The adversarial threat posed by the NSA to the integrity of the internet
Abstract
In 2013, Edward Snowden, a NSA Contractor leaked
thousands of highly classified documents about the activities of
the USA's National Security Agency (NSA) and its foreign
intelligence partners known as the "Five Eyes" [1]. The
documents revealed secret programs about the NSA's mass bulk
collection of phone, internet and communications traffic as well
as how the NSA and its partners are working to sabotage and
weaken encryption algorithms and the security protocols used to
secure the internet. This paper presents some of the programs
that were revealed as well as the rationale and legislation behind
these programs from a global perspective. Mass surveillance is
not only done by the Five Eyes partners but also by many other
countries who pay private companies to provide them with tools
to spy, censor and repress their own citizens [2]. In order to
assess the potential harm and the security implications of mass
surveillance, this paper looks at how state level actors around the
world are conducting surveillance which raise broader issues
about internet security such as how common weaknesses are
being exploited by both intelligence agencies and criminals. This
paper will also explore various technologies and techniques that
can be used by both individuals and companies to secure
themselves against mass surveillance
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/19360http://icsa.cs.up.ac.za/issa/2015/Proceedings/Full/38_Paper.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1109/ISSA.2015.7335060
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7335060/