark Knight, where Batman finds The Joker by tapping into Gotham’s cellphone network to create a three-dimensional map of the city?
It also can't be overstated that if big brother wants to use this tech, they don't need a warrant, they can simply buy access. The 4th Amendment is supposed to protect you from this, but commercial app data provides an enormous loophole.
And in fact, the government is buying access to Anomaly Six:
And another story from WSJ:
Flashback...
NY Times
Quote:In the months leading up to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, two obscure American startups met to discuss a potential surveillance partnership that would merge the ability to track the movements of billions of people via their phones with a constant stream of data purchased directly from Twitter. According to Brendon Clark of Anomaly Six — or “A6” — the combination of its cellphone location-tracking technology with the social media surveillance provided by Zignal Labs would permit the U.S. government to effortlessly spy on Russian forces as they amassed along the Ukrainian border, or similarly track Chinese nuclear submarines. To prove that the technology worked, Clark pointed A6’s powers inward, spying on the National Security Agency and CIA, using their own cellphones against them.
A6 claims that its GPS dragnet yields between 30 to 60 location pings per device per day and 2.5 trillion locational data points annually worldwide, adding up to 280 terabytes of location data per year and many petabytes in total, suggesting that the company surveils roughly 230 million devices on an average day.
Anomaly 6 harvests only GPS pinpoints, potentially accurate to within several feet. In addition to location, A6 claimed that it has built a library of over 2 billion email addresses and other personal details that people share when signing up for smartphone apps that can be used to identify who the GPS ping belongs to.
“Everything is agreed to and sent by the user even though they probably don’t read the 60 pages in the [end user license agreement].”
The Intercept
To me, the real worry here isn't that American spies could be easily tracked, (except if you are spy of course) but that the locations of ordinary people around the world are for sale, (like credit card numbers) and can be effortlessly monitored using data they likely have no idea their phones are leaking 24/7. Everyone becomes a POI.
The sale of personal location data is nothing new and has been happening without oversight or regulation for many years. But companies like A6 show what's possible when you combine gigantic personal location datasets with an easy to use UI and turn that package into a product...similar to the Israeli Pegasus. Do you remember that scene at the end of 2008’s The Dark Knight, where Batman finds The Joker by tapping into Gotham’s cellphone network to create a three-dimensional map of the city?
It also can't be overstated that if big brother wants to use this tech, they don't need a warrant, they can simply buy access. The 4th Amendment is supposed to protect you from this, but commercial app data provides an enormous loophole.
And in fact, the government is buying access to Anomaly Six:
Quote:U.S. Special Operations Command Paid $500,000 to Secretive Location Data Firm
Anomaly 6 is run by ex-military and location industry veterans.
Motherboard previously reported how a wide range of apps, including a Muslim prayer app, sent location data without users' informed consent to a firm called X-Mode, whose clients included U.S. military contractors.
And another story from WSJ:
Quote:U.S. Government Contractor Embedded Software in Apps to Track PhonesGotta luv it when your phone is weaponized against you in more ways than one.
Anomaly Six LLC a Virginia-based company founded by two U.S. military veterans with a background in intelligence, said in marketing material it is able to draw location data from more than 500 mobile applications, in part through its own software development kit, or SDK, that is embedded directly in some of the apps.
One of Babel Street’s products, called “Locate X,” includes the location records of millions of cellphones, drawn from consumer apps. The two former employees set out to build a product to compete with it, according to Babel’s lawsuit. Anomaly Six declined to comment on the lawsuit, which was settled out of court last year.
Developed with input from U.S. government officials, according to court records, Locate X is widely used by military intelligence units who work on gathering “open source” intelligence, or information taken from publicly available sources. Babel Street also has contracts with the Department of Homeland Security, the Justice Department, and many other civilian agencies, federal contracting data shows. Babel Street didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Flashback...
NY Times
"The New World fell not to a sword but to a meme." – Daniel Quinn
"Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we're being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I'm liable to be put away as insane for expressing that." ― John Lennon
Rogue News says that the US is a reality show posing as an Empire.
"Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we're being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I'm liable to be put away as insane for expressing that." ― John Lennon
Rogue News says that the US is a reality show posing as an Empire.