US Intelligence Analysts Use U.S. Smartphone Location Data Without Warrants, Memo Says

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Intelligence Analysts Use U.S. Smartphone Location Data Without Warrants, Memo Says​

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/22/us/politics/dia-surveillance-data.html (https://archive.vn/GWBAm)

A military arm of the intelligence community buys commercially available databases containing location data from smartphone apps and searches it for Americans’ past movements without a warrant, according to an unclassified memo obtained by The New York Times.

Defense Intelligence Agency analysts have searched for the movements of Americans within a commercial database in five investigations over the past two and a half years, agency officials disclosed in a memo they wrote for Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon.

The disclosure sheds light on an emerging loophole in privacy law during the digital age: In a landmark 2018 ruling known as the Carpenter decision, the Supreme Court held that the Constitution requires the government to obtain a warrant to compel phone companies to turn over location data about their customers. But the government can instead buy similar data from a broker — and does not believe it needs a warrant to do so.

“D.I.A. does not construe the Carpenter decision to require a judicial warrant endorsing purchase or use of commercially available data for intelligence purposes,” the agency memo said.

Mr. Wyden has made clear that he intends to propose legislation to add safeguards for Americans’ privacy in connection with commercially available location data. In a Senate speech this week, he denounced circumstances “in which the government, instead of getting an order, just goes out and purchases the private records of Americans from these sleazy and unregulated commercial data brokers who are simply above the law.”

He called the practice unacceptable and an intrusion on constitutional privacy rights. “The Fourth Amendment is not for sale,” he said.

The government’s use of commercial databases of location information has come under increasing scrutiny. Many smartphone apps log their users’ locations, and the app makers can aggregate the data and sell it to brokers, who can then resell it — including to the government.

It has been known that the government sometimes uses such data for law enforcement purposes on domestic soil.

The Wall Street Journal reported last year about law enforcement agencies using such data. In particular, it found, two agencies in the Department of Homeland Security — Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Customs and Border Protection — have used the data in patrolling the border and investigating immigrants who were later arrested.

In October, BuzzFeed reported on the existence of a legal memo from the Department of Homeland Security opining that it was lawful for law enforcement agencies to buy and use smartphone location data without a warrant. The department’s inspector general has opened an internal review.

The military has also been known to sometimes use location data for intelligence purposes.

In November, Vice’s Motherboard tech blog reported that Muslim Pro, a Muslim prayer and Quran app, had sent its users’ location data to a broker called X-Mode that in turn sold it to defense contractors and the U.S. military. Muslim Pro then said it would stop sharing data with X-Mode, and Apple and Google said they would ban apps that use the company’s tracking software from phones running their mobile operating systems.

The new memo for Mr. Wyden, written in response to inquiries by a privacy and cybersecurity aide in his office, Chris Soghoian, adds to that emerging mosaic.

The Defense Intelligence Agency appears to be mainly buying and using location data for investigations about foreigners abroad; one of its main missions is detecting threats to American forces stationed around the world.

But, the memo said, the unidentified broker or brokers from which the government buys bulk smartphone location data does not separate American and foreign users. The Defense Intelligence Agency instead processes the data as it arrives to filter those records which appear to be on domestic soil and puts them in a separate database.

Agency analysts may only query that separate database of Americans’ data if they receive special approval, the memo said, adding, “Permission to query the U.S. device location data has been granted five times in the past two and a half years for authorized purposes.”

Mr. Wyden asked Avril D. Haines, President Biden’s new director of national intelligence, about what he called “abuses” of commercially available locational information at her confirmation hearing this week. Ms. Haines said she was not yet up to speed on the topic but stressed the importance of the government being open about the rules under which it is operating.

“I would seek to try to publicize, essentially, a framework that helps people understand the circumstances under which we do that and the legal basis that we do that under,” she said. “I think that’s part of what’s critical to promoting transparency generally so that people have an understanding of the guidelines under which the intelligence community operates.”

Mr. Wyden’s coming legislation on the topic appears likely to be swept into a larger surveillance debate that flared in Congress last year before it temporarily ran aground after erratic statements by President Donald J. Trump, as he stoked his grievances over the Russia investigation, threatening to veto the bill and not making clear what would satisfy him.

With Mr. Biden now in office, lawmakers are set to resume that unresolved matter. The legislation has centered on reviving several provisions of the Patriot Act that expired and whether to put new safeguards on them, including banning the use of a part known as Section 215 to collect web browsing information without a warrant.
 

Attachments

Mr. Wyden’s coming legislation on the topic appears likely to be swept into a larger surveillance debate that flared in Congress last year before it temporarily ran aground after erratic statements by President Donald J. Trump, as he stoked his grievances over the Russia investigation, threatening to veto the bill and not making clear what would satisfy him.
Mass surveillance is bad.
Patriot act is good.

Pick one.
Muslim Pro, a Muslim prayer and Quran app, had sent its users’ location data to a broker called X-Mode that in turn sold it to defense contractors and the U.S. military.
I shouldn’t laugh, but that’s hilarious.
two agencies in the Department of Homeland Security — Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Customs and Border Protection — have used the data in patrolling the border and investigating immigrants who were later arrested.
So that’s why they suddenly care about privacy.
 
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No shit lol, they did this right after the Capitol hill invasion.
You can be tracked every second you have a phone.
 
No shit lol, they did this right after the Capitol hill invasion.
You can be tracked every second you have a phone.
If one were to carry a proper faraday cage not so much but also no connectivity.
But yeah, as long as your phone has battery, even if it's turned off you can be traced really accurately.

The scene from Dark Knight where batman uses signals to create a map isn't all sci-fi, brits were already doing it at the time. Obviously not exactly like in the movie but still. Cell towers can be used to triangulate anybody very accurately.
 
Real talk, I often wonder why we never hear about real terror attacks anymore (entering a public building in a viking suit doesn't count). I've suspected that phones glowing in the dark is a big factor in that.
 
Real talk, I often wonder why we never hear about real terror attacks anymore (entering a public building in a viking suit doesn't count). I've suspected that phones glowing in the dark is a big factor in that.
That and we stopped funding “moderate rebels” who were funding the support structures for a lot of those people.
 
Holy fuck no way this could happen! I am so shocked. This is my shocked face.

-_-
 
Every one of us agrees to this implicitly when we buy and carry cellphones.
I've never really seen the big deal here. The government already knows where you live. It knows where you work, and who your friends and family are. If you get on a plane or mass transit, it knows where you were and where you're going. At any given time there is a near 100% chance they know where you are to within a few hundred feet. And this was true well before cell phones. Almost nothing ever comes of it because your location doesn't really matter unless you're a smuggler or trafficker or something. Unless you plan on never going home again, all they have to do is monitor your house and wait.

If you're actively on the run from the government because you're Jason Bourne, then yes, I highly advise you to throw away anything GPS-enabled and live a purely nomadic lifestyle. Otherwise, just accept the fact that your location isn't private, never was, and never will be.

And before anyone spergs at me, I'm not saying it's a good thing. I'm saying it's an inescapable reality. It's like being upset that your name isn't a secret. Maybe it could have been 600 years ago, but those days are long gone.
 
I've never really seen the big deal here. The government already knows where you live. It knows where you work, and who your friends and family are. If you get on a plane or mass transit, it knows where you were and where you're going. At any given time there is a near 100% chance they know where you are to within a few hundred feet. And this was true well before cell phones. Almost nothing ever comes of it because your location doesn't really matter unless you're a smuggler or trafficker or something. Unless you plan on never going home again, all they have to do is monitor your house and wait.

If you're actively on the run from the government because you're Jason Bourne, then yes, I highly advise you to throw away anything GPS-enabled and live a purely nomadic lifestyle. Otherwise, just accept the fact that your location isn't private, never was, and never will be.

And before anyone spergs at me, I'm not saying it's a good thing. I'm saying it's an inescapable reality. It's like being upset that your name isn't a secret. Maybe it could have been 600 years ago, but those days are long gone.
I think it's especially chilling to many people because that location is not only instantly collected now but it's also directly tied to everything you do on your phone. And if they're tracking your location without a warrant, what else are they tracking without due process? (Or at least the laughable semblance of it, a la FISA courts.)

The location tracking isn't as huge a deal as it might seem, I agree. But it's still none of their damn business unless they have a great reason to be tracking someone, and that's what the legal system is supposed to be doing for us: making sure they have a damn good reason to pry into our lives. And increasingly it isn't.
 
and if they're tracking your location without a warrant, what else are they tracking without due process?
in current year, you should just assume that if it can be monitored, it is monitored. It's really up to you to learn how these technologies work and what they can and can't derive about you.
 
in current year, you should just assume that if it can be monitored, it is monitored. It's really up to you to learn how these technologies work and what they can and can't derive about you.
I think >using a cell phone without a sophisticated anti tracking suite is going to be tomorrow's >using a computer without a VPN.

Actually, whoever creates the first app that actually makes you untraceable is going to be a multi millionaire. Who wants to invest in my idea? Note: said idea is almost guaranteed not to come to fruition because I am too lazy.
 
I think it's especially chilling to many people because that location is not only instantly collected now but it's also directly tied to everything you do on your phone. And if they're tracking your location without a warrant, what else are they tracking without due process? (Or at least the laughable semblance of it, a la FISA courts.)

The location tracking isn't as huge a deal as it might seem, I agree. But it's still none of their damn business unless they have a great reason to be tracking someone, and that's what the legal system is supposed to be doing for us: making sure they have a damn good reason to pry into our lives. And increasingly it isn't.
They are not tracking you in the sense they are actively watching you, all that location data is stored and they can just have a peak when they want to. The tool is their to be used, they will use it.

The best OpSec is to actually just act like a normal person, blend in with the masses. But know how to go off the grid when needed, so your digital profile looks normal and has nothing standing out, your secretive shit kept to a small part. Also, reduce the usage of devices anyway, my MP3 player that is old as shit does fine for music in my car or when I am walking/hiking. I think the war on privacy is long since lost, best now to just not use the things, you will be better off anyway.
 
Actually, whoever creates the first app that actually makes you untraceable is going to be a multi millionaire.
Whoever creates the first app that actually makes you untraceable is going to be blackbagged.

But seriously though, an 'app' can't do that. Android/iOS are spyware at the basic systems level. There's really nothing you can do about that except rooting the hell out of it.
 
Time to bust out the retro nokias for that new winter look.
trust me, not viable anymore. the old Nokia's use a frequency band not available for use in the United States anymore. att was the last company to provide it, and I believe it was shut down in either 2017 or 2019.
at this point the phones are pretty much just snake players and ringtone makers without heavy electronic modification, and at that point you can be tracked by them.
 
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