India Wants To Monitor Twitter, Facebook 113
swandives writes "India's home ministry has asked its communications ministry to monitor social networking websites such as Twitter and Facebook amid fears that the services are being used by terrorists to plan attacks. The request suggests that the Indian government is trying to broaden the scope of its online surveillance for national security. Under new rules to the country's IT Act that came into force earlier this year, websites and service providers are required to provide government security agencies with information on private accounts, including passwords, on request without a court order."
I hope you don't mind (Score:5, Insightful)
me asking: Is there anything that terrorists can't use?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Yeah, that's the reason why India cannot progress any further. That f**ing corrupt government does not know anything about encryption and steganography.
Good luck with the above scheme. It is bound to fail. It would be better if you bureaucrats, policemen and other officials returned to your work of taking bribes.
Re: (Score:1)
Well, in the movies the terrorist/bad guy always uses Internet cafes to communicate with his superiors over IRC, maybe they should monitor that too... Like the Bruce Willis re-make of Day of the Jackal.
Re: (Score:2)
Hay guys! I tough, someone should car-bomb the embassy, @lovekittens, r u up 2 it? #terrorizing
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Nah... Liquids of more than 2 ounces are forbidden in airports :(
Re: (Score:2)
So I can't check in with a full bladder now?
Re: (Score:3)
Seems law enforcement are all over the web 2.0, social media act.
In Eastern Europe they had to get informants into the protest groups, now politically active people carry their own unique beacons for free.
WOW (Score:4, Funny)
I plan all my terrorist activity in world of warcraft guild chat.
Though I'm starting to suspect a Night elf who joined recently might be FBI.
Re: (Score:1)
Especially if it's a Horde guild.
I recall this comic of an agency (maybe FBI) monitoring guild chat when a raid was being set up and freaking out about the need for 'priests' etc. Tried searching for it but can't find it now, unfortunately.
Re: (Score:2)
I should try that, all my planning goes on in Second Life dominatrix brothels.
Re: (Score:2)
me asking: Is there anything that terrorists can't use?
Hmm, let us think about it and we'll get back to you. If you're kind enough to provide us with your contact list we'll be more than happy to deliver the our decision to everyone for you ... in person ... with extreme prejudice.
Re: (Score:1)
Shaving foam, it would appear.
Not much to do with terrorism (Score:1)
More to do with monitoring dissent. Because very few terrorists are going to be dumb enough to carry out obvious conversations. At least obvious enough to let the incompetent Indian agencies notice (who can't seem to notice things in plain sight until after the fact, because the poor sobs are busy protecting the 'important' people). But when it comes to monitoring peaceful protesters and conducting bogus investigations on activists and imprisoning, they are in top form.
PS: I feel sad when I see Indians get
Terrorism is just the excuse (Score:1)
Governments just pretend this is about terrorism. Actually, terrorism is just the excuse used to justify gathering information.
Also, before we criticize India, remember that the MOST intrusive government spying is done by the USA, along with Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. See Project Echelon [wikipedia.org] for details. This author wishes to further assert that AUSCANNZUKUS has operated a production quantum computer system since about 1996, a system capable of cracking data transmission encrypte
As seen on the onion (Score:4, Funny)
Oh terrorists... (Score:1)
Most likely outcome: Dodgy regex being used on large (unoptimized and inefficient) datasets with no real way to check whether any tangible results will be produced. Also hundreds, if not thousands of false positives will pop up. Best result? You nab a few terrorists. If you spend the resources and time however, on a different, more verifiable and tried-and-tested goal (like education and women's rights) you stop many, many more terrorists from ever existing.
Re: (Score:2)
And you forgot a programme where you get yourself castrated and get paid in 42 goats.
Terrorists will always find new paths for their information.
Hmmmm (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be smarter to use IRC or any other instant messenger rather than two of some of the most popular and heavily monitored social sites on th--
Hold on, someone's knocking on the door....
Passwords? (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly what is your ISP internet password going to provide except for some professional paranoid agent to cheat on your internet account and, to put false entries into your account. The only passwords your ISP should have are the ones to need to access their network and of course your email account. The email account is of course completely arbitrary as it is not encrypted. There is also web server accounts but are the government going to hack these.
This sounds like the professionally paranoid are expecting ISPs to harvest all the passwords you use on the internet or they intent to plant false information to ensure political and promotional successes.
The whole idea of warrants is to protect citizens from out of control law enforcement, from investigator who will corrupt cases for revenge, for promotion or even for payment. Which country now claims perfect police officers, those saintly individuals who never lie cheat or steal, keeping in mind that includes 100% of the police force or other investigatory agencies, including political appointees and of course the politicians that control them.
Warrants were never about gaining access to a citizens private information they are all about protecting citizens from criminal access to private information, from accessing for personal advantage, to distorting it by selective editing it and especially from planting false information. The courts must prove that law enforcement did not tamper with the evidence, the I say so defence is not good enough for us and it should not be good enough for them.
Re: (Score:2)
The only passwords your ISP should have are the ones to need to access their network and of course your email account
nah, I believe the objective is slightly more distracting. The combination of two sentences in the article ("service providers in India provide facilities for [..] monitoring of [..] communications from social networking websites such as Facebook and Twitter" and "service providers are required to provide government security agencies with information [..] including passwords") sounds suspiciously like a permanent DPI with tapping of all user/password combinations.
Re: (Score:2)
example [illinoistimes.com]
Support the Innocence Project [wikipedia.org]. Now incarcerated former Illinois Governor George Ryan stopped executions in Illinois when it was found that half of the men on Illinois' death row were innocent. The legislature has since abolished the death penalty here for the same reason, but there are still folks in prison who have been framed.
Citizens need to keep governments on tight leashes, rather than the other way around.
Laugh at India all you want but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Doesn't the NSA or whatever intelligence agency in the Western world monitor all of you traffic? USA's the most paranoid about terrorism.
How much of your social activity is monitored by intelligence agencies? Does your democratic process expose any of it?
I know /. likes to mock and laugh at India, this happened before with the Blackberry encryption case.
As an Indian citizen living abroad I know about this now, what's your congress doing behind closed doors?
Re: (Score:1)
Do not get defensive dude. It is ok to call a spade a spade. Indian government is one of the most repressive regimes in the world. Secret prisons, torture and custodial death are very common. Would you trust the same watchmen with policing online?
I am glad these articles come up discussing something or the other about India. It raises awareness at the least. Remeber that may Indians are around here and Indian government != Indian people.
Re: (Score:3)
Indian government is one of the most repressive regimes in the world.
Unfortunately, you're wrong. There are plenty of places that are even worse; a current example is Syria, where the government has been shelling its own people for dissent, and where that well-known Bastion of Freedom, Saudi Arabia, has been protesting the actions loudly. You really don't much more repressive than that.
Not that this says anything very much about India, but rather that too many governments are simply completely awful. Tone down the hyperbole; the shameful facts don't need it.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
But to answer some of your questions... yes, there's all sorts of domestic spying. Yes, some of cloak-and-dagger stuff gets exposed. Some of it happens quite openly.
And I don't think anyone is laughing at India. It's more like, "we feel your pain."
Re: (Score:2)
I didn't know cloak-and-dagger was a thing before TF2
Re: (Score:2)
"Cloak and Dagger" was a bad 80's movie with Dabney Coleman and the kid from ET.
i dont like to mock or laugh at india (Score:5, Insightful)
only the indian government, and then it has nothing to do with being 'indian', but rather because it is 'government'.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
it has nothing to do with india (Score:2)
it is about governments, all governments, which seem to have some sort of natural tendency to act like this.
Re: (Score:2)
Anywhere.
There! I just covered everything in one hit. Let's move on.
Really now (Score:5, Funny)
The CIA plan was better (Score:3)
Every 'IT act' in India provides some serious LOLs (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Its strange what "data" human rights groups can turn up.
Your right, why any state actor, supporter would let any "group" ever use any IT is strange.
Italy was able to put together the trail of a rendition operation in court http://articles.latimes.com/2008/may/29/world/fg-rendition29 [latimes.com] using telco logs.
Re: (Score:2)
I simply have no idea why they think 'terrorists' will use a particular medium when they have announced they are watching it.
Well, that's the thing. People usually laught and think "oh they're so stupid" while not knowing the reasoning or background behind it. I think it's more like IT people thinking they're so much wiser and better and ignoring the fact that there might be an actual reason behind what they want to do. I'm not saying they have such for the Facebook, but the BlackBerry phones does make more sense and it could very well had been the most used phone by malicious persons especially when RIM was advertising it as sec
Re: (Score:2)
why the fuck would a terrorist get a fucking blackberry?? or post on fb/twitter?
gsm sims are available @Rs5 each across the whole country and minimal documentation is required. really, all you need is a xerox of *some* id, even uni id will usually be enough. and then you have 300 texts free every day, which should be a terrorist's wet dream.
Good (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
completely unlike the cia/nsa/fbi, right?
Really ? (Score:3)
Re: (Score:1)
Sounds alot like the US to me. (and unfortunatly creeping it's way into other western covernments)
Re: (Score:2)
Not mentionning that I have a hard time figuring out how they're going to make sense of these billions tweets every day. The signal/noise ratio must be very low on twitter...
Yeah and that's what our major problems are (Score:2)
Not buying it.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously, is anyone else still buying the "terrorist" card any more.
The only thing those social network sites have been used for in the past year is to organise lots and lots of protests against corrupt governments around the world.
Nice try.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
ah, sh*t. I guess that means the UK government is corrupt too.
Well, either that or there's a mass surge of people who want new, free, electrical goods.
Websites too (Score:2)
don't see much the point of a public annoucement (Score:1)
Proof that the courts don't mean shit. (Score:1)
Privacy, not Security (Score:2)
Obvious! (Score:3)
Because the real terrorists communicate using twitter and are careful to include #terrorinindia in their tweets... or using the wall in a group called "Terror attack against India" on Facebook...
Re: (Score:1)
Nobody cares about terrorists. They are just a buzzword, a scapegoat. Governments want to prevent ordinary citizens to organise against corrupt and immoral governments.
These measures are put in place so corrupt officials can protect themselves against the people.
They wrote the wrong law long ago (Score:2)
The law was supposed to say: "any service/medium/product used by more than 10-25% of a given population/market/industry must be monitored/regulated/tapped". But instead they said mail/telephone. So now everyone says "broadening to include" a though anyone ever wanted a country where law enforcement can't monitor any communications of any kind. Since mail/telephone is virtually gone as a method of coordinated communication, of course governments and law enforcement in general are going to start monitoring
London calling (Score:4, Insightful)
Terrorism... yeah, sure.
Somehow I have the feeling someone's afraid of getting a riot at his hands, and that protesters could use social networking as a means to coordinate it.
In case someone didn't follow the news and hence does not get the subject line, riots broke out in London, organized and coordinated through social networks.
But of course, this is not the reason for this idea, and the timing is purely coincidental. They just want to make sure that the people are safe from terrorism. Sure.
Appearances matter more than result (Score:1)
another clueless measure (Score:1)
email+PGP (Score:3)
And even when GMail/Yahoomay/Whatevermail will provide you with access to my mailbox, what do you think you are going to get?
ABSOLUTELY NOTHING MEANINGFUL.
Nobody here cares about these things.. (Score:2)
It's telling that an Australian website is reporting this news rather than any of the Indian mainstream media.
Turn about (Score:2)
So much in the name of terrorism yet... (Score:1)
Cats! (Score:2)
All your social media are belong to us!
Only in India (Score:2)
And in the US [time.com]. The Pentagon has budgeted $42M for the expressed purposes of monitoring and influencing social media for the following:
"1. Detect, classify, measure and track the (a) formation, development and spread of ideas and concepts (memes), and
(b) purposeful or deceptive messaging and misinformation.
2. Recognize persuasion campaign structures and influence operations across social mediasites and communities.
3. Identify participants and intent, and measure effects of persuasion campaigns.
4. Coun
Re: (Score:2)
i suppose its becoming too commonplace in the us for people to care anymore. but when a govt that has so much else of importance on its plate wastes resources on such shitty things, it IS news.
https ftw, bitches!! (Score:2)
i'm glad that all my (fb/gmail, etc) web traffic is encrypted. and since google stood up to china, i'm sure they'll never open up their data to indian govt either.
Its a terrorist activation! (Score:2)
www.shopmaccosmetics.com
www.shopmaccomestics.com
www.donfljerseys.com
www.alijewelry.com
www.clheeledshoes.com
www.goodcoachshop.com
www.guccilvshoes.com
www.greatpumashoes.com
wwww.selljuicybag.com
www.goodsalewatch.com
Each combination of spam URL encodes a different message to terrorists. Track him down and drag him to gitmo
Re: (Score:2)
I was just writing a post about that... but I was referring to those other badly-written almost-english spam messages.
But you may also be right. Who would try to spam with those links and not even make them clickable? The duplication of the first link is also weird.
Re: (Score:2)