Sihai network

US global monitoring action record channel exposed: QQ mobile phones are hard to escape monitoring

Xinhua net Beijing May 26 new media special China's Internet News Research Center released the U.S. global monitoring action record (hereinafter referred to as the 'record') on the 26th, announcing the specific details of the U.S. implementation of secret eavesdropping operations. The Chinese government and leaders, Chinese funded enterprises, scientific research institutions, ordinary Internet users and mobile phone users are all involved. QQ, Feixin and other chat software and online games have become channels for the United States to obtain intelligence Avenue.

[first: mobile phone]

In modern society, many people have developed the habit of "keeping the machine in hand". If you don't take a mobile phone when you go out, it seems that you have lost your soul. However, if you know that your mobile phone is under monitoring, and your SMS, call records, etc. may be stolen at will, do you dare to 'zero distance' with your mobile phone?

According to the huge global network records of Norden's mobile phone network, nearly 5 billion copies of global mobile phone call records are collected every day. The U.S. national security agency collects a large number of short messages from mobile phones around the world, collecting about 2 billion messages a day.

Apple and Android mobile operating systems are known as the "gold mine of data resources" within the US National Security Agency. The US and British intelligence agencies have cooperated to monitor mobile phone applications in 2007. The US National Security Agency once increased the budget for this aspect from $204 million to $767 million.

Some American media believe that it is not news for US intelligence agencies to eavesdrop on suspects' phone calls in order to master intelligence, but it is quite incredible to collect such a large amount of information abroad.

Channel of us monitoring China's action records exposed

[Second: Internet]

Internet not only means the need of work for many people, but also has become a part of life. It is precisely because of the importance of the Internet that the United States monitors the Internet in every possible way.

According to the records, the United States has a huge number of Internet monitoring programs, which can monitor almost all Internet activities of a target Internet user. British "Guardian" disclosed that US intelligence personnel used a project called 'xkeyscore' to monitor Internet activities. The project is equipped with 500 servers around the world. The paper rated it as the "largest" monitoring program of the US National Security Agency, saying that intelligence personnel "can monitor almost all Internet activities of a target netizen.".

Fantastico, a Brazilian website, reported that the US National Security Agency (NSA) used mitm attack to disguise itself as a legitimate website through false security authentication to bypass the security protection of browsers and intercept user data. The U.S. national security agency used to disguise itself as a Google website to obtain user data.

The guardian revealed that the US National Security Agency shared raw monitoring data with Israel, possibly including emails and other data of US citizens, after US President Barack Obama insisted that he would not target US citizens.

According to the Washington Post, the U.S. National Security Agency secretly intruded into the main communication networks between Yahoo and Google in data centers around the world, stealing hundreds of millions of user information and retaining a large amount of data. By analyzing these data, the NSA can learn about the sender and receiver of these communication records, as well as the time and place of communication between the two sides.

[Third: Chinese government agencies]

According to the records, Chinese government agencies are the 'focus' of us eavesdropping. A foreign policy assistant at the White House has also revealed that the United States has planted optical fiber eavesdroppers in the concrete walls of each office of the new Chinese Embassy in Australia, which was completed in August 1990. Such thin glass wires were not found in the comprehensive security inspection. It was not until this incident was leaked to the Sydney Morning Herald and other news media that China became alarmed.

According to German weekly Der Spiegel, a 2010 "monitoring world map" of the United States, which has been exposed, contains the monitoring points of 90 countries in the world. As the primary monitoring object of the United States in East Asia, Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu, Hong Kong and Taipei are all under the key monitoring catalogue of the US national security administration. Chinese mainland and Hongkong computer networks have been invading Chinese mainland and Hongkong since 2009, and hundreds of targets in mainland China and China have been monitored. Most of the targets in Hong Kong are universities, government officials, businessmen and students.

[Fourth: Chinese enterprises]

According to the record, an interview with Snowden published by the South China Morning Post said that the U.S. government is invading China's major telecom companies on a large scale to obtain millions of SMS content. 'the NSA does everything from hacking into Chinese mobile phone companies to stealing all your SMS data, 'Mr. Snowden said. '

According to Reuters, the U.S. National Security Agency has reached a $10 million agreement with RSA, an encryption technology company, to join a loophole backdoor in encryption algorithms, aiming to weaken software encryption standards and assist RSA to carry out large-scale monitoring programs, according to Reuters. China Telecom, China Telecom bank, China Telecom bank, China Telecom bank, China Mobile Bank, etc.

German "mirror" weekly and the website of the New York Times reported that the US National Security Agency not only stole Huawei's e-mail archive, but also obtained the source code of individual Huawei products. The U.S. National Security Agency infiltrated Huawei's Shenzhen headquarters. Because the company handles each employee's e-mail through the headquarters, Americans have read a large proportion of Huawei's employees' e-mails since January 2009, including those of senior executives.