Wednesday, June 18, 2014

U.K. Government Admits That It Conducts Mass Surveillance Of British Citizens On Facebook, Twitter, YouTube And Google

The Royal Air Force Menwith Hill base in Northern England provides intelligence support to Britain and the United States. Credit Nigel Roddis/Reuters

GCHQ Admits Mass Surveillance of Google, YouTube, Twitter and Facebook of UK Citizens -- IBTimes

The government's top anti-terror chief has been forced to admit to spying on UK citizens through Facebook, Google, Twitter and Youtube, due to a loophole in the law.

Charles Farr, the director general of the Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism, issued a 48-page statement explaining that the domestic surveillance policy was in the name of national security.

The medium through which such communications are collected was justified by claiming that communications sent through such online services were classified as "external communications" due to the fact they passed through US servers.

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More News On The U.K. Government Admitting That It Conducts Mass Surveillance Of British Citizens On Facebook, Twitter, YouTube And Google

State spies can snoop on your use of Google, Facebook and Twitter: GCHQ is allowed to monitor citizens' use of sites without warrants because they are not based in the UK -- Daily Mail
U.K. Says Laws Permit Mass Spying on Residents Online -- WSJ
Social media mass surveillance is permitted by law, says top UK official -- The Guardian
British Spy Agencies Assert Power to Intercept Web Traffic -- New York Times
British Spies Claim Right To Intercept Facebook, Twitter, Google -- Daily Caller
Revealed: UK govt intercepted Google, Facebook and Twitter comms -- RT
UK spies using foreign loopholes to monitor Google, Facebook and Twitter users -- Endgadget
UK admits to spying on citizens via Google, Facebook -- Tech Times
UK official reveals secret justification for gov’t social media spying -- Ars Technica
Why the government believes the law is on its side on social media interceptions -- The Guardian
The British Government Just Set a Dangerous Precedent for Online Spying -- Micah Singleton, Gizmodo

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