Justice Department Proposal Massive Expand FBI Extraterritorial Surveillance

A Department of Justice proposal to amend Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure would make it easier for domestic law enforcement to hack into computers of people attempting to protect their anonymity on the Internet. The DOJ has explicitly stated that the amendment is not meant to give courts the power to issue warrants that authorize searches in foreign countries--but the practical reality of the underlying technology means doing so is almost unavoidable.

The result? Possibly the broadest expansion of extraterritorial surveillance power since the FBI's inception.

This post highlights key issues raised by the international aspect of the DOJ proposal, in the attempt to encourage wider public debate before the FBI is granted such expansive powers.

The FBI brand of hacking: Network Investigative Techniques.

Broadly, the term "Network Investigative Techniques," (NIT) describes a method of surveillance that entails "hacking," or the remote access of a computer to install malicious software without the knowledge or permission of the owner/operator. Once installed, malware controls the target computer.

The right Network Investigative Technique can cause a computer to perform any task the computer is capable of--covertly upload files, photographs and stored e-mails to an FBI controlled server, use a computer's camera or microphone to gather images and sound at any time the FBI chooses, or even take over computers which associate with the target (e.g. by accessing a website hosted on a server the FBI secretly controls and has programmed to infect any computer that accesses it).

Network Investigative Techniques are especially handy in the pursuit of targets on the anonymous Internet--defined for the purposes of this post as those using Tor, a popular and robustprivacy software, in order to obscure their location (and other identifying information), and to utilize so-called "hidden" websites on servers whose physical locations are theoretically untraceable. [...]

Full article:

http://justsecurity.org/15018/justice-department-proposal-massive-expand-fbi-extraterritorial-surveillance/

tl;dr looks like the FBI scumbags want to make it easier for them to target Tor users using hacking.


Comments


[11 Points] DicksWillBeFucked:

This is disconcerting


[10 Points] Yellow-King-yo:

Meddling fucks. Go get a life.


[9 Points] atomiku:

Thought the title said 'Extraterrestrial Surveillance'. I was gonna say, that's a step too far!


[7 Points] Forte_Astro:

What the hell man. Violation sir.


[3 Points] None:

Well shieett....


[2 Points] cmycorps:

Using TAILS would be an effective way to ensure no traces of said Tor activities would be left on the computer.


[1 Points] None:

does it actually mean anything


[1 Points] rmxz:

FTA:

seize or copy electronically stored information located within or outside of that district if (A) the district where the media or information is located has been concealed through technological means

Wow - so they can seize any company that uses a VPN?!?