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Australia Government Privacy

NSW Police Named as FinFisher Spyware Users 73

Bismillah writes Wikileaks' latest release of documents shows that the Australian New South Wales police force has spent millions on licenses for the FinFisher set of law enforcement spy- and malware tools — and still has active licenses. What it uses FinFisher, which has been deployed against dissidents by oppressive regimes, for is yet to be revealed. NSW Police spokesperson John Thompson said it would not be appropriate to comment "given this technology relates to operational capability".
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NSW Police Named as FinFisher Spyware Users

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 16, 2014 @04:34AM (#47915883)

    You'd expect they're using it as part of their day to day jobs to help keep people safe.

    Here in Australia we don't fear our police - they have a strong history of generally doing the right thing by the people they serve.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Let me fix that for you:

      http://lmgtfy.com/?q=NSW+police+brutality

      Ta.

    • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

      Here in Australia we don't fear our police - they have a strong history of generally doing the right thing by the people they serve.

      Don't feel bad, it's ok. You'll catch up with the rest of the world soon.

    • If that's the case, then perhaps you should stop them from breaking that trend and not let crap like this slide.
    • Right. I guess if your white and middle class (or better).

      Otherwise the trifecta was your most likely result of interacting with the police.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You are completely unaware of the systems and services my firm was selling to your national law enforcement institutions and private paramilitary corporations based in Australia.

      Before you say they were doing it for good, think again. The growing mercenary presence in African countries is hands down dominated by Aussie corporations. Those civvies massacred in Sierra Leone? Some of the perpetrators are walking around as free men in Melbourne. Hell, one of them runs a tech group for a contractor in Brisbane t

  • NSW police arrest SWF for NSFW behavior. Lurid film at 11.
  • There are a lot of Muslims in Australia, and it makes sense to keep an eye on them as a lot of them support terrorism
    • Tell me about it. And don't even get me started on the Anglicans -- they do almost nothing except plot terrorism. Given the number of current and former Anglicans in Australia it's hard to believe you can walk down the street with getting blown up.

      / Or maybe reducing the entire world to the single dimension of religion is not a terribly useful way to understand "terrorism"

      • by gsslay ( 807818 )

        Coffee mornings. Plotting coffee mornings. Getting a nice cup of tea and a lovely moist bit of cake, not blown up.

        I hate it when people get these things confused.

      • by Chrisq ( 894406 )

        Or maybe reducing the entire world to the single dimension of religion is not a terribly useful way to understand "terrorism"

        When the religion commands acts of terror, and many of the followers commit acts of terror then maybe it is. You might as well say "the single dimension of nazziism is not terribly useful in understanding Germany's terrorist acts against the jews in WW2"

  • An obvious thing to check however the spyware itself has been identified [eff.org].

    I seems like a return to the bad old days of corrupt NSW Police practices.

    • It depends on how the product was crafted per person.
      On some consumer OS versions all you have to do is get under the consumer grade antivirus by not having to use in the wild malware thats been found.
      That product has to avoid consumer grade antivirus behavior analysis, cosumer software firewalls over days and get the data out.
      The 'out' part can be just as fun. A waiting consumer computer that looks like any other home computer in an empty home at the end of a city street with rental phone company reco
  • Bwahahahah! (Score:5, Informative)

    by CuteSteveJobs ( 1343851 ) on Tuesday September 16, 2014 @06:45AM (#47916191)

    Australian cops are *dirty*

    NSW!
    Good cop, bad cop: how corrupt police work with drug dealers http://theconversation.com/goo... [theconversation.com]
    Corruption is endemic within Australia's police agencies, and certainly within the Australian Federal Police and New South Wales Police, which between them cover the Sydney airports. It also embraces crime commissions and other institutions charged with responsibility for police governance on behalf of the public. http://www.expendable.tv/2011/... [expendable.tv]
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/201... [abc.net.au]
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/201... [abc.net.au]
    Pressure grows for NSW police inquiry
    Posted 8 Oct 2012, 7:18pmMon 8 Oct 2012, 7:18pm
    Up to 200 police officers may have been spied on with listening devices and telephone intercepts.

    VICTORIA!
    http://www.theaustralian.com.a... [theaustralian.com.au]
    Victorian police corrupt: ex-judge The Australian
    VICTORIA'S police force is riddled with "deep-seated and continuing corruption" that will only be flushed out by a powerful and wide-ranging royal commission. Don Stewart, one of the nation's most respected judicial figures, says Victoria Police and the Bracks Labor Government oppose a royal commission because they do not want the extent of corruption within the force made public. "They know that it would reveal what they don't want revealed," says the former Supreme Court judge and founding head of Australia's first national crime agency. Dismissing arguments that dirty police are already being driven out of the force through the courts, he says the recent convictions of senior Victorian officers on corruption charges are "the tip of the iceberg". "The arrest of some corrupt police only proves that corruption is deep-seated and continuing," Mr Stewart says in a book to be published in March.

    CANBERRA!
    http://www.canberratimes.com.a... [canberratimes.com.au]
    A long history of police corruption. In 1990 the AFP officer Michael Anthony Wallace was convicted of stealing $20 million worth of drugs and cash exhibits. In 1995 Standen's colleague, Alan Taciak, rolled over in the NSW Police royal commission and alleged 78 AFP officers - 15 per cent of the force - were corrupt. Taciak's allegations sparked the Harrison inquiry in 1996. Its final report, which is understood to have alleged widespread corruption in the AFP, has also not been released. The head of the inquiry, Ian Harrison, now a Supreme Court judge, said many agents escaped investigation by quitting the AFP. In 2001 Standen's former boss at the Sydney drugs unit, Cliff Foster, committed suicide while under investigation over corruption.

    SOUTH AUSTRALIA!
    http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/... [adelaidenow.com.au]

    DARWIN!
    http://www.abc.net.au/local/st... [abc.net.au]
    NT police oppose anti-corruption tests. The Northern Territory Police Association says it will oppose Federal Government plans to secretly test officers' integrity as part of new anti-corruption measures.

    QUEENSLAND!
    Queensland police misconduct files reveal corruption, favouritism, sexual misconduct

    • Every one of the links you have posted comes from a mainstream Aussie media outlet, when those stories stop appearing you have a real corruption problem. The NSW ICAC judicial inquiry has forced the resignation of at least a dozen MP's who took illegal donations from property developers and is still going strong. Now think about real oppression (say) Mugabe or Saddam, they tow the line or risk summary execution.

      Internet snooping by cops is a double edged sword, sure it can be used as a tool of oppression
      • by ewieling ( 90662 )

        Disclaimer: I have a female cousin who has served in the Victorian police for over 3 decades. I'm not claiming all Aussie cops are saints, but certainly the vast majority have their heart in the right place and are doing a tough job as best they can.

        How do you tell the corrupt ones from the non-corrupt ones? You can't. I follow the example of law enforcement and assume they are guilty until proven innocent.

    • Once again, everyone forgets WA (then again, we are perfect...)
    • You left out western australia. I mean it's only a third of the damn continent :)

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    • Western Australia.

  • NSW Police spokesperson John Thompson said it would not be appropriate to comment "given this technology relates to operational capability".

    Indeed. The newfound ability to do very bad things always relates to operational capability.

  • Here?? At work?!?! Quick! TOR the pr0n! TrueCrypt the mp3s!
  • In Australia aren't the people allowed to know what their police force's "operational capability" is?

    • In Australia aren't the people allowed to know what their police force's "operational capability" is?

      Nobody expects the "operational capabilities" of the Australian Inquisition!

      Strat

    • Think of it in Cold War terms.
      Communist using the under the cover of workers rights, trying law reform, Vietnam war protests or other national or State issues.
      That would need a close working relationship between national and state gov staff, local police. To find the foreign aspect and have real locals watching every public meeting or protest and befriend the group or person.
      The operational capability of hardware and software once in the hands of the mil or national gov due to buying and running costs i

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