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United Kingdom Businesses Censorship Communications Government Network Networking Privacy Security Technology Hardware

British Companies Are Selling Advanced Spy Tech To Authoritarian Regimes (vice.com) 57

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: Since early 2015, over a dozen UK companies have been granted licenses to export powerful telecommunications interception technology to countries around the world, Motherboard has learned. Many of these exports include IMSI-catchers, devices which can monitor large numbers of mobile phones over broad areas. Some of the UK companies were given permission to export their products to authoritarian states such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, and Egypt; countries with poor human rights records that have been well-documented to abuse surveillance technology. In 2015, the UK's Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) started publishing basic data about the exportation of telecommunications interception devices. Through the Freedom of Information Act, Motherboard obtained the names of companies that have applied for exportation licenses, as well as details on the technologies being shipped, including, in some cases, individual product names. The companies include a subsidiary of defense giant BAE Systems, as well as Pro-Solve International, ComsTrac, CellXion, Cobham, and Domo Tactical Communications (DTC). Many of these companies sell IMSI-catchers. IMSI-catchers, sometimes known as "Stingrays" after a particularly popular brand, are fake cell phone towers which force devices in their proximity to connect. In the data obtained by Motherboard, 33 licenses are explicitly marked as being for IMSI-catchers, including for export to Turkey and Indonesia. Other listings heavily suggest the export of IMSI-catchers too: one granted application to export to Iraq is for a "Wideband Passive GSM Monitoring System," which is a more technical description of what many IMSI-catchers do. In all, Motherboard received entries for 148 export license applications, from February 2015 to April 2016. A small number of the named companies do not provide interception capabilities, but defensive measures, for example to monitor the radio spectrum.
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British Companies Are Selling Advanced Spy Tech To Authoritarian Regimes

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  • And probably most of "advanced" countries.
    Accountability ? Close to zero.

    Look for Amesys and Qosmos here : https://reflets.info/ [reflets.info] (French)

    • So does France

      this is completely false, your link is bullshit nonsense and not credible

      English monarchy are selling this tech to other monarchies so they can manage their human capital (aka the populace of the country)

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      Britain is a panopticon police state, and the US is getting there, though we only have total surveillance of the internet, phone calls and travel by air. I'd say most Western nations are selling to authoritarian regimes these days.

  • Western governments are using this technology, often illegally. I doubt that they care what other countries do with it as long as it pads the bottom line of the home grown corporations that sell it abroad.
  • Because all world governments are a lot more authoritarian than they let on. Just stop and think about the list of things you can't do. Ever thought you could try and reason your way out of punishment because you really didn't harm anyone?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      You mean how like in most US states if you have a little weed on you they remove your right to vote, travel, rent most housing, or holding most jobs?

  • In fact, the armored car bodies and basic weapons platforms are sold by Canada to them.

    Not just the spy stuff.

    Human rights?

    Hah.

  • yeah, it's all o' 'em.
  • A better headline is that the UK Government authorized the companies to sell to authoritarian regimes.
  • And the U.S. is trying to sell arms to Saudia Arabia, what else is new?

  • by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Friday August 26, 2016 @06:21PM (#52778391)
    Turkey is a parliamentary representative democracy. The president is elected for a five-year term by direct elections. There are human rights issues, but "authoritarian" is strong a word.
    • You're right to point that out, but even before the recent coup attempt many reasonable commentators were concerned about Erdogan's "authoritarian" ways, including his attempts to increase the power of the presidency. He is currently ruling by decree; not very democratic...

    • Right on spot. We are tired of the West calling their pet regimes as "democrats" and others "authoritorian"
  • by globaljustin ( 574257 ) on Friday August 26, 2016 @07:10PM (#52778627) Journal

    This is Standard Operating Procedure for the English oligarchy/monarchy.

    England is not a democracy...it has exactly as much democracy as will keep the subjects from rising up.

    If you understand the truth of the statement above, a lot of history makes sense, and this move in TFA is completely predictable.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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