NSA building massive surveillance facility, everybody a target


Recommended Posts

In 2005, a New York Times article broke the news that the National Security Agency had been engaging in a warrantless wiretapping program that monitored domestic communications ? but the agency may have much bigger ambitions in mind. Wired takes a look at the construction of a top-secret $2 billion facility in Utah ? known simply as the Utah Data Center ? that will reportedly be a storehouse for incredible amounts of both public and private data from international and domestic citizens. The facility is said to be filled with 25,000 square feet of servers, housing everything from Google searches, online product purchase records, as well as intercepted emails and cellphone calls. According to Wired, the incoming data is being mined by plugging into telecommunications companies' switches, the same behavior exposed in the New York Times piece, as well as by monitoring AT&T's "earth stations," massive satellite dishes that handle communications from the US to Europe, the Middle East, the Pacific Rim, and Asia. The new center is needed to collate the massive amounts of data being collected; former NSA employee William Binney estimates that between 15 and 20 trillion communications have been intercepted since 2001.

Of course, collecting such incredible amounts of data isn't very useful unless it can be read, and that's where another facet of the NSA's operation comes into play. Much of the communications the agency intercepts are encrypted, either through proprietary means or using the Advanced Encryption Standard. To tackle this side of the issue, the NSA has allegedly been developing a supercomputer in what is known as the "Multiprogram Research Facility" ? or Building 5300 ? aimed specifically at decryption. The team behind the project reached what is described as a "breakthrough" in creating a usable brute-force decryption system, but to handle the volume of messages the NSA is intercepting, more processing power is needed. The agency is said to be targeting 2018 as the launch for an exo-flop computer that would integrate directly with the Utah Data Center, allowing the combined system to easily collect and read transmissions from around the world. According to an unnamed security official, "Everybody's a target; everybody with communication is a target." If you're thinking this sounds like something out of the movie Sneakers, you're not alone, but according to Wired, the Utah Data Center will go live by September of next year.

News Source: The Verge

Welcome to the future guys and say good-bye to your rights, as nothing is private or protected anymore.

Anyone who believes that anything is private is living under a rock. If you do anything related to technology, it is being tracked by somebody. It may not be the government directly, but your ISP definitely has a record of your activity somewhere for some period of time, and that can be subpoenaed.

If I remember correctly, the CIA is banned from operating within the United States within its charter. The NSA on the other hand has no such limitation in its charter.

Anyone who believes that anything is private is living under a rock. If you do anything related to technology, it is being tracked by somebody. It may not be the government directly, but your ISP definitely has a record of your activity somewhere for some period of time, and that can be subpoenaed.

If I remember correctly, the CIA is banned from operating within the United States within its charter. The NSA on the other hand has no such limitation in its charter.

What various folks (including the folks at WIRED) seem to have forgotten is that part of NSA's reason for being is to monitor and protect the intra-governmental communications (voice and data) of the United States.

Simply doing that is a massive chore.

Has anyone any idea how many buildings the United States government (just the national government and military) own or lease around the world?

Does anyone have an idea how much in the way of *leased carriage* the United States government (again, just the national government and military) uses just in terms of short-term leasage?

Guess what - NSA is responsible for protecting all of it from adversarial snooping.

And given that, what makes our little pecadilloes - most of which are merely embarrassing, not felonies - of any real interest to NSA?

The National Security Agency - despite all that it has done, and continues to do, to further the business of electronic eavesdropping - is still horribly underequipped *and* undermanned just to handle what it is required to by charter and law.

In the main, what American citizens do within the United States matters not a whit to NSA.

I try to keep my online life boring, that way there's nothing much to look at. Anyone with even the slightest knowledge of computers knows how easy data can be intercepted. It's sadly a fact of life in the modern world that privacy is a thing of the past. On the other hand, I really don't think it's that much of a concern to most people. Even if they collected the data, the process of linking all of your data to you would take quite a while, and with millions of people, it is something they'd only do if they already are investigating you for something. There's not a chance in hell, regardless of the supercomputer they build, that they could decrypt EVERYTHING on the fly. The most efficient way to do it would be to collect all the data related to any one person, leave it encrypted, and if you ever need to get that information, THEN decrypt it. Even then, it would take massive super computers a very long time to brute force all the encrypted data from even one person. Unless of course they have back doors into encryption schemes, which wouldn't be overly surprising to me.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Simple answer is yes, you will still get the Windows updates and as long as browser is up to date, you will be good. Only thing secure boot does is protect you against boot level threats and make it harder to install other OS's. I've been looking into this pretty thoroughly lately myself as wifes computer has secure boot disabled plus my other, older computers that run Linux, don't have secure boot enabled. Have seen all kinds of questions about this on the Linux Mint and MX Linux forums. Just don't suddenly enable secure boot now.
    • How many other companies will follow Ford's lead? Or, have they already gotten lazy and become enslaved to AI--and now can't figure out how to get out of that mess.
    • Why would any self-respecting intelligent person follow any recommendation by Donald's GOP administration? With almost two years of fabrications, deceit, and blatantly illegal behavior, why believe them now? They had best be gone after the November 2026 election, so we'll wait and see.
    • AltSendme 0.4.1 by Razvan Serea AltSendme is a minimal, cross-platform application designed for fast, secure, and private peer-to-peer file transfers. It allows users to send files or entire directories directly between devices without relying on cloud servers, accounts, or any personal information. Everything is encrypted end-to-end using modern protocols like QUIC and TLS 1.3, ensuring both strong security and low-latency performance. Transfers are verified with BLAKE3 for data integrity, and interrupted downloads automatically resume, making the experience reliable even on unstable connections. You can transfer anything—images, videos, documents, and more. Integrity checks are performed on both ends, so your files are automatically verified for correctness during both sending and receiving. AltSendme works seamlessly across local networks or long-distance links, capable of saturating multi-gigabit connections for extremely fast delivery. With built-in NAT traversal and encrypted relay fallback, it connects devices almost anywhere. The app integrates with the Sendme CLI and will soon support mobile and web platforms. Fully free and open-source, AltSendme offers a lightweight, privacy-first alternative to traditional cloud-based services, removing size limits, upload costs, and unnecessary data exposure. AltSendme 0.4.1 changelog: Release Highlights Self-hosted relays: Run your own iroh relay so transfers don't rely on public infrastructure. Includes a full deployment template in deploy/relay/ with Docker Compose for a VPS and configuration examples for production use. Fly.io support: One-click deploy template for Fly.io, including a quick-start config (fly.dev.toml) for testing without a custom domain, plus production setup with Let's Encrypt and your own hostname. Relay settings UI: New Settings → Network panel to choose how AltSendme connects: automatic public relays, custom self-hosted URLs (with optional auth token), or disabled. Test connections, verify latency, and see live relay status in the footer. Disable relays: Turn off relay servers entirely when you only need same-network transfers (e.g. LAN). Direct connections only. No relay hop required when devices can reach each other. Android graduates from beta: Android is now part of the regular release cycle alongside desktop. APKs ship with each version (universal, arm64, and armv7). Other improvements Private relay access control via shared auth token Relay fallback notifications when a custom relay is unreachable Broadcast mode toggle in sharing settings Android release build fixes (split-per-ABI APKs, universal APK preservation) UI polish: mobile safe-area insets, dropzone layout, transfer progress animation Bug fixes for minification-related serialization issues and system tray icon loading What's Changed feat(relay): add relay status functionality and settings UI (a120cdf) feat(relay): implement custom relay server configuration and verification (51276c7) feat(relay): add configuration for private relay access and enhance observability features (48fbabf) feat(relay): enhance relay URL validation, display connection status (d4fffa0) feat(relay): add RelayChangeGuard component and enhance relay-related translations (16ba514) feat(broadcast): add toggle setting for broadcast mode in sharing UI (ca6d977) fix(relay): correct QUIC discovery port, pin image, templatize fly.dev (52a2ba5) fix: More broken serialization due to minification (67491a9) fix(android): preserve true universal APK across per-ABI builds (e9f256f) fix(ui): conditional safe-area insets padding on mobile (1182f0e) refactor(transfer): CircularRing component animation fix (944572b) chore(android): drop x86 and x86_64 release APKs, keep universal+arm64+armv7 (34ada0b) Download: AltSendme 0.4.1 | ARM64 | ~9.0 MB (Open Source) Download: AltSendme for MacOS | Android Links: AltSendme Home Page | GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • You are mostly right about the ephemeral nature of it. As I mention in the article, if you dont add a second device or take a backup of your account before uninstalling it, then yes you will lose access to your account. That said, in terms of actual user experience when you sync multiple devices your message history carries across and there's also a Saved Messages chat like there is on Telegram to send messages and attachments between your installs. But yh, what you point out are correct and its not trying to emulate Messenger or Telegram.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Woland13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Woland13 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      495
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      225
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      149
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      75
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!