According to a top-secret accounting dated
Jan. 9, 2013, the NSA’s acquisitions directorate
sends millions of records every day from
internal Yahoo and Google networks to data
warehouses at the agency’s headquarters at Fort
Meade, Md. In the preceding 30 days, the report
said, field collectors had processed and sent
back 181,280,466 new records — including
“metadata,” which would indicate who sent or
received e-mails and when, as well as content
such as text, audio and video.
The NSA’s principal tool to exploit the data
links is a project called
MUSCULAR, operated jointly with the agency’s
British counterpart, the
Government Communications Headquarters
. From undisclosed interception points, the
NSA and the GCHQ are copying entire data flows
across fiber-optic cables that carry information
among the data centers of the Silicon Valley
giants.
The infiltration is especially striking
because the NSA, under a separate program
known as PRISM, has front-door access to
Google and Yahoo user accounts through a
court-approved process.
The MUSCULAR project appears to be an
unusually aggressive use of NSA tradecraft
against flagship American companies. The agency
is built for high-tech spying, with a wide range
of digital tools, but it has not been known to
use them routinely against U.S. companies.
In a statement, the NSA said it is “focused
on discovering and developing intelligence about
valid foreign intelligence targets only.”
“NSA applies Attorney General-approved
processes to protect the privacy of U.S. persons
— minimizing the likelihood of their information
in our targeting, collection, processing,
exploitation, retention, and dissemination,” it
said.
In a statement, Google’s chief legal officer,
David Drummond, said the company has “long
been concerned about the possibility of this
kind of snooping” and has not provided the
government with access to its systems.
“We are outraged at the lengths to which the
government seems to have gone to intercept data
from our private fiber networks, and it
underscores the need for urgent reform,” he
said.
A Yahoo spokeswoman said, “We have strict
controls in place to protect the security of our
data centers, and we have not given access to
our data centers to the NSA or to any other
government agency.”
Under PRISM, the NSA gathers huge volumes of
online communications records by legally
compelling U.S. technology companies, including
Yahoo and Google, to turn over any data that
match court-approved search terms. That program,
which was first
disclosed by The Washington Post and the
Guardian newspaper in Britain, is authorized
under Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act and
overseen by the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court (FISC).
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