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Controversial GCHQ Unit Engaged In Domestic Law Enforcement, Online Propaganda 83

Advocatus Diaboli writes: Documents published by The Intercept on Monday reveal that a British spy unit purported by officials to be focused on foreign intelligence and counterterrorism, and notorious for using "controversial tactics, online propaganda and deceit,” focuses extensively on traditional law enforcement and domestic activities. The documents detail how the Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group (JTRIG) is involved in efforts against political groups it considers "extremist," Islamist activity in schools, the drug trade, online fraud, and financial scams. The story reads: "Though its existence was secret until last year, JTRIG quickly developed a distinctive profile in the public understanding, after documents from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed that the unit had engaged in 'dirty tricks' like deploying sexual 'honey traps' designed to discredit targets, launching denial-of-service attacks to shut down internet chat rooms, pushing veiled propaganda onto social networks, and generally warping discourse online."
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Controversial GCHQ Unit Engaged In Domestic Law Enforcement, Online Propaganda

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  • doing it for the children

    • by Anonymous Coward

      They are doing so many things at once, with activities ranging from countering Islamic extremism to online scam and everything in between

      No wonder they can't do anything right!!

      For example, the Birmingham school district was taken over Islamic extremists and that GCHQ unit did *NOTHING* to stop them

      What is the use of having that unit if it can't even do anything right?

  • Zeitgeist (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cosm ( 1072588 ) <thecosm3.gmail@com> on Monday June 22, 2015 @08:01PM (#49966413)
    10 years ago this story would have had over 1k comments. Now people just say meh. Collective apathy or mental resignation to the topic coupled with a demoralizing feeling of helplessness....it's been 1984 for a long time now.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The last time a significant fraction of us stood up for ourselves, we got shelled from orbit by our own media, by the mainstream media, by sites and institutions up and down the internet, and Slashdot joined right in. We know what happens to us when we stand up, and what Slashdot will do, so we're not going to bother getting worked up about it over here.

      Sites like Slashdot now support the corruption and criminality going on in the modern world. It's sad to say it, but that's what's happened. I guess there m

    • Re:Zeitgeist (Score:5, Insightful)

      by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Monday June 22, 2015 @08:22PM (#49966511) Journal
      Or so many smart readers now have, want, need or will be needing Western gov security clearances. They feel they cannot comment on anything work related anymore.
      Very chilling if you know your home network is your work network and every word that is seen is collected.
    • Collective apathy or mental resignation to the topic coupled with a demoralizing feeling of helplessness....it's been 1984 for a long time now.

      Too many people are still in favor of the surveillance society to waste effort getting really outraged.

  • Certain IRC channels are being interfered by US professional trolls. They work in teams and create fake discussions to influence and to bait out radicals.

    Here is one log of two of them trying to bait with supposedly secret information on drone technology. Notice that the main one mirrors radical ideas as bait, too.

    http://pastebin.com/sfnkmDFD [pastebin.com]

    I imagine that this is done to prevent another Snowden.

  • by Atmchicago ( 555403 ) on Monday June 22, 2015 @08:11PM (#49966451)
    This is a popular online forum. You can bet that all sorts of state actors, megacorporations, politicians, and anyone else with clout or ambition will be shaping the discourse here as needed. Turn up your critical thinking skills a notch.
  • by zedaroca ( 3630525 ) on Monday June 22, 2015 @09:46PM (#49966915)
    From the second document, talking about their costumers and objectives:

    Continue provision of intelligence relating to risks to UK investment overseas

    Both US and UK "surprisingly" boycotted an auction for the right to explore huge oil reserves in Brazil a few months after Dilma complained about the spying on Brazilians, herself and on Petrobras (the top deep sea oil exploration company in the world), driving the prices down.
    Right now Petrobras is under investigation for corruption of some of its leaders, mostly related to the federal government party, it's stocks went down by a lot and most of the infrastructure investments / constructions are blocked. This is the only news here and we'll get American help on the investigations, even though we just refused German help on the Siemens case (the corrupts on that case are on the opposition party). Some people on the opposition party are involved in this Petrobras case as well, but the prosecutors decided there was no reason to investigate them. Seems like they jumped out at the right time and then, after decades of corruption (according to the case witnesses), it started falling down.

    I hope people stop talking like economic espionage is a Chinese only thing.

    • So what I get from your post is that through some sort of intelligence/espionage the US and UK investors avoided getting pulled into some money losing scam involving corrupt Petrobras and Brazilian officials. Sounds like due diligence to me, not economic espionage.

      • I guess you didn't pay attention to the order of the events or what the events were. Collusion is not a losing scam, the involved parties usually win a lot, they have been winning for decades. It is strange that they didn't enter the bidding process of some of the largest oil reserves found so far, there was no investigation at the time.

        Maybe you are right and it is just a coincidence that Petrobras (an oil company from a pacific country) was an espionage target, in which case the spying was really unexplai

  • by Anonymous Coward

    pushing veiled propaganda onto social networks

    Does that mean lots and lots of pictures of the Queen in a revealing burqa? Or do they mostly post pictures of Putin in a burqa? Two peas in a pod, those spies and the spies.

  • All part of (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    ... the drug trade, online fraud, and financial scams ...

    This was all started for President Bush as part of the international war on terror. The rise of ISIS has excused spying on children. Which is strange since most converts are self-radicalized. Everyone calls such converts, disaffected youth, which is probably true, but I notice no politician is demanding better education and support services for at-risk teenagers: That's not part of the 'war-plan' in any country.

  • by Pete (big-pete) ( 253496 ) * <peter_endean@hotmail.com> on Tuesday June 23, 2015 @02:54AM (#49968017)

    The OP states that GCHQ is, "purported by officials to be focused on foreign intelligence and counterterrorism". Since when?

    My understanding has always been that there are 3 main "legs" to British Intelligence:

    • MI5 for internal security within the country
    • SIS (aka MI6) for international security outside the country
    • GCHQ for providing communication intelligence and security towards both of the above, and for advice on protecting key national infrastructure (via CESG)

    In this context, GCHQ should have always been providing internal communications intelligence for MI5, I'm not sure why this should be news to anyone?

    -- Pete.

    • by Coolfish ( 69926 )

      Really? REALLY?

      No. CSE, NSA, GCHQ, NZ/AUS's agencies, all of 'em have explicit laws preventing them from operating internally. And here you are, saying no no, they've always been allowed to do this. What the hell, Pete, what the hell.

      • No. CSE, NSA, GCHQ, NZ/AUS's agencies, all of 'em have explicit laws preventing them from operating internally.

        From the Intelligence Services Act 1994 [legislation.gov.uk] you will see that GCHQ's powers are quite well defined.

        This involves giving advice and assistance "to any other organisation which is determined for the purposes of this section" - which includes MI5 (Security Service) as they are a member of the Intelligence and Security Committee [legislation.gov.uk]. And the constraints are:

        The functions referred to in subsection (1)(a) above shall be exercisable only—

        (a)in the interests of national security, with particular reference to the

        • by Coolfish ( 69926 )

          Congratulations Pete, you're one of those persons who is capable of taking a complicated, confusing law, and twisting it so as to make it look like what these agencies are doing is legal, when they are clearly not. As long as people like you exist, and they always will, it goes to show why we should never trust the government to have these sorts of capabilities.

          Snoop on property within the UK .. fucks sakes, you realize we're talking about people here right. Nah, best to call it property and further dista

          • As long as people like you exist, and they always will, it goes to show why we should never trust the government to have these sorts of capabilities.

            Snoop on property within the UK .. fucks sakes, you realize we're talking about people here right. Nah, best to call it property and further distance yourself from what this really means.

            Shame on you.

            You appear to be mistaking someone who is stating the facts of the situation for someone who agrees with the situation.

            Laws should be written simly, cleanly, and transparently, and the security forces of a nation should be working for the greater good of the nation rather than against the native citizens of that nation.

            As an aside, I have spent most of my working life working (both as an employee, and as a contractor) with a company that is alleged to have been a direct target of GCHQ [spiegel.de].

            -- Pete.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      There were supposed to be very clear limits on what techniques GCHQ could use inside the UK and against UK citizens. Like most countries, the UK treats foreigners as somewhat less human than its own citizens.

      The revelation is that GCHQ breaks the law in the UK on a regular basis, and acts against the interests of UK citizens on a regular basis. The emergency legislation last month that was quietly slipped through was simply to make some of their illegal activities legal.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2015 @02:55AM (#49968021)

    Fascinating, how politicians never learn anything from history.

    • by Coolfish ( 69926 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2015 @04:03AM (#49968209)

      Of course they've learned from history! If you want to keep power, you need to distract the citizenry. They should be so preoccupied that they can't deal with some nebulous concept of having only the illusion of privacy. High unemployment, stagnant wages, but just enough entertainment to make sure the masses don't get off their couches after a long day. If you want to keep power, you need to know who the subversives are, because if they ever do get into a position of being able to do something, you want to have enough dirt on them to shut them down before things get out of hand. Or, more likely, have enough powerful media voices repeating the mantra that everything is okay, to drown out the voices that are pointing out what's actually wrong.

      They saw how it failed in East Germany, in the old countries, where force accompanied the spying. Now they know that they need to cover their asses - pass laws that vaguely sound like they allow what you're doing. Have secret courts that are "independent" that rubber stamp whatever you want. Parallel engineering for cases where the information was gleaned illegally. I don't think these systems fell apart because of their secret police tactics, but rather a culmination of other various factors - economics, and seeing how things operated outside of their ridiculous bubble. So the Americans, Canadians, etc, made their bubble that much larger, so that they can say "Everyone else is doing this as well, quit complaining".

      To be fair - this isn't the politicians per se - but rather the establishment, the bureaucracy. The politicians buy their lines about public safety and security hook line and sinker, and why not, they were paid for by the powerful, who want to ensure that they'll maintain the status quo. A small subset of the population will buy whatever it is their politician is selling, and it's just enough to give them a glean of credibility and legitimacy.

      No, the only people who haven't learned from history are the citizens. The citizens who keep thinking that professional politicians are capable of fixing anything, of accomplishing anything, despite leading *democracies* into unjust wars time and time and time and time and time again. That politicians are capable of getting a handle on the bureaucracy, to prevent corruption and incompetence. Hah. To be clear - I'm not advocating we go to anarchy and get rid of government. No, we need democracy and even a *representative* democracy, but the representation has to be fair and equitable - it can't lean way out of proportion to represent the rich and powerful, which is what most every democracy has right now, because elections are such an easy thing to subvert. A democracy must be completely open and transparent, otherwise corruption and incompetence, hand in hand with secrecy, grows and spreads like a cancer. Until more people realize this, and decide to do something about it, things won't get any better.

      • The only thing about this that's new is the scale - modern technology has simply enabled surveillance that would not have been feasible a decade ago.

        And as you say, it doesn't flow from politicians, per se. You only have to look at the unproven, but plausible reports [wikipedia.org] of the security services pursuit of Prime Minister Harold Wilson [theguardian.com] to realise that elected politicians too may be the target if they are suspected by the establishment of deviating too far from the status quo.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          Indeed. An that is the real threat: Everybody has something to hide and has done things they rather would not have public knowledge. Collect data on everybody and you can easily make sure any political candidate does not get voted into office, etc. All the secret agencies are preparing to take over the world. As these organizations have no ethics at all, this will make the Dark Ages look like paradise.

          While I did not believe it for a long time, it seems most of the dystopian predictions for the information

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Unfortunately, you are right. Fascism is raising its ugly head all over this planet again. Until stopped, the cost will be extreme. We now also know that democracy seems incapable of stopping it (big surprise: Hitler was _voted_ into office....). I wonder whether Humanity will raise again from the coming dark age or whether we are slowly entering the end-game.

  • I think I need "discrediting." Where do I sign up?

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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