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Media Freedom / Media Sources / UK Press / US Press — Comments Off on Metadata: a reckoning is still due
09
Feb 15

Metadata: a reckoning is still due

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The UK government lost a court case on electronic surveillance the other day. I hope that it will be defeated in at least one other case to come.

Faithful readers of this blog will know that when the Edward Snowden revelations changed our understanding the way governments watch how we communicate, the defenders of dragnet information gathering rested on the argument that the snoopers weren’t listening to the calls or reading the content of the emails. They were only able to see who had phone, emailed or texted who, when and for how long. Metadata, so called.

As time went on, this “defence” looked less and less reassuring. It looked especially alarming to journalists, since this harvesting equips governments with the ability to find out journalists’ sources. The direction and frequency of contacts will usually be enough to spot the source of a leak.

More than that: it can get someone killed. I had missed this extraordinary debate involving General Michael Hayden, a retired head of America’s NSA, in which he cheerfully acknowledges that “we kill people based on metadata”, quickly adding that the government does not act that way inside the US. There’s a very good commentary on what else Hayden says here by David Cole.

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Media Freedom / Media Sources / UK Press / US Press — Comments Off on The protection of journalists requires metadata surveillance to be challenged in court
14
Feb 14

The protection of journalists requires metadata surveillance to be challenged in court

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A few weeks ago, I could only have given the haziest definition of what “metadata” is if I was asked. Thanks to the electronic surveillance disclosures of Edward Snowden, the word is heard everywhere. “Metadata” should resonate very loudly with journalists.

When Snowden released clues about the scale of surveillance conducted by the NSA, GCHQ and allied cyber-snoopers, it was quickly made clear this was – mostly – who called or emailed who, when and from where. So-called “metadata”. The actual content of the communications isn’t, apparently, collected and stored in huge industrial quantities by the governments doing this.

It took me a embarrassingly long time to work out that while this form of information collection may be useful for tracking people who might want to kill people, it is also perfectly adapted to tracing journalists’ sources. Data which tells someone who called who and when is enough to provide very strong clues about who is providing information to whom. No need for any government agency to be so intrusive and unsubtle as to listen in to the conversation itself.

The Committee to Protect Journalists in New York has just released a set of excellent essay on attacks on journalism and the one by Geoffrey King dealing with this lays out the danger very well. King quotes the author and expert on the NSA James Bamford: Continue reading →

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