TOKYO MASTER BANNER

MINISTRY OF TOKYO
US-ANGLO CAPITALISMEU-NATO IMPERIALISM
Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies
Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships
Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY
[LINK | Article]

*U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR*

Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
[info from Craig Murray video appearance, follows]  US-Anglo Alliance DELIBERATELY STOKING ANTI-RUSSIAN FEELING & RAMPING UP TENSION BETWEEN EASTERN EUROPE & RUSSIA.  British military/government feeding media PROPAGANDA.  Media choosing to PUBLISH government PROPAGANDA.  US naval aggression against Russia:  Baltic Sea — US naval aggression against China:  South China Sea.  Continued NATO pressure on Russia:  US missile systems moving into Eastern Europe.     [info from John Pilger interview follows]  War Hawk:  Hillary Clinton — embodiment of seamless aggressive American imperialist post-WWII system.  USA in frenzy of preparation for a conflict.  Greatest US-led build-up of forces since WWII gathered in Eastern Europe and in Baltic states.  US expansion & military preparation HAS NOT BEEN REPORTED IN THE WEST.  Since US paid for & controlled US coup, UKRAINE has become an American preserve and CIA Theme Park, on Russia's borderland, through which Germans invaded in the 1940s, costing 27 million Russian lives.  Imagine equivalent occurring on US borders in Canada or Mexico.  US military preparations against RUSSIA and against CHINA have NOT been reported by MEDIA.  US has sent guided missile ships to diputed zone in South China Sea.  DANGER OF US PRE-EMPTIVE NUCLEAR STRIKES.  China is on HIGH NUCLEAR ALERT.  US spy plane intercepted by Chinese fighter jets.  Public is primed to accept so-called 'aggressive' moves by China, when these are in fact defensive moves:  US 400 major bases encircling China; Okinawa has 32 American military installations; Japan has 130 American military bases in all.  WARNING PENTAGON MILITARY THINKING DOMINATES WASHINGTON. ⟴  
Showing posts with label Software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Software. Show all posts

June 20, 2016

SourceForge Software is Crap




Planet Tokyo


SourceForge


Downloaded some stupid program LiVES video editor via Ubuntu Software Centre that appears to have changed my read/write etc. permissions on directories.  Well, 'write' permissions, to be specific.

Uninstalled the program as I kept getting 'permission denied' messages when trying to download (not having even used the sh*tty SourceForge program).

Uninstalling LiVES didn't do the trick.  So now I'm getting a crash course in chmod and chown commands.  Sort of.

But I can't concentrate on the instructions because I haven't slept, so I'm just banging away sort of skimming here and there.

It's pissing me off no end that there isn't a simple quick global fix.

If I were in Windows I would just restore the system to when it was working fine.  But I don't know how to do that in Linux.

Calling up my target subdirectory in the black terminal thingy and keying in:

sudo chown [user name] [subdirectory name]
indicates:
chown:  cannot access 'subdirectory name':  No such file or directory

What kind of stupid command is that?

I am looking at the subdirectory.  It's there.  How can I be getting a 'no such file or directory' return?

It's annoying the hell out of me not being unable to alter whatever is messed up.

On top of that, if I 'ls' (which is presumably 'list') I can see a horizontal list of directories in blue and a single directory in green, but I don't know why the green is the exception.

To list is 'ls' but the explanation doesn't say what the 's' is for.  That's annoying.  To remember it, it helps to know what it stands for.

No matter where I try to download, I get the same message:
"The file could not be saved because you do not have the proper permissions.  Choose another save directory."

So I would say that this thing from Hell I downloaded has altered my permissions on a global basis.

What kind of assh*le software does that?

Apparently, it's this mob:  http://lives.sourceforge.net/ (here).

"LiVES is a Free, Open Source video editor *and* a VJ tool. LiVES is a Video Editing System," it says.

It's also messed up piece of crap software that appears to have somehow altered my write permissions.

Tried chmod u=rwx  in the hope that this would do a global change, but I need a target directory or file, I guess.

Thought I'd add a '/' for a quickie solution to my problem but that didn't work.  Not permitted.

This is sooooo crap. 

Tried chmod u+rwx -r at what I thought was the root directory (the slash / ).  Nope.  It doesn't recognise:  ‘u+rwx’, which is supposed to be the command for adding read write and execute to user permissions (I think).

Think I'd better stop.  I'm never going to fix this by trial and error.

Thanks for nothing, assh*les at SourceForge, who are also known to hijack browsers.

Why would Ubuntu even facilitate download of SourceForge Assh*les from Hell sh*tty software?

Bastards.

///\\///\\////\\///\\///\\///\\\



There's a 2012 blog on the LiVES program  here and this user isn't complaining about how crap it is.

I'm still trying to figure how to change my permissions, but because don't know about Linux it is going to take me forever of looking at basic information in the lead-up to hopefully finding the commands I need to use.

Managed to remove the LiVES f*cker's directory from my home directory:  rm [some LiVES name] -R

That was fun.

Found someone whose writing style I really love.  For some reason, I find this really easy to understand.

The 's' in 'ls' (for list files) stands for 'setuid' (I think) ... but I don't really know what that is.  Runs executables, or something like that.  Setuids and setgid look like they might be the same deal.

I've downloaded, updated and run a Clam virus scanner.  No threats found.  That was kind of cool because the black terminal kinda told me to do that.  Not sure how that came up, but it did.

Guessing chown is the command to focus on.  Nope.  It might be chmod.  I'm only vaguely getting the octals reference.  I'm not into numbers at all, and prefer symbols (letters).

Tried:  chmod u=rwx,g=rx,o=r ~
in the hope this would change the permissions on a global basis.  Nope.  Nothing.  Still getting same message about not having permissions, the c*nts.

This is bullsh*t.  It could take me forever of trial and error and looking up basics before I ever figure how to change the permissions.  Every time I think I have the command I need, I've selected something wrong.  I'll probably have to reload my operating system.

Too bad I haven't been doing back-ups.  This is sh*t.  I had everything how I wanted it and now I'll probably have HOURS of trying to figure how to get my graphics driver to do what it's supposed to do, because I can't remember what I did last time. 

Tried:  sudo chmod -R u+rwe /home/myname/
Jesus.  invalid mode:  'u+rwe'

chown myname. ~.foo
returns:  'No such file or directory'
C*nt!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Too dumb to work this out.  LOL

Gonnna download:  Nautilus-Actions Configuration Tool
It has a graphics interface that might let me change permissions ... I hope.

I'm so sick of this now.

If you hold down Alt-F2 for ages you get a million open 'Application Finder' windows.  LOL  ... not so good to know.

The effing thing does not recognise:  gksu nautilus
Downloading:   Graphical front-end to su and sudo
Updating:  sudo apt-get update


Back into the F2 thingy
told it to get:  gksu nautilus 
Password wanted
Got it wrong
Try again ...


Nothing.  Where is it?


Meanwhile, I find:  Change Advance Settings For:  myname

Mess around & change by adding myname to whatever file to see if it would make difference to downloads.  Nope.  Permission denied.


Where is gksu nautilus?

No idea.  But I've manually gone into the Nautilus-Actions Configuration program ... ran some help thingy.  Supposed to have Zenity.  Keyed that into terminal, but it was rejected.  So maybe it's to be keyed into Nautilus prompt.

Looking at the Nautilus thing, I can't quickly make it out.  Don't think this is for me.  I don't have forever.  That was a big waste of time.

Now I'm probably repeating myself by running:
sudo apt-get install nautilus-gksu

I'm losing track and I want to cry.  LOL

Tells me:  E: Unable to locate package nautilus-gksu
So I'm guessing I don't have it and the above command doesn't install it. Why?   Looks like it's not in the repository (I think).

Now it's off to AskUbuntu ....

Post reads:  "Apparently nautilus-gksu has not been in the Ubuntu repositories since 12.04" and is followed by string commands

Commands at AskUbunto to load nautilus-gksu
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:upubuntu-com/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install nautilus-gksu


Done.

tried running:  nautilus -q
response:  currently not installed.  Install it by:
sudo apt-get install nautilus

What?  Whatever.  I'm running it, but I thought I had nautilus installed.

I'm so close ... I think.  LOL  It's loading tons of something I'll only probably use this once (if I even manage that).

Oh, for f*ck's sake:  ran nautilus -q
Terminal tells me it couldn't connect to accessibility bus.  Connection refused at dbus something & some kind of Ttk-WARNING.  Jesus.

So that was another big waste of time.  Maybe I should have slowly read everything I could find on chmod or chown?  Now I've got all this crap I'll never use on my sh*tty old computer ... unless I spend forever trying to back-track and uninstall.

Software Centre Updater notification popped up.  Running.

Brief interruption:  arguing about what constitutes identity.  Pointless argument.  It's like trying to get a point across to a Martian with no concept of life on planet Earth.  So, in a sense, we are very much products of histories and environments.  Those without an emotional sense of history cannot understand or feel linked to history, is what I'm thinking.

Now I have double load of anxiety:  finding my way to finally being able to download on this f*cking computer if I ever manage to change permissions, and just being annoyed arguing with someone that is eliciting strong aggressive impulses in me ... LOL.   Which is stupid, really.  No point being angry at not seeing the same way.  Think I'm just angry became if it's not my way, it's a 'stupid way' (in relation to my position ... which always feels like the obvious and absolute truth ;) ), and it's highly frustrating.  LOL

Updates done.  Updater wants me to restart.  Now I have to shut down a million windows and start again ...

This could go on forever.   I could die before I mange to change permissions in Linux.  :)

///\\///\\////\\///\\///\\///\\\


Back again. 

But whatever concentration I kind of had is broken.

First day in ages that I feel like smoking, badly.  And I'm on rations.  WTF? Whhhhhhhhhhhy?

PC keeps crashing.

Got a list of my permissions at home directory level.  Can see one for what I assume is the LiVE program I've since removed.

Made a pretty coloured file of the permissions in AbiWord, so it's easy to see what's what.   But I'm yet to fully understand what's going on.

Lesson

Linux differs from other OS, as it is:

1. multi-tasking system 

(more than one user can operate PC at same time) - deeply ingrained in OS
2.  multi-user system

Following covered by site page:
http://linuxcommand.org/lts0070.php

    chmod - modify file access rights
    su - temporarily - superuser
    chown - change file ownership
    chgrp - change group ownership

ACCESS RIGHTS
assigned for each FILE & DIRECTORY
on Linux OS

 (basis:  USER, GROUP or OTHERS)



FOR PROGRAMS COMMON TO ALL USERS

Value 755 = rwx r-x r-x

owner:  read, write, execute
all others:  read & execute file

FOR PROGRAMS ONLY OWNER MAY USE (PRIVATE FROM OTHERS)

Value 700 = rwx --- ---
owner:  read, write, execute
others:  no rights

Value 666 = rw- rw- rw-
Owner & all others:  read & write file

FILES OTHERS MAY READ
BUT ONLY OWNER MAY READ & WRITE

Value 644 = rw- r-- r--

OTHERS NO RIGHTS

Value 600 = rw- --- ---
Owner:  read, write
others:  no rights

DIRECTORIES
chmod = control access permissions for directories
works same way as files

777 - BAD SETTING - OPEN ACCESS

SHARED DIRECTORIES
755 - rwx r-x r-x
Owner:  full access
others:  cannot create files or delete (for shared directories)

FULL CONTROL - OWNER ONLY
700 rwx --- ---
Owner:  full access
Others:  no access

SUPERUSER
(SUBSTITUTE USER)
DO NOT remain logged as superuser
use for temporary access to superuser privileges:  su (ie 'substitute user')
to become superuser:  su command at prompt
new shell session as superuser available
EXIT superuser session:  type 'exit'

UBUNTU Distro, alternative:
employs 'sudo' command as alternative

CHANGE OWNERSHIP
chown command

syntax:
SUDO  COMMAND NEW-OWNER FILENAME

eg.  sudo chown tokyo filename

*MUST be superuser to change name of file

CHOWN command same for directories and files

CHANGE GROUP OWNERSHIP

command:  chgrp

syntax:  command new-group-name filename


SOURCE INFO
2000-2016, William E. Shotts, Jr. Verba
http://linuxcommand.org/lts0070.php




The sudo chown tokyo .live command did f*ck all.

Dot symbol shouldn't be there.  Tried without.  Did nothing.  Can't even remember what it did.  I'm starting to lose the plot now.


I'm so sick of this.

I can't take any more!!!!!!!!    
Need to look at Putin for some relief.



Still no joy.  Whatever I did was rejected in the terminal.

Think I was confusing files with users or something, when composing my commands?  Not sure.

On top of that, the terminal wasn't recognising files (directories) specified, even though they *are* files.

Found a round-about way of downloading videos via the terminal (after watching a video tutorial), having downloaded some package.  It does the job.

But it's driving me mental not knowing what's up with being able to download in the ordinary way to directories I ought to have permission to download to.

PC crashed at one point and now 4 files on my desktop have been chewed.  'Link not found' or similar issue, leaving me with forbidding looking padlock pics on the desktop icons for the files that have been killed.

Luckily, they're files I don't care about.

Sucked down what I think might be my last cigarette to see me through this ordeal, so quickly I feel like I haven't had it and I already want another one.

I'm now mega pissed off and eating chocolate pudding while searching for video tutorials on Linux permissions, as my notes aren't doing my much good.

The Permissions Saga continues ...

Learned a bit more about Linux permissions, but I'm still not any closer to fixing the problems.  Really like 'Eli the Computer Guy' on the video I watched; he makes it all straightforward.  It's embarrassing how easy this was after he explained it.  LOL

Folders in the home directory:
Calibre Library  Desktop  Downloads
but when I run a chmod it tells me it cannot access the folder I designate (ie desktop), which is there.

That doesn't make sense (unless I'm keying in wrong).

Overall issues following download of LiVE video editor:
  • Unable to download video files (in any directory).
  • Permissions presumed adjusted upon download of LiVE.
  • Designated folders not recognised (terminal).
  • Desktop files x4 - links not found.
  • Noticed side-pane links messed up.
  • Errors:  'streamer backend errors Parole Media Player'

Think I might need to sleep on this and maybe try to run purge commands for the LiVE software, or whatever.

*During all this drama, I've installed an alternative software or script (?) to download videos via terminal.  It works.  

But new download makes it hard to work out which event chewed my x4 files on Desktop:

1.  LiVE problems.
2.  New download.
3.  Old PC crashing constantly.
4.  My bad command line entries.


I'm too tired to find out now.  LOL

May never know.  God, I hope I don't have to re-load the OS.  I hate that. 




April 07, 2015

UK - Privacy International - Surveillance Industry - Surveillance General



Meet the privacy activists who spy on the surveillance industry
by Daniel Rivero
Illustration by Shutterstock, Elena Scotti/Fusion
April 6, 2015
http://fusion.net/story/112390/unveiling-secrets-of-the-international-surveillance-trade-one-fake-company-at-a-time/
LONDON– On the second floor of a narrow brick building [...]

Once he’s infiltrated the trade show, he’ll pose as an industry insider, chatting up company representatives, swapping business cards, and picking up shiny brochures that advertise the invasive capabilities of bleeding-edge surveillance technology. Few of the features are ever marketed or revealed openly to the general public, and if the group didn’t go through the pains of going undercover, it wouldn’t know the lengths to which law enforcement and the intelligence community are going to keep tabs on their citizens.

“I don’t know when we’ll get to use this [company], but we need a lot of these to do our research,” Omanovic tells me. (He asked Fusion not to reveal the name of the company in order to not blow its cover.)

The strange tactic– hacking into an expo in order to come into close proximity with government hackers and monitors– is a regular part of operations at Privacy International, a London-based anti-surveillance advocacy group founded 25 years ago. Omanovic is one of a few activists for the group who goes undercover to collect the surveillance promotional documents.

“At last count we had about 1,400 files,” Matt Rice, PI’s Scottish-born advocacy officer says while sifting through a file cabinet full of the brochures. “[The files] help us understand what these companies are capable of, and what’s being sold around the world,” he says. The brochures vary in scope and claims. Some showcase cell site simulators, commonly called Stingrays, which allow police to intercept cell phone activity within a certain area. Others provide details about Finfisher– surveillance software that is marketed exclusively to governments, which allows officials to put spyware on a target’s home computer or mobile device to watch their Skype calls, Facebook and email activity.

The technology buyers at these conferences are the usual suspects — the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the UK’s Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), and the Australian Secret Intelligence Service– but also representatives of repressive regimes —Bahrain, Sudan, pre-revolutionary Libya– as the group has revealed in attendees lists it has surfaced.

At times, companies’ claims can raise eyebrows. One brochure shows a soldier, draped in fatigues, holding a portable device up to the faces of a sombre group of Arabs. “Innocent civilian or insurgent?,” the pamphlet asks.

“Not certain?”

“Our systems are.”

The treasure trove of compiled documents was available as an online database, but PI recently took it offline, saying the website had security vulnerabilities that could have compromised information of anyone who wanted to donate to the organization online. They are building a new one. The group hopes that the exposure of what Western companies are selling to foreign governments will help the organization achieve its larger goal: ending the sale of hardware and software to governments that use it to monitor their populations in ways that violate basic privacy rights.

The group acknowledges that it might seem they are taking an extremist position when it comes to privacy, but “we’re not against surveillance,” Michael Rispoli, head of PI’s communications, tells me. “Governments need to keep people safe, whether it’s from criminals or terrorists or what it may be, but surveillance needs to be done in accordance with human rights, and in accordance with the rule of law.

The group is waging its fight in courtrooms. In February of last year, it filed a criminal complaint to the UK’s National Cyber Crime Unit of the National Crime Agency, asking it to investigate British technology allegedly used repeatedly by the Ethiopian government to intercept the communications of an Ethiopian national. Even after Tadesse Kersmo applied for– and was granted– asylum in the UK on the basis of being a political refugee, the Ethiopian government kept electronically spying on him, the group says, using technology from British firm Gamma International. The group currently has six lawsuits in action, mostly taking on large, yet opaque surveillance companies and the British government. Gamma International did not respond to Fusion’s request for comment on the lawsuit, which alleges that exporting the software to Ethiopian authorities means the company assisted in illegal electronic spying.

“The irony that he was given refugee status here, while a British company is facilitating intrusions into his basic right to privacy isn’t just ironic, it’s wrong,” Rispoli says. “It’s so obvious that there should be laws in place to prevent it.”

PI says it has uncovered other questionable business relationships between oppressive regimes and technology companies based in other Western countries. An investigative report the group put out a few months ago on surveillance in Central Asia said that British and Swiss companies, along with Israeli and Israeli-American companies with close ties to the Israeli military, are providing surveillance infrastructure and technical support to countries like Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan– some of the worst-ranking countries in the world when it comes to freedom of speech, according to Freedom House. Only North Korea ranks lower than them.

PI says it used confidential sources, whose accounts have been corroborated, to reach those conclusions.

Not only are these companies complicit in human rights violations, the Central Asia report alleges, but they know they are. Fusion reached out to the companies named in the report, NICE Systems (Israel), Verint Israel (U.S./ Israel), Gamma (UK), or Dreamlab (Switzerland), and none have responded to repeated requests for comment.

The report is a “blueprint” for the future of the organization’s output, says Rice, the advocacy officer. “It’s the first time we’ve done something that really looks at the infrastructure, the laws, and putting it all together to get a view on how the system actually works in a country, or even a whole region,” says Rice.

“What we can do is take that [report], and have specific findings and testimonials to present to companies, to different bodies and parliamentarians, and say this is why we need these things addressed,” adds Omanovic, the researcher and fake company designer.

The tactic is starting to show signs of progress, he says. One afternoon, Omanovic was huddled over a table in the back room, taking part in what looked like an intense conference call. “European Commission,” he says afterwards. The Commission has been looking at surveillance exports since it was revealed that Egypt, Tunisia, and Bahrain were using European tech to crack down on protesters during the Arab Spring, he added. Now, PI is consulting with some members, and together they “hope to bring in a regulation specifically on this subject by year’s end.”

***

Privacy International has come a long way from the “sterile bar of an anonymous business hotel in Luxembourg,” where founder Simon Davies, then a lone wolf privacy campaigner, hosted its first meeting with a handful of people 25 years ago. In a blog post commemorating that anniversary, Davies (who left the organization about five years ago) described the general state of privacy advocacy when that first meeting was held:

    “Those were strange times. Privacy was an arcane subject that was on very few radar screens. The Internet had barely emerged, digital telephony was just beginning, the NSA was just a conspiracy theory and email was almost non-existent (we called it electronic mail back then). We communicated by fax machines, snail mail – and through actual real face to face meetings that you travelled thousands of miles to attend.”

Immediately, there were disagreements about the scope of issues the organization should focus on, as detailed in the group’s first report, filed in 1991. Some of the group’s 120-odd loosely affiliated members and advisors wanted the organization to focus on small privacy flare-ups; others wanted it to take on huge, international privacy policies, from “transborder data flows” to medical research. Disputes arose as to what “privacy” actually meant at the time. It took years for the group to narrow down the scope of its mandate to something manageable and coherent.

Gus Hosein, current executive director, describes the 90’s as a time when the organization “just knew that it was fighting against something.” He became part of the loose collective in 1996, three days after moving to the UK from New Haven, Connecticut, thanks to a chance encounter with Davies at the London Economics School. For the first thirteen years he worked with PI, he says, the group’s headquarters was the school pub.

They were fighting then some of the same battles that are back in the news cycle today, such as the U.S. government wanting to ban encryption, calling it a tool for criminals to hide their communications from law enforcement. “[We were] fighting against the Clinton Administration and its cryptography policy, fighting against new intersections of law, or proposals in countries X, Y and Z, and almost every day you would find something to fight around,” he says.

Just as privacy issues stemming from the dot com boom were starting to stabilize, 9/11 happened. That’s when Hosein says “the shit hit the fan.”

In the immediate wake of that tragedy, Washington pushed through the Patriot Act and the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, setting an international precedent of invasive pat-downs and extensive monitoring in the name of anti-terrorism. Hosein, being an American, followed the laws closely, and the group started issuing criticism of what it considered unreasonable searches. In the UK, a public debate about issuing national identification cards sprung up. PI fought it vehemently.

“All of a sudden we’re being called upon to respond to core policy-making in Western governments, so whereas policy and surveillance were often left to some tech expert within the Department of Justice or whatever, now it had gone to mainstream policy,” he says. “We were overwhelmed because we were still just a ragtag bunch of people trying to fight fights without funding, and we were taking on the might of the executive arm of government.”

The era was marked by a collective struggle to catch up. “I don’t think anyone had any real successes in that era,” Hosein says.

But around 2008, the group’s advocacy work in India, Thailand and the Philippines started to gain the attention of donors, and the team decided it was time to organize. The three staff members then started the formal process of becoming a charity, after being registered as a corporation for ten years. By the time it got its first office in 2011 (around the time its founder, Davies, walked away to pursue other ventures) the Arab Spring was dominating international headlines.

“With the Arab Spring and the rise of attention to human rights and technology, that’s when PI actually started to realize our vision, and become an organization that could grow,” Hosein says. “Four years ago we had three employees, and now we have 16 people,” he says with a hint of pride.

***

“This is a real vindication for [Edward] Snowden,” Eric King, PI’s deputy director says about one of the organization’s recent legal victories over the UK’s foremost digital spy agency, known as the Government Communications Headquarters or GCHQ.

PI used the documents made public by Snowden to get the British court that oversees GCHQ to determine that all intelligence sharing between GCHQ and the National Security Administration (NSA) was illegal up until December 2014. Ironically, the court went on to say that the sharing was only illegal because of lack of public disclosure of the program. Now that details of the program were made public thanks to the lawsuit, the court said, the operation is now legal and GCHQ can keep doing what it was doing.

“It’s like they’re creating the law on the fly,” King says. “[The UK government] is knowingly breaking the law and then retroactively justifying themselves. Even though we got the court to admit this whole program was illegal, the things they’re saying now are wholly inadequate to protect our privacy in this country.”

Nevertheless, it was a “highly significant ruling,” says Elizabeth Knight, Legal Director of fellow UK-based civil liberties organization Open Rights Group. “It was the first time the [courts have] found the UK’s intelligence services to be in breach of human rights law,” she says. “The ruling is a welcome first step towards demonstrating that the UK government’s surveillance practices breach human rights law.

In an email, a GCHQ spokesperson downplayed the significance of the ruling, saying that PI only won the case in one respect: on a “transparency issue,” rather than on the substance of the data sharing program. “The rulings re-affirm that the processes and safeguards within these regimes were fully adequate at all times, so we have not therefore needed to make any changes to policy or practice as a result of the judgement,” the spokesperson says.

Before coming on board four years ago, King, a 25-year old Wales native, worked at Reprieve, a non-profit that provides legal support to prisoners. Some of its clients are at Guantanamo Bay and other off-the-grid prisons, something that made him mindful of security concerns when the group was communicating with clients. King worried that every time he made a call to his clients, they were being monitored. “No one could answer those questions, and that’s what got me going on this,” says King.

Right now, he tells me, most of the group’s legal actions have to do with fighting the “Five Eyes”– the nickname given to the intertwined intelligence networks of the UK, Canada, the US, Australia and New Zealand. One of the campaigns, stemming from the lawsuit against GCHQ that established a need for transparency, is asking GCHQ to confirm if the agency illegally collected information about the people who signed a “Did the GCHQ Illegally Spy On You?” petition. So far, 10,000 people have signed up to be told whether their communications or online activity were collected by the UK spy agency when it conducted mass surveillance of the Internet. If a court actually forces GCHQ to confirm whether those individuals were spied on, PI will then ask that all retrieved data be deleted from the database.

“It’s such an important campaign not only because people have the right to know, but it’s going to bring it home to people and politicians that regular, everyday people are caught up in this international scandal,” King says. “You don’t even have to be British to be caught up in it. People all over the world are being tracked in that program.”

Eerke Boiten, a senior lecturer at the interdisciplinary Cyber Security Centre at the University of Kent, says that considering recent legal victories, he can’t write off the effort, even if he would have dismissed it just a year ago.

“We have now finally seen some breakthroughs in transparency in response to Snowden, and the sense that intelligence oversight needs an overhaul is increasing,” he wrote in an email to me. “So although the [British government] will do its best to shore up the GCHQ legal position to ensure it doesn’t need to respond to this, their job will be harder than before.”

“Privacy International have a recent record of pushing the right legal buttons,” he says. “They may win again.”

A GCHQ spokesperson says that the agency will “of course comply with any direction or order” a court might give it, stemming from the campaign.

King is also the head of PI’s research arm– organizing in-depth investigations into national surveillance ecosystems, in tandem with partner groups in countries around the world. The partners hail from places as disparate as Kenya and Mexico. One recently released report features testimonials from people who reported being heavily surveilled in Morocco. Another coming out of Colombia will be more of an “exposé,” with previously unreported details on surveillance in that country, he says.

And then there’s the stuff that King pioneered: the method of sneaking into industry conferences by using a shadow company. He developed the technique Omanovic is using. King can’t go to the conferences undercover anymore because his face is now too well known. When asked why he started sneaking into the shows, he says: “Law enforcement doesn’t like talking about [surveillance]. Governments don’t talk about it. And for the most part our engagement with companies is limited to when we sue them,” he laughs.

When it comes to the surveillance field, you would be hard pressed to find a company that does exactly what it says it does, King tells me. So when he or someone else at PI sets up a fake company, they expect to get about as much scrutiny as the next ambiguous, potentially official organization that lines up behind them.

Collectively, PI has been blacklisted and been led out of a few conferences over the past four years they have been doing this, he estimates.

“If we have to navigate some spooky places to get what we need, then that’s what we’ll do,” he says. Sometimes you have to walk through a dark room to turn on a light. Privacy International sees a world with a lot of dark rooms.

Being shadowy is acceptable in this world.”

http://fusion.net/story/112390/unveiling-secrets-of-the-international-surveillance-trade-one-fake-company-at-a-time/

Highlights are for me.  Link to source article for an easier read.

Great article.  Not sure I'll remember all of this information.
Prior advocacy work:
  • India
  • Thailand
  • Philippines
More investigations coming:
  • Kenya
  • Mexico 
  • Colombia  
Completed report:  heavily surveilled in Morocco (strong USA ally, with heavy French & Spanish trade, credit and investment).

StingRays are used routinely by Chicago Police Dept:
Chicago PD
seized drug money = first purchases 2005
incl. StingRay surveillance' digital 'hoovers'

http://inthesetimes.com/article/17808/who-do-you-protect-who-do-you-surveil 
Central Asia report software companies that have not responded:
  • NICE Systems (Israel)
  • Verint Israel (US / Israel)
  • Gamma (UK)
  • Dreamlab (Switzerland)
Most of Privacy International legal actions have to do with fighting the “Five Eyes” - ie.  "intertwined intelligence networks of the UK, Canada, the US, Australia & New Zealand."

Six court actions in progress currently.

Sales to repressive governments include:
  • Bahrain
  • Sudan
  • Libya (pre-revolutionary)
  • Turkmenistan
  • Uzbekistan
Egypt, Tunisia & Bahrain - used European surveillance technology (crackdown protesters).
European Commission -  has been looking at surveillance export.
Expansive surveillance set down by:
  • Patriot Act (USA)
  • Aviation and Transportation Security Act (USA)
Intelligence sharing between USA (NSA) and UK (GCHQ) ruled illegal prior 2014 because undisclosed.  However:
"Now that details of the program were made public thanks to the lawsuit, the court said, the operation is now legal and GCHQ can keep doing what it was doing."
That outcome sounds rather bizarre to me.