Dutch and Belgian governments have access to PRISM, reveals moles in companies
12 replies, posted
[B]Netherlands[/B]
[quote][B]'AIVD also has access to information from PRISM'[/B]
Dutch secret services also get information from the Internet surveilance program of the U.S., PRISM. If the General Intelligence and Security specify a U.S. address as suspicious, is within five minutes all known, says an AIVD agent this morning in The Telegraph . The agent was working for the Dutch Muslim extremists service monitors. According to the newspaper
Many companies work according to the agent actively involved in giving access to their data. "All the major commercial Internet services are forced to provide services that can browse. Unlimited an application" Together these applications form the program of the U.S. National Security Agency to collect. Confidential internet data
"EVERYTHING IS SHARED BY SKYPE, GOOGLE AND FACEBOOK '
Skype wild as the agent for years give access, but since it is owned by Microsoft would all be shared as is the case with Google and Facebook. The executives of the latter two companies claimed Saturday not to be aware of the Internet surveilance program.
Dutch companies would kindly cooperate. "When the call you just get instant access to the data, all on a silver platter." If a company does not cooperate, an agent 'activated' who has access to the information of the company. "Within businesses and institutions everywhere activate waiting for a request for information. Agents are"[/quote]
[url=http://translate.google.nl/translate?hl=nl&sl=nl&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nrc.nl%2Fnieuws%2F2013%2F06%2F11%2Faivd-heeft-ook-toegang-tot-informatie-uit-prism%2F]Google Translated Source[/url]
[B]Belgium[/B]
[quote][B]State Security also gets information from Prism[/B]
[I]Because the Belgian intelligence exchange information with the U.S., has already landed information from the controversial PRISM program at the State Security. So say several sources in the morning edition of The Standard.[/I]
According to researcher Mathias Vermeulen, the State Security no direct access to the information that the National Security Agency from online communication via Hotmail, Facebook and other platforms gets.
But the exchange of information is perfectly legitimate for him that State Security is indirectly use them.
"This collaboration has been decades. It can not be otherwise than that input that spying program has become, "to our country says Marc Cools, professor at Ghent University / VUB and board member of the Belgian Intelligence Studies Centre. "But the State Security do not know exactly where the American information comes from, because resource protection is an important principle in intelligence."
Alain Winants, the Administrator-General of the State, would not comment yesterday on the American Prism program. "Such a system is generally not with us," he said.[/quote]
[url=http://translate.google.nl/translate?hl=nl&sl=nl&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.standaard.be%2Fcnt%2FDMF20130610_063]Google Translated Source[/url]
This is a violation of our Human Rights, as per [url]http://www.humanistischverbond.nl/dossiers/privacy_redirect[/url] But who gives a fuck right?
this should spark a western spring of sorts but I know it won't
The west has become decadent and stupid because of a diet of reality TV, self obssession and financial comfort. This matters but nobody gives a shit.
They're using sleeper agents? Wow.
I'm actually concerned for my future. Nobody seems to give a fuck anymore for some reason.
Hell in Canada there was an actual Russian spy in 2012 collecting data. Nobody seemed to give a fuck.
Time to get that European Court of Human Rights to lay down the hammer?
[QUOTE=deltasquid;40994220]Time to get that European Court of Human Rights to lay down the hammer?[/QUOTE]
You think they will actually care? Plenty of countries already have similiar laws passed, the EU has also been introducing laws that invade privacy in similiar manners.
[QUOTE=Aman;40994108]this should spark a western spring of sorts but I know it won't[/QUOTE]
America isn't the best but nowhere near western spring levels.
[QUOTE=The fox;40994244]You think they will actually care? Plenty of countries already have similiar laws passed, the EU has also been introducing laws that invade privacy in similiar manners.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=The golden;40994300]They've probably all been bribed and/or are in on it too.[/QUOTE]
Oh come on you guys, we're talking about the Court that fines Belgium millions because prisoners have to wait 24 hours before they have access to a lawyer.
[editline]11th June 2013[/editline]
[QUOTE=ROFLBURGER;40994173]I'm actually concerned for my future. Nobody seems to give a fuck anymore for some reason.
Hell in Canada there was an actual Russian spy in 2012 collecting data. Nobody seemed to give a fuck.[/QUOTE]
There's spies everywhere all the time. I guarantee you that Canadian intelligence services are collecting data from the Brazil, Russia and China as we speak.
[QUOTE=deltasquid;40994333]There's spies everywhere all the time. I guarantee you that Canadian intelligence services are collecting data from the Brazil, Russia and China as we speak.[/QUOTE]
Why though
Are they trying to prevent a war or what.
[IMG]http://www.nrc.nl/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/20308a1df81f0712340f6a7067002c87-568x3681.jpg[/IMG]
Great picture on the Dutch source :rolleyes:
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