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The public assertions made by Indian and American officials that no content was taken from Indias internet and telephone networks by U.S.s National Security Agency (NSA) and that the American surveillance programs just looked at patterns of communication as a counter-terrorism measure are far from the truth, if not outright misleading.
According to a top secret document disclosed by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and obtained byThe Hindu, the PRISM programme was deployed by the American agency to gather key information from India by tapping directly into the servers of tech giants which provide services such as email, video sharing, voice-over-IPs, online chats, file transfer and social networking services.
And, according to the PRISM document seen byThe Hindu, much of the communication targeted by the NSA is unrelated to terrorism, contrary to claims of Indian and American officials.
Instead, much of the surveillance was focused on Indias domestic politics and the countrys strategic and commercial interests.
This is the first time its being revealed that PRISM, which facilitates extensive, in-depth surveillance on live communications as well as stored information, was used by the worlds largest surveillance organization to intercept and pick content on at least three issues related to Indias geopolitical and economic interests. They are: Nuclear, Space and Politics.
The top-secret NSA document, which carries the seal of Special Source Operations, is called A Week in the Life of PRISM reporting and it shows Sampling of Reporting topics from 2-8 Feb 2013. Marked with a green slug that reads 589 End product Reports, the document carries the brand logos of companies like Gmail, Facebook, MSN, Hotmail, Yahoo!, Google, Apple, Skype, YouTube, paltalk.com and AOL on the top of the page.
End products are official reports that are distillations of the best raw intelligence.
In a section titled India, the document clearly mentions numerous subjects about which content was picked from various service providers on the worldwide web in just one week early this year.
This document is strong evidence of the fact that NSA surveillance in India was not restricted to tracking of phone calls, text messages and email logs by Boundless Informant, an NSA tool that was deployed quite aggressively against India. As politics, space and nuclear are mentioned as end products in this document, it means that emails, texts and phones of important people related to these fields were constantly monitored and intelligence was taken from them, and then the NSA prepared official reports on the basis of raw intelligence. It means, they are listening in real time to what our political leaders, bureaucrats and scientists are communicating with each other, an official with an India intelligence agency told The Hindu, speaking strictly on condition of anonymity.
But, top ministers and officials have continued to live in denial.
After it was reported by The Guardian on June 7 that the PRISM program allowed the NSA to obtain targeted communications without having to request them from the service providers and without having to obtain individual court orders, both U.S. and Indian officials claimed that no content was being taken from the countrys networks and that the programs were intended to counter terrorism.
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According to a top secret document disclosed by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and obtained byThe Hindu, the PRISM programme was deployed by the American agency to gather key information from India by tapping directly into the servers of tech giants which provide services such as email, video sharing, voice-over-IPs, online chats, file transfer and social networking services.
And, according to the PRISM document seen byThe Hindu, much of the communication targeted by the NSA is unrelated to terrorism, contrary to claims of Indian and American officials.
Instead, much of the surveillance was focused on Indias domestic politics and the countrys strategic and commercial interests.
This is the first time its being revealed that PRISM, which facilitates extensive, in-depth surveillance on live communications as well as stored information, was used by the worlds largest surveillance organization to intercept and pick content on at least three issues related to Indias geopolitical and economic interests. They are: Nuclear, Space and Politics.
The top-secret NSA document, which carries the seal of Special Source Operations, is called A Week in the Life of PRISM reporting and it shows Sampling of Reporting topics from 2-8 Feb 2013. Marked with a green slug that reads 589 End product Reports, the document carries the brand logos of companies like Gmail, Facebook, MSN, Hotmail, Yahoo!, Google, Apple, Skype, YouTube, paltalk.com and AOL on the top of the page.
End products are official reports that are distillations of the best raw intelligence.
In a section titled India, the document clearly mentions numerous subjects about which content was picked from various service providers on the worldwide web in just one week early this year.
This document is strong evidence of the fact that NSA surveillance in India was not restricted to tracking of phone calls, text messages and email logs by Boundless Informant, an NSA tool that was deployed quite aggressively against India. As politics, space and nuclear are mentioned as end products in this document, it means that emails, texts and phones of important people related to these fields were constantly monitored and intelligence was taken from them, and then the NSA prepared official reports on the basis of raw intelligence. It means, they are listening in real time to what our political leaders, bureaucrats and scientists are communicating with each other, an official with an India intelligence agency told The Hindu, speaking strictly on condition of anonymity.
But, top ministers and officials have continued to live in denial.
After it was reported by The Guardian on June 7 that the PRISM program allowed the NSA to obtain targeted communications without having to request them from the service providers and without having to obtain individual court orders, both U.S. and Indian officials claimed that no content was being taken from the countrys networks and that the programs were intended to counter terrorism.
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