Canada Temporarily Drops Out Of Five Eyes Spying Coalition, After Realizing It Wasn't Properly Protecting Information

from the an-eye-for-an-eye dept

Of course, by now you know about the “Five Eyes” coalition of the signals intelligence agencies of the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand all sharing certain intelligence information between them. Some of the Snowden docs have made clear that this collaboration helps the various countries get around restrictions on “domestic” surveillance by effectively offshoring it to other “friendly” electronic spy agencies. Well, at least for now, it appears that that the Five Eyes effort has lost an Eye.

Canada’s signals intelligence agency, the Communications Security Establishment (CSE), has stopped sharing data with the other Four Eyes after realizing that it hadn’t done a particularly good job of protecting the metadata it collected on Canadians.

“While I was conducting this current comprehensive review, CSE discovered on its own that certain metadata was not being minimized properly,” Plouffe explained in the report.

“Minimization is the process by which Canadian identity information contained in metadata is rendered unidentifiable prior to being shared ?.”

“The fact that CSE did not properly minimize Canadian identity information contained in certain metadata prior to being shared was contrary to the ministerial directive, and to CSE’s operational policy.”

I guess it’s nice that the CSE figured out that it had screwed up on its own, but really, it makes you wonder just how much information the Canadian gov’t was sending abroad on its own citizens.

Of course, the sharing will start back up again at some point in the future, once they’ve decided that they’ve properly “minimized” the data. And while Canadian politicians seem to be accepting the very Canadian apology of the CSE and saying that this was all an accident, shouldn’t this kind of “mistake” lead to a bit more than a “sorry” and “we’ll make sure it’s better next time”? Shouldn’t we be examining why such mass surveillance and data sharing are happening in the first place?

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Comments on “Canada Temporarily Drops Out Of Five Eyes Spying Coalition, After Realizing It Wasn't Properly Protecting Information”

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14 Comments
That Anonymous Coward (profile) says:

One wonders which powerful person got snagged in something.

One does find it hard to believe that any changes in course are because of concern for the “little people” who have been wholesale sold out as they look for ways to bypass the laws put into place to protect us from exactly what they are doing.

These methods used in other countries are decried, while at the same time embraced by those who point fingers at the other guy. Perhaps they should notice while they are pointing at others there are 4 fingers pointing back that should be poked in the 4 other eyes.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Is it not possible that this is the case of a civil servant actually doing his/her job? We have a few of those in Canada. Witness the slew of Auditors General and Privacy Commissioners, who have become minor hero figures. Well, at least to me, that is.

That, and a new government that has promised to open, transparent governance, that has much more Internet-savvy than the previous one, combined with an easy, clear call that doesn’t really have any great cost.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

“While I was conducting this current comprehensive review, CSE discovered on its own that certain metadata was not being minimized properly,” Plouffe explained in the report. “

I agree it certainly sounds like CSE realized their “mistake” as soon as it looked like they were about to be caught by Plouffe, or maybe who he reports to.

Personanongrata says:

Total Surviellance for Profit

Shouldn’t we be examining why such mass surveillance and data sharing are happening in the first place?

Insider trading, blackmail and industrial espionage leap into mind.

Not only do defense contractors get lucrative contracts to create, service and operate the surveillance boondoggles system users and program insiders can benefit by using purloined data for personal gain.

tqk (profile) says:

CSE, please hire better people.

Having met and worked with and been pushed under the bus by a CSE alumnus (though ultimately vindicated), I’m not the least bit surprised these technical wizards can’t code a correct SQL select statement to extract only the columns necessary from an rdb table containing raw ISP data. It makes me wonder if the NSA told them, “Just use this”, and they blindly did a copy & paste.

What trusting sorts we Canucks can be. Now we get to have them play with C-51. Great. 😛

Wowza says:

Get a grip guy

Don’t feel bad Canada. I’m sure Australia has been sharing ALL of its data for many years. But even if that weren’t true we’ve just instigated a new system to make sure we collect way more than is absolutely necessary and share it with everyone else, including gambling ‘agencies’

http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2016/01/heres-every-government-agency-that-wants-your-metadata/

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