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Title: CIA-Connected Amazon Turns Over A Record Amount Of Data To U.S. Law Enforcement
Source: Blacklisted News/Activist Post
URL Source: https://www.blacklistednews.com/CIA ... rcement/62988/0/38/38/Y/M.html
Published: Jan 17, 2018
Author: Aaron Kesel
Post Date: 2018-01-17 08:07:06 by Deckard
Keywords: None
Views: 4550
Comments: 42

Amazon’s fifth transparency report has revealed that the company provided more customer data to U.S. law enforcement in the first half of last year than in its history with a shocking 1,936 different requests between January and June 2017, ZDNet reported.

Of those 1,936 requests, Amazon complied and replied to 1,200 subpoena requests, 189 search warrants and 76 other court orders – for a whopping 1,465 requests they responded to. That’s 42 percent of all subpoenas, 44 percent of search warrants and 52 percent of other court orders.

That’s an incredible rise from the year prior where Amazon received:

  • 1,618 subpoenas, which the company fully complied with 679 cases.
  • 229 search warrants, which the company fully complied with 100 cases.
  • 89 other court orders, which the company fully complied with 46 cases.

Amazon didn’t state why there was a spike in U.S. government requests during the first half of the year, but for a company that openly has a partnership with the CIA for $600 million for cloud servers, this information should be troubling. The oddest part of this data is the fact that Amazon stated they received no content removal orders. Which begs the question what merit were the cases based on if not illegal content?

The company also refused to state whether they had received a national security letter (NSL) during this time period. Tech companies are barred from disclosing the number of NSLs they receive; however, under their First Amendment they are free to say if they received any at all.

Amazon instead opted to say they had received between zero and 249 national security letters alluding that they had received a government request but they didn’t state whether they followed through with the request or not.

On Amazon’s website, one of the reasons the company states it may hand over its customers’ data can be based merely on contact lists.

Under certain circumstances, Amazon may request additional information from you to verify the identity of a contact in your address book.

It is not clear how many U.S. government requests last year were due to attempting to receive more information on an Amazon address book.

The transparency report also does not address whether authorities collected data via wiretapping Amazon’s speaker assistant Echo.

It is worth noting that Amazon, provided recordings belonging to a suspect in a murder trial last year which proves the Echo is constantly listening and is not just activated by a keyword as the company states.

Last year, the Internet watchdog rights organization Electronic Frontier Foundation gave Amazon a very low 2 stars in its  “Who Has Your Back” ratings regarding how companies handle government data requests.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 25.

#1. To: Deckard (#0)

Amazon complied and replied to 1,200 subpoena requests, 189 search warrants and 76 other court orders – for a whopping 1,465 requests they responded to ....
Deckard - Why is it a bad thing for Amazon to comply with legal court orders, as is it implied to be in this article....and what is “whooping” about such a small number of 1,465 out of the 244 million Amazon customer base?

Gatlin  posted on  2018-01-17   8:59:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: All (#1)

The NSA is spying on ALL OF US! Don't you get that yet?

I don’t get how you can post an article showing such a small number of 1,465 out of the 244 million can ever be construed to be “ALL OF US.

I do however understand your paranoia.

You need to understand that I asked you a specific question, one that you deflected from.

I will repeat the question:

“Why is it a bad thing for Amazon to comply with legal court orders?”

And are you suggesting Amazon ignore legal curt orders and face contempt of court proceedings?

Gatlin  posted on  2018-01-17   10:24:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Gatlin (#6)

Why is it a bad thing for Amazon to comply with legal court orders?”

And are you suggesting Amazon ignore legal curt orders and face contempt of court proceedings?

If Amazon is lying about when it collects data, why should Amazon be allowed to continue to exist?

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-01-17   10:30:35 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: A K A Stone (#7)

If Amazon is lying about when it collects data, why should Amazon be allowed to continue to exist?

It has always been public knowledge that Amazon collects data.

I have seen no place where it has been shown that Amazon lies about collecting date....have you?

As to the second part of your question ...

Amazon should be allowed to continue to exist until they are charged tried, convicted and punished in a court of law that so orders they should not be allowed to continue to exist.

That is the American justice system....and you do believe in having an American justice system, right?

Or. do you want to be a Deckard....to judge using incomplete information and your personal opinion?

Surely you do not....at least I would cant to think that.

Gatlin  posted on  2018-01-17   10:56:13 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Gatlin (#11)

Antitrust baby. Break it up. Same for Facebook and Google.

Especially Google then stolen facebook.

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-01-17   11:01:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: A K A Stone (#12) (Edited)

Antitrust baby. Break it up. Same for Facebook and Google.

Especially Google then stolen facebook.

That’s a different subject for a different time and another thread....and one we can come to some agreements on.

But right now, we are discussing the “hit piece” that Deckard posted here.

I shouldn’t have to caution you, but I will, that when reading this article and other articles posted by Deckard....you need to recognize this article for what it is.

It is a published article posted only with the full intent to sway public opinion by presenting half facts scattered throughout with omissions.

The article should be fully recognized as presenting false and biased information by omission in a way that appears to be objective and truthful.

You need to be very gullible or extremely biased to fall for this propaganda shit....and I don’t see you as being either of these.

Gatlin  posted on  2018-01-17   11:13:37 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Gatlin (#13)

Echo and Google assist and are deep state spying devices.. directly or indirectly.

Yes Amazon has to respond to subpoenas.

They can be useful but they are most likely being abused and always listening. I think someone demonstrated that before.

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-01-17   11:18:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: A K A Stone (#14)

Echo and Google assist and are deep state spying devices.. directly or indirectly.

Have you seen this?

If HAL9000 Were Amazon.com’s Alexa

Deckard  posted on  2018-01-17   11:21:32 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Deckard (#15)

Have you ...

Have you decided to directly answer the questions I posed to you?

Gatlin  posted on  2018-01-17   11:40:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: Deckard, A K A Stone, All (#18)

Have you decided to directly answer the questions I posed to you?

Obviously not....and it’s because you can not.

Therefore, I will close with this ...

The author stated that Amazon responded to the requests of a “whopping”1,465 subpoenas. search warrants and other official court orders from their 244,000,000 customers. For the purpose of our discussion here, I will stipulate that number is accurate.

Now, both the author and you have insinuated this is overstepping the judicial procedures and implied these actions were improper and in violation of the laws.

While you are adamant in your accusation, you have failed to show where either Amazon, the CIA, the U.S. government or any LEO did ANYTHING wrong here....because you CAN’T.

Yet you whine and piss all over yourself while yelling fowl about a violation of the right to privacy using mere conjectures and pure wishful speculation....because you simply just want to believe it.

Show me proof of any violations anywhere, on anything and we will continue this discussion.

In the meantime, I will no longer waste time on this thread and check off this article posting as yet another one of the many yellow journalism articles you continue to post daily.

Gatlin  posted on  2018-01-17   12:59:18 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: Gatlin (#19)

While you are adamant in your accusation, you have failed to show where either Amazon, the CIA, the U.S. government or any LEO did ANYTHING wrong here....because you CAN’T.

Do you honestly believe they would just tell us that?

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-01-17   13:01:32 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: A K A Stone (#20) (Edited)

Do you honestly believe they would just tell us that?
I honestly believe the author had access to that information and chose not to share that information with us by including it in his article. The reason I believe this is that I am sure God just didn’t open up Heaven and say: Here, Aaron, I have some numbers for you....but I am only giving you numbers and nothing else.

So, since that didn’t happen....then those numbers had to come from somewhere. And I do believe the numbers are accurate because they can easily be checked by those who know how to gain access to the reports as he did. The author had to have read the full reports wherein those numbers were contained. Those numbers could never have been published as stand alone numbers. The reasons and actions taken had to be in the report he got those numbers from and if there were VIOLATIONS anywhere, then the author would have been all over them like stink on shit....to show how the big bad government did something wrong.

I honestly believe that since the author could not in any way show anything was done wrong here, he therefore merely posted partially accurate information in order to mislead the “gullible” or try to kindle the reaffirmation of the already “believers.”

I am speculating of course, which I don’t like to do.....but the speculation is well founded since he posted only partial information for which there would have been no purpose in merely releasing the numbers.

I trust I have answered your question and now I have a questions for you. It does call for speculation.

The question is: Since the author could show absolutely no wrong doing in any way by anyone....why do you think he merely extracted only numbers from a report, posted those numbers andthen left the rest up to people’s imagination?

Read the article again for the sole purpose of finding factually documented and substantially verifiable charges of misconduct by anyone. I find none....please let me know if you do when you get back to me and me and tell me that all you found were generalizations and innuendos.

I don’t pass judgment based on reading mere generalizations and sneaky innuendos....and I don’t believe that you don‘t either.

Edit Add:
That 1,465 requests were lawfully responded to by Amazon on 244,000,000 Amazon customers when presented by the author as a stand alone fact, in no way verifies that either Amazon or the government did anything wrong. It does show that the author merely uses those numbers and a bunch of fancy suggestive wording to try and make people believe they did something wrong and to hate Amazon and the government. That was the author’s purpose and that was also the purpose for which Deckard posted this article.

Gatlin  posted on  2018-01-17   14:37:07 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#24. To: Gatlin (#21)

I honestly believe the author had access to that information and chose not to share that information with us by including it in his article. The reason I believe this is that I am sure God just didn’t open up Heaven and say: Here, Aaron, I have some numbers for you....but I am only giving you numbers and nothing else.

Just read the first sentence of the article and it says where the numbers come from. So your speculation is incorrect.

Amazon’s fifth transparency report has revealed that the company provided more customer data to U.S. law enforcement

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-01-17   16:58:33 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#25. To: A K A Stone (#24) (Edited)

So your speculation is incorrect.
The author obviously neglected to source his data....I believe that was intentional. Consequently, I was left to only speculate....which is something I absolutgely hate to do.
Just read the first sentence of the article and it says where the numbers come from. [Underline Added].
Ah, but that begs the question: Just “where” is “where?”

I of course read the same thing as you did and I googled: “Amazon Transparency Report.”

This showed up:

https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/security/tag/transparency- report/
I clicked on that Amazon link and found: “AWS Security Blog Privacy and Data Security | by Stephen Schmidt | on 12 JUN 2015.” [Note the Date]

At the bottom of that information post, I found:

Amazon’s bi- annual information request report, available here, provides additional information on the types and volume of information requests we receive.
After clicking on “ available here” I found Amazon Transparency Report: “For the period January 1, 2015, through May 31, 2015.” [Note the Date] Since I knew that was obviously outdated data....I naturally had to turn to speculation.

Aaron Kesel is presenting himself as a professional journalist. As a professional journalist and following the Code of Journalist Ethics....he must know, or surely should know, that he is to provide a link(s) to his source information. Since he provided links in three other places, I can only surmise that he INTENTIONALLY omitted sourcing his data. And for what reason....only Aaron Kesel knows.

All of this of course, is what led to my speculation and I will retract my speculation as I continue to search for the source he used. If and when I do find some type of source....I will once again have to speculate that may be the one he used since he never provided a source for his information.

Sad, very sad....the poor journalistic practices used by this biased pseudo journalist.

All said and done, the first 10 lines of his article are probably correct. After that he starts to spin in an attempt to mislead readers as he tries to get them to hate Amazon and the government.

There are no doubt many reasons to hate Amazon and many more reasons to hate the government....but Aaron has not provided a SINGLE REASON in his yellow journalism article to do so.

Again, nowhere....NOWHERE...does the author show that Amazon or anyone else did anything wrong and he in a cunning, deceitful and manipulative manner tried to make it appear someone did.

Therefore, and without any reservation, I still stand firmly behind my call: This is a YELLOW JOURNALISM hit piece. However, I also stand to be corrected and apologize if it is verifiably shown that I am wrong ...

Gatlin  posted on  2018-01-17   20:53:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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