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US, British Spies Use 'Angry Birds'

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  • US, British Spies Use 'Angry Birds'

    US, BRITISH SPIES USE 'ANGRY BIRDS'

    12:44 * 28.01.14

    US and British spy agencies routinely try to gain access to personal
    data from Angry Birds and other mobile applications, BBC News says,
    citing a report.

    A National Security Agency (NSA) document shows location, websites
    visited and contacts are among the data targeted from mobile
    applications.

    It is the latest revelation from documents leaked by Edward Snowden.

    In a statement, the NSA said it was not interested in data beyond
    "valid foreign intelligence targets".

    "Any implication that NSA's foreign intelligence collection is focused
    on the smartphone or social media communications of everyday Americans
    is not true," the statement said.

    The report, published by the New York Times, ProPublica and the
    Guardian, said the NSA and Britain's GCHQ have worked together since
    2007 to develop ways to gain access to information from applications
    for mobile phones and tablets.

    The scale of data gathering is unclear.

    But the reports suggest data is gained from a variety of mapping,
    gaming and social networking applications, using techniques similar
    to the ones used to intercept mobile internet traffic and text
    message data.

    The documents also reveal the two agencies are increasingly convinced
    of the importance of mobile applications data.

    The joint spying programme "effectively means that anyone using Google
    Maps on a smartphone is working in support of a GCHQ system" one 2008
    document from the British intelligence agency is quoted as saying.

    Another GCHQ report, in 2012, laid out how to extract information
    from Angry Birds user information from phones on the Android operating
    system. The game has been download 1.7 billion times across the world.

    The British spy agency said it would not comment on intelligence
    matters, but insisted that all of its activities were "authorised,
    necessary and proportionate".

    Another NSA document described a "golden nugget" - a perfect scenario
    where NSA analysts could get broad selections of information from
    the applications, including networks the phone had connected to,
    documents downloaded, websites visited and "buddy lists".

    Other applications mentioned by the documents include the photo-sharing
    site Flickr, movie-based social network Flixster and applications
    that connect to Facebook.

    Armenian News - Tert.am

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