Recalling the CIA's long-running
Operation Mockingbird
program that enrolled journalists as spies in what are now
euphemistically called "influence operations," the covert manipulation
of the domestic and foreign press according to WikiLeaks, showed "the
extent to which the collaboration of journalists with intelligence
agencies has become common and to what dimensions consent is
manufactured in the interests of those involved."
BBC News reported that "Bavaria has admitted using the spyware, but claimed it had acted within the law." And
Deutsche Welle
disclosed that "several additional German states have admitted to
deploying spyware," including "Baden-Württemberg, Brandenburg,
Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony," but like their counterparts in
Bavaria, those officials also claimed they had operated "within the
parameters of the law."
As I have written many times, the secret
state is bound by their own set of "laws." Normal rules and procedures
which are supposed to protect citizens from unwarranted government
intrusions are deemed inoperative for reasons of "national security."
In
the United States, constitutional protections designed to guarantee the
right of citizens to protest, enjoy a modicum of privacy in their daily
lives or, at the most basic level, have their day in court before being
executed, have been overthrown by two successive administrations who
assert the right to conduct the affairs of state in secret, according to
a set of legal guidelines which are unreviewable by any court.
It would appear that similar moves are underway in Germany.
'Backdoor Functionality'
The Chaos Computer Club revealed in their
analysis
that when they reverse engineered the program, variously dubbed
"0zapftis", "Bundestrojaner" or "R2D2," they discovered that the spyware
"found in the wild" and "submitted to the CCC anonymously," can "not
only siphon away intimate data but also offers a remote control or
backdoor functionality for uploading and executing arbitrary other
programs. Significant design and implementation flaws make all of the
functionality available to anyone on the internet."
Club
researchers learned that "the trojan's developers never even tried to
put in technical safeguards to make sure the malware can exclusively be
used for wiretapping internet telephony, as set forth by the
constitution court. On the contrary, the design included functionality
to clandestinely add more components over the network right from the
start, making it a bridge-head to further infiltrate the computer."
"The
government malware can," analysts noted, "unchecked by a judge, load
extensions by remote control, to use the trojan for other functions,
including but not limited to eavesdropping."
"This complete
control over the infected PC, is open not just to the agency that put it
there, but to everyone. It could even be used to upload falsified
'evidence' against the PC's owner, or to delete files, which puts the
whole rationale for this method of investigation into question."
Their
study also "revealed serious security holes that the trojan is tearing
into infected systems. The screenshots and audio files it sends out are
encrypted in an incompetent way, the commands from the control software
to the trojan are even completely unencrypted. Neither the commands to
the trojan nor its replies are authenticated or have their integrity
protected."
"We were surprised and shocked by the lack of even
elementary security in the code. Any attacker could assume control of a
computer infiltrated by the German law enforcement authorities," a CCC
spokesperson commented. "The security level this trojan leaves the
infected systems in is comparable to it setting all passwords to
'1234'."
Nothing 'Magical' about this 'Lantern'
There
are glaring similarities between the "R2D2" package deployed by German
police and "Magic Lantern" software used by the FBI. As with Bureau
spyware, the German program is a keystroke logging virus installed via a
malicious email attachment or by exploiting operating system
vulnerabilities.
When news of the FBI program first broke back in 2000, the Electronic Privacy Information Center (
EPIC)
obtained documents under a Freedom of Information Act request relating
to the system, which were part of a suite of surveillance tools then
called Carnivore.
At the time, EPIC
revealed
that the FBI "had developed an Internet monitoring system that would be
installed at the facilities of an Internet Service Provider (ISP) and
would monitor all traffic moving through that ISP."
Once a user
is spoofed into installing the malicious Trojan, it is activated when
PGP encryption is used to enhance email security. When switched on, the
Trojan will log the PGP password which will then allow the agents to
read the encrypted communications unbeknownst to the sender. Since its
first iteration in the 1990s, such programs are exponentially more
sophisticated and are now capable of scooping-up virtually everything a
user stores on a computer or handset.
A 2007 exposé by
Wired Magazine
revealed that Magic Lantern's "computer and internet protocol address
verifier" or CIPAV, "gathers a wide range of information, including the
computer's IP address; MAC address; open ports; a list of running
programs; the operating system type, version and serial number;
preferred internet browser and version; the computer's registered owner
and registered company name; the current logged-in user name and the
last-visited URL."
And once that data was obtained, it was
siphoned-off to the Bureau's technology laboratory in Quantico, Virginia
via fiber optic splitter cables.
As whistleblower Babak Pasdar
revealed in 2008, following earlier disclosures by AT&T
whistleblower Mark Klein, Verizon, and other giant telecommunications
firms, including AT&T, maintained a high-speed DS-3 digital line
that handed the Bureau and other security agencies "unfettered" access
to the carrier's wireless network, including billing records and
customer data "transmitted wirelessly."
Just after the scandal broke,
Wired Magazine
disclosed that "two years before the Bavarian state in Germany began
using a controversial spy tool to gather evidence from suspect
computers, German authorities approached the Federal Bureau of
Investigation to discuss a similar tool the U.S. law enforcement agency
was using."
"Bavarian authorities," Wired
reported, "began using their spyware in 2009. It's not known if that
spyware is based on the FBI's, but in July 2007, German authorities
contacted the FBI seeking information about its tool."
The FBI's assistant legal attache in Frankfurt "sent an
email
to Bureau colleagues on July 24, 2007, writing, 'I am embarrassed to be
approaching you again with a request from the Germans ... but they now
have asked us about CIPAV (Computer Internet Protocol Address Verifier)
software, allegedly used by the Bu[reau]'."
The email uncovered by Wired was part of a huge cache of files obtained by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (
EFF) in response to their 2007 Freedom of Information Act request for data on CIPAV.
In
the years since those disclosures, secret state surveillance is more
pervasive than ever and and now includes the "lawful interception" of
GPS locational data streamed automatically to their manufacturers or
hosting services by smart phones.
It appears that German secret state officials are playing a similar game. According to
Der Spiegel,
at least two agencies, the Bundeskriminalamt, or BKA, the federal crime
investigation agency equivalent to the FBI, and some 16
Landeskriminalamt or LKAs, regional investigative bureaus, may have
deployed the malware during wide-ranging investigations unrelated to
terrorism.
Following Chaos Computer Club revelations, it is clear
that German authorities have been caught red-handed violating a
landmark decision by the Supreme Court. "The court," Der Spiegel noted, "specified that online spying was only permissible if there was concrete evidence of danger to individuals or society."
In a follow-up piece,
Der Spiegel disclosed that the firm
DigiTask
was the spyware's developer. Along with hundreds of similar firms,
DigiTask is a niche security outfit that develops applications for the
so-called "lawful interception" market.
In 2008,
WikiLeaks
released two documents concerning "interception technology for Skype
and SSL in Bavaria, Germany. The first document is a communication by
the Bavarian Ministry of Justice to the prosecutors office, relating to
cost distribution for the interception licenses between police and
prosecution. The second document allegedly presents the offer made by
Digitask, the German company developing the technology, and holds
information on pricing and license model, high-level technology
descriptions and other detail."
According to the
WikiLeaks
analysis, the DigiTask offer "introduces a basic description of the
cryptographic workings of Skype, and concludes that new systems are
needed to spy on Skype calls."
We were informed in that letter that German police were interested in standing-up a "Skype Capture Unit."
"In
a nutshell: malware is installed onto a target machine, to intercept
Skype Voice and Chat. Another feature introduced is a recording proxy,
that is not part of the offer, yet would allow for anonymous proxying of
recorded information to a target recording station. Access to the
recording station is possible via a multimedia streaming client,
supposedly offering real-time interception."
"Another part of the
offer," WikiLeaks noted, was related to "an interception method for SSL
based communication, working on the same principle of establishing a
man-in-the-middle attack on the key material on the client machine.
According to the offer, this method works for Internet Explorer and
Firefox web browsers. Digitask also recommends using overseas proxy
servers, to cover the tracks of all activities."
As it turns out
those proxy servers were conveniently located in the United States. This
raises the distinct possibility that information captured by German
secret state officials is also being shared with "partner agencies" of
their close NATO ally, the CIA, FBI and NSA.
This was confirmed
by CCC's analysis of R2D2's code. "To avoid the location of the command
and control server, all data is redirected through a rented dedicated
server in a data center in the USA. The control of this malware is only
partially within the borders of its jurisdiction."
"Considering
the incompetent encryption and the missing digital signatures on the
command channel, this poses an unacceptable and incalculable risk. It
also poses the question how a citizen is supposed to get their right of
legal redress in the case the wiretapping data get lost outside Germany,
or the command channel is misused."
The short answer is, they can't.
Aside from lining the pockets of DigiTask shareholders, there are more sinister uses for the malware. As the
World Socialist Web Site
noted "the remote-control function could be used to load and execute
malicious software, and to plant bogus digital evidence on the computer,
which can then be detected if the computer was seized. A suspect would
have no way of proving that this had happened."
This would
certainly be a convenient way to "neutralize" a troublesome politician,
journalist or over-eager anticorporate campaigner.
'Less Democracy'
Following
similar efforts in the United States, evidence that police are
illegally spying on German citizens using sophisticated malware
developed for the government are neither benign nor accidental events.
As a recent article in
German Foreign Policy
disclosed, leading voices in Europe's largest state are "pleading for a
transition toward 'less democracy'." A recent book, published under the
title, Dare Less Democracy,
claims that the "voice of the people" and the "'emancipatory Zeitgeist,
putting everything into question,' has a too 'paralyzing influence" on
current governance'."
"The author," the critical online leftist
magazine observes, "demands to 'correct the system' for 'more efficient
policy making.' These 'corrections' must include the dismantlement of
democratic participation."
Author Laszlo Trankovits, the bureau
chief of the Deutsche Presse Agentur in South Africa, who had previously
worked for the agency in Washington "as its White House correspondent,"
explained "it should never be suggested that a 'democratic society can
do away with inequality and establish social justice'."
"Trankovits," German Foreign Policy
notes, is "a member of the elitist Rotary-Club." He demands that "the
elite clearly 'commits itself to capitalism and profit,' and that
'intelligent forms of public relations' be used to communicate policy
measures to the population. However, the demand for more 'transparency'
is 'counterproductive and paralyzing' for any 'governance efficiency'
and must be rejected."
That drivel such as this was penned by a
journalist for Germany's leading news agency, to whit, that the media
should serve as a propaganda mouthpiece for casino capitalist interests,
is one more sign that democratic norms, already seriously eroded in the
West, are now being rapidly jettisoned by our political masters.
With
the global capitalist system on the verge of a repeat performance of
the 2008 meltdown, and with a worldwide resurgence of opposition to the
one-sided costs of saving a system of financial plunder borne by the
working class, elite calls for "less democracy" are warning signs that
stern measures, including blanket surveillance and naked police
violence, are in the offing.