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American Phone-Tracking Firm Demo'd Surveillance Powers By Spying On CIA and NSA (arstechnica.com) 50

Anomaly Six, a secretive government contractor, claims to monitor the movements of billions of phones around the world and unmask spies with the press of a button. Reader BeerFartMoron shares a report: In the months leading up to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, two obscure American startups met to discuss a potential surveillance partnership that would merge the ability to track the movements of billions of people via their phones with a constant stream of data purchased directly from Twitter. According to Brendon Clark of Anomaly Six -- or "A6" -- the combination of its cellphone location-tracking technology with the social media surveillance provided by Zignal Labs would permit the U.S. government to effortlessly spy on Russian forces as they amassed along the Ukrainian border, or similarly track Chinese nuclear submarines. To prove that the technology worked, Clark pointed A6's powers inward, spying on the National Security Agency and CIA, using their own cellphones against them.

Virginia-based Anomaly Six was founded in 2018 by two ex-military intelligence officers and maintains a public presence that is scant to the point of mysterious, its website disclosing nothing about what the firm actually does. But there's a good chance that A6 knows an immense amount about you. The company is one of many that purchases vast reams of location data, tracking hundreds of millions of people around the world by exploiting a poorly understood fact: Countless common smartphone apps are constantly harvesting your location and relaying it to advertisers, typically without your knowledge or informed consent, relying on disclosures buried in the legalese of the sprawling terms of service that the companies involved count on you never reading.

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American Phone-Tracking Firm Demo'd Surveillance Powers By Spying On CIA and NSA

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  • by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Friday April 22, 2022 @07:11PM (#62470458) Homepage
    Install personalDNSfilter, if you have Android, and see just what your phone is up to. Before I tracked down the apps involved and removed them, I was seeing thousands of attempted lookups per day to tracking, telemetry and ad servers.

    For the other people's devices I'm running pi-hole and on average it blocks about 10,000 requests per day PER PHONE on the network.

    • Or just use a dumbphone.

      Most of us spend nearly all of our time within walking distance of an internet-connected computer. Why do we need to be constantly connected via our phone too?

      • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Friday April 22, 2022 @09:42PM (#62470678)

        Or just use a dumbphone.

        Most of us spend nearly all of our time within walking distance of an internet-connected computer. Why do we need to be constantly connected via our phone too?

        If you are using a cellular phone, you are using a device and infrastructure that is exactly a tracking system. It's inherent to the cellular system, and if not tracking, it will not work.

        Now if you are willing to be located only when you need to use the phone, turn it off, and store it in a tight metal box while turned off.

        Seriously - there is only one way to be free of these things. Destroy your SS, find a way to have yourself declared dead, do not engage in any form of RF or wired communications, and maybe move to a compound in Idaho, grow all your food and live by bartering chickens.

        Most people think that is being snarky, actually that is the god-honest truth.

    • Or you could just not install bad apps.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        .. google products (Android, Google Play, Gmail, Google docs...) .. your phone carrier's apps (AT&T's, Verizon's, T-mobile's...) .. your phone manufacturer's apps (Samsung's, Apple's, ...)

        so that almost gets you there if you write your own fork of android; but you're still missing ... the firmware apps that run on a lower level than the Android layer that you can't uninstall without a soldering iron that'll break your phone...

      • Or you could just not install bad apps.

        ...or leave your cellphone at home.

    • I recommend ditching Android altogether in favor of Pine64's PinePhone or PinePhone Pro.

      • I recommend ditching Android altogether in favor of Pine64's PinePhone or PinePhone Pro.

        How are you going to deal with Cell Phone tower triangulation?

        • It has a switch under the back cover to turn off the modem.

          • It has a switch under the back cover to turn off the modem.

            An actual mechanical switch? That would be great.

            • An actual mechanical switch? That would be great.

              Yes, there are 6 mechanical "dip" switches to toggle radios, mic, camera and headphone port.

              • An actual mechanical switch? That would be great.

                Yes, there are 6 mechanical "dip" switches to toggle radios, mic, camera and headphone port.

                Bloody hell - take my money! 8^)

    • You should be. Tasked Satellites, Airplanes stocked with electronic goodies, Embassy roofs with cell phone harvesting, or even ships and subs hoisting an aerial or 20. Social media may be cheaper. So you know there is a bunch of phones, polling. But this works BOTH ways. A mobile phone is the last thing a genuine spy would carry if he wanted to be unobserved. Sure Elint traffic analysis is easy. SDR or software defined receivers are cheap nowadays. Another fly in the ointment is VPN use, Good luck picking t
  • by Wokan ( 14062 ) on Friday April 22, 2022 @07:25PM (#62470486) Journal

    "... or similarly track Chinese nuclear submarines."

    *cough* bullshit *cough*

    Unless they're on the surface, you can't track cellphones in submarines. Radio waves don't penetrate beyond a few inches of water at best.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. Also submarines usually have a steel hull which is not the best thing to get radio waves through either...

      But these guys are clearly idiots. Spying on the CIA and NSA and then publicly being proud of that?

    • "... or similarly track Chinese nuclear submarines."

      *cough* bullshit *cough*

      Unless they're on the surface, you can't track cellphones in submarines. Radio waves don't penetrate beyond a few inches of water at best.

      Nah, they just track the sound waves under water everytime they do a Gertrude check...

  • Why does link behind "unmask spies with the press of a button" lead to a primer on elliptical cryptography instead of something related to the article summary?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Why does link behind "unmask spies with the press of a button" lead to a primer on elliptical cryptography instead of something related to the article summary?

      Not sure - changed after posting? Here's the article that the summary refers to: https://theintercept.com/2022/... [theintercept.com]

  • Doesn't mean they aren't tracking you. And who knows for what reasons? I personally can't do much about my tracking, but that doesn't mean that I like or would allow it if I knew how to stop it. Either way, I was thinking maybe this is why Elon wants to buy Twitter, maybe he heard something about this, and stereotypically wants it? Or I'm just being an ass.... Either way I'm starting to consider re-routing my efforts into trying to bring back actual privacy, choice, and maybe the freedom to not have to s
  • âoePrivacy Rapistsâ
  • Countless common smartphone apps are constantly harvesting your location and relaying it to advertisers

    Yeah, and they're going to be just as disappointed as I'm assuming DJI was when they discovered that I primarily fly my drone around the empty field behind my neighborhood with a great view of the rear side of the nearby Walmart. Somebody in China probably got to say "Hey, I recognize that empty cardboard box!"

    I'm guessing if you're not a person of significant political interest, this rent-a-spook company really isn't worth losing sleep over.

    • You're guessing wrong if you think they don't also sell the data to criminals and criminal organizations.

      • You're guessing wrong if you think they don't also sell the data to criminals and criminal organizations.

        Criminals who most likely go through it looking for profitable marks. So, if you own a lot of cryptocurrency and leave it sitting on an exchange, yeah - you might end up the victim of a SIM swap scam or something like that. If you're a celebrity or politician (is there a difference these days?) criminals might see some value in getting into your cloud backups or social media accounts.

        But for the average person who sticks to old fashioned money kept in traditional FDIC insured accounts, and isn't a public

        • You're naive to the point of suspicion. You claim to be an uninteresting nobody with a clean credit record. You're exactly the type of person they target. You've just been lucky.

          • (Lucky or oblivious - sometimes when they steal your identity they keep the bills paid so you don't notice.)

  • But I thought it was common knowledge that apps track people. Its why I disable twatter and faceplant as just two examples. I think most people know, they just don't care. I'd hope soldiers care a little more. But I thought I read something about US soldiers in Iraq not knowing it was a no-no to use faceplant. So maybe soldiers don't care either.
    • But I thought it was common knowledge that apps track people. Its why I disable twatter and faceplant as just two examples. I think most people know, they just don't care. I'd hope soldiers care a little more. But I thought I read something about US soldiers in Iraq not knowing it was a no-no to use faceplant. So maybe soldiers don't care either.

      It should be common knowledge. It should also be common knowledge to the Slashdot Paranoids that if as they think, the three letter people are after them, the cellular phone system will eventually lead them to the poor paranoid fella. Then the poor guy will be whisked off to be rendered.

      They need to stop using phones altogether. Probably won't cure their paranoia though, because then the Orbital cameras will be trying to get them, maybe psyops will read their mind and know where they are.

      We go through

      • They need to stop using phones altogether. Probably won't cure their paranoia though, because then the Orbital cameras will be trying to get them, maybe psyops will read their mind and know where they are.

        The government will still be able to track them with the 5G chips that were in the vaccines. Duh.

        • They need to stop using phones altogether. Probably won't cure their paranoia though, because then the Orbital cameras will be trying to get them, maybe psyops will read their mind and know where they are.

          The government will still be able to track them with the 5G chips that were in the vaccines. Duh.

          And then pick them up with big magnets, because the vaccine makes people magnetic

  • ... by Twatter

    "...the ability to track the movements of billions of people via their phones with a constant stream of data purchased directly from Twitter..."

    At a minimum I would have thought they would use a dumb or "clean" phone with firewall, dnsfilter, etc. Not a phone crippled with malware, and tweeting their latest exploits. Unless it is on purpose..

    Also, it is quite strange that these companies reveal how they do it...
  • ... is available on their "About Us" page on LinkedIn.
    https://www.linkedin.com/compa... [linkedin.com]

  • Even before "smart" phones with cell hopping cdma they could triangulate a calls position within 20 feet. If they wanted too....
  • Seems to be wrong in the post. Here: https://theintercept.com/2022/... [theintercept.com]

  • This usage of location data grossly violates every GDPR aspect so is forbidden by law in EU, unless the user gave consent. So, did the spies and military personnel give their consent?
  • In a sane world this would be a sign that the practices that make this possible need regulating. But normal people are no longer considered by our leadership.

Don't panic.

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