List of government mass surveillance projects (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "List of government mass surveillance projects" in English language version.

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about.com

usgovinfo.about.com

archive.today

books.google.com

businessinsider.com

businessweek.com

cnet.co.uk

crave.cnet.co.uk

computerworld.com

defensesystems.com

digital-report.ru

dnaindia.com

doi.org

firstlook.org

free.fr

reseau.echelon.free.fr

  • "La France se met à l'espionnage" (in French). Free (ISP). Retrieved 11 June 2013. Frenchelon (ou French Echelon) est le surnom donné au réseau d'écoute de la DGSE. Le véritable nom de ce système d'écoute n'est pas connu (contrairement à ce que nous expliquions, ce n'est pas Emeraude)

heise.de

hrw.org

indect-project.eu

latimes.com

nih.gov

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

nytimes.com

princeton.edu

jpia.princeton.edu

reuters.com

in.reuters.com

  • "India sets up elaborate system to tap phone calls, e-mail". Reuters. 20 June 2013. Retrieved 28 June 2013. The new system will allow the government to listen to and tape phone conversations, read e-mails and text messages, monitor posts on Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn and track searches on Google of selected targets, according to interviews with two other officials involved in setting up the new surveillance programme, human rights activists and cyber experts.

rfa.org

  • "How China's Internet Police Control Speech on the Internet". Radio Free Asia. Retrieved 11 June 2013. China's police authorities spent the three years between 2003 and 2006 completing the massive "Golden Shield Project". Not only did over 50 percent of China's policing agencies get on the Internet, there is also an agency called the Public Information Network Security and Monitoring Bureau, which boasts a huge number of technologically advanced and well-equipped network police. These are all the direct products of the Golden Shield Project.

salon.com

smh.com.au

  • Ben Grubb (20 August 2014). "Telstra found divulging web browsing histories to law-enforcement agencies without a warrant". The Sydney Morning Herald.

southsearepublic.org

spiegel.de

svt.se

telegraph.co.uk

theatlantic.com

  • "Meet 'Boundless Informant,' the NSA's Secret Tool for Tracking Global Surveillance Data". The Atlantic. Retrieved 13 June 2013. The country where the largest amount of intelligence was gathered was, unsurprisingly, Iran: Boundless Informant shows more than 14 billion reports in that period. The second-largest collection came from Pakistan, with 13.5 billion reports. Jordan -- which is, yes, one of America's closest Arab allies -- had 12.7 billion reports. Egypt came in fourth (7.6 billion reports), and India in fifth with 6.3 billion. And when it comes to the U.S.? "The Boundless Informant documents show the agency collecting almost 3 billion pieces of intelligence from US computer networks over a 30-day period ending in March 2013."

theguardian.com

theregister.co.uk

warwickshire.police.uk

washingtonpost.com

washingtonpost.com

  • Josh Rogin (2 August 2018). "Ethnic cleansing makes a comeback – in China". No. Washington Post. Archived from the original on 31 March 2019. Retrieved 4 August 2018. Add to that the unprecedented security and surveillance state in Xinjiang, which includes all-encompassing monitoring based on identity cards, checkpoints, facial recognition and the collection of DNA from millions of individuals. The authorities feed all this data into an artificial-intelligence machine that rates people's loyalty to the Communist Party in order to control every aspect of their lives.
  • Blustein, Paul, Gellman, Barton, and Linzer, Dafna. "Bank Records Secretly Tapped", Washington Post, 23 June 2006. Accessed 23 June 2006.

articles.washingtonpost.com

  • Nakashima, Ellen; Warrick, Joby (3 June 2012). "Stuxnet was work of U.S. and Israeli experts, officials say". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 1 January 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2013. The officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to describe the classified effort code-named Olympic Games, said it was first developed during the George W. Bush administration and was geared toward damaging Iran's nuclear capability gradually while sowing confusion among Iranian scientists about the cause of mishaps at a nuclear plant.

wayxar.com

wall.wayxar.com

web.archive.org

wired.co.uk

wired.com

worldcat.org

youtube.com

  • Thomas Drake on The Real News "[2]", The Real News, 3 August 2015. Accessed 19 August 2015.