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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Thu Jun 4, 2015, 01:22 AM Jun 2015

FBI Says Privacy Must Take Backseat To National Security In Online Fight Against ISIS

One of the United States government’s top counterterrorism officials says Congress must help investigators crack the encrypted communications of terrorists as groups like the so-called Islamic State ramp-up their online recruitment efforts.

On Capitol Hill on Wednesday, Michael Steinbach, the assistant director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s counterterrorism division, told the House Homeland Security Committee that the FBI is “imploring for Congress to help” law enforcement with its quest to decrypt digital communications.

Steinbach said that the FBI is working with the Department of Homeland Security to ensure that the law enforcement tactics currently in use can be implemented as needed, but suggested that legislation might be needed for situations where communications being sought are obfuscated from the eyes of investigators by encryption or other means.

According to Steinbach, individuals belonging to the group calling itself the Islamic State (also known as ISIS, or ISIL), are making the jobs of counterterrorism investigators increasingly difficult by relying more and more on methods of communication that cannot be compromised as easily as more mainstream mediums.

It’s no secret that ISIS proclaims its ideology far and wide with the help of social networking tools like Twitter, enabling the message to be spread among the public instantly. A report issued by the Brookings Institute this past March alleged the individuals sympathetic with ISIS opened at least 46,000 Twitter accounts during the last quarter of 2014, and slickly produced propaganda that the group amplifies with professional social media software has done anything but draw away attention. According to Steinbach, upwards of 20,000 Twitter account holders can end up on the receiving end of a single tweet sent by the group or one of its supporters.

more...

http://rt.com/usa/264709-steinbach-mccaul-dark-web/

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FBI Says Privacy Must Take Backseat To National Security In Online Fight Against ISIS (Original Post) Purveyor Jun 2015 OP
I think they should have flights for people in a super hurry. lovemydog Jun 2015 #1
So, what's Twitter got to do with secrecy or privacy? Do they... TreasonousBastard Jun 2015 #2
I am much more likely to be Downwinder Jun 2015 #3
Maybe this is an appeal to thwart the super encryption that.. grasswire Jun 2015 #4
Well, Sherman A1 Jun 2015 #5
Do you have a legitimate source for this? MohRokTah Jun 2015 #6

lovemydog

(11,833 posts)
1. I think they should have flights for people in a super hurry.
Thu Jun 4, 2015, 01:29 AM
Jun 2015

Just run on the plane. No security or checkpoints. if you reach your destination - awesome!

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
2. So, what's Twitter got to do with secrecy or privacy? Do they...
Thu Jun 4, 2015, 01:37 AM
Jun 2015

think ISIS recruiting is worse than neo-Nazis or biker gangs? And once they get back doors and crack encryption, won't anyone with a real secret find some other way to keep it?

While we've had such enhanced security, how many drug gangs, terrorists, smugglers, or other such types have we managed to catch?

Downwinder

(12,869 posts)
3. I am much more likely to be
Thu Jun 4, 2015, 01:45 AM
Jun 2015

killed by US Law Enforcement than by ISIS. The best way to provide for my security is for the FBI to do their job and police the Police.

grasswire

(50,130 posts)
4. Maybe this is an appeal to thwart the super encryption that..
Thu Jun 4, 2015, 02:25 AM
Jun 2015

...some telecoms are allowing. Sounds like whining to me.

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