A new lawsuit from the EFF seeks to shed light on the mysterious 'Other Intelligence Activities' that the NSA was engaged in after 9/11, and that the DoJ eventually found to be illegal. Based Ars' reporting of the government's datamining efforts, we suggest that it probably looks a lot like social network crawling."
The government could be building a giant map of social networks using Facebook and Twitter, scraping MySpace pages, or mining the metadata associated with cellular phone calls in order to look for communication patterns. On the other hand, all of that computer power that the NSA is aggregating at the datacenters that are coming online could just be for the limited purpose of snooping voice calls and e-mail coming into and out of the US, but such narrow use is unlikely.
What the NSA is doing with its massive and growing capabilities is still a secret, but it's probably an extension of DoD efforts at mapping social networks that extend back to the early part of the decade. A new EFF lawsuit filed this week could finally shed at least a little more light on the nature of these classified activities, so that we can know for sure whether some descendent of John Poindexter's Total Information Awareness program lives on at the NSA.
Earlier this month, the EFF filed a Freedom of Information Act request that sought to obtain the mandatory oversight records that agencies in-the-loop on these secret activities would have had to file
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