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View Full Version : Today is a great victory against GCHQ, the NSA and the surveillance state




tangent4ronpaul
02-06-2015, 04:05 PM
Britain and America broke the law by intercepting electronic communications in bulk, and they can no longer claim otherwise

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/feb/06/great-victory-against-gchq-nsa-surveillance-state

It is a rare thing to bring truth to bear on the most powerful and secretive arm of the state. Never before has the Investigatory Powers Tribunal – the British court tasked with reviewing complaints against the security services – ruled against the government. Not once have the spooks been taken to task for overstepping the lawful boundaries of their conduct. Not a single British spy has been held accountable for mass surveillance, unlawful spying or snooping on private emails and phone calls.

Until today.

Privacy International has spent the past 25 years fighting back against the ever-expanding British surveillance state. Together with our allies, we’ve resisted the snooper’s charter (multiple times), mandatory ID cards and the provision of passenger name records. Yet in June 2013 we were as shocked as everyone else to learn that GCHQ, in collaboration with the NSA, had acquired the capabilities to completely control, monitor, copy, read and analyse the world’s private communications.

It was, until that point, unfathomable that the security services could have so audaciously stretched the boundaries of democratic legitimacy – and could have so severely violated the civil liberties and human rights of not only Britons, but of hundreds of millions of innocent people across the globe.

Thanks to Edward Snowden, we learned that GCHQ has access to emails and messages that the NSA siphons off directly and en masse from Google, Skype and Facebook. We discovered that the NSA collects 194m text messages and 5bn location records every day – and GCHQ can read them too. And, of course, we learned that GCHQ is operating a mass surveillance system that, combined with its access to the NSA’s own mass surveillance architecture, means it can read almost anyone’s communications, at any time, without judicial authorisation or any meaningful oversight.

In July 2013, the Intelligence and Security Committee assured us that GCHQ access to NSA surveillance material, in particular through the Prism programme, was entirely lawful. Unsurprisingly, we did not find the reassurances of a body that has consistently and blindly backed the services that it is meant to scrutinise comforting.

That’s why we decided to take GCHQ to court. Alongside Liberty, Amnesty International and human rights organisations from around the world, we argued that mass surveillance is not an acceptable activity of a democratic government, and that the cosy dealings between GCHQ and the NSA, conducted under a veil of secrecy that was only lifted by a whistleblower’s bravery, had to be brought within public control and scrutiny.

The evidence was overwhelming and the history of human rights law was in our favour, but the tribunal – which at that point had never before found that the surveillance activities of GCHQ broke the law – disagreed. Mass surveillance, it found in its decision of December 2014, was legitimate under British law. GCHQ’s access to NSA mass surveillance was also acceptable, it said, given that the government had disclosed details of its relationship with the US during the course of our case.

The decision was a disappointing one, and we’ll soon appeal to the European court of human rights. But it left us with a small glimmer of hope. The tribunal said that it was lawful for GCHQ and the NSA to swap and share surveillance material only because GCHQ has secret internal policies that it reluctantly disclosed in response to Privacy International’s case.

Now that those secret policies are no longer secret, the court reasoned, the British public know what’s going on, and that in itself must make those activities lawful. It must follow, therefore, that before those policies were public – prior to Edward Snowden’s disclosures, and our case in the IPT – GCHQ was acting outside the law.

Complicated reasoning aside, this finding was a genuine – and rare – success. The tribunal agreed, and we today have a firm statement that the intelligence services were acting completely out of bounds. It is not the judgment we would have liked – that we still hope to get from the European court of human rights in Strasbourg later this year – but it is a significant victory against an arm of the state that has rarely been forced to account for its wrongdoings.

It is a vindication of Snowden, and all those who put their careers – and even their lives – on the line to ensure the truth was told. It is a huge encouragement to civil society organisations like Privacy International, which often spend years locked in David and Goliath battles, depleting their funds and their morale to perform the essential role of holding truth to power.

In years to come we will look back on today as an essential victory against the surveillance state. Here at Privacy International, we humbly hope that perhaps we will also look back at this day as a turning of the tide; the day when the seemingly uncontrollable advancement of state intrusion into individuals’ lives was halted, and when internet users reclaimed some of the power in their fight for privacy, security and free expression.

Perhaps today will be the day that the government realises it cannot continue to expand its powers, outlaw encryption, and ban private speech in private places. Perhaps this victory will be the first of many – in the IPT, where Reprieve will soon protest the surveillance of lawyers, in the high court, where David Davis and Tom Watson are challenging blanket data retention laws, and in Strasbourg, where the European court of human rights has the opportunity to end mass surveillance once and for all. Perhaps this will spell the beginning of the end of unlawful, excessive, invasive intrusion into our private lives.

-t

tangent4ronpaul
02-06-2015, 04:10 PM
Surveillance ruling: GCHQ and privacy campaigners respond
Reaction to the landmark ruling that GCHQ mass internet surveillance was unlawful, from the intelligence agency, Privacy International and others

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/feb/06/surveillance-ruling-gchq-privacy-campaigners-respond

Reaction by privacy campaigners and others to Friday’s landmark ruling that GCHQ’s mass surveillance was unlawful contrasts sharply with that of the intelligence agency itself.


UK-US surveillance regime was unlawful ‘for seven years’
Read more
While a GCHQ spokesperson insisted the ruling by Britain’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) found against the authorities only “in one small respect”, Privacy International said the decision had “vindicated” the actions of Edward Snowden, the former US National Security Agency (NSA) whistleblower whose revelations led to the IPT investigation.

Downing Street said the judgment – which found that GCHQ’s access to intercepted information obtained by the NSA breached human rights law until the end of last year – did not require GCHQ to change its operations.

GCHQ spokesperson
We are pleased that the court has once again ruled that the UK’s bulk interception regime is fully lawful. It follows the court’s clear rejection of accusations of ‘mass surveillance’ in their December judgment.

The IPT has, however, found against the government in one small respect in relation to the historic intelligence-sharing legal regime.

The court has ruled that the public disclosure of two paragraphs of additional detail, voluntarily disclosed by the government during the litigation, were essential to make the public regime sufficiently foreseeable and therefore fully compatible with the European convention on human rights.

They found that to the extent that these two paragraphs were not previously in the public domain, the intelligence-sharing regime prior to that point was in contravention of human rights law.

But the judgment does not in any way suggest that important safeguards protecting privacy were not in place at all relevant times. It does not require GCHQ to change what it does to protect national security in any way.

Today’s IPT ruling reaffirms that the processes and safeguards within the intelligence-sharing regime were fully adequate at all times – it is simply about the amount of detail about those processes and safeguards that needed to be in the public domain.

We welcome the important role the IPT has played in ensuring that the public regime is sufficiently detailed. By its nature, much of GCHQ’s work must remain secret.

But we are working with the rest of government to improve public understanding about what we do and the strong legal and policy framework that underpins all our work. We continue to do what we can to place information safely into the public domain that can help to achieve this.

James Welch, legal director for Liberty
We now know that, by keeping the public in the dark about their secret dealings with the NSA, GCHQ acted unlawfully and violated our rights. That their activities are now deemed lawful is thanks only to the degree of disclosure Liberty and the other claimants were able to force from our secrecy-obsessed government.

But the intelligence services retain a largely unfettered power to rifle through millions of people’s private communications – and the tribunal believes the limited safeguards revealed during last year’s legal proceedings are an adequate protection of our privacy. We disagree, and will be taking our fight to the European court of human rights.

Eric King, deputy director of Privacy International
For far too long, intelligence agencies like GCHQ and NSA have acted like they are above the law. Today’s decision confirms to the public what many have said all along: over the past decade, GCHQ and the NSA have been engaged in an illegal mass surveillance sharing programme that has affected millions of people around the world.

We must not allow agencies to continue justifying mass surveillance programmes using secret interpretations of secret laws. The world owes Edward Snowden a great debt for blowing the whistle, and today’s decision is a vindication of his actions.

But more work needs to be done. The only reason why the NSA-GCHQ sharing relationship is still legal today is because of a last-minute clean-up effort by government to release previously secret “arrangements”. That is plainly not enough to fix what remains a massive loophole in the law, and we hope that the European court decides to rule in favour of privacy rather than unchecked state power.

Elizabeth Knight, legal director at Open Rights Group
This ruling is a very welcome first step. It shows that secret policies are not an acceptable basis for highly intrusive intelligence sharing practices.

However, the IPT has not gone far enough. These flimsy policies are not enough to comply with the requirements of human rights law, even now they are public.

And GCHQ’s own Tempora programme of mass interception is clearly both unlawful and disproportionate. We hope the European court of human rights will go further than the IPT and find that mass surveillance breaches our human right to privacy.

Cori Crider, director, Reprieve
After a decade and a half of siding with the government, it is welcome that the IPT is beginning to hold our spies to account.

But stark problems with the UK’s surveillance system remain: for years the government has written itself a blank cheque to eavesdrop on confidential communications between lawyers and clients, even in cases where the government itself is in the dock.

This is totally unfair and undermines the core premise of our legal system.

Downing Street spokeswoman
The overall judgment this morning is that the UK’s interception regime is fully lawful. That follows on from the court’s clear rejection of accusations of mass surveillance in their December judgment, and we welcome that.

It’s important to be clear that the overall interception regime and bulk interception they found fully, fully lawful, and that it was compliant with the right to privacy at all times.

What they said was, on the legal framework governing that, that there should be more about the rules that should be disclosed publicly. I think it was two paragraphs of additional detail, and the government did that during the proceedings.

They are not questioning in this judgment that the safeguarding of privacy was in any way jeopardised and the judgment will not require GCHQ to change what it does.

The spokeswoman added that the prime minister believes the government should make sure the intelligence agencies “continue to have the powers they need to keep us safe”.

On Twitter, the longer term consequences of the ruling were seized upon.

Michael Harris, a free speech campaigner, wrote:

— Michael Harris (@mjrharris)
February 6, 2015
GCHQ's programmes found unlawful. Wait till this goes to the European Court after the election. Mass population surveillance is untenable

Glenn Greenwald, who was working for the Guardian when he and colleague Ewen MacAskill wrote the first stories based on Snowden’s leaks, gave this reaction:

— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald)
February 6, 2015
Why did Edward Snowden have to make us aware of all this? Would have been so much better if we remained ignorant http://t.co/CrKCvLHziV

And the Guardian’s editor-in-chief, Alan Rusbridger, wrote:

— alan rusbridger (@arusbridger)
February 6, 2015
Illegal snooping by GCHQ. It's not the longest judgement in the world. But it couldn't be clearer pic.twitter.com/oIq5k2a8C5

-t

tangent4ronpaul
02-06-2015, 04:14 PM
Mass surveillance exposed by Snowden ‘not justified by fight against terrorism’
Report by Nils Muižnieks, commissioner for human rights at the Council of Europe, says ‘secret, massive and indiscriminate’ intelligence work is contrary to rule of law

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/08/mass-surveillance-exposed-edward-snowden-not-justified-by-fight-against-terrorism

The “secret, massive and indiscriminate” surveillance conducted by intelligence services and disclosed by the former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden cannot be justified by the fight against terrorism, the most senior human rights official in Europe has warned.

In a direct challenge to the United Kingdom and other states, Nils Muižnieks, the commissioner for human rights at the Council of Europe, calls for greater transparency and stronger democratic oversight of the way security agencies monitor the internet. He also said that so-called Five Eyes intelligence-sharing treaty between the UK, US, Australia, New Zealand and Canada should be published.

“Suspicionless mass retention of communications data is fundamentally contrary to the rule of law … and ineffective,” the Latvian official argues in a 120-page report, The Rule of Law on the Internet in the Wider Digital World. “Member states should not resort to it or impose compulsory retention of data by third parties.”

As human rights commissioner, Muižnieks has the power to intervene as a third party in cases sent to the European court of human rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg. His report is published the week after the UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) found that the legal regime governing mass surveillance of the internet by the monitoring agency GCHQ is “human rights compliant”.

In his report, Muižnieks wrote: “In connection with the debate on the practices of intelligence and security services prompted by Edward Snowden’s revelations, it is becoming increasingly clear that secret, massive and indiscriminate surveillance programmes are not in conformity with European human rights law and cannot be justified by the fight against terrorism or other important threats to national security. Such interferences can only be accepted if they are strictly necessary and proportionate to a legitimate aim.”

The civil liberties organisations which brought the claim in the IPT case are planning to appeal against the ruling to the ECHR - a case in which the commissioner could participate.

Muižnieks told the Guardian: ”I’m interested in weighing in on such cases about surveillance. Surveillance has gone beyond the bounds of the rule of law and democratic oversight needs to be more robust.

“We have seen examples where there’s a clear lack of oversight of security: the first was black sites, torture and rendition; the second was the revelations about mass surveillance. I want to influence the working of the court and its thinking.

“These recommendations [in the report] are my interpretation of basic human rights principles. The court often refers to my work in their judgments. There’s no substantial case law in internet-related issues so far.

“The UK is a country we are watching closely on these issues. It has a huge influence on whether or not the rule of law will prevail in the digital environment. All of these data sharing agreements should be as transparent as possible so we can assess the extent to which they are abiding by the law. Our right to privacy has been compromised on a regular basis and on a mass scale. I find that very worrying.”

Muižnieks said he expects to visit the UK next year and examine the UK’s record on surveillance. Asked about the IPT ruling, he commented: “I would note that very few complaints to this tribunal have been upheld in the last few years which raises many questions for me.”

He supported calls for publication of the so-called Five Eyes treaty that authorises intelligence sharing between the UK, US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand as a contribution to greater transparency. A case requesting its release has already been lodged at the ECHR.

His report contained a number of recommendations including:

• No states … European or otherwise, should access data stored in another country without the express consent of the other country or countries involved unless there is a clear, explicit and sufficiently circumscribed legal basis in international law for such access.

• Member states should ensure that their law-enforcement agencies do not obtain data from servers and infrastructure in another country under informal arrangements.

• [Countries] should stop relying on private companies that control the internet and the wider digital environment to impose restrictions that are in violation of the state’s human rights obligations.

• The activities of national security and intelligence agencies [should be brought within] an overarching legal framework. Until there is increased transparency on the rules under which these services operate their activities cannot be assumed to be in accordance with the rule of law.

• States should ensure that effective democratic oversight over national security services is in place. For effective democratic oversight, a culture of respect for human rights and the rule of law should be promoted, in particular among security service officers.

The Council of Europe, which has 47 member states including the UK, Russia and Turkey, is the body that oversees the European court of human rights in Strasbourg.

-t

Anti Federalist
02-06-2015, 04:48 PM
A bunch of legal mumbo jumbo that our overlords will laugh at and ignore.

Call it a "great victory" when the "spook central" facility out in Utah is a smoking crater.

DamianTV
02-06-2015, 05:04 PM
The only way this is going to stop is to throw the people that both Authorize (as if they had the Authority) the spying and doing the Spying itself into Gitmo. These bastards have absolutely no fear of being held accountable for their actions. Put em in jail for what they have done and then and ONLY then will this enslavement of humanity end.

If I went to india, I would be terrified of petting a Cow because they are sacred to them and take that shit very seriously. As a result, I would experience a fear of reprisal for my actions even though I dont think cows are sacred, I would be fearful of being held accountable for my lack of respect for what they hold to be sacred.

We need to make our PRIVACY SACRED, just as the Cows are in India. Imprison the fuckers that refuse to respect those things that we hold to be most sacred and precious unto ourselves. Our Privacy. Our Children. Our Rights. Our Property. Our ability to hold others accountable for any and all violations of the things that are truly valuable to us. Only when we can hold them accountable for their crimes against us will things ever stand a chance of change.

jllundqu
02-06-2015, 05:27 PM
Is this a joke?

Sorry don't mean to be cynical, but really? Celebrating over a report that the mass spying is 100% legal but some insignificant court has ruled that "for awhile we think it was illegal, but not anymore"

DamianTV
02-06-2015, 05:39 PM
Is this a joke?

Sorry don't mean to be cynical, but really? Celebrating over a report that the mass spying is 100% legal but some insignificant court has ruled that "for awhile we think it was illegal, but not anymore"

It is one step.

Ever been arrested? It is a multiple step process. First, you are accused of a crime. Then you are taken to jail. You may or may not be released depending on the severity of the "Crime" committed. Then formal charges are held against you. Habeus Corpus. No Body, no Crime. If there are no charges, you can not be detained for more than 48 hours, but that isnt applied any more. The hearing for your "Formal Charges" is only the first step of many visits you'll have to the Courtroom. You'll end up being "allowed" many more than the ficticious "one phone call". You'll eventually go to Trial. Usually guilt is determined by a Judge, but occasionally, you'll get a Jury Trial. Many many formalities. Guilt or Innocense is then decided. If deemed innocent, then you go free, otherwise, youre guilty, which is now the Default. Then finally, sentence is determined. We have barely scratched the surface of the multiple steps that are necessary to hold an individual or group accountable for their actions. Yeah, it was a crime, but what are YOU, the single stupid mundane gunna do about it? Are you going to play the part of Judge? You are not allowed. And even if you are the MAJORITY OF THE COUNTRY, it still wont mean jack shit unless the 2nd step takes place. Without the 2nd step, there can be no 3rd or 4th or 5th step. Much like a bully admitting they are a bully. Yeah, Im a bully, what are YOU gunna do about it, twerp?