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Feds Order Massive Number Of Tech Giants To Help Hunt Down One WhatsApp Meth Dealer (forbes.com) 53

As it struggles to get content from encrypted messenger apps and smartphones, the U.S. government is getting creative in how it tracks down criminal WhatsApp users, according to a search warrant uncovered by Forbes. From the report: Aside from shedding light on police data-trawling operations, these new efforts are "problematic," legal experts tell Forbes. They show that investigators are willing to test the boundaries of legality by demanding content they may not legally be allowed to collect from WhatsApp. And they're then demanding data from a seemingly endless list of tech providers -- from Google to any telecom company imaginable -- that could feasibly help them catch a single WhatsApp user.

In a bid to find an alleged Mexican methamphetamine dealer, the government demanded that WhatsApp hand over basic subscriber details, according to a previously unreported government order filed in Colorado in October. They'd been tipped off that the dealer -- a fugitive on the DEA's most-wanted list -- was a frequent user of WhatsApp and had even used the app to talk with an undercover agent. That WhatsApp data would come from what's known as a "pen-trap." Think of these as tracking tools that collect limited metadata like user phone numbers, IP addresses and call duration, not the content of messages. Forbes has reported on these before and they're fairly common. So far, so normal.

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Feds Order Massive Number Of Tech Giants To Help Hunt Down One WhatsApp Meth Dealer

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    And after they spent a few million dollars, violated the rights of thousands of people they get the IP address of the User's VPN service, saying that he probably was in the vicinity of a Starbucks' free WIFI.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Surrounding CCTV is kept for a long time AC.
    • Paraphrasing TFA... the order asked for information WhatsApp wouldn’t ever provide including:
      • identity of other WhatsApp accounts that were created using
        • the same IP address
        • the same recovery email
        • the same telephone number
        • other identifiers that were the same as the target
      • identity of all accounts that are linked to the account by cookies,
      • IP addresses of any websites or other servers to which the cellphone device or devices connected
      • post-cut-through dialed digits (the numbers hit by the user once a cal
  • Almost there..... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fafalone ( 633739 ) on Thursday January 30, 2020 @05:39PM (#59672394)
    Come on guys, we're soooo close. If we just give up a little bit more of our privacy and 4th Amendment rights, the scourge of methamphetamine will vanish from the world forever as we emerge victorious in the War on Drugs!!!

    And they'll definitely never use these powers for less serious things, non-law enforcement purposes, or to go after undesirables, it's Win Win! What could possibly go wrong? Do you have something to hide???
    • "Come on guys, we're soooo close. If we just give up a little bit more of our privacy and 4th Amendment rights, the scourge of methamphetamine will vanish from the world forever as we emerge victorious in the War on Drugs!!!"

      My Whatsapp is on a discarded tablet from the trash-bin, I used an empty prepaid SIM from the same bin, to receive the initial SMS and then threw it away. I wouldn't want anything from FB on my real phone, but to receive family messages this does the deed.

      I also _delete_, not archive ev

      • by rho ( 6063 )

        That's a lot of work. Maybe you should call your family once a week and catch up instead.

      • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

        if you're using it to receive family messages it kind of defeats the whole fking point of scoring it from a bin, because now it's connected to "you" anyways.

        well at least it was free I guess. I find it unlikely that the senders and or receivers of the messages were deleting them.

        wouldn't it be funny if the whatsapp dealer they're hunting for turned out to be a fbi plant? you should start with that by the way, you shouldn't allow police to create crime to solve crime. I mean USA alphabet organizations have

    • In this case, it looks like they actually went to a court and got a judge to issue an order under 8 U.S.C. S 3123 [cornell.edu] (passed in 1986). That's progress from a government that was very recently conducting mass warrantless surveillance.

      We've got a hell of a long way to go, but this seems like progress in the right direction.

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Thursday January 30, 2020 @05:46PM (#59672414) Homepage Journal

    Are they federalizing private firms and installing troops at those private firms, cause it sure seems like this is a direct violation of the Constitution, if so.

    Next they will use this to go after your personal firearms.

  • Oh is it so hard to ask these HUGE companies to make a small effort? Does it matter how unimportant they think the crime is? THese companies want to skate on the ice of non-responsibility for anything. THat is, it's not a cost issue. It's not an ability issue. It's their fear that this leads to either customer's avoiding them or for their desire not to admit a single instance of an expected code of corporate conduct.

    Letting this happen might open the door to being help responsible for content or disinf

    • >"This isn't an over-reach of their powers any more than it wold be to go into a mom-and-pop shoe store and ask if they sold any size 14 workboots in the last year and could we see the customer's address."

      And, yet, that is not quite the best comparison. If I went into a shoe store and they post a sign saying "we value your privacy" and they have no cameras, no logs, and I paid in cash, there should be no data for them to give. In the case of something like communication software, they *have* to gather

      • Depending on the transaction type there are reasonable laws. Banks need to know their customers. Banks are a platform that can enable illegal money trafficing. So the law is htye need record and No anonymous money laundering.

        Likewise if a platform when a platform makes it easy to be used for crimes then it's reasonable to collect info.

        The show store I suggested is a case where your exception makes sense in fact. That is obviously all crimminals commit crimes in shoes. But that doesn't mean we need to r

    • How's that bootleather taste?

  • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Thursday January 30, 2020 @05:51PM (#59672430) Homepage Journal

    ...and no one spoke up. Then it turned out everyone was a meth dealer and no one was left. Or something like that.

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Thursday January 30, 2020 @06:02PM (#59672468)

    Adelphia Communications
    Adelphia Long Distance
    Allegiance Telecom of California Inc.
    Astound
    AT&T California
    AT&T Local Service
    AT&T Long Distance
    AT&T Midwest
    AT&T Nevada
    AT&T Southwest
    Bell South Telecommunications
    Broadwing Communications
    Cellco Partnership
    Cellular One
    Central Wireless Partnership
    Cingular Wireless
    Comcast
    Cox Communications
    Dobson Cellular
    Dobson Communications
    Edge Wireless LLC
    Electric Lightwave inc.
    Embarq
    Ernest Communications
    Evans Telephone Company
    Frontier: A Citizens Communications Company
    Genesis Communications international
    ICG Communications
    ICG Telecom Group
    Locus Communications
    Metro PCS
    Metrocall
    Mpower
    Nationwide Paging
    Navigator Telecommunications LLC
    Network Services LLC
    Nextel Communications
    NII Communications
    Pac West Telecomm Incorporated
    Qwest Communications
    RCN Communications
    Roseville Telephone Company
    Skype
    Sprint PCS
    Sprint-Nextel
    T-Mobile USA inc.
    TelePacific Communications
    Teligent
    Time-Warner Telecom
    US Cellular
    US TelePacific Corp.
    USA Mobility
    Verizon California
    Verizon District of Columbia
    Verizon Maryland
    Verizon New Jersey
    Verizon New York
    Verizon Northwest
    Verizon Texas
    Verizon Wireless
    Vonage
    Weblink Wireless
    West Coast PCS LLC

  • limited metadata (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account 173 ( 6570042 ) on Thursday January 30, 2020 @06:30PM (#59672560)
    "We kill based on metadata" -- former NSA director Michael Hayden
    • All information collected is either data or metadata.

      The GPS location from the terrorist's hacked phone is metadata.

      That is the sort of thing you use for targeting.

      You don't use the direct data, which is just a person's voice.

      I mean, fuck an A you're being intentionally stupid.

  • He can't tell what's in that binary!
    The next update could contain a detector for certain phrases the dealer uses. Bam, you've got his phone location, address book, everything.

    Make sure to get a warrant, unless you live in a Nazi state thst doesn't care about basic human rights.

    A smart dealer would use Signal anyway.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The amount of people taking their privacy that seriously is statistically insignificant. I would not bet on any messaging system to be that secure. With government level resources I could have 1000 hot nerd girl spies and be pwning any tech company on earth in a few months max. That greatly increases the options you have to break a system and even leave it broken for X amount of time. Opensource is even more vulnerable since a little money goes that much further for people who have tiny budgets. Plus good
      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        Re "government controls the law", "nearly unlimited manhours and money" and "the scope of government budgets"
        Also the number of people working for that the FBI/other agency/state police task force "deal".
        Return to "work" and help the FBI for decades in the private sector or ... its back to real court, paying for lawyers again and no deal.

        Take the deal, return to work and its parallel construction deep in the telco/ISP, ad company, bank for decades...
        Any US key thought to be in the hands of the compan
  • ...it'd be necessary to invent one.

    • Naw bro, I get what you're saying, but HE'S TOTALLY REAL!! I know 'cuz I read it on Facebook...

      • Naw bro, I get what you're saying, but HE'S TOTALLY REAL!! I know 'cuz I read it on Facebook...

        I get it. But seriously, I've been reading all week on Facebook that guys carrying their tools around in padlocked vans are really human traffickers. A driver in Tennessee was killed a few months ago by some doofus that believes what he reads on facebook.

  • That is all. Thank you for your time!
  • a Hegelian Dialectic on steroids, growth hormones, and meth.

    Sherman, set the wayback machine to 1984.
    Right away Mr. Peabody.
  • Gustavo Fring is Chilean, not Mexican...

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